NASDAQ:TILE Interface Q1 2026 Earnings Report $28.90 -0.24 (-0.81%) As of 01:59 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Interface EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.41Consensus EPS $0.33Beat/MissBeat by +$0.08One Year Ago EPS$0.25Interface Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$331.04 millionExpected Revenue$320.38 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$10.66 millionYoY Revenue Growth+11.30%Interface Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/8/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateFriday, May 8, 2026Conference Call Time8:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsInterface's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Friday, August 7, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, July 31, 2026 at 8:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Interface Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 8, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Interface beat expectations in Q1 with currency-neutral net sales up 7%, adjusted EPS up 64% to $0.41, adjusted EBITDA of $46.8M, and a raised FY26 revenue guide of $1.45–$1.48B with ~38.8%–39.0% adjusted gross margin. Positive Sentiment: Management says the One Interface strategy is driving broad-based momentum — consolidated orders +8%, backlog up 18% YTD, EMEA commercial alignment completed, and robotic automation deployed in Europe and Australia to improve supply chain efficiency. Positive Sentiment: Product innovation is expanding addressable markets — launched noravant (rubber with wood-look) and two new carpet tile collections; carpet tile billings were up double digits and noravant is expected to begin contributing in Q4 2026. Negative Sentiment: Cost risks remain — the Middle East situation is expected to add a low single-digit increase to input costs globally, and management notes ~15–20% of COGS are subject to tariffs with no tariff refund assumed in guidance. Positive Sentiment: Strong balance sheet and capital allocation — $13.5M cash from operations in Q1, $12M of buybacks executed, FY26 capex guided to ~$60M to fund innovation/automation, and sustainability credentials (>$50% recycled/bio-based inputs) support differentiation. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallInterface Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us, and welcome to Interface, Inc. First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Christine Needles, Corporate Communications. Christine, please go ahead. Christine NeedlesCorporate Communications at Interface, Inc.00:00:29Good morning, and welcome to Interface's conference call regarding first quarter 2026 results, hosted by Laurel Hurd, CEO, and Bruce Hausmann, CFO. During today's conference call, any management comments regarding Interface's business, which are not historical information, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the intent, belief, or current expectations of our management team, as well as the assumptions on which such statements are based. Any forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from any such statements, including risks and uncertainties described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC. The company assumes no responsibility to update forward-looking statements. Management's remarks during this call also refer to certain non-GAAP measures. Christine NeedlesCorporate Communications at Interface, Inc.00:01:32Reconciliations of the non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures and explanations for their use are contained in the company's earnings release and Form 8-K furnished with the SEC today. This call is being recorded and broadcasted for Interface. It contains copyrighted material and may not be re-recorded or rebroadcasted without Interface's express permission. Your participation on the call confirms your consent to the company's taping and broadcasting of it. After our prepared remarks, we will open up the call for questions. I will turn the call over to Laurel Hurd, CEO. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:02:09Thank you, Christine, and good morning, everyone. Interface delivered a strong start to 2026, with 7% year-over-year currency neutral growth in net sales and 64% growth in adjusted earnings per diluted share in the quarter, ahead of our expectations. Growth was broad-based across all product categories and key market segments, reflecting consistent execution and continued momentum across the business. Our One Interface strategy is working, and it continues to drive strong results. As we've discussed before, One Interface is a multi-year strategy focused on building strong global functions to support our world-class local selling teams, accelerating growth through enhanced commercial productivity, expanding margins through global supply chain management and simplifying operations, and leading in design, performance, and sustainability. As part of the next phase of our strategy, we recently aligned our EMEA commercial organization under a single leader. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:03:13This will drive greater consistency across Europe and build on the best thinking and results we've seen with our One Interface selling teams in the U.S. We also went live with our robotic solutions in Europe and Australia, which will further strengthen our manufacturing and supply chain operations. These automation investments improve efficiency, reduce waste, and enhance customer service levels while positioning us for growth. From a product standpoint, we continue to invest in design and innovation that expands our reach across segments and price points. In late February, we launched noravant, a groundbreaking rubber flooring innovation that opens new design possibilities in the resilient category. Noravant complements our existing nora rubber portfolio and represents an incremental growth opportunity. We expect it to meaningfully expand our addressable market over time, particularly in healthcare, where our initial product, noravant timber, is an excellent solution for patient rooms. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:04:16Customer response has been very positive, and we expect it to begin contributing to growth in the fourth quarter of 2026 and build over time. During the first quarter, we also introduced two new carpet tile collections, which are both aimed at driving incremental growth in the middle of the market. Crafted Connections launched globally and brings sophisticated texture and pattern to more accessible price points. Open Forms builds on our successful Open Air platform, extending the color palette to warmer tones that are in demand from our customers. Our carpet tile billings were up double digits in the quarter, reflecting strong progress in the category. In nora, we expanded norament kivo, enhancing its color range to include both vibrant accents and classic tones. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:05:05K through 12 education continues to be one of our fastest-growing segments for nora, this expanded color range to fit the budgets of our education customers will continue to maximize our potential. We remain confident in our ability to drive both the premium end of the market with design leadership and expand our addressable market with new offerings at more accessible price points, and in our ability to expand margins while gaining market share and giving our customers what they're looking for. We also look forward to Clerkenwell Design Week in May and NeoCon in June, where we will showcase noravant along with our latest global carpet tile and LVT collections and other new products. These events provide excellent opportunities to connect with our customers and industry partners and to demonstrate our design, performance, and sustainability leadership. Turning to sustainability. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:05:59Sustainability remains core to who we are at Interface. In conjunction with Earth Day, we launched Good Design Never Ends, a new campaign that makes circularity actionable for our customers. By specifying our products, customers can make informed choices that support a circular model. We design our flooring for high performance and easy maintenance to extend its useful life. We also use innovative low carbon inputs. Globally, more than 50% of the materials in our products are recycled or bio-based, which is the highest in commercial flooring. This lowers the carbon footprint from the start and means less virgin raw material inputs over time. Circularity is critical to carbon reduction, and it's an important pathway to achieve our science-based targets by 2030 and our carbon negative ambition by 2040. Let me turn to our first quarter results. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:06:57We delivered 7% year-over-year currency neutral net sales growth in the first quarter, ahead of our expectations. In the Americas, currency neutral net sales increased 8% year-over-year, driven by our One Interface combined selling teams and strength across our key market segments. In EAAA, currency neutral net sales increased 4% in the first quarter, despite a continued challenging macro environment. We are encouraged by the progress in the region, including improved commercial alignment and significant profitability improvement. Turning to our market segments, our diversification strategy continues to drive growth and strengthen the business. Corporate office had a strong start to 2026, where we continue to take share. Global billings were up 16% with broad-based growth globally. We're continuing to see return to office and renovation activity and flight to quality in cClass A space, where our brand, design leadership, and product portfolio are well-positioned. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:08:01In addition, our expanded product offering across a broader range of price points is helping us capture new opportunities and further strengthen our market position. In healthcare, global billings were up 11%, driven by our One Interface combined selling teams and favorable long-term demand trends. Our broad differentiated product portfolio continues to position us well to capture an increasing share of market opportunities, as demonstrated by our nora rubber billings, which were up 15%. We also believe the launch of noravant will meaningfully expand our opportunity in healthcare over time, where design, durability, and performance requirements align well with the product's value proposition. Education billings were up 1% in the first quarter. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:08:50We view this more modest growth rate as a matter of timing as we remain well-positioned across both K-12 and higher education going into the education buying season, supported by our design leadership and low carbon, high-performing products. This market segment continues to benefit from supportive macro drivers, including renovation work, modernization initiatives, and new build opportunities in some geographies. Our broad range of price points helps Interface win projects across all budgets. Turning to orders. Consolidated currency neutral orders increased 8% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2026. Orders in the Americas grew 6%, while EAAA increased 11%, driven by strength across all regions. Backlog was strong at the end of the quarter, up 18% year-to-date, reinforcing our confidence that our strategy is working and positioning us well for the quarters ahead. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:09:52Before I turn the call over to Bruce, I want to briefly address the situation in the Middle East. We are closely monitoring developments and assessing the potential impacts on our people and our business. The safety and well-being of our employees and their families remain our top priority, and we continue to support them as needed. The Middle East represents approximately 1% of our net sales. At this time, we expect these events to drive a low single-digit increase in input costs across our global business. Importantly, we have plans in place to offset this impact through incremental pricing and productivity actions, and this is reflected in our guidance. This remains a dynamic environment, and we will continue to monitor the situation and respond as needed to manage costs, support growth, and serve our customers. With that, I'll turn it over to Bruce. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:10:45Well, thank you, Laurel, and good morning, everyone. All comparisons provided are year-over-year versus the first quarter of 2025, unless otherwise noted. As a reminder, fiscal year 2026 is a 53-week year for Interface, with the extra week occurring in the first quarter of 2026. First quarter net sales were $331 million, up 11.3% as reported and 6.8% on a currency neutral basis. First quarter currency neutral net sales were up 8.4% in the Americas and up 4.3% in EAAA. First quarter adjusted gross profit margin was 38.3%, up 55 basis points on a favorable pricing and product mix, plus manufacturing efficiencies. First quarter adjusted SG&A expenses were $94 million compared to $86.8 million. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:11:45As a percentage of net sales, first quarter adjusted SG&A expenses improved 78 basis points to 28.4%, reflecting our continued focus on leveraging SG&A and driving SG&A-related efficiencies. First quarter adjusted operating income was $32.7 million, up 28.6% compared to $25.5 million. First quarter adjusted net income was $23.9 million, compared to $14.6 million. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $46.8 million, compared to $37 million. First quarter adjusted EPS was $0.41, up 64%, compared to $0.25. With these results in mind, I'll turn to capital allocation. As previously discussed, our capital allocation strategy is balanced and disciplined. First, we prioritize investing in the business in areas like innovation and productivity to drive growth, margin expansion, and operational efficiencies. Second, we focus on managing leverage through a disciplined use of debt. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:13:00We continue to evaluate potential M&A opportunities that align with our strategy and that can accelerate growth and margins. Lastly, and importantly, we remain committed to returning excess cash to shareholders through a combination of dividends and disciplined share repurchases. To recap our progress against these objectives in the first quarter, we generated $13.5 million of cash from operating activities. Capital expenditures were $10.3 million as we continued to invest in the business, and we repurchased $12 million of Interface common stock. Turning to our outlook, we entered the second quarter with a healthy backlog and order momentum amidst a dynamic macro environment. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:13:48With that backdrop in mind, we are raising our full year guidance and anticipate the following: for the second quarter of fiscal 2026, net sales of $385 million-$395 million, adjusted gross profit margin of approximately 39.9% of net sales. Adjusted SG&A expenses of approximately $100 million. Adjusted interest and other expenses of approximately $4 million. An adjusted effective income tax rate of approximately 28%, and fully diluted weighted average share count of approximately 59 million shares. For the full fiscal year of 2026, net sales of $1.45 billion-$1.48 billion. Adjusted gross profit margin of approximately 38.8%-39% of net sales. Adjusted SG&A expenses of approximately 26.2%-26.4% of net sales. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:14:51Adjusted interest and other expenses of approximately $14 million-$16 million. An adjusted effective income tax rate of approximately 26%, capital expenditures of approximately $60 million. With that, I'll turn the call back to Laurel for concluding remarks. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:15:09Thank you, Bruce Hausmann. Interface delivered a strong start to 2026, and we are encouraged by the continued momentum as we move through the year. While the external environment remains dynamic, we are well-positioned with a strong balance sheet, a diversified portfolio, and a global team that is more connected than ever. I'd like to thank the entire Interface team for their disciplined execution, commitment, and passion for serving our customers each and every day. With that, I'll open it up to questions. Operator? Operator00:15:43We will now begin the question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. If you're muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Brian Biros with TRG. Brian, your line is open. Please go ahead. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:16:13Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions today. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:16:16Hey, Brian. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:16:18Morning. I want to talk about the One Interface strategy again here a bit more. You know, it's not new anymore, but it's probably still early days across some of the initiatives there. I mean, it feels like it's really paying off already, and you had some proof in that last year, Q1 already. You know, some of the growth numbers you just cited for office, healthcare, it's obviously well above market growth. I mean, maybe just remind us what is left to implement and kind of what is still not running at the full potential yet? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:16:47Thanks, Brian. It is You know, I'm really proud of the team's execution on the One Interface strategy, and we are seeing that really pay dividends. If I think about the U.S. teams, they were the first to start this initiative, and it's really still early days. These selling organization across the U.S., and they've just done an incredible job, selling as one team market by market, but we're opening up new opportunities every day. The more that these teams work together across the nora portfolio and the Interface portfolio, we're finding more places that nora can really help serve our customers, and our Interface customers are often opening the door for us there. It feels like early days. We're learning from each other, learning from our customers where we continue to amplify that growth. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:17:32As you said, the nora growth, up 15% in the quarter is really incredible. As we also said, we've just announced our European business will be under one leader, and, you know, that's really different across country by country. It's really different where we're in different phases of our penetration across the product portfolio. Germany, for example, is really advanced. That's nora's home market, and we have strong business in both Interface and nora there. Like U.K., there's a ton of opportunity. Feel like we're really getting started in Europe and across the globe, taking some of the key learnings. It'll play out a little bit differently as we go, but there's just, you know, a ton of meaningful opportunities still in the U.S., as we move across the globe. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:18:23Brian, on the growth, in addition to the growth points that Laurel made, we continue to advance on the cost efficiency side, which is fantastic to see. You know, our supply chain organization now is working globally as one organization and really delivering results. We continue to invest in our supply chain organization and in the machinery that's driving efficiencies around manufacturing. You know, I think that that's really There's sort of three key things I think about for this quarter. Strong Q1 results, solid momentum going into Q2, and it's apparent on our P&L that our strategy is working, and we continue to outperform the industry. I think that has a lot to do with the One Interface strategy. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:19:12No, good to hear. carpet tile, I think you guys quoted, was up double digits for the quarter, and that's pretty surprising and good to hear. Can you put some more context behind that? I mean, is that a large order? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:19:24Yeah. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:19:24Is that timing? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:19:25Yeah. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:19:25You know, just how to think about that rate for the rest of the year would be interesting. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:19:29Yeah. carpet tile being up double-digit is certainly exciting to see. Some of that I think goes hand in hand, we said corporate office up 16% in the quarter. We sell carpet tile in a lot of places, but certainly corporate office is a key part of that. I think there are a couple of reasons for that. One is, you know, we've done a lot of work across carpet tile to expand our addressable market through more accessible price points. We've done that in a really disciplined way to make sure that we're happy with the margin structure, that it's incremental business to us, and it's really been playing out well. The combination of our expanded product offering and accessible price points, really maintaining that design leadership with high style, high design products at the premium end. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:20:15We look at the trends in corporate and that really feels good. People are going back to work. There's a flight to quality, a lot of renovation activity, and that plays really well for Interface. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:20:30The last one from me, maybe just on the CapEx, I think you stepped up a little bit for the year. Can you just talk about kind of what drove that decision to accelerate some of that spend and kind of what that effort is going towards? Thank you. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:20:41Yeah. Great question, Brian. You know, this ties right into our capital allocation strategy, where our number one priority is investing in the business, and we're seeing nice returns, as you can see on our P&L and on our balance sheet, around the investments that we've made. I don't know if you look at our ROIC. Our ROIC was 19% year, last 12 months. We just wanna continue investing around product innovation and around efficiency initiatives. That incremental five, that we compared to last guide, is going into those two areas. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:21:21Yeah. Thank you. Pass along. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:21:23Thanks, Brian. Operator00:21:25Your next question comes from the line of Alex Paris with Barrington Research. Alex, your line is open. Please go ahead. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:21:34Hi, guys. congrats on the beat and raise. very impressive first quarter with growth across all product categories and key markets. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:21:44Thank you. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:21:44Thank you. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:21:47Thank you. Given this is a 53-week year with the extra week coming here in the first quarter, I wonder if you can quantify that extra week's impact on net sales and earnings, whether that's adjusted EBITDA or earnings per share, or however you want to characterize it. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:22:07Yeah. Great question. You know, the extra week was baked into our guide, and there's noise in our year-over-year comps in Q1. It is really difficult to quantify the exact impact of the extra week with any sort of certainty. I think the important thing, Alex, is that the trends are looking good. The underlying growth rate of the business is around 3%-5%. As you pointed out, we have really broad-based growth geographically and from a market segmentation standpoint. You know, lastly, I'll just add, with the orders up 8% year-over-year, backlog up 18%, it gives us confidence in delivering to our guide, which again is at 3%-5% growth for the rest of the year. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:22:53Awesome. Thanks. You did though on the last conference call say the net impact for the full year of the 53 weeks is +$10 million-$15 million, and that takes into account some dates of the holidays in this coming holiday season. I assume there's a put and a take in that $10 million-$15 million estimate. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:23:13Yeah. Yeah, really good memory. If you think about Q4-You know, not to get too complicated and in the weeds, but this year in Q4, we'll have two holiday weeks versus last year we only had one holiday week. Again, this is baked into our guide that, you know, there might be a little bit of drag on the, on the growth rate in Q4, but again, that's all baked into our outlook. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:23:40Good. Helpful. Thank you. You know, you said global billings were up 16% in corporate office. That's obviously taking market share, and that's an acceleration from the fourth quarter when it was flat. Healthcare, similar growth rate to the fourth quarter, up 11%. You mentioned education. I'm sorry, I might have missed it, but I know it's an off-season quarter so to speak. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:24:05Right. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:24:05For education. What was the growth in billings in Q1 on education? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:24:12Yep. education was up 1% in Q1. as you said, it's really, we're heading into education season right now. Q2 and early Q3 are when the bulk of our billings come for education, and we feel really confident in our continued momentum there. a little bit of timing in Q1, but no change to the long-term outlook. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:24:34Great. Any other commentary on other segments? I know that it drops off pretty quickly from there, but what's going on in retail, for example? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:24:47Yeah, it does drop off. I mean, our, you know, our three biggest segments, as you said, are corporate, education, health. We had some nice growth in retail, a little bit of growth in retail in the quarter. Our government business was up a little bit. You know, puts and takes here and there, but the big ones we've covered. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:25:07Great. I think we talked about this last quarter, but, and we anticipated a significantly lower tax rate year-over-year. Was that related to stock-based compensation, Bruce? Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:25:25Well, that was in Q1 that we had that. Do you mind? Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:25:28Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:25:28That's why we, our tax rate was low in Q1, is that our vesting happens for our employees in Q1. Again, it's very technical, but it's a discrete item. You take the deduction in the quarter that the vesting happens. However, I'm sure you noticed in our guide that our full year estimate is around 26%. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:25:54Okay, great. Last question, I think, for me, I mean, I have two more. Backlog up 18%. Can you offer some color there, either by Americas versus EAAA or by market segment? What's driving that? I realize it's broad-based, but there should, there's likely certain areas that stand out in terms of that up +18%. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:26:22I was gonna say what you said, which is honestly, it's really broad-based. Like, we look across market segment, product category, and region, and we're seeing really good backlog support. It's pretty diverse and really healthy, up 18%. Nothing really to call out specifically there. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:26:44Okay. Then this is truly my last question. It is about tariffs. What did you pay in tariffs in 2025? For example, what did you pay in Q1 2026, because these tariffs didn't come into play until Q2 2025? Then related, is there a tariff refund possibility for Interface? Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:08Yeah. Great question. You know, the tariff costs are all blended in our COGS. I think you might remember, what we talked about previously, is about 15%-20% of our COGS are subject to tariffs, and of course those rates are bouncing around a lot. There's nothing assumed in our guide around a tariff refund. It's a really dynamic situation, and we'll keep you posted as that area evolves. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:42Interface was the one paying the tax, right? Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:45Oh, yeah. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:45It wasn't some import agent paying the tax. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:47But- Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:48Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:49Yeah. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:51If it's out there, you could be eligible for it. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:54Yeah. I mean, that, I'm telling you what you already know. That's how tariffs work, is that the importer of record pays those tariffs. Yes. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:28:02Yeah. Okay, good. I'll wait and see how that unfolds. Thank you very much. Again, congrats on the quarter. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:28:09Thanks, Alex. Operator00:28:12Your next question comes from the line of David MacGregor with Longbow Research. David, your line is open. Please go ahead. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:28:22Yes. Good morning, everyone, and congratulations on the quarter. Strong quarter. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:28:26Thanks, David. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:28:27Excellent EBITDA. Yeah, really strong. I guess I wanted a few questions here, but maybe just start by talking about cadence within the quarter. I mean, the office furniture guys are talking about having seen a very slow January and February, then March kind of picked up, and yet underlying design and quote activity remained consistent throughout that period, which really implied people were kinda like just maybe tapping the brakes on purchase orders until the whole sort of dynamics from the Middle East kind of settled out a little bit at least. Did you see a similar pattern like that in your business? Maybe just comment around what you saw in terms of patterns timing-wise. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:29:06Yeah. You know, we actually, we've been watching it like a hawk obviously, like everybody, and tracking it really closely. We haven't seen any real variation like you're talking about. It's been really pretty steady, again, steady and broad-based. We've been watching it to see any tap of the brakes or pausing out there. We haven't seen any significant delays or anything like that that would indicate that. April looks good too, it sort of feels like really just steady growth. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:29:38Okay. On the spec writing front, fairly consistent level of activity. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:29:43Yeah, really good activity. There's a lot. As we talked a little bit about corporate office, there's a lot of activity. You know, the return to work, we're definitely feeling continued strength in healthcare, and then we're excited for the education season. It honestly, we're watching it like crazy because it's a dynamic environment, but it feels really good out there. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:30:05Right. Within corporate office, how much of that is sort of tenant improvement with people renewing leases versus people just doing a refresh on the back to the office kind of dynamic? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:30:18You know, it's probably mixed. We would say, as you know, about 80% of our business is renovation work, and that's a combination of. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:30:25Right. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:30:25Of what you talked about versus new build. It's mostly that, but I think a lot of it is, as people are encouraging folks to come back to work, they're refreshing their spaces, and everybody's trying to get in Class A space. There's just a ton of activity that suits us really well David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:30:42Right. That back to the office, dynamic, what inning do you think we're in there? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:30:49You know, I would say it's accelerating. You know, it sort of started slow and some key companies mandating it. It's definitely accelerating. We're seeing more and more, you know, just as you are, more and more announcements of return to work, and some of those put a timeframe out, like by August or by Q3 or that sort of thing, giving their employees some notice. Man, it's. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:14Right. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:15It's accelerating everywhere really. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:31:17More, more, more days being tacked on. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:19Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:31:20So- Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:20Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:31:20You know, if it was two days before, now it's four or five. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:23Which means they need more space. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:25Right. A lot of refresh. Okay, interesting dynamics there. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:29Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:29I guess if you could talk about the you mentioned mix as a strength in the organic growth. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:35Price mix and manufacturing efficiencies. Can you just talk about carpet tile versus LVT versus nora? I know there's a lot of new product that's rolling out in nora and maybe in carpet tile as well. Just how that mix dynamic played out and the extent to which you maybe think the line extensions drove that. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:53You know, we think about mix a lot and, you know, if I start at the highest level, we look at country mix and our, you know, our U.S. business is our most profitable business. What we do to grow the U.S. business is great and why we've been so focused on it. We go to product categories and as you know, our nora business, especially in the U.S., all of our product categories are good margins, but nora's especially strong, and another reason why we've been really focused on accelerating that growth here in the U.S. That certainly helps us. Carpet tile's been really strong for us. A lot of the work that the organizations, the supply chain organization's been doing on manufacturing efficiencies have helped certainly. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:32:42You know, improving our volumes in our facilities is fantastic. The initiatives that we have on the approachable price points, so kind of line extensions as you would say in carpet tile, has been really exciting for our growth, but also for our profitability. We've been really disciplined. The teams both across supply chain and design have done a really beautiful job designing products that are right for our customers, that we feel great about the margins, and certainly the volume helps with our fixed overhead leverage. It's a win-win in that environment. We've been really disciplined tracking it like crazy, but it's been a nice way for us to continue to expand our growth and margins. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:33:23Right. Yeah. Tremendous success there. I wanted to ask you about the sustainability dynamic of your value proposition. Interface has always been sort of perceived as the sustainability leader. This goes all the way back to Ray Anderson, I guess. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:33:38Ray Anderson, yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:33:40Yeah. I'm just wondering, in this kind of an environment where, you know, energy prices are spiking, you know, pretty much everything in a piece of carpet comes out of a barrel of oil at some point or another, are you seeing some kind of competitive advantage off of that? David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:33:57more, a greater realization? I'm not asking the question.very crisply here, but. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:01No, I get you. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:01You know what I'm saying is. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:02Yeah. Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:03Are you getting an advantage out of this? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:05Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:05Competitors are still, you know, producing from virgin elements and you've got a recycled backing. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:11Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:11A recycled yarn product. I mean, all of this should presumably give you some kind of advantage. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:16Yes. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:16I'm just wondering the extent to which you may be realizing that. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:19Yeah. It's a really good question, and, you know, over 50% of our inputs are recycled or bio-based materials, so that really helps us on the cost side, right? It's not that it does, it's not tied to oil, but it's certainly mitigated because it's recycled content, so it helps on the cost side. Certainly from a value perspective, our customers love buying our products because of our low carbon footprint, and they help their carbon goals, is the built environment is such a big portion of most companies' carbon impact. It helps us on the demand side in selling our product to customers who care about sustainability, and then on the cost side as well. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:35:01Yeah. I would just add on to that, it really amplifies the value proposition of who we are and highlights the purpose and value behind our brand. You know. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:35:14Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:35:15It's interesting, all this, you know We hope that all this Middle East conflict stuff, you know, gets resolved soon, but the silver lining is that it really highlights some of the value of the company. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:35:27Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:35:27So. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:35:31I wanted to ask you about manufacturing efficiencies, because this is sort of the gift that keeps on giving under One Interface, I guess. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:35:37All the new products that are rolling out and everything that you're doing. How, what, from a magnitude standpoint, I'm trying to get a sense of how this contributes going forward. Do we see manufacturing efficiencies with the investments in automation and everything that you're doing, contributing in a larger manner to the gross margin progression? Or do you feel like the biggest pieces of this have been realized, it'll continue to contribute, but maybe in a diminishing marginal pattern? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:36:06You know, I would say the team's doing an incredible job, and the power of the team working together across the globe is they find new ideas every day. When we think we've got, you know, our robotic solutions that we put in play as an example, we've now just taken that live in our European and our Australia operations, so that's sort of yet to pay off. There are more and more efficiencies that we're finding when, whether it relates to robotics for packaging and for cutting. I, you know, we've, the team's made so much progress there, which I'm so proud of, but I think there's a lot more room to go. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:36:44Way to go. Interesting. I guess I have to ask about the balance sheet when you got 0.6 leverage. I mean, just a tremendous amount of progress made here over the past few years. Obviously provides you with a lot more optionality. Bruce, you walked through sort of the priorities of capital allocation, but it seems like you've got the latitude at this point to do a little bit of everything or a lot of everything, as the case may be. How do we think about sort of the acquisition opportunity here right now? David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:37:13Notwithstanding the need to reinvest in the business and the desire to, you know, purchase stock, but isolating M&A and just talking about how you're thinking about that opportunity, if you've got a funnel, how that funnel may be developing, where you see white space, where you see the need to maybe supplement the existing model. Just talk about that strategically, if you would. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:37:35Yeah. I'll talk about it maybe at a, at a higher level, which is, we say sort of, you heard us say this before, M&A is not required to achieve our goals, but as you said, our balance sheet's in great shape, and we feel good about our strategy and execution, and have clarity around, where we think we can continue to grow and what opportunities that means for us. You know, I'll tell you, we'll be rigorous and disciplined, and it's got to align with our strategy, which I think we're clear about, and then accelerate our growth and our margins. We've, we're working in that space and excited about what it may mean for us for the future, but also super heads down on our current execution of our organic plan. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:38:20Great. Do you perceive within kind of the existing lines where you've got the carpet tile and the LVT and the nora, could you add a fourth category, or would you be looking to kind of supplement what you've got? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:38:33You know, we could. I think we put it through the lens of our customer first and really see what is it that they need, how can we continue to help serve them. As I think about our noravant expansion, that really came through the lens of the customer and looking at our hospital and healthcare systems, and seeing that they were looking for a product that had the benefits of rubber, but the look of a wood grain, a warmer look for their patient rooms. The team did, you know, incredible work to launch that breakthrough new product. That's an example of how we're thinking about it, whether it's an innovation we develop ourselves or an inorganic opportunity. It's really, how can we continue to help our customers. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:39:14Got it. Congratulations on all the progress. Thank you very much. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:39:17Thanks so much. Operator00:39:20Your next question comes from the line of Reuben Garner with The Benchmark Company. Reuben, your line is open. Please go ahead. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:39:29Hi. Good morning, everyone. This is John McGlade on for Reuben Garner. Just congratulations on the impressive quarter. Great way to end the week. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:39:36Thanks, John. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:39:42I know it's still early days, but I was hoping maybe you could dive into how the noravant reception has gone from the customers. Maybe any differences you're seeing in customers that are familiar with your existing product and then, you know, have that familiarity with the technical specs and requirements that they need for their facilities. Does that have any impact on maybe what the that selling cycle looks like early days? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:40:13Yeah, it's a great question. I'd start by saying it's, you know, it's off to a really great start. Our sellers got the products in their hands, end of February, early March, they're showing it to their customers really for the first time. The sample requests are really high, as you can imagine, as everyone's trying to really get an understanding for what this product can do. It's building momentum as we expected. As you're suggesting, you know, our current healthcare customers are the closest probably. We sell nora in a lot of places, obviously, but our healthcare customers, I think are the closest in to understand the need. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:40:52They understand the technical strength and properties of the current nora offering and how well it does in, you know, infectious areas and maintenance control and that sort of thing. I think they're the closest in on really understanding what this product category can do. There's a lot of interest in other categories as well, in other end markets as well, but I think we'll see the quickest uptake in healthcare, where they're most familiar with the technical requirements, as you suggest. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:41:27Okay, that's great. I know, you mentioned earlier, and you just kind of mentioned it again that you're finding other places that nora can kind of serve the market. In general, are those outside of healthcare and education or is that just kind of different subsegments within those end markets? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:41:48I would say, education has always been Our team in Germany does an incredible job in education and has for years, I would say that's an end market in the U.S. as our U.S. selling team has really amplified their focus on Nora that we've really unlocked in education. That's one of the strongest growth drivers is education. When we look beyond that, other areas like labs are continuing to grow. Industry, transportation continues to be a strong end market, and there's a couple different ways to think about that. One is on, you know, on trains and subways and that sort of thing, which those are growing around the world, and Nora's a great solution there. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:42:32Also in airports, Nora's been a really strong product category for airports, and we're seeing that grow as well. Healthcare and education are the biggest. Education is growing, you know, really, really well, especially in the U.S., we're really discovering additional opportunities for it as I mentioned. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:42:58Okay. That's fantastic to hear. I guess also, you're still kind of monitoring the situation. Obviously gross margin came in very strong for the quarter, and just kind of given all the macro changes that have happened since the last call, I know there was a comment earlier that, you know, there are some offsets that are available, you know, as costs change. Can you kind of run us through what levers you have available to pull? Maybe any lags between that? Is it as simple as just a surcharge or a price increase, or is there, you know, some additional dynamics there with how customers are able to take these orders and take these cost pass-throughs? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:43:47We're Yeah, it's as you said, it's dynamic, and we're navigating through it. We have deployed some modest pricing across the globe, it's not as a surcharge. We try to do it the best we can with new product launches and other ways that are easier for our customers to absorb. I think pricing and then additional productivity will help us to offset it. The other thing that we have in our toolkit that we it's newer for us, I guess, is this focus on approachable price point products. In the past, if a customer You know, our customers, if they're under cost pressure, we may not have had a solution for them, or we might have had to take a really aggressive price on a more premium product, which would impact our margins. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:44:36Now our sellers have a great option to offer something at a more approachable price points when those costs are tough for our customers. I think we've got a really good way to augment the situation by taking a little bit of price, making sure that we've got good offerings for our customers at all price points, and then continuing to push the productivity lever. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:44:58Okay. That's a great strategy there. I appreciate you taking the questions, and congratulations on the quarter and look forward to talking to you soon. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:45:08Great. Thanks so much. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:45:08Thanks, John. Operator00:45:11There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back to Laurel Hurd, President and Chief Executive Officer, for closing remarks. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:45:20Great. Well, I just wanna say again, thanks to the entire Interface team for all the great work you do every day. Proud of this team, and thank you for everything you do to serve our customers. Thanks for everyone's time today listening to the call. Operator00:45:34This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBruce HausmannCFOChristine NeedlesCorporate CommunicationsLaurel HurdCEOAnalystsAlex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington ResearchBrian BirosAnalyst at TRGDavid MacGregorPresident at Longbow ResearchJohn McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark CompanyPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Interface Earnings HeadlinesDavid Foshee Sells 44,393 Shares of Interface (NASDAQ:TILE) StockMay 22 at 5:01 AM | americanbankingnews.comInterface Shareholders Back Board, Pay and Auditor SlateMay 20 at 3:50 PM | tipranks.comHey, it's Jon Najarian. The SpaceX IPO is right around the corner. But I discovered Elon may have something BIGGER planned. Check this out before June 9th...After being invited to the SpaceX launch headquarters in Cape Canaveral from one of Elon's top lobbyists… Hall of Fame Trader Jon Najarian now says EVERYONE is missing an even bigger story about the SpaceX IPO… That it's just the start of an Elon Musk $44 trillion "Superconvergence…" An event that could kick off as soon as June 12th.May 22 at 1:00 AM | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)Benchmark initiates coverage of Interface (TILE) with buy recommendationMay 20 at 9:44 AM | msn.comInterface Declares Regular Quarterly DividendMay 19 at 4:05 PM | businesswire.comAssessing Interface (TILE) Valuation After Strong Q1 Results And Raised 2026 Revenue GuidanceMay 18, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Interface Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Interface? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Interface and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About InterfaceInterface (NASDAQ:TILE) (NASDAQ: TILE) is a global manufacturer of modular flooring and resilient commercial flooring solutions. The company specializes in carpet tiles, luxury vinyl tile (LVT) and other environmentally responsible hard-surface products designed for use in corporate, education, healthcare, hospitality and retail environments. Interface’s portfolio also includes broadloom carpet, rubber flooring and acoustic underlays, all engineered to meet performance, design and sustainability requirements in modern interior spaces. Founded in 1973 by Ray C. Anderson, Interface introduced the carpet tile concept to simplify installation and reduce waste in office fit-outs. Over the years, the company expanded into luxury vinyl tile and other hard-surface categories, while maintaining a strong emphasis on product innovation and environmental stewardship. Interface operates dedicated research and development centers that focus on sustainable materials, circular design principles and low-emission manufacturing processes. Interface maintains a global footprint, with manufacturing facilities, sales offices and distribution centers across North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and Latin America. This international network enables the company to serve diverse geographies and comply with local building standards, green-building certification programs and customer preferences. Interface works collaboratively with architects, interior designers and facility managers to deliver integrated flooring systems tailored to specific project needs. Under the leadership of CEO Patrick Burns, Interface continues to advance its Mission Zero pledge, aiming to eliminate any negative environmental impact by 2040. The company remains committed to driving sustainable innovation, forging strategic partnerships and enhancing operational efficiency as it positions itself as a leader in the flooring industry’s transition to a circular economy.View Interface 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 Operator00:00:00Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us, and welcome to Interface, Inc. First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Christine Needles, Corporate Communications. Christine, please go ahead. Christine NeedlesCorporate Communications at Interface, Inc.00:00:29Good morning, and welcome to Interface's conference call regarding first quarter 2026 results, hosted by Laurel Hurd, CEO, and Bruce Hausmann, CFO. During today's conference call, any management comments regarding Interface's business, which are not historical information, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the intent, belief, or current expectations of our management team, as well as the assumptions on which such statements are based. Any forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from any such statements, including risks and uncertainties described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC. The company assumes no responsibility to update forward-looking statements. Management's remarks during this call also refer to certain non-GAAP measures. Christine NeedlesCorporate Communications at Interface, Inc.00:01:32Reconciliations of the non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures and explanations for their use are contained in the company's earnings release and Form 8-K furnished with the SEC today. This call is being recorded and broadcasted for Interface. It contains copyrighted material and may not be re-recorded or rebroadcasted without Interface's express permission. Your participation on the call confirms your consent to the company's taping and broadcasting of it. After our prepared remarks, we will open up the call for questions. I will turn the call over to Laurel Hurd, CEO. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:02:09Thank you, Christine, and good morning, everyone. Interface delivered a strong start to 2026, with 7% year-over-year currency neutral growth in net sales and 64% growth in adjusted earnings per diluted share in the quarter, ahead of our expectations. Growth was broad-based across all product categories and key market segments, reflecting consistent execution and continued momentum across the business. Our One Interface strategy is working, and it continues to drive strong results. As we've discussed before, One Interface is a multi-year strategy focused on building strong global functions to support our world-class local selling teams, accelerating growth through enhanced commercial productivity, expanding margins through global supply chain management and simplifying operations, and leading in design, performance, and sustainability. As part of the next phase of our strategy, we recently aligned our EMEA commercial organization under a single leader. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:03:13This will drive greater consistency across Europe and build on the best thinking and results we've seen with our One Interface selling teams in the U.S. We also went live with our robotic solutions in Europe and Australia, which will further strengthen our manufacturing and supply chain operations. These automation investments improve efficiency, reduce waste, and enhance customer service levels while positioning us for growth. From a product standpoint, we continue to invest in design and innovation that expands our reach across segments and price points. In late February, we launched noravant, a groundbreaking rubber flooring innovation that opens new design possibilities in the resilient category. Noravant complements our existing nora rubber portfolio and represents an incremental growth opportunity. We expect it to meaningfully expand our addressable market over time, particularly in healthcare, where our initial product, noravant timber, is an excellent solution for patient rooms. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:04:16Customer response has been very positive, and we expect it to begin contributing to growth in the fourth quarter of 2026 and build over time. During the first quarter, we also introduced two new carpet tile collections, which are both aimed at driving incremental growth in the middle of the market. Crafted Connections launched globally and brings sophisticated texture and pattern to more accessible price points. Open Forms builds on our successful Open Air platform, extending the color palette to warmer tones that are in demand from our customers. Our carpet tile billings were up double digits in the quarter, reflecting strong progress in the category. In nora, we expanded norament kivo, enhancing its color range to include both vibrant accents and classic tones. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:05:05K through 12 education continues to be one of our fastest-growing segments for nora, this expanded color range to fit the budgets of our education customers will continue to maximize our potential. We remain confident in our ability to drive both the premium end of the market with design leadership and expand our addressable market with new offerings at more accessible price points, and in our ability to expand margins while gaining market share and giving our customers what they're looking for. We also look forward to Clerkenwell Design Week in May and NeoCon in June, where we will showcase noravant along with our latest global carpet tile and LVT collections and other new products. These events provide excellent opportunities to connect with our customers and industry partners and to demonstrate our design, performance, and sustainability leadership. Turning to sustainability. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:05:59Sustainability remains core to who we are at Interface. In conjunction with Earth Day, we launched Good Design Never Ends, a new campaign that makes circularity actionable for our customers. By specifying our products, customers can make informed choices that support a circular model. We design our flooring for high performance and easy maintenance to extend its useful life. We also use innovative low carbon inputs. Globally, more than 50% of the materials in our products are recycled or bio-based, which is the highest in commercial flooring. This lowers the carbon footprint from the start and means less virgin raw material inputs over time. Circularity is critical to carbon reduction, and it's an important pathway to achieve our science-based targets by 2030 and our carbon negative ambition by 2040. Let me turn to our first quarter results. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:06:57We delivered 7% year-over-year currency neutral net sales growth in the first quarter, ahead of our expectations. In the Americas, currency neutral net sales increased 8% year-over-year, driven by our One Interface combined selling teams and strength across our key market segments. In EAAA, currency neutral net sales increased 4% in the first quarter, despite a continued challenging macro environment. We are encouraged by the progress in the region, including improved commercial alignment and significant profitability improvement. Turning to our market segments, our diversification strategy continues to drive growth and strengthen the business. Corporate office had a strong start to 2026, where we continue to take share. Global billings were up 16% with broad-based growth globally. We're continuing to see return to office and renovation activity and flight to quality in cClass A space, where our brand, design leadership, and product portfolio are well-positioned. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:08:01In addition, our expanded product offering across a broader range of price points is helping us capture new opportunities and further strengthen our market position. In healthcare, global billings were up 11%, driven by our One Interface combined selling teams and favorable long-term demand trends. Our broad differentiated product portfolio continues to position us well to capture an increasing share of market opportunities, as demonstrated by our nora rubber billings, which were up 15%. We also believe the launch of noravant will meaningfully expand our opportunity in healthcare over time, where design, durability, and performance requirements align well with the product's value proposition. Education billings were up 1% in the first quarter. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:08:50We view this more modest growth rate as a matter of timing as we remain well-positioned across both K-12 and higher education going into the education buying season, supported by our design leadership and low carbon, high-performing products. This market segment continues to benefit from supportive macro drivers, including renovation work, modernization initiatives, and new build opportunities in some geographies. Our broad range of price points helps Interface win projects across all budgets. Turning to orders. Consolidated currency neutral orders increased 8% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2026. Orders in the Americas grew 6%, while EAAA increased 11%, driven by strength across all regions. Backlog was strong at the end of the quarter, up 18% year-to-date, reinforcing our confidence that our strategy is working and positioning us well for the quarters ahead. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:09:52Before I turn the call over to Bruce, I want to briefly address the situation in the Middle East. We are closely monitoring developments and assessing the potential impacts on our people and our business. The safety and well-being of our employees and their families remain our top priority, and we continue to support them as needed. The Middle East represents approximately 1% of our net sales. At this time, we expect these events to drive a low single-digit increase in input costs across our global business. Importantly, we have plans in place to offset this impact through incremental pricing and productivity actions, and this is reflected in our guidance. This remains a dynamic environment, and we will continue to monitor the situation and respond as needed to manage costs, support growth, and serve our customers. With that, I'll turn it over to Bruce. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:10:45Well, thank you, Laurel, and good morning, everyone. All comparisons provided are year-over-year versus the first quarter of 2025, unless otherwise noted. As a reminder, fiscal year 2026 is a 53-week year for Interface, with the extra week occurring in the first quarter of 2026. First quarter net sales were $331 million, up 11.3% as reported and 6.8% on a currency neutral basis. First quarter currency neutral net sales were up 8.4% in the Americas and up 4.3% in EAAA. First quarter adjusted gross profit margin was 38.3%, up 55 basis points on a favorable pricing and product mix, plus manufacturing efficiencies. First quarter adjusted SG&A expenses were $94 million compared to $86.8 million. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:11:45As a percentage of net sales, first quarter adjusted SG&A expenses improved 78 basis points to 28.4%, reflecting our continued focus on leveraging SG&A and driving SG&A-related efficiencies. First quarter adjusted operating income was $32.7 million, up 28.6% compared to $25.5 million. First quarter adjusted net income was $23.9 million, compared to $14.6 million. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $46.8 million, compared to $37 million. First quarter adjusted EPS was $0.41, up 64%, compared to $0.25. With these results in mind, I'll turn to capital allocation. As previously discussed, our capital allocation strategy is balanced and disciplined. First, we prioritize investing in the business in areas like innovation and productivity to drive growth, margin expansion, and operational efficiencies. Second, we focus on managing leverage through a disciplined use of debt. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:13:00We continue to evaluate potential M&A opportunities that align with our strategy and that can accelerate growth and margins. Lastly, and importantly, we remain committed to returning excess cash to shareholders through a combination of dividends and disciplined share repurchases. To recap our progress against these objectives in the first quarter, we generated $13.5 million of cash from operating activities. Capital expenditures were $10.3 million as we continued to invest in the business, and we repurchased $12 million of Interface common stock. Turning to our outlook, we entered the second quarter with a healthy backlog and order momentum amidst a dynamic macro environment. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:13:48With that backdrop in mind, we are raising our full year guidance and anticipate the following: for the second quarter of fiscal 2026, net sales of $385 million-$395 million, adjusted gross profit margin of approximately 39.9% of net sales. Adjusted SG&A expenses of approximately $100 million. Adjusted interest and other expenses of approximately $4 million. An adjusted effective income tax rate of approximately 28%, and fully diluted weighted average share count of approximately 59 million shares. For the full fiscal year of 2026, net sales of $1.45 billion-$1.48 billion. Adjusted gross profit margin of approximately 38.8%-39% of net sales. Adjusted SG&A expenses of approximately 26.2%-26.4% of net sales. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:14:51Adjusted interest and other expenses of approximately $14 million-$16 million. An adjusted effective income tax rate of approximately 26%, capital expenditures of approximately $60 million. With that, I'll turn the call back to Laurel for concluding remarks. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:15:09Thank you, Bruce Hausmann. Interface delivered a strong start to 2026, and we are encouraged by the continued momentum as we move through the year. While the external environment remains dynamic, we are well-positioned with a strong balance sheet, a diversified portfolio, and a global team that is more connected than ever. I'd like to thank the entire Interface team for their disciplined execution, commitment, and passion for serving our customers each and every day. With that, I'll open it up to questions. Operator? Operator00:15:43We will now begin the question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. If you're muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Brian Biros with TRG. Brian, your line is open. Please go ahead. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:16:13Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions today. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:16:16Hey, Brian. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:16:18Morning. I want to talk about the One Interface strategy again here a bit more. You know, it's not new anymore, but it's probably still early days across some of the initiatives there. I mean, it feels like it's really paying off already, and you had some proof in that last year, Q1 already. You know, some of the growth numbers you just cited for office, healthcare, it's obviously well above market growth. I mean, maybe just remind us what is left to implement and kind of what is still not running at the full potential yet? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:16:47Thanks, Brian. It is You know, I'm really proud of the team's execution on the One Interface strategy, and we are seeing that really pay dividends. If I think about the U.S. teams, they were the first to start this initiative, and it's really still early days. These selling organization across the U.S., and they've just done an incredible job, selling as one team market by market, but we're opening up new opportunities every day. The more that these teams work together across the nora portfolio and the Interface portfolio, we're finding more places that nora can really help serve our customers, and our Interface customers are often opening the door for us there. It feels like early days. We're learning from each other, learning from our customers where we continue to amplify that growth. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:17:32As you said, the nora growth, up 15% in the quarter is really incredible. As we also said, we've just announced our European business will be under one leader, and, you know, that's really different across country by country. It's really different where we're in different phases of our penetration across the product portfolio. Germany, for example, is really advanced. That's nora's home market, and we have strong business in both Interface and nora there. Like U.K., there's a ton of opportunity. Feel like we're really getting started in Europe and across the globe, taking some of the key learnings. It'll play out a little bit differently as we go, but there's just, you know, a ton of meaningful opportunities still in the U.S., as we move across the globe. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:18:23Brian, on the growth, in addition to the growth points that Laurel made, we continue to advance on the cost efficiency side, which is fantastic to see. You know, our supply chain organization now is working globally as one organization and really delivering results. We continue to invest in our supply chain organization and in the machinery that's driving efficiencies around manufacturing. You know, I think that that's really There's sort of three key things I think about for this quarter. Strong Q1 results, solid momentum going into Q2, and it's apparent on our P&L that our strategy is working, and we continue to outperform the industry. I think that has a lot to do with the One Interface strategy. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:19:12No, good to hear. carpet tile, I think you guys quoted, was up double digits for the quarter, and that's pretty surprising and good to hear. Can you put some more context behind that? I mean, is that a large order? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:19:24Yeah. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:19:24Is that timing? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:19:25Yeah. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:19:25You know, just how to think about that rate for the rest of the year would be interesting. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:19:29Yeah. carpet tile being up double-digit is certainly exciting to see. Some of that I think goes hand in hand, we said corporate office up 16% in the quarter. We sell carpet tile in a lot of places, but certainly corporate office is a key part of that. I think there are a couple of reasons for that. One is, you know, we've done a lot of work across carpet tile to expand our addressable market through more accessible price points. We've done that in a really disciplined way to make sure that we're happy with the margin structure, that it's incremental business to us, and it's really been playing out well. The combination of our expanded product offering and accessible price points, really maintaining that design leadership with high style, high design products at the premium end. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:20:15We look at the trends in corporate and that really feels good. People are going back to work. There's a flight to quality, a lot of renovation activity, and that plays really well for Interface. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:20:30The last one from me, maybe just on the CapEx, I think you stepped up a little bit for the year. Can you just talk about kind of what drove that decision to accelerate some of that spend and kind of what that effort is going towards? Thank you. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:20:41Yeah. Great question, Brian. You know, this ties right into our capital allocation strategy, where our number one priority is investing in the business, and we're seeing nice returns, as you can see on our P&L and on our balance sheet, around the investments that we've made. I don't know if you look at our ROIC. Our ROIC was 19% year, last 12 months. We just wanna continue investing around product innovation and around efficiency initiatives. That incremental five, that we compared to last guide, is going into those two areas. Brian BirosAnalyst at TRG00:21:21Yeah. Thank you. Pass along. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:21:23Thanks, Brian. Operator00:21:25Your next question comes from the line of Alex Paris with Barrington Research. Alex, your line is open. Please go ahead. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:21:34Hi, guys. congrats on the beat and raise. very impressive first quarter with growth across all product categories and key markets. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:21:44Thank you. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:21:44Thank you. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:21:47Thank you. Given this is a 53-week year with the extra week coming here in the first quarter, I wonder if you can quantify that extra week's impact on net sales and earnings, whether that's adjusted EBITDA or earnings per share, or however you want to characterize it. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:22:07Yeah. Great question. You know, the extra week was baked into our guide, and there's noise in our year-over-year comps in Q1. It is really difficult to quantify the exact impact of the extra week with any sort of certainty. I think the important thing, Alex, is that the trends are looking good. The underlying growth rate of the business is around 3%-5%. As you pointed out, we have really broad-based growth geographically and from a market segmentation standpoint. You know, lastly, I'll just add, with the orders up 8% year-over-year, backlog up 18%, it gives us confidence in delivering to our guide, which again is at 3%-5% growth for the rest of the year. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:22:53Awesome. Thanks. You did though on the last conference call say the net impact for the full year of the 53 weeks is +$10 million-$15 million, and that takes into account some dates of the holidays in this coming holiday season. I assume there's a put and a take in that $10 million-$15 million estimate. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:23:13Yeah. Yeah, really good memory. If you think about Q4-You know, not to get too complicated and in the weeds, but this year in Q4, we'll have two holiday weeks versus last year we only had one holiday week. Again, this is baked into our guide that, you know, there might be a little bit of drag on the, on the growth rate in Q4, but again, that's all baked into our outlook. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:23:40Good. Helpful. Thank you. You know, you said global billings were up 16% in corporate office. That's obviously taking market share, and that's an acceleration from the fourth quarter when it was flat. Healthcare, similar growth rate to the fourth quarter, up 11%. You mentioned education. I'm sorry, I might have missed it, but I know it's an off-season quarter so to speak. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:24:05Right. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:24:05For education. What was the growth in billings in Q1 on education? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:24:12Yep. education was up 1% in Q1. as you said, it's really, we're heading into education season right now. Q2 and early Q3 are when the bulk of our billings come for education, and we feel really confident in our continued momentum there. a little bit of timing in Q1, but no change to the long-term outlook. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:24:34Great. Any other commentary on other segments? I know that it drops off pretty quickly from there, but what's going on in retail, for example? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:24:47Yeah, it does drop off. I mean, our, you know, our three biggest segments, as you said, are corporate, education, health. We had some nice growth in retail, a little bit of growth in retail in the quarter. Our government business was up a little bit. You know, puts and takes here and there, but the big ones we've covered. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:25:07Great. I think we talked about this last quarter, but, and we anticipated a significantly lower tax rate year-over-year. Was that related to stock-based compensation, Bruce? Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:25:25Well, that was in Q1 that we had that. Do you mind? Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:25:28Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:25:28That's why we, our tax rate was low in Q1, is that our vesting happens for our employees in Q1. Again, it's very technical, but it's a discrete item. You take the deduction in the quarter that the vesting happens. However, I'm sure you noticed in our guide that our full year estimate is around 26%. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:25:54Okay, great. Last question, I think, for me, I mean, I have two more. Backlog up 18%. Can you offer some color there, either by Americas versus EAAA or by market segment? What's driving that? I realize it's broad-based, but there should, there's likely certain areas that stand out in terms of that up +18%. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:26:22I was gonna say what you said, which is honestly, it's really broad-based. Like, we look across market segment, product category, and region, and we're seeing really good backlog support. It's pretty diverse and really healthy, up 18%. Nothing really to call out specifically there. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:26:44Okay. Then this is truly my last question. It is about tariffs. What did you pay in tariffs in 2025? For example, what did you pay in Q1 2026, because these tariffs didn't come into play until Q2 2025? Then related, is there a tariff refund possibility for Interface? Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:08Yeah. Great question. You know, the tariff costs are all blended in our COGS. I think you might remember, what we talked about previously, is about 15%-20% of our COGS are subject to tariffs, and of course those rates are bouncing around a lot. There's nothing assumed in our guide around a tariff refund. It's a really dynamic situation, and we'll keep you posted as that area evolves. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:42Interface was the one paying the tax, right? Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:45Oh, yeah. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:45It wasn't some import agent paying the tax. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:47But- Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:48Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:49Yeah. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:27:51If it's out there, you could be eligible for it. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:27:54Yeah. I mean, that, I'm telling you what you already know. That's how tariffs work, is that the importer of record pays those tariffs. Yes. Alex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington Research00:28:02Yeah. Okay, good. I'll wait and see how that unfolds. Thank you very much. Again, congrats on the quarter. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:28:09Thanks, Alex. Operator00:28:12Your next question comes from the line of David MacGregor with Longbow Research. David, your line is open. Please go ahead. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:28:22Yes. Good morning, everyone, and congratulations on the quarter. Strong quarter. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:28:26Thanks, David. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:28:27Excellent EBITDA. Yeah, really strong. I guess I wanted a few questions here, but maybe just start by talking about cadence within the quarter. I mean, the office furniture guys are talking about having seen a very slow January and February, then March kind of picked up, and yet underlying design and quote activity remained consistent throughout that period, which really implied people were kinda like just maybe tapping the brakes on purchase orders until the whole sort of dynamics from the Middle East kind of settled out a little bit at least. Did you see a similar pattern like that in your business? Maybe just comment around what you saw in terms of patterns timing-wise. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:29:06Yeah. You know, we actually, we've been watching it like a hawk obviously, like everybody, and tracking it really closely. We haven't seen any real variation like you're talking about. It's been really pretty steady, again, steady and broad-based. We've been watching it to see any tap of the brakes or pausing out there. We haven't seen any significant delays or anything like that that would indicate that. April looks good too, it sort of feels like really just steady growth. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:29:38Okay. On the spec writing front, fairly consistent level of activity. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:29:43Yeah, really good activity. There's a lot. As we talked a little bit about corporate office, there's a lot of activity. You know, the return to work, we're definitely feeling continued strength in healthcare, and then we're excited for the education season. It honestly, we're watching it like crazy because it's a dynamic environment, but it feels really good out there. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:30:05Right. Within corporate office, how much of that is sort of tenant improvement with people renewing leases versus people just doing a refresh on the back to the office kind of dynamic? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:30:18You know, it's probably mixed. We would say, as you know, about 80% of our business is renovation work, and that's a combination of. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:30:25Right. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:30:25Of what you talked about versus new build. It's mostly that, but I think a lot of it is, as people are encouraging folks to come back to work, they're refreshing their spaces, and everybody's trying to get in Class A space. There's just a ton of activity that suits us really well David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:30:42Right. That back to the office, dynamic, what inning do you think we're in there? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:30:49You know, I would say it's accelerating. You know, it sort of started slow and some key companies mandating it. It's definitely accelerating. We're seeing more and more, you know, just as you are, more and more announcements of return to work, and some of those put a timeframe out, like by August or by Q3 or that sort of thing, giving their employees some notice. Man, it's. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:14Right. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:15It's accelerating everywhere really. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:31:17More, more, more days being tacked on. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:19Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:31:20So- Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:20Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:31:20You know, if it was two days before, now it's four or five. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:23Which means they need more space. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:25Right. A lot of refresh. Okay, interesting dynamics there. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:29Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:29I guess if you could talk about the you mentioned mix as a strength in the organic growth. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:31:35Price mix and manufacturing efficiencies. Can you just talk about carpet tile versus LVT versus nora? I know there's a lot of new product that's rolling out in nora and maybe in carpet tile as well. Just how that mix dynamic played out and the extent to which you maybe think the line extensions drove that. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:31:53You know, we think about mix a lot and, you know, if I start at the highest level, we look at country mix and our, you know, our U.S. business is our most profitable business. What we do to grow the U.S. business is great and why we've been so focused on it. We go to product categories and as you know, our nora business, especially in the U.S., all of our product categories are good margins, but nora's especially strong, and another reason why we've been really focused on accelerating that growth here in the U.S. That certainly helps us. Carpet tile's been really strong for us. A lot of the work that the organizations, the supply chain organization's been doing on manufacturing efficiencies have helped certainly. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:32:42You know, improving our volumes in our facilities is fantastic. The initiatives that we have on the approachable price points, so kind of line extensions as you would say in carpet tile, has been really exciting for our growth, but also for our profitability. We've been really disciplined. The teams both across supply chain and design have done a really beautiful job designing products that are right for our customers, that we feel great about the margins, and certainly the volume helps with our fixed overhead leverage. It's a win-win in that environment. We've been really disciplined tracking it like crazy, but it's been a nice way for us to continue to expand our growth and margins. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:33:23Right. Yeah. Tremendous success there. I wanted to ask you about the sustainability dynamic of your value proposition. Interface has always been sort of perceived as the sustainability leader. This goes all the way back to Ray Anderson, I guess. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:33:38Ray Anderson, yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:33:40Yeah. I'm just wondering, in this kind of an environment where, you know, energy prices are spiking, you know, pretty much everything in a piece of carpet comes out of a barrel of oil at some point or another, are you seeing some kind of competitive advantage off of that? David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:33:57more, a greater realization? I'm not asking the question.very crisply here, but. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:01No, I get you. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:01You know what I'm saying is. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:02Yeah. Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:03Are you getting an advantage out of this? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:05Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:05Competitors are still, you know, producing from virgin elements and you've got a recycled backing. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:11Yeah. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:11A recycled yarn product. I mean, all of this should presumably give you some kind of advantage. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:16Yes. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:34:16I'm just wondering the extent to which you may be realizing that. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:34:19Yeah. It's a really good question, and, you know, over 50% of our inputs are recycled or bio-based materials, so that really helps us on the cost side, right? It's not that it does, it's not tied to oil, but it's certainly mitigated because it's recycled content, so it helps on the cost side. Certainly from a value perspective, our customers love buying our products because of our low carbon footprint, and they help their carbon goals, is the built environment is such a big portion of most companies' carbon impact. It helps us on the demand side in selling our product to customers who care about sustainability, and then on the cost side as well. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:35:01Yeah. I would just add on to that, it really amplifies the value proposition of who we are and highlights the purpose and value behind our brand. You know. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:35:14Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:35:15It's interesting, all this, you know We hope that all this Middle East conflict stuff, you know, gets resolved soon, but the silver lining is that it really highlights some of the value of the company. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:35:27Yeah. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:35:27So. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:35:31I wanted to ask you about manufacturing efficiencies, because this is sort of the gift that keeps on giving under One Interface, I guess. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:35:37All the new products that are rolling out and everything that you're doing. How, what, from a magnitude standpoint, I'm trying to get a sense of how this contributes going forward. Do we see manufacturing efficiencies with the investments in automation and everything that you're doing, contributing in a larger manner to the gross margin progression? Or do you feel like the biggest pieces of this have been realized, it'll continue to contribute, but maybe in a diminishing marginal pattern? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:36:06You know, I would say the team's doing an incredible job, and the power of the team working together across the globe is they find new ideas every day. When we think we've got, you know, our robotic solutions that we put in play as an example, we've now just taken that live in our European and our Australia operations, so that's sort of yet to pay off. There are more and more efficiencies that we're finding when, whether it relates to robotics for packaging and for cutting. I, you know, we've, the team's made so much progress there, which I'm so proud of, but I think there's a lot more room to go. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:36:44Way to go. Interesting. I guess I have to ask about the balance sheet when you got 0.6 leverage. I mean, just a tremendous amount of progress made here over the past few years. Obviously provides you with a lot more optionality. Bruce, you walked through sort of the priorities of capital allocation, but it seems like you've got the latitude at this point to do a little bit of everything or a lot of everything, as the case may be. How do we think about sort of the acquisition opportunity here right now? David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:37:13Notwithstanding the need to reinvest in the business and the desire to, you know, purchase stock, but isolating M&A and just talking about how you're thinking about that opportunity, if you've got a funnel, how that funnel may be developing, where you see white space, where you see the need to maybe supplement the existing model. Just talk about that strategically, if you would. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:37:35Yeah. I'll talk about it maybe at a, at a higher level, which is, we say sort of, you heard us say this before, M&A is not required to achieve our goals, but as you said, our balance sheet's in great shape, and we feel good about our strategy and execution, and have clarity around, where we think we can continue to grow and what opportunities that means for us. You know, I'll tell you, we'll be rigorous and disciplined, and it's got to align with our strategy, which I think we're clear about, and then accelerate our growth and our margins. We've, we're working in that space and excited about what it may mean for us for the future, but also super heads down on our current execution of our organic plan. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:38:20Great. Do you perceive within kind of the existing lines where you've got the carpet tile and the LVT and the nora, could you add a fourth category, or would you be looking to kind of supplement what you've got? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:38:33You know, we could. I think we put it through the lens of our customer first and really see what is it that they need, how can we continue to help serve them. As I think about our noravant expansion, that really came through the lens of the customer and looking at our hospital and healthcare systems, and seeing that they were looking for a product that had the benefits of rubber, but the look of a wood grain, a warmer look for their patient rooms. The team did, you know, incredible work to launch that breakthrough new product. That's an example of how we're thinking about it, whether it's an innovation we develop ourselves or an inorganic opportunity. It's really, how can we continue to help our customers. David MacGregorPresident at Longbow Research00:39:14Got it. Congratulations on all the progress. Thank you very much. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:39:17Thanks so much. Operator00:39:20Your next question comes from the line of Reuben Garner with The Benchmark Company. Reuben, your line is open. Please go ahead. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:39:29Hi. Good morning, everyone. This is John McGlade on for Reuben Garner. Just congratulations on the impressive quarter. Great way to end the week. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:39:36Thanks, John. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:39:42I know it's still early days, but I was hoping maybe you could dive into how the noravant reception has gone from the customers. Maybe any differences you're seeing in customers that are familiar with your existing product and then, you know, have that familiarity with the technical specs and requirements that they need for their facilities. Does that have any impact on maybe what the that selling cycle looks like early days? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:40:13Yeah, it's a great question. I'd start by saying it's, you know, it's off to a really great start. Our sellers got the products in their hands, end of February, early March, they're showing it to their customers really for the first time. The sample requests are really high, as you can imagine, as everyone's trying to really get an understanding for what this product can do. It's building momentum as we expected. As you're suggesting, you know, our current healthcare customers are the closest probably. We sell nora in a lot of places, obviously, but our healthcare customers, I think are the closest in to understand the need. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:40:52They understand the technical strength and properties of the current nora offering and how well it does in, you know, infectious areas and maintenance control and that sort of thing. I think they're the closest in on really understanding what this product category can do. There's a lot of interest in other categories as well, in other end markets as well, but I think we'll see the quickest uptake in healthcare, where they're most familiar with the technical requirements, as you suggest. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:41:27Okay, that's great. I know, you mentioned earlier, and you just kind of mentioned it again that you're finding other places that nora can kind of serve the market. In general, are those outside of healthcare and education or is that just kind of different subsegments within those end markets? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:41:48I would say, education has always been Our team in Germany does an incredible job in education and has for years, I would say that's an end market in the U.S. as our U.S. selling team has really amplified their focus on Nora that we've really unlocked in education. That's one of the strongest growth drivers is education. When we look beyond that, other areas like labs are continuing to grow. Industry, transportation continues to be a strong end market, and there's a couple different ways to think about that. One is on, you know, on trains and subways and that sort of thing, which those are growing around the world, and Nora's a great solution there. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:42:32Also in airports, Nora's been a really strong product category for airports, and we're seeing that grow as well. Healthcare and education are the biggest. Education is growing, you know, really, really well, especially in the U.S., we're really discovering additional opportunities for it as I mentioned. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:42:58Okay. That's fantastic to hear. I guess also, you're still kind of monitoring the situation. Obviously gross margin came in very strong for the quarter, and just kind of given all the macro changes that have happened since the last call, I know there was a comment earlier that, you know, there are some offsets that are available, you know, as costs change. Can you kind of run us through what levers you have available to pull? Maybe any lags between that? Is it as simple as just a surcharge or a price increase, or is there, you know, some additional dynamics there with how customers are able to take these orders and take these cost pass-throughs? Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:43:47We're Yeah, it's as you said, it's dynamic, and we're navigating through it. We have deployed some modest pricing across the globe, it's not as a surcharge. We try to do it the best we can with new product launches and other ways that are easier for our customers to absorb. I think pricing and then additional productivity will help us to offset it. The other thing that we have in our toolkit that we it's newer for us, I guess, is this focus on approachable price point products. In the past, if a customer You know, our customers, if they're under cost pressure, we may not have had a solution for them, or we might have had to take a really aggressive price on a more premium product, which would impact our margins. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:44:36Now our sellers have a great option to offer something at a more approachable price points when those costs are tough for our customers. I think we've got a really good way to augment the situation by taking a little bit of price, making sure that we've got good offerings for our customers at all price points, and then continuing to push the productivity lever. John McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark Company00:44:58Okay. That's a great strategy there. I appreciate you taking the questions, and congratulations on the quarter and look forward to talking to you soon. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:45:08Great. Thanks so much. Bruce HausmannCFO at Interface, Inc.00:45:08Thanks, John. Operator00:45:11There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back to Laurel Hurd, President and Chief Executive Officer, for closing remarks. Laurel HurdCEO at Interface, Inc.00:45:20Great. Well, I just wanna say again, thanks to the entire Interface team for all the great work you do every day. Proud of this team, and thank you for everything you do to serve our customers. Thanks for everyone's time today listening to the call. Operator00:45:34This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesBruce HausmannCFOChristine NeedlesCorporate CommunicationsLaurel HurdCEOAnalystsAlex ParisPresident and Senior Managing Director at Barrington ResearchBrian BirosAnalyst at TRGDavid MacGregorPresident at Longbow ResearchJohn McGladeAnalyst at The Benchmark CompanyPowered by