3/5/2026

speaker
Unknown Participant

Bye. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

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Operator
Conference Call Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Miller Industries fourth quarter 2025 results conference call. Please note this event is being recorded. And now at this time, I would like to turn the call over to Will Miller at Miller Industries. Please go ahead, sir.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

I want to begin by thanking our employees around the world for their dedication throughout the year. Our results and strategic progress reflect the commitment and passion of our team, our suppliers, our customers, and our shareholders.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

As always, our remarks today will include forward-looking statements.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Actual results may differ materially. Please refer to our SEC filings and the safe harbor statement included in today's presentation.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

I would like to start

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

greater detail. We were pleased to deliver a fourth quarter that led to generating full-year revenue in line with our revised expectations, despite a challenging industry environment. I'm incredibly proud of the way our team rose to the challenge this year, focusing on operating discipline in the areas of the business within our control. We have over 1,500 employees across Tennessee, Pennsylvania, France, the United Kingdom, and Italy. And our footprint gives us unmatched reach, capability, and reliability. During the year, we made many difficult but necessary decisions to protect the long-term health of the business. These included strategically decreasing production in response to elevated field inventory in our North American distribution network, right-sizing our cost structure for the current environment and strengthening our supply chain to mitigate the impacts of tariffs. We also achieved meaningful milestones, completing the acquisition of OMARS in an effort to expand our European footprint and take advantage of the strong demand we are seeing in the region, particularly for our heavy duty products.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

More on that shortly. Our core philosophy remains exactly as it has been since day one.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Miller Industries has the best people, in the towing and recovery industry. That philosophy is the backbone of Miller Industries' 35-year history and continues to position the company for future growth. I want to directly acknowledge our teams across the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom who delivered through a challenging market and a deliberate recalibration of production. Their execution enabled us to finish and enter 2026 from a position of strength. I'll now turn the call over to Debbie, who will provide an update on our financial results in more detail, before returning with some more specific thoughts on our markets in 2026, capital allocation priorities, and guidance.

speaker
Debbie
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Will. Before I begin, I would like to note that we closed the acquisition of OMARS on December 2nd, so our fourth quarter results only reflects approximately one month of contribution from OMARS. For the fourth quarter, revenue was $171.2 million, down 22.9% year-over-year as expected. This decline reflects our decision earlier in the year to reduce production and allow distributor inventories to return to historically normalized levels. Gross profit was $26.5 million, or 15.5% of sales, and diluted EPS was 29 cents per share. We saw sequential improvement in retail order activity late in the quarter, and that momentum has continued into 2026, consistent with our expectations. As a result, we have already begun to increase production levels at all the U.S. facilities to meet this demand. For the full year 2025, Revenue was $790.3 million, down 37.2% from 2024. Gross profit was $120.4 million, or 15.2% of sales, and net income was $23 million, or $1.98 per diluted share. With distributor inventory now back to historical levels, we have greater visibility into retail demands and are operating with an improved production cadence. Our SG&A expenses increased on a year-over-year basis for both the fourth quarter and full year 2025, primarily due to one-time expenses related to the voluntary retirement program in third and fourth quarter, and as we executed planned workforce transitions across the organization. Also, transaction and integration costs related to the OMARS acquisition which represent an important investment in our European growth strategy, and higher stock compensation expenses to retain key leadership talent and further align the executive team to the interests of shareholders. These were all planned and strategic investments and expenses that advance our future growth strategy. Now, I'll turn the call back to Will to discuss our markets and our outlook for 2026.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Debbie. In the domestic market, we now see normalized distributor inventory, steadier retail demand, and improved sales order entry as we move into 2026. We expect production levels to rise methodically throughout Q1 and Q2 to match this demand recovery.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Our export business remains a major strength, and the 2026 outlook is very encouraging.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Three drivers stand out in particular, consistent European demand, growing demand in other international markets such as Australia, Japan, Mexico, Indonesia, and many others, and a robust pipeline of global military RFQs, which we will discuss further later in the presentation. These should provide a strong multiyear growth tailwind. and the acquisition of OMARS and our expansion of GDA will both play large roles in this expected growth. Our integration of OMARS, Italy's premier towing equipment manufacturer, continues to progress extremely well. As we've previously shared, we expect our OMARS acquisition to be accretive in the first year. OMARS provides Miller Industries with new sales chains, a stronger brand presence in Europe, and a strategic manufacturing and distribution hub in a key growth region. Omar's is critical to our long-term growth in the European market. This acquisition should also increase U.S. production levels to supplement Omar's integration capacity and equip them with the necessary resources and scale to capitalize on the strong demand for their products. At Gijet in France, our 8 million euro expansion is on schedule is anticipated to double their heavy-duty integration capacity. We're expected to complete the expansion project by mid-2027. Meanwhile, at Boniface in the United Kingdom, we're investing in production efficiencies to increase capacity and support the growing need for both light and heavy-duty products. Demand in Europe remains strong, And to support this, our U.S. operations, especially Ottawa's increased heavy duty production capabilities, will supply GJ, Boniface, and OMARS with reduced lead times, consistent quality, and increased production volumes.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Earlier, I mentioned our robust pipeline of military RFQs.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

We began 2026 with more than $150 million in military commitment. with production scheduled to begin in 2027, with the majority of revenue to be recognized in 2028 and 2029. We are also actively engaged in a substantial pipeline of additional military RFQs. This level of military activity is unprecedented for our company and represents a major long-term growth factor. To service future demand, we're beginning one of the most significant projects in our history. a 200,000-plus square foot addition to our Udawah facility. This estimated $100 million investment should unlock new capacity, streamline heavy-duty workflow, and enhance our manufacturing efficiencies. With more than $150 million in military commitments secured and additional global RFQs underway, the new facility will be key to producing global, high-volume, defense-grade recovery vehicles as well as meeting increased demand for our global export markets while maintaining the ability to service our North American customer base.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

We anticipate the new facility will be production ready in late 2027.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

As we continue our strong cash generation and debt continues to decline, we anticipate funding the majority of our expansion organically through operating cash flow over the next several years. We remain disciplined in how we allocate capital, focusing on five key priorities. Paying a consistent quarterly dividend, which the Board of Directors increased 5% to 21 cents per share this quarter. Debt reduction, which has been reduced to $20 million in January of 2026 through our diligent reduction in working capital. Share repurchases, including $2.2 million in Q4 of 2025. selective M&A opportunities, and ongoing investments in automation, innovation, people, and capacity. We're extremely proud that we've paid our dividend for 61 consecutive quarters, and in 2025, we returned approximately $15.1 million to shareholders between our dividend and share repurchase program.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

This balanced approach strengthens the company while also returning value directly to shareholders. For 2026, we expect revenues between $850 and $900 million.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

We also expect that performance will accelerate into the second half of the year as manufacturing activity increases throughout the first and second quarters and product mix normalizes. We anticipate that revenue will approach $250 million per quarter by the second half of 2026. Additionally, as product mix shifts to a historical percentage of manufactured product and chassis, we would also expect gross margins to return to historical levels in the mid-13% range for the full year. We look forward to meeting with investors to speak about these exciting developments throughout 2026 at the three-part advisors conferences in New York, Chicago, and Dallas, at DA Davidson's Industrial Conference in Nashville,

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

and additional non-deal roadshows to be scheduled. We always welcome continued dialogue with our shareholders.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

In closing, I want to emphasize that 2025 was a difficult year, and our team managed multiple challenges extremely well. We now enter 2026 with normalized distributor inventories, stronger retail demand visibility, a growing international platform, major military momentum, a significant expansion of our U.S. manufacturing footprint, and a strengthened balance sheet. We are exceptionally well positioned for long-term global growth, and I am proud of the work our team has done to get us here. As always, I would like to thank our employees, customers, suppliers, and shareholders for their ongoing support of Miller Industries. Thank you again for joining us. Operator, please open the line for questions.

speaker
Operator
Conference Call Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by the one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. If you wish to decline from the polling process, please press star followed by the two. And if you are using a speakerphone, please flip the handset before pressing any keys. First question comes from Mike Schliske at DA Davidson. Please go ahead.

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Mike Schliske
Analyst, DA Davidson

Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions here. Absolutely. Good morning. So, help me understand. Hey, guys. So, I guess I'm trying to figure out the margin story first. Would you say that the gross margin expectation for 13% range is better than you've seen in the past for the mix that you're expecting? I'm trying to make sure that the cost that you've undertaken are kind of having the desired effect, or at least that we might see on the operating margin line an improvement. when you consider your cost reductions, you know, now that they're behind you? Or is it better or worse than it's been in the past? That's kind of what I'm trying to figure out here.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

I believe they're normalizing. I think our margins are better than they were pre-COVID levels in 19, where we saw margins in the mid-12s to high-12s. But I think you'll see the return back to... On an average year, if you look at 23 and 24 in those mid-13s, although we did have some fluctuations for quarter due to chassis availability and timing of shipments of chassis.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

But I think over a year period, you're going to see them normalize back in the mid-13 range.

speaker
Mike Schliske
Analyst, DA Davidson

So the cost reduction that you've had, the people cost, et cetera, that you've done over the last 12 months, they haven't had any impact? on margins, or I'm just trying to figure out whether you're going to be seeing a better margin profile. Maybe it's operating margin rather than gross. Do you feel you're going to get the benefit that you're expecting on the margin end from all those cost reductions?

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, most of our people reduction was hourly employees that were focused on the reduction or lower levels of production. As we start to ramp back up, we'll intentionally add some people back We did have some retirements that will help, you know, on the SG&A level.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

However, some of those employees have also been replaced as we moved on and we progressed to the, and had plans to replace them throughout the process. Okay. No, that makes sense.

speaker
Mike Schliske
Analyst, DA Davidson

I get it. That's totally, totally fair will. And then the top-line outlook, I think back a year, what happened back then, we on our end were blindsided by some of the, you know, how there's low expectations. I think some of that even surprised you in the swiftness of how the market changed and things that happened in the late fourth quarter of 2024. So the outlook you have now for 2026 at this time of the year, do you feel like you've got a better sense of the confidence this time around than you had this time last year. What's changed, et cetera, that makes you feel like you've got the 850?

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think our confidence level's higher this year. So we saw an abrupt change in downward projections mid-year last year, and really a couple of things. So we've utilized the technology that we have internal to be able to better analyze and predict basis. So we've got a lot more. We had the data, but actually putting into a format to be able to project what we think future needs will be. Also, distribution inventory is back to, as we said, historical average levels. So we're starting to see that order intake pick back up. And really what we're looking at is retail activity. Retail activity or retail demand from our distributors was consistent throughout all of 2025. And we see that consistency moving right back into 2026.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

So really what we're projecting is that we're just ranking back production to meet the average retail demand levels that we saw consistent through 25 and into 26 so far. Great. Our confidence level is pretty high.

speaker
Mike Schliske
Analyst, DA Davidson

And so you would characterize the mix between the chassis plus tow stales and the tow-only kind of packages as more normalized in 26 in your current outlook?

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Absolutely.

speaker
Mike Schliske
Analyst, DA Davidson

And does that mean that it's 50-50 or some other kind of fraction?

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

No, it's not a one-for-one. As you realize, we do have distributors that provide their own chassis municipalities that provide their own chassis along with all of our export products and our sales over in Europe. So it's not a one for one, but it's returning back to a normalized level. I mean, every tow body that we manufacture does have to have a chassis to create a tow truck, but that doesn't mean that we sell every chassis with the body.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Right.

speaker
Mike Schliske
Analyst, DA Davidson

Okay. Just switching over to Omar's real quick. You have an outlook for an accretion in 2026, if I'm not mistaken. But it sounds like your description of it, Will, was more that OMARS is going to help in a lot of other ways, help your U.S. capacity, help your European business with some synergies and cross-selling and some cross, I guess, cross-manufacturing. Is your comment that it was going to be accretive just based on, you know, just layering in the existing OMARS P&L? It sounds like there's a lot more accretion that could happen once some of these synergies start to roll. Is that a fair expectation?

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, it's more of a long-term play, right? So, I mean, currently you're going to see their P&L drop in dollars, and we do believe that they'll be accretive in year one. However, moving forwards, we're now focused on, you know, in our European facilities, what product we should build where and what's most successful, and also looking at the purchasing throughout those three facilities and how to best purchase product. And then, you know, augmenting Omar's heavy-duty production, which they make a great heavy-duty product, but also giving them additional production capabilities from the United States that we can export to them to increase their sales capacity. Similar to what we're doing with Shijie, as both Shijie and Boniface currently use about 50% of their heavy-duty product that's manufactured. other than bringing on just their additional revenue to our organization.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Not to mention they have an amazing state-of-the-art factory with some great capacity and capabilities as well. Sounds great. I appreciate all the color. I'll pass it along. Thank you. Thank you, Mike.

speaker
Operator
Conference Call Operator

Thank you. We have no further questions. I will turn the call back over to Will Miller for closing comments.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Thank you.

speaker
Will Miller
President and Chief Executive Officer

I'd like to thank you all again for joining us on the call today, and we look forward to speaking with you on our first border conference call. If you'd like information on how to participate and ask questions on the call, please visit our investor relations website, millerind.com forward slash investors, or email investors.relations at millerind.com.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative
Director of Investor Relations

Thank you. May God bless you, and may God bless our troops.

speaker
Operator
Conference Call Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and we ask that you please disconnect your lines.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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