Miller Industries Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Key Takeaways

  • Neutral Sentiment: Q1 revenue was $180.9 million, down 19.8% year‑over‑year but in line with expectations, with quarter‑over‑quarter revenue growth of 5.7%; diluted EPS was $0.05 and gross margin was 14.2%.
  • Negative Sentiment: First full quarter contribution from the Omars acquisition was smooth, but the company recorded non‑cash acquisition-related charges that reduced Q1 EPS by about $0.13 and expects roughly half of the remaining one‑time charges to be recognized over the rest of 2026.
  • Positive Sentiment: Miller reiterated full‑year 2026 revenue guidance of $850–$900 million, expects EPS roughly in line with 2025, and sees production and revenue increasingly weighted to the second half of the year as demand recovers.
  • Neutral Sentiment: The company paused planned North American production increases amid Middle East tensions and higher diesel prices, and implemented a 3% price increase on manufactured products effective August 1, 2026, to help offset rising U.S. manufacturing costs.
  • Positive Sentiment: Longer‑term growth drivers include >$150 million in military commitments (production from 2027, revenue mainly 2028–29), a EUR 8M expansion in France, a new 200k+ sq ft U.S. facility targeted for late 2027, and disciplined capital allocation with dividends, buybacks and reduced net debt (~$21M).
AI Generated. May Contain Errors.
Earnings Conference Call
Miller Industries Q1 2026
00:00 / 00:00

Transcript Sections

Skip to Participants
Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Miller Industries first quarter 2026 results conference call. Please note, this event is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to William Miller at Miller Industries. Please go ahead, sir.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2026 earnings call. I want to begin by thanking our employees around the world for their dedication and support. Our first quarter results and strategic progress reflect the commitment and passion of our team, our suppliers, our customers, and our shareholders. As always, our remarks today will include forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially. Please refer to our SEC filings and the safe harbor statement included in today's presentation. I would like to start with a brief overview before I hand the call over to Debbie, who will review our results in greater detail. We entered the year with strong momentum. The actions we took in 2025 to reduce field inventory, improve the health of our distribution channel, and strengthen our supply chain positioned us to capture rising demand across the business.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

As that demand materialized, we strategically increased production to deliver solid sequential revenue growth. Late in the quarter, escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East introduced additional uncertainty and led to higher diesel prices, creating pressure on retail demand. In response, our team remained disciplined and focused, proactively pausing our North American production increase at current levels to maintain balanced distributor inventory. We believe this was the right decision to best position the business for future success. Despite the reduction in retail activity that we saw throughout 2025 and the recent effects of the conflict in the Middle East, we remain confident in the strength of our business and the structural demand opportunities ahead. Our core philosophy remains exactly as it has been since day one. Miller Industries has the best people, the best products, and the best distribution network in the towing and recovery industry.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

That philosophy is the backbone of Miller Industries' 35-year history and will continue to be our philosophy moving forward. Our 1,500 plus employees across Tennessee, Pennsylvania, France, the U.K., and Italy, and our distribution footprint gives us unmatched reach, capability, and reliability that continues to position the company for future growth. I want to recognize all of our teams across the U.S., Europe, and the U.K. for their dedication to support the company throughout difficult periods. Their commitment allows us to stay agile in the near term while building the foundation for longer-term growth and value creation. I'll now turn the call over to Debbie, who will provide an update on our financial results in more detail, before returning with some more specific thoughts on our markets in 2026, capital allocation priorities, and guidance.

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

Thank you, Will. I would like to note that this was our first full quarter of contribution from the Omars acquisition. We are encouraged by the smooth integration thus far and expect Omars to be an increasingly meaningful contributor to our results going forward. For the first quarter, revenue was $180.9 million, down 19.8% year-over-year and in line with our expectations for the quarter. This decline reflects the institution of lower production levels in the second half of 2025. Earlier this year, we started to accelerate production to meet increasing retail activity and order intake. This drove quarter-over-quarter revenue growth of 5.7%. Gross profit was $25.7 million or 14.2% of sales, and diluted EPS was $0.05 per share.

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

Higher SG&A expenses for the quarter were primarily attributable to the inclusion of Omars. Based on preliminary valuation estimates, we recorded certain non-cash acquisition-related expenses associated with Omars during the first quarter, primarily related to fair value adjustments on equipment sales and the amortization of estimated intangible customer relationship assets. These items reduced first quarter results by approximately $0.13 per diluted share. At this time, we expect this amount to represent roughly half of those total one-time acquisition-related expenses anticipated to be recognized over the balance of 2026. We are continuing to work closely with our third-party valuation specialists, and the final amounts will be recorded upon completion of the valuation process. We remain confident that the acquisition will be accretive in the first year after recognizing these non-cash acquisition-related expenses.

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

Earnings per share was also impacted by higher consolidated taxes, primarily as a result of a conservative tax approach to the acquisition-related expenses for Omars, as well as non-deductible executive compensation. I'd like to now shift to a discussion of our balance sheet. At the end of the first quarter, we had a cash balance of $53 million, up $8.3 million from the end of last year as we continued to convert receivables at a faster pace. Our strong cash position provides increased flexibility to deploy capital in the most efficient and value-creating ways for our investors. I'll turn the call back to Will to discuss our markets and our outlook.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Thank you, Debbie. In the domestic market, we started 2026 with strengthening retail activity and order intake. Due to geopolitical tensions and rising fuel costs towards the end of Q1, we saw a significant reduction in the overall market. At the same time, cost of manufacturing in the U.S. have continued to increase. While we implemented an initial surcharge in April 2025 to offset tariff-related costs, continued cost increases have exceeded the coverage that our surcharge provided. As a result, we have implemented an additional 3% price increase on all manufactured products to better align pricing with our current cost environment and support our continued investment in U.S. manufacturing. Effective August 1, 2026, all manufactured products will begin invoicing at the updated pricing structure. Orders invoiced on or after this date will reflect new pricing regardless of order placement date.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Importantly, more recent data suggests that the underlying demand that was present at the beginning of the year remains intact, as we have seen a rise in chassis sales over the past few weeks. We remain optimistic that retail activity will increase in the second half of the year, which would enable us to continue to accelerate production. With systems in place to closely monitor demand signals, we are well-positioned to respond quickly as market conditions improve. With backlog levels elevated, our international facilities production rates remain consistent as they work to meet steady customer demand. We remain encouraged by the outlook for our export business, driven by growing international sales and a robust pipeline of global military RFQs. These positive trends should provide a strong multiyear growth tailwind.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

The acquisition of Omars and our EUR 8 million expansion at Jige in France, which remains on track to be completed by mid 2027, will both play significant roles in the success of our global initiatives. We continue to build a strong pipeline of military RFQs, continuing long-term growth in our overall business. We began 2026 with more than $150 million in military commitments, with production scheduled to begin in 2027, with the majority of revenue to be recognized in 2028 and 2029. We continue to work diligently with militaries around the globe and anticipate that defense-grade recovery vehicles will be an important contributor to our financial results in the years to come. To serve future demand, we are focused on being production-ready in Ooltewah's new 200,000+ square foot manufacturing facility by late 2027.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Site preparation for the capacity expansion remains on schedule, and we are targeting facility construction to begin by late summer. As we shared last quarter, this investment will streamline heavy duty workflow and enhance our manufacturing efficiencies. The new facility will be key to producing global high-volume defense-grade recovery vehicles, as well as meeting increased demand for our global export markets while maintaining the ability to service our North American customer base. Our strong ongoing cash flow generation position us to fund the majority of this expansion organically through operating cash flow over the next several years. We remain disciplined in how we allocate capital, focusing on five key priorities. Paying a consistent industry-leading quarterly dividend of $0.21 per share. We reduced our credit facility by $10 million, bringing the total debt balance to approximately $21 million at the end of the quarter.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Share repurchases, including $2.2 million in the first quarter and approximately $14 million remaining under our current authorization. Selective M&A opportunities and ongoing investment in capacity expansion, automation, and innovation. We're extremely proud that we paid our dividend for 62 consecutive quarters. In the first quarter, we returned approximately $4.6 million to shareholders between our dividend and share repurchase program. This balanced approach strengthens the company while also returning value directly to shareholders. As Debbie said earlier, our strong cash generation allows us to execute on each one of these priorities without the need for additional financing.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

At this time, we remain optimistic that we are on track to generate between $850 million and $900 million in revenue for full year 2026 and expect earnings per share to be generally in line with full year 2025 results. While demand remains consistent, higher diesel prices and heightened uncertainty stemming from geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are leading customers to push orders. As a result, we expect production volumes and revenue to be increasingly weighted towards the second half of 2026. As external pressures on our industry lessen, we remain confident in our ability to approach $250 million in quarterly revenue by the second half of the year.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

We also continue to expect that gross margins will return to historical levels in the mid 13% range for full year 2026, with product mix shifting towards historical levels of bodies and chassis. We look forward to meeting with investors to speak about these exciting developments throughout 2026 at the Three Part Advisors conferences in New York, Chicago, and Dallas. D.A. Davidson's Industrial Conference, and additional non-deal roadshows to be scheduled. We welcome continued dialogue with our shareholders. In closing, the entire management team and I would like to thank all of our employees, suppliers, customers, and shareholders for their continued support of Miller Industries. We are exceptionally well-positioned to manage near-term uncertainty and capitalize on long-term global growth. Thank you again for joining us. Operator, please open the line for questions.

Operator

Thank you. In a moment, we will open the call to questions. The company requests that all callers limit each turn to two questions from each analyst. If you would like to ask a question, please press one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Your first question comes from Michael Shlisky with D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Yes, hi, good morning. Let's take my questions here.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Good morning, Mike. How are you?

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

I'm great, thank you. The one-time items that you mentioned, Debbie, in your comments, were those on the SG&A line in the quarter? Maybe more broadly, you added SG&A about $3 million quarter-over-quarter because of the Omars deal. First of all, is that the right number that Omars is a run rate or were there one-time items in there? Do you anticipate any synergies over time to reduce some of that SG&A?

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

Morning, Mike. Some of the one-time charges were at the gross margin line and some were at the SG&A line. About $600,000 is on the SG&A line that is related to those acquisition costs. The remaining amount will be pretty much the current run rate with a full quarter of Omars. The additional was the conservative approach that we took from a tax standpoint, as we continue to understand the deductibility under Italian tax law of those acquisition-related expenses. The combination of the three.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Great. The synergies?

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

What was that?

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Opportunities to reduce SG&A in the future.

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

Oh, yes. You know, Omars was a standalone company, so they had a full staff of, you know, engineering, HR, accounting. We feel like the leverage that we can get is the synergies between the three European companies as we go forward to either enhance efficiencies or combine that with the U.S. for reductions of cost.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Great. Thank you for that. I also wanted to ask about, from your comments, Will, on the military opportunities out there. Did anything move closer to the commitment phase during the quarter? In other words, how is the pipeline looking as far as getting closer to being able to book things?

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Yeah, we've seen some movement in positive directions from a few RFQs throughout the quarter. And this time there's nothing specifically to add on any specific RFQ, but we're hoping that when we release Q2 earnings next quarter, that we'll have some additional information that we can provide to you and shareholders more specifically about some of the RFQs that we have commitments for and some that are in the pipeline that we believe will move forwards throughout the quarter.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Great. Hey, if you'll indulge me in one more here.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

No, absolutely.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

I wanna ask about Okay, yeah. They said two questions, but usually there's very few other folks on this call here, asking any questions.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

They are.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

I appreciate the time. Just wanna also ask the underlying reasons for a consumer to use a tow service. Are most of those kind of still intact? You know, the average age of a car remains, you know, all-time records, number of cars on the road, miles driven. Most of those things are still trending in, you know, Miller's favor, you think in 2026?

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

I believe so. I think, what we're seeing today is, individuals as they're looking to, you know, make that purchase of $100,000 to $1 million with, you know, diesel price ranging anywhere from $5 to $9 a gallon here in the U.S., that a little bit of uncertainty, with the current geopolitical tensions and waiting to see how that all levels out before they make that commitment. Obviously, we're still seeing some solid retail activity, but not at the levels where they were prior to six or eight weeks ago. I think that will quickly return once things in the Middle East settle down.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Your view of maybe the average tow fleet truck, is somewhat elevated.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Still in line.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Mm-hmm. Okay.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

It's still in line. If anything, you know, last year, lower retail activity. If anything, the age of the fleet has aged out slightly more, which is a positive trend for us as customers look to replace fleets.

Michael Shlisky
Michael Shlisky
Analyst at D.A. Davidson

Great. That was where my question was going. I appreciate the call, everybody. I'll pass it along.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Absolutely, Mike. Thank you very much.

Deborah Whitmire
Deborah Whitmire
EVP, CFO, and Treasurer at Miller Industries

Thanks, Mike.

Operator

Thank you. We have reached the end of the question and answer session, and I will now turn the call over to William Miller for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

William Miller
William Miller
President and CEO at Miller Industries

Thank you. I'd like to thank you all again for joining us on the call today, and we look forward to speaking with you on our second quarter conference call. If you would like information on how to participate and ask questions on the call, please visit our investor relations website, millerind.com/investors, or email investors.relations@millerind.com. Thank you, and may God bless you, and may God bless our troops.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's conference, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you all for your participation.

Executives
    • Deborah Whitmire
      Deborah Whitmire
      EVP, CFO, and Treasurer
    • William Miller
      William Miller
      President and CEO
Analysts