APOG April 24, 2026

Apogee Enterprises FY2026 Q4 Earnings Call - Navigating Aluminum Volatility and Soft End-Market Demand

Summary

Apogee Enterprises closed its fiscal 2026 with a performance that beat internal expectations, yet the underlying narrative is one of defensive maneuvering. While net sales rose slightly to $351.4 million, the company is grappling with a perfect storm of rising aluminum costs—up 87% year-over-year—and persistent softness in the metals and glass segments due to sluggish nonresidential construction demand. The quarter's results were bolstered by the successful integration of UW Solutions into the Performance Surfaces segment and cost-cutting measures from 'Project Fortify,' but these wins are being tested by macroeconomic headwinds.

Looking toward fiscal 2027, management is bracing for a bumpy ride. Guidance reflects a cautious outlook, anticipating continued pricing pressure, elevated interest rates, and a slow start to the year. The company is leaning heavily on its 'Apogee Management System' and early-stage AI implementations to drive efficiency, attempting to outrun cyclical downturns through operational discipline and strategic portfolio expansion.

Key Takeaways

  • Net sales for the fourth quarter rose 1.6% to $351.4 million, driven by favorable pricing that helped offset higher aluminum costs.
  • Aluminum costs have surged significantly, increasing 87% over the past year and 25% since January alone.
  • The Performance Surfaces segment saw a major boost from the UW Solutions acquisition, which met its first-year targets of $100 million in revenue and at least 20% Adjusted EBITDA margin.
  • Metals and glass segments are facing significant headwinds due to lower volumes and soft end-market demand in nonresidential construction.
  • Management is deploying AI within the Apogee Management System to improve manufacturing productivity and service levels.
  • Fiscal 2027 guidance for net sales is set between $1.38 billion and $1.43 billion, reflecting a cautious view of the macroeconomic environment.
  • The company expects Adjusted diluted EPS for fiscal 2027 to fall within the range of $2.70 to $3.25.
  • Tariff impacts from the previous year are expected to transition from a headwind to a tailwind in fiscal 2027.
  • SG&A rates are expected to increase in the coming year as incentive compensation programs are reinstated and normalized.
  • The company maintains a strong balance sheet with a consolidated leverage ratio of 1.3x and no near-term debt maturities.
  • Services segment backlog ended the quarter at $694 million, a 4% decrease year-over-year, though management remains optimistic about future positioning.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Apogee Enterprises’ fourth quarter earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there’ll be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you need to press star one one on your telephone. You’ll then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded for replay purposes. I will now turn the conference over to Jeremy Steffan, Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications to begin. Jeremy, please go ahead.

Jeremy Steffan, Vice President, Investor Relations and Communications, Apogee Enterprises: Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to Apogee Enterprises’ fiscal 2026 fourth quarter earnings call. On the call today are Don Nolan, Apogee’s Chief Executive Officer, and Mark Augdahl, our Chief Financial Officer. During this call, the team will reference certain non-GAAP financial measures. Definitions of these measures and a reconciliation to the nearest GAAP measures are provided in the earnings release and slide deck, which are available in the investor relations section of our website. As a reminder, today’s call will contain forward-looking statements. These reflect management’s expectations based on currently available information. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed today. More information about factors that could affect Apogee’s business and financial results can be found in our press release and in the company’s SEC filings. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Don.

Don Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Thanks, Jeremy, and good morning, everyone. We’re glad you could join us for our fourth quarter earnings call. As I’ve spent more time with the business over the past several months, engaging with our teams, visiting our operations, and working closely with our leadership group, I’ve gained a deeper appreciation for both the strengths of our portfolio and the discipline embedded in how we operate. While the market environment continues to evolve, we are focused on executing what is within our control, managing through near-term pressures, and continuing to build a strong foundation for long-term sustainable performance. I’m confident in the organization we have in place and the enhanced strategic direction we are taking as we move forward.

With that said, I’m pleased to share that our results for the quarter were ahead of our expectations on both the top and bottom line, despite what continued to be a dynamic and challenging environment. I’d like to thank our team of dedicated and resilient employees for their focus on delivering exceptional products and services to all of our valuable customers. Fiscal 2026 was a year of disciplined execution for Apogee as we navigated a difficult environment while continuing to strengthen our operating foundation. Our teams delivered meaningful gains in safety, service, and productivity and generated solid cash flow. I’d like to emphasize three areas that position us particularly well for the future. First, Performance Surfaces successfully integrated UW Solutions into the segment. They delivered upon the first year of financial targets for the acquisition of $100 million in revenue and Adjusted EBITDA margin of at least 20%.

The total segment delivered revenue of almost $200 million and an accretive margin for the company, and we’re excited for the future given the expanded market, greater geographical reach, along with the added substrate capability and coating technology. Second, the Apogee Management System continues to drive meaningful improvements across our manufacturing footprint utilizing technology with embedded AI. Last fiscal year, our architectural metals segment made significant progress improving outcomes for our Tubelite brand, completing a value stream redesign, which resulted in improved service levels and lead times. We also reconfigured our Linetec finishing facility in Wausau, Wisconsin, creating a tighter, more connected footprint that streamlined anodizing, paint, and packaging operations. This drove significant reductions in material movement, ultimately creating a leaner and safer environment.

AMS has truly become a cornerstone of Apogee’s operating success, creating a safer work environment for our teams, delivering better quality, service, and reliability for our customers, and building a culture of continuous improvement that will drive even stronger outcomes in the years ahead. Third, we actively managed our cost structure and manufacturing footprint to mitigate portions of direct and indirect tariffs while driving efficiencies across the organization. These decisions were difficult, and we certainly don’t take them lightly, but we are confident that the actions further position Apogee to successfully navigate the market headwinds we see today and expect in the near future. What we delivered in fiscal 2026 reflects more than just execution. It reflects the strength of a strategy that has guided Apogee through change and positioned us to lead.

The strategy we put in place in 2021 continues to serve us well with a clear focus on becoming the economic leader in our target markets, actively managing our portfolio, and strengthening our core capabilities and platforms. That focus has driven meaningful improvement across the business, including a more competitive cost structure through facility consolidation and organizational alignment, tighter supply chain integration, and greater leverage of enterprise back-office functions. At the same time, the Apogee Management System delivered substantial gains in productivity and safety. We elevated pricing discipline and sharpened our portfolio, resulting in higher margins and increased profit dollars over the past five years.

Moving forward, we are enhancing these strategic pillars to position Apogee as a more growth-oriented, customer-obsessed organization. Pillar number one is focused on accelerating leadership in target markets by differentiating through deep customer focus and insight, shaping what we offer and how we deliver it to be the economic leader in the markets we serve. The second pillar involves growing and strengthening the portfolio through organic and inorganic investments and differentiated solutions that address evolving customer challenges and deliver lasting value. The third pillar is all about advancing core capabilities by driving a culture of continuous improvement through operational excellence, talent development, and technology that truly elevates the customer experience. Building on the progress we’ve made, we continue to identify areas for growth in nonresidential construction markets.

We see opportunities to further leverage our deep knowledge of this industry by offering differentiated products, project expertise, and strong customer relationships across architectural building products and services. At the same time, we are evaluating adjacent opportunities and growth avenues that build on our core capabilities in Performance Surfaces, including the selective expansion of substrate capabilities and advanced coating technologies. These opportunities have the potential to extend our reach into new markets and geographies, broaden our end market exposure, and provide platform-style growth options for the future. Our focus remains to be disciplined on execution and thoughtful with our capital allocation as we evaluate opportunities intended to support durable returns, long-term earnings, and cash flow generation across the portfolio.

By cultivating a broad growth mindset, deepening our commercial and customer insight capabilities, and intentionally expanding into new and adjacent markets, we are positioning Apogee not only to respond to evolving customer needs but to anticipate them, shaping demand, redefining our competitive space, and creating enduring value over time. As we look ahead, we’re reminded that our industry will always move through cycles. Apogee’s future is not defined by those cycles. It’s defined by the choices we’re making today. By investing in the strategic growth areas where demand is strongest, and by elevating our focus on delivering exceptional value to our customers, we’re building a company positioned not only to navigate the near-term environment but to achieve long-term sustainable success. I’m deeply proud of what our teams have accomplished, and I’m even more confident in where we’re headed.

Together, we are creating an Apogee that is stronger, more resilient, and capable of delivering exceptional value for all stakeholders. With that, I’ll turn it over to Mark to cover the financials and our fiscal 2027 outlook.

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Thanks, Don, and good morning, everyone. First, I’ll begin with a review of the results of the fourth quarter, followed by full-year commentary, and then discuss our outlook and assumptions for fiscal 2027. Starting with our consolidated results, net sales increased 1.6% to $351.4 million, primarily reflecting favorable pricing in the metal segment that helped offset a portion of higher aluminum costs. Favorable mix also contributed, partially offset by lower overall volume. Adjusted EBITDA margin increased to 12.1% compared to 11.9% a year ago. The improvement was primarily driven by lower incentive compensation and risk-related insurance expenses, along with productivity improvements. We also benefited from cost savings associated with Fortify Phase Two, with actions substantially completed during the quarter. The improvements were partially offset by higher aluminum costs, the impact from the reduction in volume, and higher health insurance costs.

Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.92, slightly ahead of our expectations and up year-over-year, primarily driven by lower amortization and interest expense. Turning to our segment results, metals net sales declined approximately 2% to $110 million, reflecting continued challenging market conditions. The decrease was primarily due to lower volume, partially offset by favorable price and product mix. Despite the revenue decline, adjusted EBITDA margin improved to 6.5%, driven by cost savings from Fortify Phase 2 and favorable product mix, partially offset by higher aluminum costs that were not fully offset by those pricing actions and the impact of lower volume. The services segment delivered its eighth consecutive quarter of year-over-year net sales growth, primarily due to increased volume from project timing, partially offset by price.

Adjusted EBITDA margin decreased to 7.5%, mostly driven by lower price, partially offset by the impact from higher volume and improved productivity. Backlog for services ended the quarter at $694 million, down approximately 4% compared to the prior year, but we are well positioned entering the upcoming fiscal year. Glass net sales declined to approximately $67 million, primarily driven by lower volume and price due to continued end market demand softness. Adjusted EBITDA margin also declined to 13.5% due to lower volume and price and higher material and freight costs, partially offset by productivity improvements, lower incentive compensation, and warranty-related expenses. Performance Surfaces net sales increased to over 13%, driven by volume growth, supported by share gains in the retail and fine arts market channels. Adjusted EBITDA margin decreased due to higher material and manufacturing costs, partially offset by net sales leveraged from higher volume.

On a full year basis, the company’s net sales increased 3.2% to $1.4 billion, driven by $65.3 million of inorganic contribution from the acquisition of UW Solutions. This growth was partially offset by lower volume, reflecting softer end market demand in metals and glass throughout the fiscal year. Adjusted EBITDA margin declined to 11.9%, primarily due to higher aluminum costs, as well as the impact of lower volume and higher health insurance costs. These headwinds were partially offset by lower incentive compensation and risk-related insurance expenses, and savings generated under Project Fortify Phase 2. Turning to cash flow on the balance sheet. Net cash provided by operating activities was $55.8 million in the quarter, compared to $30 million a year ago. The improvement was driven by higher net income and working capital improvements.

On a full year basis, net cash from operating activities was $122.5 million and similar on a year-over-year basis. Also, during the fiscal year, we used $27.3 million for CapEx, prioritizing investments that drive operational efficiency and margin improvement. In the fourth quarter, we repurchased $15 million of stock, and on a full year basis, returned $37.2 million to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. Our balance sheet remains strong, with a consolidated leverage ratio of 1.3 times, no near-term debt maturities, and significant capital available for future deployment. Looking ahead to fiscal 2027, the market characteristics are expected to remain relatively unchanged, especially in the first half. We anticipate continued competitive pricing and volume pressure in the metals and glass segments, elevated long-term interest rates, and a dynamic macroeconomic environment. External indicators, including the Architecture Billings Index and FMI, reflect ongoing softness in the operating environment throughout the year.

Amid these conditions, we remain focused on executing the enhanced strategy Don referenced earlier, which is positioning the business to drive organic and inorganic growth over time. While we remain confident in the long-term fundamentals of our business, the pace and direction of global economic conditions continue to be in flux. As a result, we’ve set wider full year sales and EPS ranges to ensure our guidance reflects the realities of today’s operating environment. For fiscal 2027, we expect full year net sales between $1.38 billion-$1.43 billion, and Adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $2.70-$3.25. This guidance includes the following headwind assumptions, normalization of corporate incentive compensation expense, elevated aluminum and fuel cost inflation, and persistently rising health insurance expense.

These are partially offset by benefits from the fourth quarter Fortify 2 actions in metals and corporate, prior year tariff costs that have since been mitigated and will be tailwinds mostly impacting the first half, and pricing actions expected to offset incremental inflationary costs, and finally, continued emphasis on cost controls across the organization. We anticipate generating slightly more revenue and profit in the second half than the first, as macroeconomic factors are expected to improve throughout the upcoming fiscal year. Additionally, we expect interest expense of approximately $10 million, an adjusted effective tax rate of 26%-27%, and capital expenditures between $35 million and $40 million. Looking ahead to the first quarter, we expect net sales to be slightly lower and adjusted EPS to be lower on a year-over-year basis.

We also expect operating cash flow generation to start the year strong, reflecting disciplined execution and working capital management. As we look ahead, we recognize we are operating amid a challenging macroeconomic environment marked by pricing pressure, elevated interest rates, and uneven demand. Even so, our focus remains firmly on what we can control, operating safely, executing with discipline, and managing the business for long-term success. I want to thank our employees for their continued dedication and execution, and our customers for their trust and partnership. Importantly, our strong cash generation and disciplined approach to managing our balance sheet provide the flexibility to reinvest in the business, advance our strategic priorities, and return capital thoughtfully. That financial strength gives us confidence in our ability to navigate near-term headwinds while positioning Apogee for sustainable performance and driving long-term value for all stakeholders.

With that said, we will now open up the call to questions. Operator, please go ahead.

Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question or a comment at this time, please press star one one on your telephone. If your question has been answered and you wish to remove yourself from the queue, please press star one one again. We will pause for a moment while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Julio Romero with Sidoti & Company. Your line is open.

Julio Romero, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Thanks. Hey, good morning, Don, Mark, Jeremy.

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Hi, Julio.

Julio Romero, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Hey, good morning. Hey, Mark, I appreciate you running through some of the headwinds and tailwinds in the guidance in your prepared remarks. Was hoping you could help us out with putting a finer point on any effect baked in for the year-to-date rise in aluminum prices and kind of what assumptions are baked in terms of price increases to help offset that.

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Sure. First of all, yeah, aluminum has been an interesting thing to be tracking, and we’ve been doing so diligently. I think we’ve seen about 87% increase in aluminum costs over the past year, and 25% increases just since January. Yeah, very dynamic market as it relates to that. As far as how we’re thinking about that, we’re certainly baking those increases in where we, at this point, have no idea what’s going to happen to aluminum costs going forward. We are certainly addressing pricing or offsetting those costs that we’ve seen by implementing pricing as appropriate. We’re looking at all levers around that pricing too, whether it be surcharges or regular pricing built into our normal pricing processes. Certainly a drag on the year, which is reflected in our outlook. We’re doing all that we can to mitigate those impacts.

Julio Romero, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Got it. Thanks. Very helpful there. On tariffs, did I hear you guys correctly that the tariff impact from the prior year is essentially fully mitigated and should be a tailwind in 2026? Secondly, I guess, would both that imply with regards to the recently revised tariff policy, no direct impact and just more of an indirect impact on the rising aluminum side?

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Yes, that’s correct, Julio. First of all, I think we articulated last year that for FY 2026, we had about a $9 million impact on tariffs. It was primarily as it relates to our supply chain as we move product across the border to Canada and back. That was offset with the actions that we put in place with Fortify too. But it will be a headwind in the first half of the year. Excuse me, it was a headwind in 2026. It’ll be a tailwind now in 2027.

Julio Romero, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Got you. Super helpful there. One more, and I’ll pass it on. Don, you mentioned in the prepared that the Apogee Management System is leveraging embedded AI to drive some manufacturing improvements. Can you expand on those comments? I think you mentioned some benefit with regards to reconfiguring a finishing facility in Wausau and then another initiative on the metal side. Just hoping you could expand on those comments.

Don Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Sure. Look, it’s early days for us in AI for sure, but we’re already starting to see some impact. We have a few things that we’re looking at and using in our manufacturing facilities already. It’s early days and more to come. I think the other thing that you should know is we’re rolling out Copilot across the company, and we’re starting to see some impact as everyone gets a little bit more productive. This is a long-term investment.

Julio Romero, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Very helpful. I’ll pass it on. Thanks very much.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Gowshihan Sriharan with Singular Research. Your line is open.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Good morning, gentlemen. Can you hear me?

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Loud and clear. Morning.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Can you hear me? Hello?

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Yes, we can hear you.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Okay, thank you. On the metals side, with the aluminum headwind, and Fortify that has helped you kind of maintain margins, have you consciously shifted your mix of customers or project types to stay away from certain low-margin accounts, and should we expect more of that mix pruning as we go through FY 2027?

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: From my perspective, we have not changed our product or customer mix as it relates to anything that’s gone on with aluminum cost increases. If I’m answering your question correctly there.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Just in metals in respect as well, have you shifted away from...

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Nope. Aluminum is the base of most of our product in that segment.

Don Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, Apogee Enterprises: Yeah, even at this price, aluminum is the best material for these applications, so.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Gotcha. On the glass side, are you changing any price structure in terms of surcharges or contract duration so that it’s not exposed to any rapid swings in the input pricing?

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: The glass market is unique as the float suppliers do provide surcharges to us as they get impacted by various components of their cost, and to the extent that those are passed on to us, we pass them on as well.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Gotcha. On the Fortify 1 and 2, as SG&A is down as a percent, how much of that SG&A efficiency is truly structural versus temporarily depressed by lower incentive comps? Are there any areas where you actually expect SG&A to step back up in FY 2027?

Mark Augdahl, Chief Financial Officer, Apogee Enterprises: It’s a great point. Yes, both incentives as well as Fortify savings impacted the SG&A rate in FY 2026. We are reinstating our compensation programs or allowing for our STI to come back into play, so it will be a drag on our FY 2027 results. Therefore, I do expect our overall SG&A rate to increase.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Gotcha. On the performance in UW platform, you look like you have a lot of runway, but from an operational standpoint, are there any specific capacity bottlenecks or process constraints in that business that you need to address in FY 2027 to support the next leg of growth there?

Don Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, Apogee Enterprises: I mean, you hit it right on the head. We’re really excited about the growth potential for Performance Surfaces, especially our ResinDek mezzanine flooring line. We continue to expand that business, not just in the United States but into Europe and elsewhere. We are investing in that plan. Short-term, we don’t see a problem there.

Gowshihan Sriharan, Analyst, Singular Research: Okay. I’ll take the rest offline. Thank you, guys.

Operator: I’m not showing any further questions at this time. I turn the call back to Don for any further remarks.

Don Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, Apogee Enterprises: In closing, we remain confident in the actions we’re taking and the foundation we’ve built. We’re a leaner, more agile organization with a clear and urgent focus on serving the customer. I want to thank our employees for their dedication and commitment. They continue to make a meaningful difference for our customers and our company. Our strategy is clear, our discipline is strong, and we believe Apogee is well-positioned to deliver long-term value. Thank you for your continued interest and support.

Operator: Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today’s presentation. We thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.