Albany Intl (NYSE:AIN) reported first-quarter financial results on Thursday. The transcript from the company's first-quarter earnings call has been provided below.

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Summary

Albany Intl reported first quarter 2026 revenue of $311 million, a 7.8% increase year over year, with adjusted EBITDA of $48 million.

Strategic focus includes operational excellence and safety, with increased demand in weapons programs and new contracts in engineered composites.

Future outlook shows stable demand across segments, with revenue guidance for Q2 2026 between $335 million and $345 million, and anticipated EPS of $0.7 to $0.8.

Full Transcript

Gunnar Cleveland (President and CEO)

Gunnar thank you Karen Good morning and welcome everyone. Thank you for joining our first quarter earnings call. We entered 2026 as a more focused and disciplined organization with a clear strategy centered on our core strengths. Our culture begins with caring for our people and it was an honor to recently have our engineered composites segment recognized as one of America's safest companies. Safety is a priority at Albany and is embedded in how we design processes and operate each day. And a strong safety culture translates to a strong quality culture. This operational philosophy is also manifested in our outstanding on time delivery performance. Our focus on safety, quality and operational excellence creates a solid foundation for our reliable operations, while our value proposition remains grounded in our shared expertise in industrial weaving and material science which connects our two businesses and differentiates us in the markets we serve. I'd like to take a minute to address the conflict in the Middle East. We're continuously monitoring and working closely with our suppliers and customers and to date we have not seen any impact and have made only slight adjustments to delivery routes. Raw materials are generally protected by either long term contracts or customer directed contracts. We will continue to monitor and work to minimize any supply chain risk. At the same time, we're seeing increased demand on our weapons programs and are maximizing production on key programs. In machine clothing. The team did an outstanding job taking corrective actions to make up the downtime of a machine malfunction and we expect debt recovery to be completed in the back half of the year. More broadly, demand conditions across our end markets stabilized in the first quarter in engineered composites. Our focus remains on refining our operating model and prioritizing higher value add applications, particularly within our advanced weaving technologies including 3D weaving, braiding, winding and resin transfer molding that serve end markets such as commercial and defense propulsion systems, missile production and space exploration. We're seeing volume increase across key programs reflecting both higher production rates and the benefit of the actions we have taken over the past 12 months. Importantly, we're winning new business with new and existing customers and demand remains strong across defense platforms and the lead production continues to increase. Our current pipeline of new business opportunities remains robust and and continues to expand as we focus on new applications where our expertise and products offer greater strengths and lighter weight solutions. We believe the actions we have taken and the trends we see across both segments position us well to drive strong free cash generation and build on the baseline we established exiting 2025. This provides us with the flexibility to continue allocating capital in a balanced and disciplined manner including reinvesting and in the business to support long term growth while also returning cash to shareholders. Turning to the quarter, we're off to a Solid start to 2026 with revenue of $311 million up 7.8% year over year, which translated to adjusted EBITDA of $48 million in machine clothing. Revenue for the quarter was $166 million and came in ahead of our expectations across all regions including North America, Europe and China. Despite the recent stabilization in China and improved order rates which are positive developments, visibility beyond the near term remains limited. As we previously disclosed, at the start of the first quarter we experienced an equipment failure at one of our facilities and I'm pleased to report that we were able to recover more of the lost production related to the unplanned downtime that than we initially anticipated in the first quarter. Assuming the equipment continues to operate as expected, we believe we are well positioned to recover the remaining lost volume by the end of the year we're actively managing this situation and are relocating a machine from a coast facility to have a long term solution in place. By year end, adjusted EBITDA margin for MC was 25.9% on a constant currency. Margins were stable driven by a meaningful improvement across Europe as we continue to realize the benefits of integration activities. Turning to engineered composites, revenue for the quarter was $145 million compared to $114 million in the prior year. The increase was driven by broad based growth across our programs with incremental contribution from F-35 Missile Systems Leap 787 and the CH53K segment. Adjusted EBITDA was $17 million or 11.7% of sales compared to $15 million or 13.5% of sales in the prior year. The increase in EBITDA reflects higher overall volume while the margins in mind with expectations were driven by mix primarily the impact of Ch53k AFFT program revenue which is now booked at 0 margin following the actions taken in the third quarter of 2025 in new business developments, we're excited to announce our new contract with Pratt and Whitney for composite engine components for their gear turbofan. The turbofan relies extensively on advanced composite materials to achieve its fuel efficiency, noise reduction and weight targets which strongly leverages AEC strengths in high performance composite structures for both JASSM and Lurasm missiles. We have been requested by our customer to increase production, bringing output to the highest level achievable within our current capabilities, including through the use of overtime. Turning to the strategic review of the Amelia Earhart facility in Salt Lake City which houses the CH-53K program, we continue to make progress and have completed the standalone analysis with PwC. While it is still too early in the process for us to share any conclusions, we remain on schedule and look forward to providing an update as we move towards a resolution. As we look ahead, our priorities remain clear, disciplined execution, continued progress across both segments and driving improved profitability and cash generation. In machine clothing, we saw stabilization in key markets and remain focused on execution and margin recovery in engineered composites. We're scaling the business, refining our operating model and prioritizing higher value application to support long term growth and margin expansion. We believe Albany is well positioned to deliver sustainable value for our customers and shareholders, supported by our differentiated capabilities and a more focused, disciplined approach. I would like to thank our employees for their continued dedication as well as our customers, partners and shareholders for their ongoing support. With that, I will turn the call over to Will to review the financial results in more detail.

Will

Thank you Gunnar and good morning. Before turning to the financials, I would like to remind you that a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP measures discussed today can be found in this morning's press release. First quarter revenue was $311.3 million representing growth of 7.8% year over year. This increase was driven primarily by high volumes in engineered composites as key programs continue to ramp partially offset by lower volumes in machine clothing, particularly in China. Adjusted EBITDA for The quarter was 48.2 million compared to 55.7 million in the prior year reflecting a margin of 15.5%. The year over year decline in margin was primarily driven by a higher mix of revenue from engineered composites which carries structurally lower margins as well as lower volumes in machine clothing and the impact of foreign exchange in machine clothing. Results reflect continued softness in Asia markets, particularly in China, resulting in a modest year over year decline in revenue to $166 million compared to $174.7 million in a prior year. Despite this headwind, underlining trends remain stable and operational execution was solid. Adjusted EBITDADA for The segment was $43 million with a margin of 25.9%. The year over year decline was driven primarily by foreign exchange impacts and lower volume in Asia on a constant currency basis. Margins were stable overall, supported by efficiency initiatives and integration. Progress in engineering composites performance was solid above our internal expectations. The revenue increased to $145.4 million from $114.1 million in the prior year. The growth was driven by higher volumes across multiple programs including commercial aerospace platforms such as Leap as well as Defense program. The outperformance reflects both the timing of program ramps and strong execution which enabled us to meet higher than anticipated demand in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDADA for The segment was $16.9 million compared to $15.4 million last year while margins declined to 11.7%. This reflects the impact of prior year items and mix, including zero margin revenues associated with actions taken on a Ch53k AFF program in 2025. Gross profit for the quarter was $99.8 million with a margin of 32.1% compared to 33.4% in the prior year. The change reflects revenue mix with a greater contribution from engineered composites. Operating income was $25.4 million representing a margin of 8.1% compared to 9.8% last year. The decline was driven by higher non recurring and restructuring expenses. Net Interest expense increased to $5.5 million, reflecting higher borrowing costs. Other income was at a net benefit of $3.2 million, driven primarily by foreign currency and derivative impacts. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 33.1% compared to 26.6% in the prior year, largely due to the absence of favorable discrete items. Free cash flow was at a net use of $3.6 million compared to a net use of $13.5 million in the prior year period. The year over year improvement reflects timely customer collections. Capital expenditures totaled $9.3 million, focused on facility optimization and investments tied to key customer programs. R and D expense was $13 million, reflecting our continued commitment to innovation. We ended the quarter with $122.6 million in cash and $477 million in total debt, resulting in net debt of approximately $354 million, including revolver availability. We have approximately $446 million of available capital providing flexibility to support ongoing investments and return capital to shareholders. Looking ahead, Carrying trends support a stable outlook across both segments. In machine clothing, we expect modest sequential improvement in volume in the second quarter following typical first quarter seasonality. Assuming no additional equipment downtime, we expect to recover the remainder of lost volume as the year progresses. In engineered composites, we expect continued growth supported by ongoing program ramps across both commercial and defense platforms. For the second quarter, we expect consolidated revenue in the range of $335 million to $345 million. We anticipate adjusted EPS in the range of $0.7 to $0.8 and an effective tax rate of approximately 31.5% for the full year. In machine clothing, we continue to see stable demand in Europe and the Americas. And while China shows signs of stabilization, we still have limited visibility for the remainder of the year. In engineering composites, we expect continued growth driven by key platforms with margin levels normalizing relative to the prior year. Now I'd like to open the call up for questions.

Operator

Thank you. At this time I would like to remind everyone in order to ask a question, please press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. We ask to please limit to one question and one follow up. We will pause for just a moment to compile the Q and A roster. And your first question comes from the line of Peter Arment with Baird. Your line is open.

Peter Arment (Equity Analyst)

Hey, good morning, Gunnar and Will. Thanks for your time. Gunnar, maybe you could just give us an update on Salt Lake and discussions around CH-53K, what you can say about planned divestiture or any kind of anything you could kind of highlight. I know it's obviously challenging given there's ongoing negotiations.

Gunnar Cleveland (President and CEO)

Yeah. Armand, I think that the. Our performance out of our Salt Lake facility, as you can see with the performance in the first quarter has been very, very good. We stay very close to our customer and continue to deliver both for our customer on the CH-53K program as well as all the other programs as well as the war fighters. That is the commitment that we have given through this process to. The process of the strategic review is progressing to our schedule. We're in the process of finalizing the marketing material so that we can go more directly to the interested parties that have already contacted us and Guggenheim. So I would say we just like Will said, we are on schedule and we are staying connected with our customer throughout this process. Appreciate that color.

Peter Arment (Equity Analyst)

And if I could just ask a follow up unrelated on the MC business, could you just give us a little more color on the overcapacity issue in Asia? You know, the MC business has been such a resilient business over the years and obviously you've got different regions that it's in. But could you just give us a little more color on what's driving the overcapacity? Is it just economic activity or something specific?

Gunnar Cleveland (President and CEO)

Yeah. The investment in paper machines and new machines in China specifically has been very high in the last several years. And as you know, Peter, we to run a paper machine profitably, it needs to run at high speeds. That's where we come in. And we have the best belts for that. But they overproduce and that overproduction, that's what we are uncertain about. How long does it take to get the paper back to a normal level so that production can pick up again? Then the other uncertainty is is there too much production capability in China and is this a cycle that they're going to go through? Because we see new builds there. The positive that we're seeing there is on tissue. We're seeing an increase in tissue and some of our process belts that are being used there continue to be in favor. So that's what we saw in the first quarter, the stabilization. We're taking a conservative outlook for the year in what's happening in China.

Peter Arment (Equity Analyst)

Thanks, Gunnar.

Operator

Again, if you would like to ask a question, press star and the number one on your telephone keypad. Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions in the queue. I will now turn it back over to Bennor Cleveland for closing remarks.

Bennor Cleveland

All right, thank you, Cass. And thank you everyone for joining us on the call today. We appreciate your continued interest in Albany. Thank you, and have a good day.

Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company's SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants' and analysts' statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.