NASDAQ:UFPT UFP Technologies Q1 2026 Earnings Report $228.97 +2.87 (+1.27%) Closing price 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$229.47 +0.50 (+0.22%) As of 06:05 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast UFP Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.48Consensus EPS $2.18Beat/MissBeat by +$0.30One Year Ago EPS$2.47UFP Technologies Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$154.20 millionExpected Revenue$154.78 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$574.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+4.10%UFP Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/4/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, May 5, 2026Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsUFP Technologies' Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Monday, August 3, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, August 4, 2026 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by UFP Technologies Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 5, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Revenue growth of 4.1% driven by medical sales up 5.9% with strength in robotic surgery, patient services & support, and interventional/surgical segments while non-medical sales declined 15% as the company exits lower-fit markets like automotive. Positive Sentiment: The company launched four major programs (three new) with three customers already asking to double capacity, and is adding buildings in La Romana and Santiago and planning APAC expansion to support expected back-half ramp. Negative Sentiment: EPS lagged revenue due to startup costs for the simultaneous program launches, ongoing labor inefficiencies at AJR following turnover tied to E‑Verify implementation, and non-recurring legal/cyber/CEO-transition expenses, though management expects startup headwinds to abate in H2. Neutral Sentiment: Gross margin improved to 28.8% and adjusted operating margin was 16.7% with adjusted EPS $2.48; cash from operations was $3.2M (seasonally impacted), the company paid down ~$4M of debt to reach ~1.14x leverage, and tariff reductions/vendor credits may help margins while oil-driven input cost volatility is expected to be passed to customers. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallUFP Technologies Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day. Welcome to the UFP Technologies 1st quarter 2026 earnings conference call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ron Lataille, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:00:34Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thank you for joining us on our 2026 first quarter earnings conference call. With me on today's call is our CEO and Chairman, R. Jeffrey Bailly. Today, we will make some forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, the accuracy of which is subject to risks and uncertainties. Wherever possible, we will try to identify those forward-looking statements by using words such as believe, expect, anticipate, pursue, forecast, and similar expressions. Our forward-looking statements are based on our estimates and assumptions as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our estimates or views on any subsequent date. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:01:27Please refer to the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information and the risk factors in our most recent 10-K, including disclosures of the factors that could cause results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which include organic sales growth, adjusted gross margin, adjusted operating income, adjusted SG&A, adjusted earnings per share, and EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures discussed in this call is contained in the associated press release and is available in the investor relations section of our website. I'll now turn the call over to Jeff Bailly. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:02:16Thank you, Ron, and thank you to everyone joining the call. I am pleased with our first quarter results and start to the year, including important progress on our strategic growth initiatives. Our revenue grew 4.1% with medical sales growing 5.9% and our non-medical sales declining 15% as we continue to focus our efforts on best fit, fast-growing segments in the med tech space. Growth in our robotic surgery, patient services and support, and interventional and surgical segments of 7%, 11%, and 15% respectively, were partially offset by declines in wound care as two major customers slowed temporarily due to excess inventory. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:03:09EPS grew more slowly than revenue due in part to, number 1, startup costs related to our 4 simultaneous program launches, each of which is slowly ramping up and expected to make meaningful contributions in the second half of the year. Number 2, softer results at AJR versus Q1 of 2025 as they continue to work through their labor inefficiency issues related to turnover following our E-Verify or legal right to work process last year. Number 3, non-recurring legal expenses related to a cyber attack and the CEO transition. A lot of exciting things are happening on the business expansion front. In addition to the 4 successful program launches, 3 of those 4 customers have already asked us to double our capacity on the new programs. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:04:01We are also adding new buildings in both Santiago D.R. and La Romana D.R. to expand capacity and accommodate forecast growth in patient services and support and robotic surgery. In both locations, we are co-investing with our customers and will take possession of the buildings in the second quarter of this year. We're also in the planning stages to add capacity in the APAC region to meet growing demand in Asia. Our new product development labs in La Romana and Grand Rapids are performing well, adding new programs and new talent to meet growing customer demand. On the acquisition front, we are reviewing multiple opportunities. Although we have been outbid on a couple of recent opportunities, we remain disciplined in our approach to vetting and valuing strategic acquisitions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:04:55The 3 acquisitions we completed in 2025 and the 4 in 2024 are all performing well and have increased our value to customers and strengthened our position in the market. Mitch Rock is excited to take over as CEO in June and is well prepared to succeed. We have a deep team of talented managers supporting him who understand our strategy and how they fit in. This team, together with our vendor partners, adds significant value to our blue-chip customers in growing market segments. Each of these 3 critical components of our success, our team, our customers, and our vendor partners, trusts and respects Mitch and looks forward to continuing to grow with UFP. For these reasons and many more, I'm very excited about the future of UFP Technologies and the value it can create for our shareholders. Thank you. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:05:51I will now hand it back to Ron to provide more color on our financials. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:05:56Thank you, Jeff. Before reviewing operating results, I'd like to give a brief update on tariffs and the impact of the conflict in Iran on our raw material input costs. In general, effective tariffs are net down from our last update. This should have a positive prospective impact on margins. Additionally, as our suppliers seek refunds from the government, we will be looking for these to flow through to us in the form of vendor credits. Counting in these savings are raw material inflationary increases caused by the increased price of oil stemming from the conflict in Iran. It is difficult to estimate the ultimate impact as the news changes daily and therefore the price of oil has been volatile. It remains our expectation that we will pass these through to our customers. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:06:51Moving to operations, as Jeff mentioned, overall sales were up 4%, fueled by a 6% increase in medical sales. Strength in this area was driven by our robotic-assisted surgery, patient services and support, and interventional and surgical sub-markets. As anticipated, organic sales growth for the quarter was essentially flat as we are slowly ramping our new programs and our non-medical business continues to soften. We anticipate that the new program revenue growth will accelerate in the second half of the year. Approximately $1 million in sales pushed into the second quarter due to a cyber event at one of our key customers. Of note, sales to our 2 largest customers collectively grew 7.5% during the first quarter. Gross profit as a percentage of sales or gross margin increased to 28.8% from 28.5% last year. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:07:53This improvement was despite continued labor inefficiencies at AJR, which although diminishing, are still impacting cost of sales. Helping to drive the improvement was a more than 200% increase in revenue in Santiago, Dominican Republic, enabling us to leverage fixed overhead costs at this location. SG&A expenses for our first quarter of 2026 increased by $2.2 million to $21 million. This is largely due to approximately $750,000 in wages and benefits for back-office investments made at various times during 2025 to support our larger organization, as well as approximately half a million dollars in non-cash equity compensation. We also incurred approximately half a million dollars in non-recurring legal expenses due to the cyber breach incident in mid-February, as well as the anticipated CEO transition. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:08:56Adjusted operating margin for the first quarter was 16.7% of sales, and adjusted earnings per diluted share outstanding was $2.48, up slightly from last year. We generated approximately $3.2 million in cash from operations during our first quarter. This was lower than is typical, as a much stronger March sales month created a correspondingly high working capital need. Since March 31st, we have paid down approximately $4 million in debt. Capital expenditures were $1.7 million during our first quarter, and we ended with a leverage ratio of approximately 1.14 times. With that, I now turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator00:09:45We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Brett Fishbin with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:10:17Hey, guys. Good morning. Thank you very much for taking the questions. Just wanted to maybe start off with the robotics segment. I saw in the press release, you know, you mentioned 7% growth in this category. Was hoping you could just, you know, discuss this a little bit more, maybe touch on the contribution from the new products that are starting to ramp in this segment. Also just curious how growth is trending, you know, across your larger customer base outside of the large robotics customer. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:10:46Sure. Thanks, Brett. The 7% growth was a blend, but it is primarily anchor programs or existing programs at this point. The new programs that we've launched are still in their infancy stage. Over time, they will be a bigger and bigger component of our growth. We are pleased with the start to the year in the robotic surgery area, particularly at the 7%. It was a little higher than we had originally forecast. With respect to What's the second part of the question? I'm sorry. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:11:18Oh, was just curious. Well, I guess you kind of addressed it. I was asking about the new product launches also just how, you know, non-Intuitive customers, you know, overall are doing. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:11:29Yeah, our business is becoming more and more diverse. More and more diverse within Intuitive with additional programs and more and more diverse with additional customers. I think you'll consider, you'll continue to see less of a dominant position in that one customer as we go forward. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:11:47Then, you know, maybe just more broadly, you know, you mentioned 4 large programs that are currently in the ramp phase. Maybe just a little bit more flavor around how you're thinking about those opportunities. I know you mentioned that they're expected to become significant contributors in the back half. Maybe just a little bit more detail on how you're thinking about that. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:12:07Yeah, I mean, three of the four programs are brand new, and one was a transfer. The three new programs, each of those customers has already asked us to at least double our capacity with them. Three very successful launches. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:12:19The startup revenue still is small. The revenue will ramp into Q2 and be more robust in Q3 and 4, and then continue on. As we add new capacity, those three programs will be meaningful contributors. Two are robotic surgery, and one was an infection prevention. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:12:38All right. Perfect. Last question for me. Just, you know, the non-medical business was down a little bit more than we were expecting. Wanted to just ask if you think that's kind of the right way to think about it for the rest of the year from a growth perspective, or if anything, you know, is changing in a notable way as the year progresses. Thank you so much for taking the questions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:12:59Yeah, absolutely. The, the dominant drop was in automotive, which I think is gonna be the new normal as we literally phase out of this market. There was also a softer side in the aerospace and defense, and that will flip. We already have some activity that's gonna take that from slowing back to growing. I think you'll see advanced components continue to be little to no growth over time, and certain markets like automotive we'll completely phase out of. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:13:25All right. Perfect. Thanks again. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:13:27You're welcome. Operator00:13:29The next question comes from Justin Ages with CJS Securities. Please go ahead. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:13:36Hi, morning all. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:13:39Morning, Justin Ages. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:13:41You know, you mentioned 4 large programs ramping, contributing in the second half. Can we dig down a bit and just talk about the impact to profitability from those? How long will those headwinds? Well, I don't wanna call them headwinds, but how long will those, like, startup costs be in there? Are we gonna see that go down once the programs start contributing more in the second half? R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:14:07Yes, absolutely. The startup costs relate to getting the whole team there prepared, trained, et cetera, before the volume follows. All those hires have been made, those people have been trained, and as the volume ramps up, you know, we'll be absorbing those costs. The fixed costs won't go up, but the revenue will. I think you'll see just a smooth plus. They're very slow starts. You know, we'll ship a handful of parts and then a pallet, and then eventually they'll sort of turn on the spigot, and by the second half of the year, I think it'll be robust contributions from all three of those brand new programs. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:14:42Okay. I appreciate that. You know, you mentioned taking control of two buildings, one in La Romana, one in Santiago. Can you just remind us how many buildings you have in each location then, and what the capacity looks like after that? Because you mentioned, you know, already customers you have are asking for increased capacity. Just wondering if there are new additional buildings that are already kind of on your pipeline coming down the pike. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:15:07In La Romana, this will be our sixth building. You know, it's not exactly even how much capacity it adds, but it's approximately one-sixth more capacity. That's primarily for robotic surgery. We set up a big infection prevention program in one of the other buildings. The La Romana campus is dominantly robotic surgery. In Santiago, we're adding our third building, and that one is predominantly patient services and support. And that will probably stay that way for the time being. If we have new low-cost country applications, we'll probably be directing them towards La Romana in the short term because that team is very experienced and their quality systems and everything have been going for literally decades, whereas Santiago is a little more of a startup situation still. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:15:55All right. Thanks for taking the questions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:15:57You're welcome, Justin. Operator00:16:00Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. The next question comes from Andrew Cooper with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:16:08Hey, everybody. Thanks for the questions. First, just wanna touch a little bit on the wound care drags you called out tied to inventory. I guess, can you give a little bit of sense of magnitude for those programs? What gives you the confidence and comfort that this is purely an inventory dynamic that should normalize as the year progresses? R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:16:27These are both I mean, they're large customers within wound care, but not necessarily large customers within the whole of UFP Technologies. Both had inventory issues that they thought were in the sort of 8-month range of impact to us. At the same time, we have 2 major programs that were in the development stage in wound care. I'm still long-term very bullish on wound care. There seems to be a resurgence of interest in this area. To answer your question, probably, you know, a 3-quarter impact from the slowdown in wound care and then back to normal. Probably next year, we'd be overlaying some new programs. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:17:02Okay. Helpful. Shifting a little bit to the AJR business, I guess two-part question. First, can you give us a sense, I know you called out the 200% growth in what's coming out of Santiago, but what inning of that transition of getting those products from Illinois to Santiago would you say we're in? Similar question, when we think about the labor headwinds, you know, where are we in terms of temp labor versus full-time hires and really sort of getting those hires trained and back to full capacity and where you would expect to be to start working down that backlog in a more meaningful way? R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:17:40Yes, absolutely. With respect to the transfers, we think in terms of 3 major programs. Number 1, completely transferred and running at rate. Number 2, now completely transferred, and about to ramp up in rate. We had sort of a tripling of volume over the last, you know, 12 months, and that will continue to grow. Program number 3 has not really started. We have the space, the lease, we've got the equipment that's shown up on site, but there's a long sort of PPAP and protocol that we have to go through before that one will get up and running. That may take more than 1 year, frankly, to be a meaningful contributor to Santiago. With respect to AJR. As Santiago comes up, it takes some pressure off AJR. We have a lot of employees in Chicago. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:18:27We've really fueled up or geared up quickly to get our backlog down. The problem is not only do we have backlog, but our customer was growing rapidly. We've been working quite a bit of overtime with a less efficient crew. That overtime is already beginning to subside a little. As we transfer more work, the less efficient employees will sort of naturally fall off, and the ones that are most efficient and eligible for overtime and incentive, et cetera, will be the ones that stay. I expect to see a smooth plus on that. With respect to progress, between Q3 and Q4, I think we cut the problem about in half. Between Q4 and Q1, we made about a 25% improvement. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:19:09There's still a ways to go, but I think it will accelerate when we ramp up in Santiago, because again, we have to keep all employees, whether efficient or not right now, just 'cause we're trying to get out of backlog situation. We'll end up with a more efficient crew when we're done, a smaller, more efficient crew in Illinois. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:19:29Okay, great. Super helpful. Then maybe last one, just would love a little bit more color on sort of what you're seeing in that M&A landscape and how you're thinking about it. I know you called out a couple opportunities that were interesting, but maybe not as interesting from a dollar perspective to you as others. Just would love maybe the latest thinking on what that landscape looks like. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:19:51Yeah, we have a number of discussions underway. I would say that it's a little quiet right now, frankly. You know, there were some big deals that went through that we've bid on, a couple unsuccessfully, which we are absolutely fine with, by the way. If we get outbid, we'd rather get outbid by a lot than miss it by a little. We're very disciplined in our process, both vetting strategically, vetting for culture, and then vetting for value. We do have some small ones that we're working on, and we do have still one very large one that's percolating in the background that will probably take quite a while to come to fruition if it does. The perfect deals for us are more the medium-sized ones. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:20:27There's not as many of those as we'd like to see in the pipeline, but we are looking at deals every single week. We have meetings with prospects every single week. The pipeline's constantly being refilled and then vetted, and some stuff falls off. I mean, I still believe that over the next multiple years, acquisition growth will still be 50% of our overall growth. It's just hard to time, that's it. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:20:53Great. I'll stop there. Thanks for the questions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:20:55You're welcome. Thank you. Operator00:20:59This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to R. Jeffrey Bailly, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, for any closing remarks. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:21:10Yes. Thank you, Operator, and thank you everybody who joined the call. Just to close, this is my last call as CEO, and I really appreciate all the support of our shareholders. I'm super excited about the future of the company. UFP is still the largest investment I have by multiples of greater than 10 over the next largest stock, and it's the most exciting stock in my portfolio. I think the team of people taking over is super fired up and super excited, and it's a very deep team of people. Mitch is well respected. He's ready to go, and he's well prepared to succeed. I will be there for the next year as Executive Chair to support him with acquisitions, to key strategic hires, et cetera. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:21:49I just wanted to say thank you, and I appreciate everybody. Operator00:21:55The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesR. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and ChairmanRon LatailleCFOAnalystsAndrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond JamesBrett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital MarketsJustin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS SecuritiesPowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) UFP Technologies Earnings HeadlinesUFP Technologies Signals Medical-Focused Growth AheadMay 19 at 12:11 AM | tipranks.comUFP Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ:UFPT) Just Released Its First-Quarter Earnings: Here's What Analysts ThinkMay 13, 2026 | uk.finance.yahoo.comYour book is insideThe "Sucker's Bet" Most New Options Traders Fall For Most people who try options lose money the same way. They don't know the rules. They don't know what to avoid. And they hand their account to Wall Street on a silver platter. Normally $29.97. Free today.May 22 at 1:00 AM | Profits Run (Ad)UFP Technologies Signals Growth Momentum Amid Short-Term DragsMay 5, 2026 | tipranks.comShould UFPT’s MedTech-Led Q1 2026 Earnings Growth Shift How Investors View Its Core Strategy?May 5, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comUFP Technologies (NASDAQ:UFPT) posts Q1 CY2026 sales in line with estimatesMay 4, 2026 | msn.comSee More UFP Technologies Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like UFP Technologies? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on UFP Technologies and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About UFP TechnologiesUFP Technologies (NASDAQ:UFPT) (NASDAQ: UFPT) is a global designer and manufacturer of custom-engineered products using plastics, foams and adhesives. The company partners with customers to develop application-specific solutions through a range of in-house processes, including foam fabrication, die cutting, sheet processing, lamination, machining and assembly services. Its components find use in industries requiring precise material properties, such as medical devices, aerospace, defense, electronics and transportation. Building on its origins as a specialty foam converter, UFP Technologies has expanded its capabilities to include advanced material technologies, such as thermal management and electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding solutions. The company provides end-to-end support from concept and prototyping through high-volume production, leveraging vertical integration across its manufacturing footprint to manage quality, lead times and total cost of ownership for customers. Headquartered in Freeport, Maine, UFP Technologies operates multiple facilities across North America and Europe, serving a diverse base of domestic and international customers. Its management team combines deep industry expertise in engineered materials and contract manufacturing with a focus on operational excellence, research and development, and supply-chain optimization.View UFP Technologies ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Overextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back HalfDeere Beats Q2 Estimates, But Ag Weakness Weighs on OutlookNVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day. Welcome to the UFP Technologies 1st quarter 2026 earnings conference call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ron Lataille, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:00:34Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thank you for joining us on our 2026 first quarter earnings conference call. With me on today's call is our CEO and Chairman, R. Jeffrey Bailly. Today, we will make some forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, the accuracy of which is subject to risks and uncertainties. Wherever possible, we will try to identify those forward-looking statements by using words such as believe, expect, anticipate, pursue, forecast, and similar expressions. Our forward-looking statements are based on our estimates and assumptions as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our estimates or views on any subsequent date. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:01:27Please refer to the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information and the risk factors in our most recent 10-K, including disclosures of the factors that could cause results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which include organic sales growth, adjusted gross margin, adjusted operating income, adjusted SG&A, adjusted earnings per share, and EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures discussed in this call is contained in the associated press release and is available in the investor relations section of our website. I'll now turn the call over to Jeff Bailly. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:02:16Thank you, Ron, and thank you to everyone joining the call. I am pleased with our first quarter results and start to the year, including important progress on our strategic growth initiatives. Our revenue grew 4.1% with medical sales growing 5.9% and our non-medical sales declining 15% as we continue to focus our efforts on best fit, fast-growing segments in the med tech space. Growth in our robotic surgery, patient services and support, and interventional and surgical segments of 7%, 11%, and 15% respectively, were partially offset by declines in wound care as two major customers slowed temporarily due to excess inventory. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:03:09EPS grew more slowly than revenue due in part to, number 1, startup costs related to our 4 simultaneous program launches, each of which is slowly ramping up and expected to make meaningful contributions in the second half of the year. Number 2, softer results at AJR versus Q1 of 2025 as they continue to work through their labor inefficiency issues related to turnover following our E-Verify or legal right to work process last year. Number 3, non-recurring legal expenses related to a cyber attack and the CEO transition. A lot of exciting things are happening on the business expansion front. In addition to the 4 successful program launches, 3 of those 4 customers have already asked us to double our capacity on the new programs. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:04:01We are also adding new buildings in both Santiago D.R. and La Romana D.R. to expand capacity and accommodate forecast growth in patient services and support and robotic surgery. In both locations, we are co-investing with our customers and will take possession of the buildings in the second quarter of this year. We're also in the planning stages to add capacity in the APAC region to meet growing demand in Asia. Our new product development labs in La Romana and Grand Rapids are performing well, adding new programs and new talent to meet growing customer demand. On the acquisition front, we are reviewing multiple opportunities. Although we have been outbid on a couple of recent opportunities, we remain disciplined in our approach to vetting and valuing strategic acquisitions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:04:55The 3 acquisitions we completed in 2025 and the 4 in 2024 are all performing well and have increased our value to customers and strengthened our position in the market. Mitch Rock is excited to take over as CEO in June and is well prepared to succeed. We have a deep team of talented managers supporting him who understand our strategy and how they fit in. This team, together with our vendor partners, adds significant value to our blue-chip customers in growing market segments. Each of these 3 critical components of our success, our team, our customers, and our vendor partners, trusts and respects Mitch and looks forward to continuing to grow with UFP. For these reasons and many more, I'm very excited about the future of UFP Technologies and the value it can create for our shareholders. Thank you. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:05:51I will now hand it back to Ron to provide more color on our financials. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:05:56Thank you, Jeff. Before reviewing operating results, I'd like to give a brief update on tariffs and the impact of the conflict in Iran on our raw material input costs. In general, effective tariffs are net down from our last update. This should have a positive prospective impact on margins. Additionally, as our suppliers seek refunds from the government, we will be looking for these to flow through to us in the form of vendor credits. Counting in these savings are raw material inflationary increases caused by the increased price of oil stemming from the conflict in Iran. It is difficult to estimate the ultimate impact as the news changes daily and therefore the price of oil has been volatile. It remains our expectation that we will pass these through to our customers. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:06:51Moving to operations, as Jeff mentioned, overall sales were up 4%, fueled by a 6% increase in medical sales. Strength in this area was driven by our robotic-assisted surgery, patient services and support, and interventional and surgical sub-markets. As anticipated, organic sales growth for the quarter was essentially flat as we are slowly ramping our new programs and our non-medical business continues to soften. We anticipate that the new program revenue growth will accelerate in the second half of the year. Approximately $1 million in sales pushed into the second quarter due to a cyber event at one of our key customers. Of note, sales to our 2 largest customers collectively grew 7.5% during the first quarter. Gross profit as a percentage of sales or gross margin increased to 28.8% from 28.5% last year. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:07:53This improvement was despite continued labor inefficiencies at AJR, which although diminishing, are still impacting cost of sales. Helping to drive the improvement was a more than 200% increase in revenue in Santiago, Dominican Republic, enabling us to leverage fixed overhead costs at this location. SG&A expenses for our first quarter of 2026 increased by $2.2 million to $21 million. This is largely due to approximately $750,000 in wages and benefits for back-office investments made at various times during 2025 to support our larger organization, as well as approximately half a million dollars in non-cash equity compensation. We also incurred approximately half a million dollars in non-recurring legal expenses due to the cyber breach incident in mid-February, as well as the anticipated CEO transition. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:08:56Adjusted operating margin for the first quarter was 16.7% of sales, and adjusted earnings per diluted share outstanding was $2.48, up slightly from last year. We generated approximately $3.2 million in cash from operations during our first quarter. This was lower than is typical, as a much stronger March sales month created a correspondingly high working capital need. Since March 31st, we have paid down approximately $4 million in debt. Capital expenditures were $1.7 million during our first quarter, and we ended with a leverage ratio of approximately 1.14 times. With that, I now turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator00:09:45We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Brett Fishbin with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:10:17Hey, guys. Good morning. Thank you very much for taking the questions. Just wanted to maybe start off with the robotics segment. I saw in the press release, you know, you mentioned 7% growth in this category. Was hoping you could just, you know, discuss this a little bit more, maybe touch on the contribution from the new products that are starting to ramp in this segment. Also just curious how growth is trending, you know, across your larger customer base outside of the large robotics customer. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:10:46Sure. Thanks, Brett. The 7% growth was a blend, but it is primarily anchor programs or existing programs at this point. The new programs that we've launched are still in their infancy stage. Over time, they will be a bigger and bigger component of our growth. We are pleased with the start to the year in the robotic surgery area, particularly at the 7%. It was a little higher than we had originally forecast. With respect to What's the second part of the question? I'm sorry. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:11:18Oh, was just curious. Well, I guess you kind of addressed it. I was asking about the new product launches also just how, you know, non-Intuitive customers, you know, overall are doing. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:11:29Yeah, our business is becoming more and more diverse. More and more diverse within Intuitive with additional programs and more and more diverse with additional customers. I think you'll consider, you'll continue to see less of a dominant position in that one customer as we go forward. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:11:47Then, you know, maybe just more broadly, you know, you mentioned 4 large programs that are currently in the ramp phase. Maybe just a little bit more flavor around how you're thinking about those opportunities. I know you mentioned that they're expected to become significant contributors in the back half. Maybe just a little bit more detail on how you're thinking about that. Ron LatailleCFO at UFP Technologies00:12:07Yeah, I mean, three of the four programs are brand new, and one was a transfer. The three new programs, each of those customers has already asked us to at least double our capacity with them. Three very successful launches. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:12:19The startup revenue still is small. The revenue will ramp into Q2 and be more robust in Q3 and 4, and then continue on. As we add new capacity, those three programs will be meaningful contributors. Two are robotic surgery, and one was an infection prevention. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:12:38All right. Perfect. Last question for me. Just, you know, the non-medical business was down a little bit more than we were expecting. Wanted to just ask if you think that's kind of the right way to think about it for the rest of the year from a growth perspective, or if anything, you know, is changing in a notable way as the year progresses. Thank you so much for taking the questions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:12:59Yeah, absolutely. The, the dominant drop was in automotive, which I think is gonna be the new normal as we literally phase out of this market. There was also a softer side in the aerospace and defense, and that will flip. We already have some activity that's gonna take that from slowing back to growing. I think you'll see advanced components continue to be little to no growth over time, and certain markets like automotive we'll completely phase out of. Brett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets00:13:25All right. Perfect. Thanks again. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:13:27You're welcome. Operator00:13:29The next question comes from Justin Ages with CJS Securities. Please go ahead. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:13:36Hi, morning all. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:13:39Morning, Justin Ages. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:13:41You know, you mentioned 4 large programs ramping, contributing in the second half. Can we dig down a bit and just talk about the impact to profitability from those? How long will those headwinds? Well, I don't wanna call them headwinds, but how long will those, like, startup costs be in there? Are we gonna see that go down once the programs start contributing more in the second half? R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:14:07Yes, absolutely. The startup costs relate to getting the whole team there prepared, trained, et cetera, before the volume follows. All those hires have been made, those people have been trained, and as the volume ramps up, you know, we'll be absorbing those costs. The fixed costs won't go up, but the revenue will. I think you'll see just a smooth plus. They're very slow starts. You know, we'll ship a handful of parts and then a pallet, and then eventually they'll sort of turn on the spigot, and by the second half of the year, I think it'll be robust contributions from all three of those brand new programs. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:14:42Okay. I appreciate that. You know, you mentioned taking control of two buildings, one in La Romana, one in Santiago. Can you just remind us how many buildings you have in each location then, and what the capacity looks like after that? Because you mentioned, you know, already customers you have are asking for increased capacity. Just wondering if there are new additional buildings that are already kind of on your pipeline coming down the pike. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:15:07In La Romana, this will be our sixth building. You know, it's not exactly even how much capacity it adds, but it's approximately one-sixth more capacity. That's primarily for robotic surgery. We set up a big infection prevention program in one of the other buildings. The La Romana campus is dominantly robotic surgery. In Santiago, we're adding our third building, and that one is predominantly patient services and support. And that will probably stay that way for the time being. If we have new low-cost country applications, we'll probably be directing them towards La Romana in the short term because that team is very experienced and their quality systems and everything have been going for literally decades, whereas Santiago is a little more of a startup situation still. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS Securities00:15:55All right. Thanks for taking the questions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:15:57You're welcome, Justin. Operator00:16:00Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. The next question comes from Andrew Cooper with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:16:08Hey, everybody. Thanks for the questions. First, just wanna touch a little bit on the wound care drags you called out tied to inventory. I guess, can you give a little bit of sense of magnitude for those programs? What gives you the confidence and comfort that this is purely an inventory dynamic that should normalize as the year progresses? R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:16:27These are both I mean, they're large customers within wound care, but not necessarily large customers within the whole of UFP Technologies. Both had inventory issues that they thought were in the sort of 8-month range of impact to us. At the same time, we have 2 major programs that were in the development stage in wound care. I'm still long-term very bullish on wound care. There seems to be a resurgence of interest in this area. To answer your question, probably, you know, a 3-quarter impact from the slowdown in wound care and then back to normal. Probably next year, we'd be overlaying some new programs. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:17:02Okay. Helpful. Shifting a little bit to the AJR business, I guess two-part question. First, can you give us a sense, I know you called out the 200% growth in what's coming out of Santiago, but what inning of that transition of getting those products from Illinois to Santiago would you say we're in? Similar question, when we think about the labor headwinds, you know, where are we in terms of temp labor versus full-time hires and really sort of getting those hires trained and back to full capacity and where you would expect to be to start working down that backlog in a more meaningful way? R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:17:40Yes, absolutely. With respect to the transfers, we think in terms of 3 major programs. Number 1, completely transferred and running at rate. Number 2, now completely transferred, and about to ramp up in rate. We had sort of a tripling of volume over the last, you know, 12 months, and that will continue to grow. Program number 3 has not really started. We have the space, the lease, we've got the equipment that's shown up on site, but there's a long sort of PPAP and protocol that we have to go through before that one will get up and running. That may take more than 1 year, frankly, to be a meaningful contributor to Santiago. With respect to AJR. As Santiago comes up, it takes some pressure off AJR. We have a lot of employees in Chicago. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:18:27We've really fueled up or geared up quickly to get our backlog down. The problem is not only do we have backlog, but our customer was growing rapidly. We've been working quite a bit of overtime with a less efficient crew. That overtime is already beginning to subside a little. As we transfer more work, the less efficient employees will sort of naturally fall off, and the ones that are most efficient and eligible for overtime and incentive, et cetera, will be the ones that stay. I expect to see a smooth plus on that. With respect to progress, between Q3 and Q4, I think we cut the problem about in half. Between Q4 and Q1, we made about a 25% improvement. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:19:09There's still a ways to go, but I think it will accelerate when we ramp up in Santiago, because again, we have to keep all employees, whether efficient or not right now, just 'cause we're trying to get out of backlog situation. We'll end up with a more efficient crew when we're done, a smaller, more efficient crew in Illinois. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:19:29Okay, great. Super helpful. Then maybe last one, just would love a little bit more color on sort of what you're seeing in that M&A landscape and how you're thinking about it. I know you called out a couple opportunities that were interesting, but maybe not as interesting from a dollar perspective to you as others. Just would love maybe the latest thinking on what that landscape looks like. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:19:51Yeah, we have a number of discussions underway. I would say that it's a little quiet right now, frankly. You know, there were some big deals that went through that we've bid on, a couple unsuccessfully, which we are absolutely fine with, by the way. If we get outbid, we'd rather get outbid by a lot than miss it by a little. We're very disciplined in our process, both vetting strategically, vetting for culture, and then vetting for value. We do have some small ones that we're working on, and we do have still one very large one that's percolating in the background that will probably take quite a while to come to fruition if it does. The perfect deals for us are more the medium-sized ones. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:20:27There's not as many of those as we'd like to see in the pipeline, but we are looking at deals every single week. We have meetings with prospects every single week. The pipeline's constantly being refilled and then vetted, and some stuff falls off. I mean, I still believe that over the next multiple years, acquisition growth will still be 50% of our overall growth. It's just hard to time, that's it. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:20:53Great. I'll stop there. Thanks for the questions. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:20:55You're welcome. Thank you. Operator00:20:59This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to R. Jeffrey Bailly, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, for any closing remarks. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:21:10Yes. Thank you, Operator, and thank you everybody who joined the call. Just to close, this is my last call as CEO, and I really appreciate all the support of our shareholders. I'm super excited about the future of the company. UFP is still the largest investment I have by multiples of greater than 10 over the next largest stock, and it's the most exciting stock in my portfolio. I think the team of people taking over is super fired up and super excited, and it's a very deep team of people. Mitch is well respected. He's ready to go, and he's well prepared to succeed. I will be there for the next year as Executive Chair to support him with acquisitions, to key strategic hires, et cetera. R. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and Chairman at UFP Technologies00:21:49I just wanted to say thank you, and I appreciate everybody. Operator00:21:55The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesR. Jeffrey BaillyCEO and ChairmanRon LatailleCFOAnalystsAndrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond JamesBrett FishbinVP and Senior Equity Research Analyst at KeyBanc Capital MarketsJustin AgesDirector of Equity Research Analyst at CJS SecuritiesPowered by