NN, Inc. Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Accelerating Long-Term Goals to 2029 on Strong Data Center & Grid Momentum
Summary
NN, Inc. delivered a strong first quarter with net sales rising 12.1% year-over-year to $118.5 million and adjusted EBITDA up 33.7% to $14.1 million. The results were driven by a favorable shift in sales mix toward higher-margin growth markets like electric grid, data center, and defense electronics, which offset softness in China automotive. Management raised full-year 2026 guidance for net sales and adjusted EBITDA, citing broad-based growth across 22 of its top 30 customers and strong new business wins concentrated in strategic end markets.
The company is accelerating its long-term financial targets, pulling the timeline to achieve its 2029 goals forward by one year. Management highlighted significant momentum in its data center and electric grid businesses, with the data center segment already exceeding $70 million in trailing sales and targeting $100 million. The portfolio transformation is visibly working, with growth markets now comprising 44% of sales compared to 35% in 2023, while automotive exposure has shrunk to 44%. Management remains disciplined on margins, rejecting low-yield automotive quotes and focusing on profitable content growth per data center rack.
Key Takeaways
- Net sales for Q1 2026 reached $118.5 million, a 12.1% increase year-over-year, driven by positive sales mix, higher precious metals pass-through, and favorable foreign exchange impacts.
- Adjusted EBITDA surged 33.7% to $14.1 million, with margins expanding to 11.9% from 10% in the prior year period, reflecting improved operational efficiency and cost-out programs.
- Management raised full-year 2026 guidance, projecting net sales of $450 million to $470 million and adjusted EBITDA of $52 million to $62 million, citing strong momentum and visibility.
- The company is accelerating its long-term financial goals, pulling the timeline to achieve its 2029 targets forward by one year, while keeping the net sales and EBITDA targets unchanged.
- Growth markets including electric grid, data center, defense electronics, and medical now account for 44% of sales, up from 35% in 2023, as the company deliberately shifts away from automotive.
- New business wins totaled $42.9 million in Q1, concentrated heavily in electrical grid and data center markets, with the data center business already exceeding $70 million on a trailing twelve-month basis.
- NN, Inc. launched liquid cooling connectors for data centers, a high-growth area with market estimates ranging from $1.5 billion to $6 billion, leveraging existing fluid management expertise.
- The Power Solutions segment saw sales jump 27% to $55.4 million, with adjusted EBITDA margins expanding to 18.7%, while the Mobile Solutions segment returned to year-over-year sales growth.
- Management maintained a disciplined approach to automotive markets, refusing to chase share with low-margin quotes and offsetting China automotive softness with strength in other regions.
- Liquidity improved with the receipt of CARES Act proceeds, and management confirmed there are no immediate plans for further plant closures, focusing instead on capital deployment for growth assets like new plating equipment.
Full Transcript
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the NN, Inc. first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during that time, press star followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you want to withdraw your question, press star followed by the number 1. I will now hand today’s call over to Joseph Caminiti in Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Joseph Caminiti, Investor Relations, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Tamika. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. I’m Joe Caminiti with NN, Inc.’s Investor Relations team, and I’d love to thank you for attending today’s earnings call and business update. Last evening, we issued a press release announcing our financial results for the first quarter ended March 31st, 2026, as well as a supplemental presentation, which has been posted to the Investor Relations section of our website. If anyone needs a copy of the press release or a supplemental presentation, you may contact Alpha IR Group at [email protected]. Joining us from NN management today are Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, Chris Bohnert, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, while Tim French, our Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, will be joining us for the question-and-answer session. Please turn to slide 2, where you’ll find our forward-looking statements and disclosure information.
Before we begin, I’d like to take a note of the cautionary language regarding forward-looking statements contained in today’s press release. Supplemental presentation and risk factors in the section of the company’s annual report on 10-Q for the fiscal 1st quarter ended March 31st, 2026. The same language applies to the comments made on today’s conference call, including the Q&A session, as well as the live webcast. Our presentation today will contain forward-looking statements regarding sales, margins, inflation, supply chain constraints, foreign exchange rates, tax rates, acquisitions and divestitures, synergies, cash and cost savings, future operating results, performance of our worldwide markets, general economic conditions, and economic conditions in the industrial sector, including the potential impact and ramifications of tariffs, the impacts of pandemics and other public health crises and military conflicts on the company’s financial condition, and other topics.
These statements should be used with caution and are subject to various risks and uncertainties, many of which are outside the company’s control, which may cause actual results to be materially different from the such forward-looking statements. The presentation also includes certain non-GAAP measures as defined by SEC rules. A reconciliation of such non-GAAP measures is contained in the tables in the financial section, in the final section of the press release and the supplemental presentation. Please turn to slide 4. I will now turn the call over to our CEO, Harold Bevis. Harold?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Joe. Joe, I just received a text that there’s just music on the call. Can we do a check to make sure the lines are open?
Joseph Caminiti, Investor Relations, NN, Inc.: Tamika, may you help us with that?
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: Yes, the lines are open.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Okay. I’ll proceed here. Thank you. Thank you, Joe. Good morning, everyone. We had a good quarter, and we have a good outlook, and we look forward to giving you an update today and answering questions. We had a strong Q1. We’re very thankful for it. It was across net sales, adjusted EBITDA, and a few other areas. We’re gonna highlight a few of those today. The performance in the quarter was led by a very good mix, which was a main driver of our improved results. Of note, we achieved the highest trailing twelve-month adjusted EBITDA that we have in five years. Additionally, with regards to future performance, we captured noteworthy wins in key markets of electric grid and data center. We’re gonna touch on those in a minute also.
The second point that we want to make is that our growth programs are delivering results. We have 3 main diversification programs that are in play. They’re in electrical grid and data center, defense electronics, and the medical markets. We expect to see solid volume growth through 2026. We are winning in data centers for AI cloud computing hardware. We’re focused on increasing our content per data center. The 3rd point that we want to mention is that our growth program is meeting up with our cost blueprint and generating good profits. We have a lower cost operating footprint today. It’s delivering results reflected in stronger profitability. Our margins, therefore, are turning to the high side of historical results. You are witnessing the earnings potential of this company.
Fourth point that we wanna mention right up front here is that we’re forecasting this performance to continue, and we’re raising our 2026 guidance in a few spots. Our strong Q1 and the outlook and the visibility that we have for the remainder of the year is leading us to positively revise our full year guide. We’re revising our guidance ranges higher for net sales, adjusted EBITDA, and new business wins, which we previously announced on April 14th. We’re building momentum from new launches and program ramp-ups, and we’re quite excited about it. Our improved 2026 outlook is pulling the timelines of attaining our long-term goals in as well, and specifically, we are accelerating our 5-year model to be a 4-year model. That is something that we’re gonna touch on later on as also.
If we turn to slide five, I’d like to make a few more comments about the outlook and the guidance improvement. We did have a strong first quarter. We’re gonna cover that, and Chris is gonna do a deep dive into some of the areas. We delivered on multiple company records, and we’re building forward momentum that will carry us through the rest of the year and into 2027 as well. The first point that we wanna make is that our sales growth is broad. It is not one big program with one customer or even just a few customers. Instead, our sales are up with 22 of our top 30 customers, and improvements are widespread. We have 700 customers in total, and the bottom beneath the top 30 customers, we’re up with that group as well.
Right now, we’re launching over 100 small and medium-sized programs with many of those customers, and we’re adding brand new customers also, specifically in the data center arena. Our outlook for the rest of 2026 is strong, and it’s multifaceted. The second point is that based on our full year outlooks and our forecast and our actual momentum, we’re going to be delivering record annual performance this year. We expect that strength to be across many of our key metrics. We expect to have a strong sales mix, growth, adjusted EBITDA growth and adjusted EBITDA margins, growth in adjusted EPS, and new business wins growth. We’re expanding our participation in the data center build-out that’s underway, and we’re actively prospecting and winning additional business. It’s a nice turning point for our company, and we expect it to continue.
Additionally, as a result of a strong 2026, we’re moving the long-term goal timeline in from 2030 to 2029. The results that we are delivering are overcoming global automotive weakness and global commercial vehicle weakness and tariff turmoil. We’re more than offsetting those dynamics, we’re successfully replacing these soft areas with new sales in electric grid, data center, defense electronics, medical, and our industrial business. Turning to page 6, we wanna review the high-level metrics in the first quarter, then Chris Bohnert, our CFO, will drill down a bit further into the numbers. First of all, our sales were up both year-over-year and sequentially, about $12 million-$13 million or about 12%. I’ll wait a minute for the slide to advance and catch up with me here.
The growth was a solid mix, and it was in grid and data center, defense and electronics are delivering strong growth, as I mentioned. The sequential sales growth also led to a commensurate increase in working capital, which occurs seasonally in our business, and that did happen in the first quarter. Secondly, our adjusted operating income was up year over year and sequentially, and the results of our operational actions are shining through into our results. We have a leaner operating model today, and the large one time costs that we incurred are washing behind us. Our adjusted EBITDA was also up year over year and sequentially. As mentioned, this is being driven by a good sales mix, which we expect to continue, heavily concentrated in the power side of our business and strong operating performance.
Most of our plants are delivering results for us. We have just a few left that are at break even, slightly negative, but it’s very widespread across many customers, all of our plants, and we’re very thankful for that we’re seeing the results of our hard work. On the new business win side, we were up significantly year over year and sequentially. We had a big quarter in Q1 for us, and it was concentrated in electrical grid and the data center markets. On adjusted gross margin, again, we were up sequentially and year over year, and our margins were also up for the same reasons, good sales mix and good operating performance. It was a solid quarter, obviously. It’s reflective of the progress we’ve made across the portfolio with a good sales mix and strong operating performance.
As a result of this performance and our outlook, we’re raising our outlook for both the full year and for the next few years. We’re gonna get into a few more details after Chris speaks and reviews our company’s first quarter more fully. Chris?
Chris Bohnert, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Harold. Good morning, everyone. If you’re following along in the presentation, I’ll start on slide 7, which highlights our first quarter financial results. Net sales for the quarter were $118.5 million, an increase of $12.8 million or 12.1% versus the prior year quarter. The revenue growth was driven by the impact of a positive shift in our sales mix, as Harold mentioned. Higher precious metals passed through in the quarter, along with favorable foreign exchange impacts. These positive impacts were partially offset by softness in our China automotive business. Outside of China, our global automotive business was up slightly. Adjusted operating income for the first quarter was $5.8 million, marking a strong increase of $3.8 million compared to $2 million or 184% versus the prior year period.
Adjusted EBITDA results for the quarter were $14.1 million, increasing $3.5 million compared to the $10.6 million we reported in the prior year period, an improvement of 33.7%. Our strong first quarter adjusted EBITDA results were driven by an improvement to our sales mix, the capture of operating efficiencies across our operations, and our successful cost-out programs we implemented the past couple years. As a result, adjusted EBITDA margins were 11.9%, an increase of 33% compared to the 10% in the prior year quarter. I’ll turn to our segment results starting on slide 8.
In our Power Solutions segment, where our business consists largely of stamped products, net sales for the quarter were $55.4 million, up $11.9 million or 27% compared to the $43.5 million we reported in the prior year period. The growth was driven by an improved sales mix from higher volumes in targeted growth areas, higher precious metals pass-through pricing, and favorable foreign exchange impacts. This top-line growth was partially offset by sales volume softness in certain stamped product lines. Power Solutions adjusted EBITDA was $10.4 million, an increase of $4.1 million or 65.1% versus prior year’s quarter of $6.3 million, driven by improved sales mix, the strengthening of profitability through ongoing cost out initiatives.
We do see a short lag as we pass through the impact of inflation to precious metals pricing, tariff impacts, and other surcharges, which temporarily pinch profitability. As a function of this improved adjusted EBITDA, we’ve seen stronger margin pull-through with quarterly adjusted EBITDA margins of 18.7% of net sales, up from 14.5% in the prior year period. Looking ahead, our new business momentum in this segment remains strong, with wins totaling $29.3 million in the first quarter, concentrated in key markets that Harold mentioned of electrical grid, data center and defense, and electronics products. During the quarter, we announced that we had acquired additional plating equipment to advance our growth in electrical grid and data center markets. Consistent with our strategic growth efforts, we continue to invest our CapEx to support these growth opportunities.
Turning to slide 9, our Mobile Solutions segment, which covers our machine products business. The net sales for the first quarter were $63.1 million compared to $62.2 million in last year’s first quarter, an increase of $0.9 million or about 1.4%. Notably, this segment has now returned to year-over-year sales growth. While modest, our sales growth reflected solid volumes from new program launches and broader strength across North America, South America, Europe, and automotive markets, along with favorable foreign exchange impacts. This was partially offset by softer automotive volumes in China. Our first quarter adjusted EBITDA in the Mobile Solutions segment was $8.2 million, up slightly versus last year’s first quarter, with adjusted EBITDA margins falling at 13%.
The flat margin reflects the offset of profitability improvements in most regions against the impact of China automotive softness. On the new business front, we secured wins totaling $13.6 million. Notably, this included the liquid cooling connector components, and we are now in production and pursuing additional opportunities. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Harold. Harold?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Chris. Let’s turn to slide 9. Excuse me, slide 10. I’m seeing a lag in the slides turning here. I’ll just wait a second. Our portfolio transformation is working. We wanted to report out to you on that. We’ve been asked questions about that. We’re executing on our strategy to intentionally reshape our portfolio towards higher growth and higher margin end markets. Our top three growth markets, as we’ve mentioned, and you know, are electric grid and data center, defense electronics and medical. Those specific end markets are collectively up 28% versus Q1 2025. On a consolidated basis, our growth markets accounted for 35% in 2023. Now constitute 44%. The, excuse me, the 56% in automotive has shrank to 44%.
We’re deliberately changing that mix, and we have forward goals to continue that progression. As mentioned, our growth is broad-based and spread across multiple customers, products, and programs. It’s not concentrated in any single program or with any single customer or platform. There are no big bets in what we’re doing intentionally, and we’re happy to show you here that the portfolio is shifting as we are driving it to. Our auto strategy remains disciplined. Our goal in automotive markets is to maintain good volumes, not chase share or chase large volumes. Because of this, we’re able to better absorb the automotive market weakness that’s happening right now without disrupting our overall growth trajectory or our reported numbers.
This mix shift is an important structural driver of our margin expansion. The growth markets carry more accretive margins than our legacy mix, that’s helping us achieve our margin rates also. As these scale up, we expect to see continued pull-through to gross margin and EBITDA. This will be a primary lever closing the gap to our long-term targets. Turning to slide 11, wanted to point out a little bit more about each of the 3 areas that we’re pursuing. For diversification and for forward growth, each has the potential to become a material business for our company. All 3 are internally funded. We have been allocating people and capital resources to each one of these. Each has dedicated assets, certifications, and pipelines well in excess of current revenue.
We’re going to go through just a few highlights and then kind of a status update for you, starting with electric grid and data center. We are building on a large, profitable end-to-end business. It’s already over $70 million segment for us on an LTM basis. Our near-term goal is to target this to be a $100 million business for us. We’ve added assets, products, and people. As we previously reported, we added liquid cooling connectors in the first quarter with new product line and new customers for us. The data center part of this endeavor for us is fast-paced and it’s collaborative.
As you know from following this industry, all of us know from following the public markets globally, there’s a big, big backlog of equipment here, infrastructure build-out, the industry, the supply industry of which we’re a part of, is underway with trying to get caught up. The bottom line for this segment for us is that the growth from new and existing customers is higher than we expected and faster than we expected, and it’s continuing. We’re attempting to increase our content per rack and content per data center with multiple endeavors that we’re underway with. That one is a plus plus in terms of performance for us, and the margins are quite good. Next is defense electronics. We’re also adding to a large profitable business in this area. The business is already over $50 million on a trailing 12-month basis.
We’re also adding assets and certifications here. We’re internally funding this as well. In this case, we’ve been working with a marquee OEM in the United States to expand into a new product area as a tier 1 manufacturer of weapons components. It’s been going quite well. We’ve had to add new specialized equipment in this case. It required new equipment because the parts are quite large compared to the parts we’ve made in our past. I will say that the bottom line here is the growth has been faster and bigger than we expected also, and our momentum continues to build. The third area is medical. Medical, we restarted that in the fall of 2023. In this case, it was a small, unprofitable business, and we implemented both an operational turnaround plan as well as a forward growth plan.
Similar to the defense electronics segment, we’ve been working for 2 years with a marquee OEM, a global maker of robotic surgical equipment, and that program is beginning to show results for us also in terms of products going into production. Bottom line for this area is that it’s been slower than we had expected relative to the 2 other diversification endeavors, but momentum is now increasing. We’re carrying forward with each of these, and in each case, we have a prospecting list, and we have new products envisioned as well as new equipment and new certifications. They’re kicking in now. The biggest and fastest one, obviously, is data center.
If you turn the page to page 12, we’re getting a lot of questions about what are we doing, what are we not doing, how big is it, how big is the market, that sort of a thing. We wanted to report out to you. It is our number 2 overall market right now. Our internal plan is for it to become our number 1 market. Currently, right now, the global automotive business is larger than this. We sell multiple components into this arena, transformer components, electrical disconnects, circuit breaker components, smart meter components, liquid cooling components. As I mentioned, it’s already a big accretive business for us, and our near-term goal is to get it to $100 million. The liquid cooling connector business that we launched in the 1st quarter was really a neat product for us. If you follow this area, it’s a big deal.
It’s a big deal in the industry if you go to a trade show, a whole bunch of the trade shows tied to cooling if you go to a data center trade show. It’s growing fast. It’s also called quick disconnect couplings. It’s also called fluid connectors. The bottom line is it’s the stainless steel connectors through which the coolant flows to the cold plates and through the cooling system inside of the data center racks so that the chips don’t get overheated and can form at spec. Market sizes are, there’s a big range here if you Google this or research it because the numbers that pre-existed the last 18 months are getting blown up as this whole area has really gotten big fast. The market size estimates for what we’re participating in range from $1.5 billion-$6 billion and growing quickly.
When I say quickly, some of the growth rates are at 40% per annum. Large growth rates. The bellwether reporter here is NVIDIA. If you follow what they say, they say they have a five-year backlog. We’re seeing big backlog situations also. We’re seeing backlogs that go out through the rest of this decade, and we’re participating in those. We’re leveraging our fluid management trade secrets. For a long time, we’ve understood how to control fuels, atomized fuels inside of engines. It’s a no-leak situation as well. We’re adding to our existing portfolio of machines to make these types of small, precise components.
The specs that are prevalent in the data centers equate to about one drop of water that can leak every 10 years. That may sound severe, but actually we’re at a better level than that because in the engine environment with fuel, the leakage is measured atomically and molecularly, as it can be explosive and damaging. This is right in our sweet spot. We previously mentioned that while we had over 100 machines that could make these kind of products already, we added another 17 and ordered them and have received about half of them. We’re coupling them with our in-house trade secrets around turning, treating, electroplating, abrasive flow, machining, and manufacturing, and testing.
Big deal here is you can’t have burrs, and there’s a lot of deburring required, and then they have to be aesthetically pleasing with a mirror-like finish, which leads to electroplating. We believe there’s a lot of upside in this area. We have a multi-product view of it, and our goal is to add content per rack, and we’re working on that on a bill four basis. That was just a little bit more on the data center. If you turn the page to our end market outlooks, we do participate in several end markets, as you know. We have two main types of production platforms, one turning and machining and one stamping, welding, and plating. We serve multiple end markets with those common engineering and manufacturing platforms. I covered grid. You know, it’s a strong market.
It’s growing. It’s backlogged several years. Generally speaking, we’re getting into situations that are immediate ramp up in this arena. We expect it to continue like that through the rest of this year. Second, defense electronics, we mainly serve it in North America, United States specifically. Spending is at record levels under the current president administration and on a forward basis. We also expect that to continue through the rest of this year. Third is medical, where we’re really focused in on equipment versus implants. That is a steady and growing market, and we’re expecting to achieve more new wins as the year progresses. It’s still a small business for us, but I will say that Tim French and team have corrected the profit problem, and we are making money in the medical business already.
Automotive in China. Automotive in China has been growing quickly for us over the last couple of years. If you follow that market year-to-date, in 2026, the China market is down, and it’s predicted to be down going through the rest of the year. We expect to stay at similar rate that we’re at through the rest of 2026. The indigenous market’s down more than export market, but we’re right there in the middle of it with a big plant in the suburbs of Shanghai, and we serve Chinese car makers and the business is soft. We’ve been able to overcome that soft business. That’s a good mix for us. We make good money in China, but we’ve been able to offset the market softness there. Commercial vehicle, that covers trucks, agriculture equipment, construction equipment.
Each of those markets has a different outlook by geography. The common denominator for us is that we’re attached to large diesel engines. The market’s been down slightly, globally, and it’s a combination of being down in North America, but up in China. We’ve been had two situations, one in China being up, one in North America being down. The bellwether reporter there in this case would be Cummins. They’re a big merchant manufacturer of engines, big diesel engines, and also now with generators for data centers. We’re expecting to see growth in the second half. Industrial, we’re mainly tied into the industrial market in the United States. GDP is up about 2% year to date. That’s kind of the outlook.
We expect to see modest growth through the rest of the year. Global auto, which I mentioned, which is slightly down due to affordability, ICE, the EV, reset rates, and China exports. GlobalData came out yesterday with a global automotive update, they’re predicting that the global market will be down about 2% this year. Due to the programs we’re on, we’ll just do a little bit better than that, we’re expecting flat to low through the rest of 2026. That was just a market update for you. Overall, our markets are better than last year is kind of a takeaway that I’d like you to have here. If we turn to page 14, I’d like to have Chris take us through a little bit of on our long-term goals.
Chris Bohnert, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Harold. Please turn to slide 14 if you’re continuing to follow along. Given our market expected growth rates and the pace at which our targeted growth programs and cost initiatives have been delivering our results, we’re gonna pull in the timing of our long-term financial goals by 1 year. We’ve previously communicated these goals to you. With these changes in our markets and business, we’re gonna pull them forward from 2030 to 2029. The net sales and EBITDA targets are not changing. The net sales of approximately $600 million at a 20% adjusted gross margin rate and adjusted EBITDA about $80 million at a 13% margin are gonna be consistent with what we’ve previously reported.
Relative to our full year 2025 results, this reflects more than a 40% growth in net sales and more than 60% growth in adjusted EBITDA. With adjusted gross margins expanding from around 18.5% in 2025 to our target of 20%. As previously communicated, we’re targeting about 13%-14% adjusted EBITDA margins, demonstrating meaningful growth from where we’re at today at about 11.6% through 2025. On slide 15 provides additional context on our business performance through our transformation actions and the trajectory of underpinning our targets. This chart represents our adjusted EBITDA performance from 2020 through the midpoint of our 2026 updated guidance, excluding the contribution from the divested Lubbock business for comparability.
Notably, ahead of the launch of our transformation, our results reached a trough in mid-2023 at approximately $35 million on an LTM basis, with the adjusted EBITDA margins having fallen to 7.4%. From the launch of our transformation plan at that point, adjusted EBITDA has increased approximately 61% to the midpoint of our 2026 guidance of $57 million, with margins expanding significantly to 12.4%. This success in the first years of our transformation has been led by operational performance as we simultaneously work to reestablish our sales pipeline and reshape our portfolio mix, as we discussed in the past. Our three main growth programs in Electric Grid, Data Center, Defense and Electronics, and Medical are now contributing, and we expect to drive further improved results.
Lastly, on slide 16, which shows our end market outlook for 2026 as it stands today. Given our first quarter results and the expected forecast we have for the remainder of the year, we’re revising our guidance ranges slightly higher. For the full year of 2026, we’re now guiding net sales in the range of $450 million-$470 million, reflecting approximately 9% growth at the midpoint compared to the prior year, and adjusted EBITDA in the range of $52 million-$62 million, reflecting approximately 16% growth at the midpoint. Importantly, this revised guidance is supported by our current market outlooks, the expected contributions from our new business from prior wins, and the operating leverage we expect to capture as our volumes grow across the year.
With that, I’ll now turn the call back over to the operator for questions from our analysts. Operator?
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: At this time, if you’d like to ask a question, press star followed by 1 on your telephone keypad. If your question has been answered and you would like to remove yourself from the queue, press star followed by 1. We do ask that you ask one question and a follow-up. If you do have further questions, you may reenter the queue. Your first question is from the line of Robert Brown with Lake Street Capital Markets.
Robert Brown, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Hi, good morning. Congratulations on the progress.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you. Good morning.
Robert Brown, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Just following up on your data center activity, and wins there. You know, to get to the $100 million goal, what’s sort of the steps that you need to take? It seems like you’re well on the way there. Is it expanding penetration in the liquid cooling market, or are there other products that you can go after to get there?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: We have multiple items there, Rob. We have 2 new products we’re coming out with in busbar and power whips. We also are growing with the current content that we have there, which is tied into transformer components as well as these connector components. We’re not overly counting on 1 product line, but we’re hitting the market more broadly now and have organized to do that. We’re not making any predictions yet, but I will say that we have a great product line going into these data centers and, you know, we’re trying to get our content up. We’re not falling in love with any particular product. We’re selling a product basket.
Robert Brown, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay, great. Then in the capacity to expand there, I know you’ve mentioned additional machines that you’re deploying, but how much capacity do you have in the Power Solutions segment that you can kind of grow into here before you really need to add much capacity?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah. Tim, you wanna take that?
Tim French, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, NN, Inc.: Sure. In Power Solutions specifically, we have significant capacity available. We aren’t running 24/7 in the primary facilities, so we’re able to adapt and assimilate new business fairly quickly. It requires basically just the creation of the tool, and then we’re good to go from there. Lots of available capacity. Ramp-ups can be extremely quickly in the power side.
Robert Brown, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay, excellent. Thank you. I’ll turn it over.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Rob.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: Your next question is from the line of Joe Gomes with Noble Capital Markets.
Joe Gomes, Analyst, Noble Capital Markets: Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: You bet, Joe.
Joe Gomes, Analyst, Noble Capital Markets: You mentioned, you know, a couple of factors that were behind the sales growth for the quarter, including, you know, precious metals pass-through, some favorable FX and product mix. I was wondering, could you kind of break those out as to what each contributed to that 12% sales growth?
Chris Bohnert, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, NN, Inc.: Well, actually it’s harder to answer than that, Joe, because we’re up with 22 of our 30 top customers, and they cover basically all the markets we’re in. We’re just down, and we’re flat with 3 others. It’s been a consequence of the new programs that we’ve won and that we’re launching. You know, Chris touched on that we have all these new programs that we’ve won.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: With new and existing customers, that it’s helping propel us. Precious metals were flat sequentially, up year-over-year. We’re expecting precious metal pricing for the rest of the year to be flat to where it is now, it will not quote, contribute anything further beyond this second quarter because the current levels are flat to the second half. If you look at the second half of last year when things began to come up. Getting a temporary boost for sure from precious metals and volume growth with customers in most of the markets we’re in.
Joe Gomes, Analyst, Noble Capital Markets: Okay. Thanks for that. Then just to follow up on the data centers, when you talk about, you know, increasing content per rack, what are we talking about here? I don’t know if you can kind of either give a dollar figure or, you know, a percentage type of increase, you know, are you at, you know, whatever the number is, what you’re selling into the rack for today, can you double the amount of content you’re selling into that rack, triple that amount of content? Just a little more color there just to see what the potential growth is just by increasing the wallet share, so to speak, per rack.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: That’s similar question to what Robert Brown asked. You know, roughly speaking our trailing 12 months is a little over $70 million, we’re trying to get to $100 million, and our pipeline is multiples of that number. It’s hard to tell which new programs you’ll get a hit on, you know, we’re planning on our same hit rate. I believe that we have the pipeline that we need to get to $100 million. We’re really trying to understand, you know, the TAM is so big here, Joe Gomes. I mean, we’re talking $ billions of TAM and we have a $70 million business. We really can’t blame anything on what’s happening in the market. It’s based on our own actions, we’re coordinating our efforts to grow.
When we get specific numbers, it’s hard to even tell how many racks are in development right now with the amount of announcements that are underway. So we can’t really answer that with good accuracy right now, but we are going to be getting smarter on it and reporting more in the future on the per rack content. When I say per rack, so when we’re calling on a customer that’s building out racks, we’re trying to get more content during that sales call, and we have multiple products that we can bring to it. We’re coordinating between what we call Power Mobile to call on these customers to sell a bigger portfolio of products.
Joe Gomes, Analyst, Noble Capital Markets: Okay. Great. Thanks for that, Harold. I’ll get back in queue.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Joe.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: Your next question is from the line of John Franzreb with Sidoti & Company.
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Good morning, everyone, and thanks for taking the questions. I guess I’d like to drill down a little bit on some of your call newer growth initiatives. Can you talk a little bit about what’s going on in medical? You kind of illustrated or suggested that it’s a little bit behind plan. Also the new program I’m also interested in the wireless program you initiated on last year. How’s that standing?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah. Medical pipeline is fine. The development is fine. We’ve had to conquer more plant certifications than we expected at the beginning of our endeavors, but we’ve now done that. We expect to report positively in the medical arena this year. Coming into today’s call, it was not a source of our sales increase, so it hasn’t showed up yet in terms of an actual item. We’re not backing off of it. We have a dedicated team. We hired people. We added equipment. We got underway with these certifications, and we’re calling on customers and adding to the portfolio. Just in terms of the three of them, John, it’s behind, but overall, what we expected from the three in total is ahead by a lot.
It’s really hard to tell where you’re gonna get the hits. It is playing out nicely though for us overall. On wireless, what specifically are you interested in there, John?
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: The wire harness business that you started.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah. We put together the team. We’ve hired a team. Tim and I are in the final stages of equipment selection. There’s a wire harness show. Tim, is it next week coming up here?
Tim French, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, NN, Inc.: It’s today.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Today. Thank you. We’re making specific equipment selections and have a team there. We expect to report on that during this year that we’ve launched that program, John.
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Got it. Just not on the precious metals, cost escalation, how are you dealing with regular metals, steel, aluminum, copper? All of them have gone up sizably in the first quarter. Do you have surcharges, escalators? How are you working with that with your customers?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yes, you’re correct. We’re experiencing metal escalation, and we have the right to pass it through. We have to show, you know, POs that we’ve incurred, that we’ve actually incurred the inflation before we can increase our prices for the pass-through. We still have metal tariffs on copper from Germany and that sort of a thing. We also have tariff charges to pass through as well. We get a slight lag, but we don’t have to wait till the end of a month or a quarter. I mean, once it happens, we go in and we present proof. We’ve been able to keep up with it because generally speaking, we have raw material on hand at quote the old price.
The game plan is procuring, which has a lead time. You have a time period there where you have an adjustment negotiation that you go through and prove it. We’ve had to adjust our prices, and it’s taken active work by our customer service teams. Knock on wood, we haven’t had any material compression at all from that, John.
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Good to hear. I’ll get back into queue. Thank you, Harold.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: Your next question is from the line of Mike Crawford with B. Riley’s.
Remy Johnson, Analyst, B. Riley: Hey, this is Remy Johnson on for Mike. Just wanted to zero in on the new business wins guidance for 2026. It was nice to see the $42.9 million in new business for the quarter. How should we think about the cadence of wins as the year goes on, and what that split looks like between Power Solutions and Mobile Solutions? Thanks.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah. Thank you. Our pipeline overall covers each of the areas that we have pretty uniformly. The hit rates are similar. We have goals that we set that for our sales team and our business development team that obviously exceed our guidance. You know, we’re aiming higher than what we’re committing to here. We’re shooting for higher numbers. The goal is skewed towards our growth areas of medical, defense and electronics and grid and data center. The pipeline is reflective of what we’re trying to do. In the case of automotive, you know, the outlooks for automotive are interesting.
The unit volumes are supposed to be down 2%, it doesn’t mean that the industry’s stressed because the affordability is so high on new cars that Wealthy people are the ones buying the new cars, and they’re still wealthy. The industry is viewed as being healthy even though unit volume is down somewhat. We’re not getting the normal pressure like when you’re in a real problem or recession or something to reduce our prices on new business or anything. We’re on the watch out for that because that sometimes happens. I will say that we are letting quotes go if they get thin our margin bottom lines, and that’s gonna continue to happen. It happens the most in automotive, that’s for sure.
It’s going to be driven by margins and our opportunity set, but right now we see a good cadence to get to the new guidance that we’ve given.
Remy Johnson, Analyst, B. Riley: Nice. Thanks for the color on that. Then just taking a look at 2029, where the new long-term goal settles, if you don’t mind sharing, I guess, what could the split look like between the growth end markets and the auto end market, where could we see the auto segment fall out in 2028, 2029 area?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yep. We’re trying to get automotive to be 30% or less over time. We could do it abruptly and harm ourselves, you know, financially speaking, because it takes active work to be flat in automotive because you have end of lives that come upon you, and then you need to either be aggressive about the next generation win for that same platform or pursue a different type of business. To stay flat in automotive is, it’s hard work. If we get to the point where we’re outperforming in the other areas, we can start to price clear ourselves on next generation programs. It goes EOP, and it’s EOP, and the sales are gone. For the minute, it’s sizable for the company.
We’re working hard to keep the business we want. In the last trailing two years, you know, we’ve gotten rid of a bunch of dilutive business, so that’s largely behind us. On a go-forward basis, it’s really about competing in areas that are profitable for us. Overall, you know, if we could dial it in and everything was perfect, it would be around 30%.
Remy Johnson, Analyst, B. Riley: Thank you. I’ll get back in the queue.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: We have a follow-up from the line of Joe Gomes with Noble Capital Markets.
Joe Gomes, Analyst, Noble Capital Markets: Hey, Harold.
Hey.
You had talked anything, this morning on, you know, the strategic option program. Maybe you kind of give us just a little update of, you know, what’s been going on there behind the scenes and, you know, when you think we might start to hear some information coming out about that?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yep. We do have an ongoing process, still evaluating our alternatives for financing or otherwise. There’s nothing material to report there or meaningful, and we don’t really have an update. I will say, though, Joe, that I do have an update on the CARES Act proceeds, and we did receive that money, so we have that in the house. That’s helped with our liquidity. That also was a driver of looking at our options because we were having a tough time with liquidity, with the growth vector that we’re on. That’s helping us a lot. I’d say there’s The pressure is less, and we’re being calculated. The board is being calculated with its actions there, and we have nothing major to report at this time. Okay, great.
Thanks for that, Harold. Thank you.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: You have a follow-up from John Franzreb with Sidoti & Company.
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Yeah. I was looking at the slide in Power. It seems like you were looking for new wins in certain markets that may not have materialized. Can you just, you know, talk about that? What are the new program wins that you need that you referenced?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: In power, we’re trying prospecting to get more straight up grid business. That’s one area we’ve outperformed on the data center side of that. On the grid side, you know, residential starts are down in the U.S. The EV craze has subsided, the, I’ll call it, residential stream that was driving a lot of grid thinking has lessened. On the other side, the industrial side of the grid, which ties into large equipment, and large infrastructure investments, is outperforming. Historically, our grid portfolio was tethered to residential grid. We are pursuing new wins in those areas, that’s one of the areas that we want.
Then in terms of a product category, busbars are an area that we’ve been focusing on growing in, that’s tied into the plating equipment acquisition that we previously announced. We couldn’t do the big parts. We couldn’t plate the big parts. Most of them were silver-plated. The acquisition of that equipment from a customer who’s also a very large electrical grid customer, headquartered out of Europe, is a big advancement for us. We’ll be able to, instead of no quoting business, we’ll be able to quote the full bill of material and be a more holistic supplier in there. We have fixes underways. You know, we’re always looking at our hit rates there, John, and looking for pattern recognition for what we need to do next to get our hit rates up.
There are areas that we know about and that we’re focused on fixing.
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Got it. Just on the refinancing of the preferred or retirement of it or whatever you decide to do with it, I mean, it’s been a multi-year process at this point. Can you just give us some color as to why it’s taken so long besides the turnover at the investment bank?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah. That’s true.
We’re actively looking at our alternatives there. It’s, it’s not on the back burner, it’s on the front burner. It’s, it’s helpful to have better operating performance because it’s, you know, you have better credit statistics when you look at the secured debt part of that as well. You know, we’re in possession of our outlook here for the year.
You are too now. You see that we’re planning on having a nice year, and the cash value of the EBITDA is going to be a lot higher because we’re not doing plant closures and laying off people. In the last few years, we’ve closed 4 plants and laid off 800 people, and that had a cost to it so that the cash value of our performance was lower. Going forward, that’s behind us. You know, our adjusted EBITDA is a cash value, and therefore it’s leverageable. We’ll have better cash flow, John, to do a refinancing with going forward than we have in the past. It’s becoming a better situation in terms of a refinance story.
John Franzreb, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Got it. Thank you, Harold. I appreciate the color.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, John.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: Your next question is from the line of Robert Sussman with Bentley Capital Management.
Robert Sussman, Analyst, Bentley Capital Management: Thank you. 2 questions. Number one, in your outlook for margins, your goal is to go from 18.5% to 20%. However, everything that you said indicates you’re pruning low-margin businesses. Maybe you know, you have another plant or 2 to close. The new business is theoretically at a much higher margin. Why is your goal only 1.5% improvement from 2025 to 2029?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yep. It’s a good question and a good catch. We are being conservative, to your point. We’re not ready to change our guidance yet, on that topic. Your comment also is the same if you do the same comparison on the EBITDA margin, Robert.
Robert Sussman, Analyst, Bentley Capital Management: Yes.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Be the same question. We’re looking at both of those for revising external commitments. We’re closing in on them. You’re correct. They look conservative going forward. You’re correct. We’re aware of that. You know, we were thinking through how to improve our multi-year guidance and instead of changing the margin percent goals, we decided to change the time period to achieve them. That would be what’s next, Robert. I will say that that’s top of mind for us and we’re looking at it.
Robert Sussman, Analyst, Bentley Capital Management: On a follow-up, are there still plants or businesses to exit, you know, that are marginally profitable or not making an adequate return for you?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah. Tim, you wanna answer that?
Tim French, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, NN, Inc.: Sure. At this point, we have nothing scheduled for closure. We’ve been able to mitigate the impact of what we formally refer to as the Group of Seven, and they’re all performing in a decent fashion right now. At this point, there’s nothing scheduled for closure.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: I’ll add, Robert, that we obviously have some plants, if you force rank them, are at the bottom, you know. When you look at consolidation and the one-time cost to do it and the IRR of doing the project and the disruption of doing the project, we don’t have any. To Tim’s point, we don’t have any that check those boxes right now. We have better use of our capital than closing plants.
Tim French, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, NN, Inc.: Exactly.
Robert Sussman, Analyst, Bentley Capital Management: Okay. Last question from me. How are you paying for the plating acquisition? Is it going to be a meaningful add to your revenues or is it relatively small?
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: It’s medium-sized, but it’s in our thinking and guidance for the year. The equipment is kind of expensive. The installation is kind of expensive. It has a lot of chemicals and require proper chemical handling. But it was in our base plan for this year to do a product expansion in that area so that we could more fully participate in busbar prospecting. And it’ll come online and When, Tim? The fourth quarter, maybe?
Joseph Caminiti, Investor Relations, NN, Inc.: Yeah.
Construction spend increased 0.6%. NN estimates +0.3%.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Towards the end of the year, Robert.
Tim French, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, NN, Inc.: Yeah.
Robert Sussman, Analyst, Bentley Capital Management: Okay.
Tim French, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, NN, Inc.: Towards the end of the year.
Robert Sussman, Analyst, Bentley Capital Management: Okay. Keep up the great work. Thank you very much.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you, Robert.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: I will now hand today’s call back over to Harold Bevis for any closing remarks.
Harold Bevis, President and Chief Executive Officer, NN, Inc.: Thank you for everyone for staying on the call with us and for the good questions. We’re very happy about this quarter. We obviously expect it to continue with our guidance improvement. We look forward to reporting out to you on our initiatives in the next call. With that, operator Tamika, we’ll end the call today.
Tamika, Conference Call Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.