All right, Jake, take it away.
Good morning, everyone. Welcome, and thank you for joining the Atlas Engineered Products Earnings Call. My name is Jake Bouma, IR Consultant for AEP. Today on the line discussing AEP's Q1 financial and operating results and company highlights will be CEO Hadi Abassi, CFO Melissa MacRae, and Director Paul Andreola. Following the discussion, we will open up the call for a Q&A. Before handing over the call to Hadi, please note that the information we present today could contain forward-looking information that is based on management's expectations, estimates, and projections. Please consider the risk factors, including those in the filings made by Atlas on SEDAR, when reviewing this information. Also, all amounts discussed will be in CAD unless otherwise noted. Over to you, Hadi.
Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Atlas Engineered Products' Earnings Call to discuss our first quarter of 2025 results. We are excited to be with you today, and thank you for joining us. We are highlighting another strong quarter from an execution standpoint, completely backing the industry trends and delivering on a more diversified product offering with a bigger share of the customer wallets. We continue to generate industry-leading margins through the tough market and take market share, while significantly growing the wall panel and engineered wood product business. As we indicated in the Q4 year-end conference call last month, we are encouraged that both political parties have well-delineated platforms that address the housing shortage in Canada. We see early signs of government funding programs that could be rolled out to fund automation.
AEP will play a pivotal role as a supplier of fabricated structures to support the vision of more affordable housing. With both Canada and the U.S. elections now behind us, we expect 2025 to be the key inflection year for the company, and we are encouraged to see momentum from 2024 carrying into 2025. The catalog and bookings are gaining momentum, and we see green shoots in the builder sentiment with uncertainty baking in the market. Augmenting the organic growth, the M&A pipeline remains healthy, and we are investing in automation, which is the future of our industry. Our first robotic car, Clinton, is under construction and is on time and budget. AEP will see a material contribution from this investment starting Q2 2026. Capital allocation is important to the company.
While M&A and automation have been the focus in 2024, we also instituted an NCIB given the share price performance. The company continues to be active, acquiring shares at attractive levels. We see deep value in the stock and will manage our capital prudently to make accurate purchases when appropriate. We are steadfast in our approach to evaluating returns in investment capital, and we take a balanced approach, considering organic growth, M&A, and buybacks. We have a very ambitious plan at Atlas to expand our footprint across Canada and increase our capacity through automation. Given our established footprint, we see AEP as a logical partner of choice for builders and government as we address the structural housing deficit in Canada. I would like now to introduce Melissa MacRae, our CFO of AEP, to provide commentary on Q4 on the financial and operational performance. Thank you.
Thank you, Hadi. Results from our Q1 2025 include revenue of CAD 11 million for the quarter, representing a 21% increase over the same quarter as last year. This is driven largely by increased sales in the commercial and multifamily building sectors. The company has been working hard to integrate LCF since its acquisition and obtain more winter work and expand into the commercial building industry. This winter saw successes with this expansion, leading to a 56% increase in revenues at LCF period- over- period. Additionally, the company has seen a 30% increase in engineered wood product sales for this first quarter over the first quarter of last year.
The company has been able to expand its supply of engineered wood products to the multifamily building sector due to the expansion of our sales force, the skill of our design team, and our buying power with our national supplier that gives us a competitive advantage. Gross margin remained consistent for the first quarter of 2025 compared to last year's same quarter. Typically, margins are the lowest in our first quarter due to the need to keep skilled labor, including designers, and make sure our equipment's running efficiently during the busier quarters later in the year. Normalized EBITDA of just about CAD 616,000 for Q1 2025. This is an increase over the prior year due to the increase in revenues and sales. Normalized EBITDA includes some adjustments to one-time costs for legal and consulting fees related to the new automation facility in Clinton and acquisition projects.
Although no adjustments have been made to some other costs associated for the future automation, which would be ongoing moving forward, but incurred now to prepare for that expansion in organic growth. These costs include expansion of the sales and management teams to support the future growth. Additionally, there are no adjustments for management labor costs related to the previously announced due diligence completion for a location in Western Canada, which is still anticipated to close as soon as possible. The company also continues to see strong signs of a rebound in the construction industry as quoting continues to significantly improve over last year. Quoting is up by 29% up to the end of April 2025 at this point.
The company is continuing to work diligently to convert those quotes to orders, increase the number of jobs that include a full package of trusses, EWP, and wall panels, and further gain market share with the bolstered sales staff. In anticipation of the diligent work converting these quotes, the company has built a few design jobs ahead of the busier construction season, thus increasing our finished goods and inventories as at March 31, 2024, but strategically leaving production capacity available in the second and third quarter where capacity is typically at or close to full production. I'd now like to open up the call for your questions. Operator, please provide the appropriate instructions.
Thank you, Hadi. Thank you, Melissa. At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session from our analysts. Please raise your hand if you have a question, and we will address each one of you in order. If there are any outstanding questions still at the end of the call, there will be our contact information on the screen. We will be happy to take them all by email. It looks like our first question is from Frederic from Desjardins Securities. Frederic, your microphone has been enabled.
Great. Thanks. Good morning.
Good morning.
First question is on the quoting activity up 29% year-to-date. It feels like April was strong from a quoting perspective. I was just wondering if you could expand a bit on what those opportunities look like for AEP regionally and maybe by type of property. If you could comment if you're seeing some pockets of strength in certain provinces and if you're seeing more work on the multifamily front, just that sort of color would be helpful. Thanks.
Thank you, Frederic. The one advantage we have in Canada, we have a national footprint right now, and we're expanding on that. Historically, it's always been like this. There are certain provinces in Canada that construction slows down, and other provinces pick up. One day, if your dream is to all the provinces go all at the same thing, and that is coming. Right now, we have certain pockets of country. Like in the Maritimes, we're pretty busy quoting, in the Prairies. There's a certain part of British Columbia and Ontario, the quote activity has increased. Of course, we do a small amount of business in the U.S., and the activities there have increased too, especially all the noise from the tariff and stuff that is just settling down, and people are not scared anymore and everything. Business is getting back more to a normal situation.
That just because everybody's barking and making noise, it doesn't mean actually the reality is there and it's not affecting our business. One area there is there in a slow time is when you build your team to get ready for the good times. One of the great things about our investing at the sales force and building the team, you build a team of hunters because construction historically slows down even in the wintertime, but it never dies down. There are always jobs to be done there. I'm not talking about the stats you get about the concrete buildings in downtown Toronto or downtown Vancouver. I'm talking about wood construction. That includes housing, condominiums, and commercial wood construction. With the sales force we have and the aggressive system we have, we do cover the geography pretty high in Canada.
We do not leave a stone unturned and we go after the business. Those are where all those activities are paying back to us right now.
Okay, great. Maybe last question before I get back into Q, maybe for Melissa. On the working cap, just the working cap drag that we saw in Q1 from higher inventories, do you expect that to reverse in Q2 or possibly Q3 as you deliver on more projects or just generally some color on your working cap expectations for the coming quarters?
Yeah, we do typically see drag on working capital coming out of Q1. Really, you'll see a little bit maybe at the end of Q2. It might not show completely in a full three-quarter into Q2, but Q3 and Q4, we see that pick up quite a bit, especially with cash flow. This year, with our investment to try and allow for more capacity into the summer months, we did invest a little bit extra into these finished goods this quarter. Yeah, we're seeing a little bit of drag on cash, but we had the availability to do this and with the results paying off later in the year.
Great. Thanks very much.
Thank you, Frederic.
Thank you. So now we have Daniel from Beacon Securities. Go ahead, take it away. Daniel, you're still muted. You're still muted.
Sorry about that. Can you guys hear me?
Yep, we can hear you now. Perfect.
Oh, okay. Sorry about that. Yeah. Congratulations on the results. I'm calling on behalf of Russell Stanley. Just regarding the acquisition in Western Canada, understanding that you do not own it yet and may not have any numbers to share, can you guys provide any color as to how that business has been performing versus your expectations? Are there any notable differences versus the base business?
Melissa, do you want to go on that one?
Yeah. Yeah, we have. Compared to the base business, they are pretty steady with what we anticipated. They are seeing a strong start to this year, which is getting us excited to get this acquisition across the finish line here. That provides some color.
Okay. Thank you. Just moving over to home builder demand, understanding that there's a lag between housing starts reported by the CMHC and your physical demand picture, April starts showed some surprising strength. Can you talk about the actual home builder activity this spring and how it compares to last spring? Are home builders expressing more or less confidence?
No, they're more and more comfortable right now. Because we went to two elections in both countries, and then all the tariff talks and all the tariff talks going on, we had the election in Canada. Nobody was concentrating on business, and everyone was glued to what's going to happen in the election and all of that stuff. There was just a lot of noise, a lot of unnecessary noise was going on there, and people were preoccupied. Now the politicians are getting to work, and the builders are like, "Okay, time to get to work." There have been a lot of posturing in the last two years and lots of wandering, but they were getting ready. There are lots of projects that they are getting ready to press green light and go. That's what we see out there. It's like, "Be ready.
Get ready that things could turn pretty fast. That is the sentiment I get.
Okay. Perfect. Thank you for the color. Congratulations on the results once again, guys. I'll hop back in the queue.
Thank you, Russell. Thank you, Daniel.
Will do.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Now we have David from Cormark Securities. David, your mic has been enabled.
Perfect. Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Maybe a first one just here for Melissa. We talked about the working capital release that you expect for the back half of the year. Even then, if I take a look at the cash position, assuming that some of those proceeds do come back into the full CAD 8 million in cash this quarter, but call it CAD 15 million of CapEx left for your normal CapEx facilities, as well as the robotics at Clinton, how should we be thinking about that funding gap? Are you guys mostly going to do that with debt, or are there any other options available for you guys on the capital side?
Yeah. I mean, we're definitely still, Hadi's definitely still pushing that sales team to get as much work we can through the business here for the next few quarters, driving up that internally generated cash flow as much as possible. Yes, at this point in time, the next best thing looks like it is debt at the moment. We do have that line of credit with our current banking partner that we can go in and out of as we need to, depending on how that cash tracks in and out over the rest of the year. Yes, we do have that strong partnership that we're in constant contact with right now.
Okay. That's perfect. How much room is left on your revolver, Melissa? Just so we're aware.
It's up to 7.5, and we haven't used it yet.
Okay. Okay. That's good. Just curious, just going back to Frederic's original line of questioning on the quoting activity, you guys called out the wood frame commercial market really benefiting LCF. Are the markets that you're in on your legacy plants, are you guys fully penetrated into the commercial wood frame market, or is there room to do there as well?
Certain locations, we are penetrated pretty good, and we are the choice supplier in those markets, in those certain markets that we have been there longer. That has been one of the arms of the organic growth that we implement when we do M&A, that we immediately work on once we purchase a company because they usually trust manufacturers, and some do a little bit of wall and a little bit of engineered wood products. Based on their size and cash availability and buying power, they cannot really get aggressive in that market. That is one arm of the M&A, the organic growth that you see the results we are showing that we implement. That is the part I am really excited about, is the implementing that the team is a believer now into organic growth, that we are not just a truss manufacturer.
We are an engineered wood product supplier, design and supply, and a wall panel supplier. That just becomes the norm of language for us right now. Those are the areas that are so positive, even in the slow time for us, is the organic growth that we increase in those markets. There are lots of opportunities available in those markets. Sometimes it takes a while for the work to do the design and supply everything, so the result shows up later. Whatever you plant, you see right now, it could be three months, six months down the road that it turns into a revenue. That is the one area that I'm really excited with the team that we look at all the time and we go after at the moment. It's a big, big advantage for us.
Yeah, it does sound like an exciting opportunity. Maybe just a last one for Melissa. I mean, you take a look at the organic growth or revenue growth for the quarter, it was pretty strong at 20%. How should we be thinking about it from a volume perspective? If we stripped out the price of lumber, how much more volumes, however you want to define it, would that look on an organic basis on a year-over-year number?
Yeah. I mean, from a production volume and capacity, there's a lot more that we can still put into quarter one, typically the worst of the year. Stripping out lumber, this is still the lowest. Usually, it is throughout the year. We are seeing some rebounds or some rebound. I wouldn't say actually strong in the lumber, which is our pass-through cost. Looking at the forward look of this year, happy with how the costs are looking and moving forward, but we definitely have room. We had more room in quarter 1 for further growth as we move forward with our strategic plans and organic growth.
Okay. That's it for me. I'll hop back in the queue. Thank you.
Thank you, Dave.
Thank you. Now we have Andrew from Ventum Capital Markets. Andrew, your mic has been enabled.
Great. Thank you very much. Congrats on the Q1 results here. First question, just want to go back to the targeted inventory build in Q1 for projects coming in Q2, Q3. I just want to clarify whether those are firm commitments or whether you're building some of the inventory on spec. Second, just to clarify whether this is something you've done before or a new practice for Atlas.
Good morning, Andrew. This is not a new practice for us. We've always done it. Basically, it's a commitment, and we call it winter works. That, in our lingo we use at our operation base, is you have certain clients that 12 months a year, they build. Usually, those are the commercial builders, whether they're building hotels, motels, and that kind of building, or even housing. Now, once they give you a contract for a subdivision, say for 100 homes or 200 homes, they never change those designs or anything. The specs are the same. Everything is the same. They will give you a schedule of the time they need this product.
We use those products and stuff to work through the winter and build ahead of time and do the delivery when they already want to do the first building, the second building, and the third building. Those are firm purchase order commitments, and those are long-term contracts we have with most of our clients there across the country. Those are the type of jobs we do all the time for them. You gauge your capacity in manufacturing. You have less capacity in the summertime when the busy season starts, and you have more capacity in the wintertime. We build ahead of time. We do not build anything as an inventory hoping we get an order for it because trusses is not that kind of product. You are manufacturing custom for the building. These are all big contracts that we have.
The developers, they just build one building or two buildings at a time. As they need it, we deliver it to them.
Got it. Okay. So these are for longer-term, larger-scale projects. So they got visibility on it. Got it.
Absolutely.
A follow-up question would be, I'm keeping an eye on the resale market conditions for existing homes. For most of the country, it still appears the market is tight, but there are growing inventory balances in Ontario and British Columbia. The GTA market in particular looks weak. Have you seen home builders nervous about the inventory of unsold homes, or are there some mitigating factors in your view that keeps those groups excited for the remainder of the year?
First, I've got to take the stats away from B.C., and especially B.C. and GTA. We basically take the, it's pretty difficult to do, but we take the stats away from the concrete high rises. That's a huge number of unsold homes in those sectors there. That is the sector we are not in. We do not do any business in that area, but it's a mood frame. Really, I do not know if I would call it nervous. Most of the established builders, this is not a first time. You usually go to a cycle of five to seven years, and things slow down a bit. I do not know if the nervousness is a part, but because a lot of them slowed down right after the boom we had after COVID, and they knew this is not going to last the way everybody was hungry and interest rate.
The moment interest rates started to jump up, they started to shorten their inventory. This is about the low rises. This is five, six-story homes or townhouses and everything. They slowed down. They just wait. The moment they slow down is you build for the future. They do their planning. They do their land purchases. They do their zoning and all of that stuff because nothing ever stays down. Sometimes you hear the politicians talk and stuff there, and we pay too much attention to their gaslighting because then it sounds like the world has ended. The one thing never ended is increased the demand for housing in Canada keeps increasing every day, every month. The increase is completely opposite to what we supply them out there.
Developers, they were nervous for a while about what these guys are going to do and what the government is going to do and stuff. Yes, but they know the pressure and the demand is out there, and somehow we have to find solutions for it. Even right now, we are working with them, and we look at how can we make houses more affordable for them? How could we do this? How could we do solutions for that? Because really, at the end of it, you cannot expect the government to solve everything for you. They will not. They will mess it up for you sometimes. It becomes up to us in our industry. What do we do to make these homes more affordable and make it more efficient and move forward? Those are the conversations we are having with them. At the end, you are right.
If they keep an inventory of 5- 10 homes, and if they sell them, they sell one or two, they will start another one. If they do not, they just wait till they find a buyer for it. They become creative on lowering the down payment or helping with the financing and all of that stuff there. It is amazing once you start becoming creative in your own business and take care of your business, how you find a solution rather than always looking up for somebody else to come up with the solution for you. In our industry, we have a lot of creative entrepreneurs that always come up with that solution.
Great. That was helpful context. I appreciate that. I'll turn the call over. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thanks, Andrew. It looks like there are no more hands raised. This marks the end of our question and answer session. The company is available post-call to answer all of your questions that you may still have via email. That contact information is right now on the screen. If you called in without being able to see, that is info@atlasep.ca Again, info@atlasep.ca. At this time, you may now disconnect. Thanks again for joining us, and I hope you have a great day.
Thank you, Steve. Thank you, everybody, for being on the call. Have a great day.
Thank you.