TrueBlue Inc Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Energy Sector Revenue Doubles as Data Center Demand Surges
Summary
TrueBlue delivered Q1 2026 revenue of $399 million, up 8% year-over-year, landing at the high end of its guidance. The standout driver was PeopleReady’s energy vertical, which more than doubled for the third consecutive quarter. This growth is being fueled by a structural shift in labor demand. Data centers now account for roughly one-third of the company’s active energy projects, creating a durable secular tailwind that extends beyond traditional renewables. The skilled trades segment continues to outperform the broader market, with double-digit growth for four straight quarters, underscoring the company’s ability to capture share in high-demand, specialized roles.
Despite the top-line strength, profitability remains under pressure. Gross margins contracted to 19.8% from 23.3% in the prior year period, primarily due to the absence of favorable workers’ compensation reserve adjustments and a revenue mix skewed toward lower-margin energy work. The company reported a net loss of $20 million, including a $4 million non-cash goodwill impairment. Management countered with aggressive cost discipline, reducing SG&A by 8% while revenue grew 8%. The balance sheet shows improved flexibility after transitioning to an asset-backed revolver, with $60 million in total liquidity. Management expects sequential margin expansion in Q2 and a return to double-digit segment profit margins in PeopleSolutions, signaling a path toward improved operating leverage as demand normalizes.
Key Takeaways
- Revenue reached $399 million, up 8% year-over-year and near the high end of guidance.
- PeopleReady’s energy vertical revenue more than doubled for the third consecutive quarter, driven by data center construction and renewable energy projects.
- Data center power needs now represent approximately one-third of TrueBlue’s active energy projects, highlighting a major secular growth driver.
- Skilled businesses delivered double-digit growth for the fourth straight quarter, outperforming the broader staffing market.
- Gross margin contracted to 19.8% from 23.3% in Q1 2025, largely due to the non-recurrence of favorable workers’ compensation reserve adjustments.
- Revenue mix shift toward lower-margin energy work and a $7 million unfavorable workers’ comp differential impacted profitability.
- SG&A expenses declined 8% despite 8% revenue growth, demonstrating successful cost discipline and operating leverage.
- PeopleReady on-demand business shows improving trends, with the U.S. East region returning to growth for the first time in recent quarters.
- Commercial driver business posted its ninth consecutive quarter of growth, benefiting from share gains in a challenging transportation market.
- Management expects Q2 revenue growth of 2-8% year-over-year, with sequential gross margin expansion of 130-170 basis points and a return to double-digit segment profit margins in PeopleSolutions.
Full Transcript
Operator: Greetings, and welcome to the TrueBlue 1st quarter 2026 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. The question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, press star 0 on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. At this time, I want to remind everyone that today’s call and slide presentation contain forward-looking statements, all of which are subject to risk and uncertainties, and management assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties, some of which are described in today’s press release and SEC filings, could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Management uses non-GAAP measures when presenting financial results.
You are encouraged to review the non-GAAP reconciliations in today’s earnings release or at trueblue.com under the Investor Relations section for a complete understanding of these terms and their purpose. Any comparisons made today are based on a comparison to the same period in the prior year, unless otherwise stated. Lastly, a copy of the company’s prepared remarks will be provided on TrueBlue’s investor website at the conclusion of today’s call, and a full transcript and audio replay will be available soon after the call. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thank you, operator, welcome everyone to today’s call. I am joined by our Chief Financial Officer, Carl Schweihs. We entered this year focused on strengthening our sales reach, expanding in growing markets, and leveraging our efficient operating structure to drive top-line growth with enhanced margins. We have made meaningful progress and have clear momentum underway, but we have more work to do to improve performance. We delivered first quarter results toward the high end of expectations, driven by continued expansion in skilled verticals alongside stabilizing demand trends and disciplined operational execution to improve profitability. Our revenue in the energy sector more than doubled this quarter as we continue to leverage our strong market position and expertise to capture demand in this growing market.
There are an increasing number of secular growth drivers in the energy space, positioning us to capture further upside as we continue to expand into adjacent sub-sectors, including those supporting data centers and energy storage facilities. In fact, addressing the power needs of data centers now represents approximately a third of our active energy projects. The sustained growth of our commercial driver business also speaks to our success expanding in attractive end markets. Our team continues to outperform the broader market, delivering its ninth consecutive quarter of growth. We have strong client relationships and deep expertise in high-demand skilled sectors, positioning us to help address the structural labor shortages leading to rising demand in skilled roles and end markets with energy and commercial driving being just two examples. We are also expanding our presence in the government vertical, most notably with our RPO and talent advisory solutions.
We recently secured a nine-year engagement serving a law enforcement agency in the U.K., further demonstrating our growth in the government sector alongside our previous U.K. Armed Forces win. We continue to diversify our business mix, building momentum to expand our market share and increase our revenue potential. Healthcare remains yet another significant long-term market opportunity for us with strong secular growth drivers. We continue to strengthen our position in the U.S. healthcare market with new business wins across our brand portfolio and geographic expansion of our healthcare staffing business as we leverage the combined strength of our deep expertise, recruitment agility, and sophisticated technology to expand in this under-penetrated market. We are also making significant progress enhancing our sales function to accelerate growth and capture incremental demand. We continue to strategically increase our sales capacity within our on-demand territory-based structure to further extend our market reach.
Expanding our sales function enables more targeted localized sales strategy and deeper client engagement. Enhanced sales focus, coupled with our improved operating model, positions us well to drive scalable growth. This expanded sales capacity is already delivering clear results, with dedicated sales-supported territories delivering stronger sequential performance. Our strategic partnership with a leading group purchasing organization is unlocking new client acquisition channels and fueling a robust pipeline that includes several multi-brand prospects. During the quarter, our team secured roughly $11 million in annualized new business through this strategic partnership. Greater enterprise alignment and collaboration is also building stronger partnerships across our brand portfolio, leading to more cross-selling opportunities. Our teams recently secured new business serving a global leader in health and medical devices with a tailored multi-service solution, highlighting the combined power of our brands and offering a full spectrum of specialized workforce solutions.
While strategically investing in sales, we have continued to lower our total operating cost through disciplined and effective cost management, as well as enhanced operational efficiencies enabled through our portfolio of proprietary technology platforms. We continue to lead on the digital front with AI-powered features, predictive analytics, and behavioral insights that enable us to connect people and work with speed, precision, and scale. Advancing our digital ecosystem remains a priority, positioning us to deliver greater value to the customers and talent we serve with a differentiated experience and efficient solutions as we accelerate growth. As we continue to advance our long-term growth strategy, we remain committed to delivering improved profitability and sustainable growth. While our strategic priorities are taking hold, driving improved results and positioning us well to capitalize on the growth opportunities ahead, we are not done yet.
The staffing market has significant untapped potential, and we are confident our strategic focus on enhancing our sales model, expanding our share in attractive end markets, and unlocking efficiencies with technology and operational excellence will not only drive our improved performance in 2026, but also enable us to realize long-term sustainable value for our shareholders. I will now pass the call over to Carl, who will share further details around our financial results and outlook.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thank you, Taryn. Total revenue for the quarter was $399 million, up 8% and near the high end of our outlook range. Organic revenue increased 7%, with our acquisition of HSP in January 2025 contributing one percentage point of inorganic growth year-over-year. Our skilled businesses continue to outperform the broader market, delivering double-digit growth for the fourth consecutive quarter, due in large part to our continued success capturing rising demand in the energy vertical. Demand for skilled trades remains strong, broader demand trends continue to stabilize, driving solid momentum as we advance our growth strategy. Gross margin was 19.8% for the quarter, down from 23.3% in the prior year period as anticipated, primarily due to less favorability in prior year workers’ comp reserve adjustments and changes in revenue mix.
As you may recall, last year’s gross margin benefited from a significant reduction in workers’ compensation costs due to favorable development of prior year reserves. As expected, that degree of favorability did not repeat this year. The revenue mix impact, this stems from outsized growth in PeopleReady energy work. A reminder, energy work carries a lower gross margin than the general PeopleReady business due to pass-through travel costs involved. Outside of these costs, the underlying margin for energy work is consistent with other large PeopleReady accounts. We successfully reduced SG&A by 8%, even while revenue grew 8% for the quarter. This improved leverage demonstrates our commitment to effectively manage costs and deliver enhanced profitability.
We’ve made significant progress, creating greater flexibility to scale and driving efficiencies that position us well to deliver strong incremental margins as industry demand improves and we continue to advance our growth initiatives. We reported a net loss of $20 million this quarter, which included a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $4 million, driven largely by our lower share price and market capitalization during the quarter. Our results also included a small amount of income tax expense, primarily associated with our foreign operations, and essentially zero income tax benefit on U.S. operations due to the valuation allowance in effect on our U.S. deferred tax assets. As a reminder, the impairment charge and valuation allowance have no impact on our operations or liquidity. Adjusted net loss was $12 million, while adjusted EBITDA was negative $3 million for the quarter. Now let’s turn to our segments.
PeopleReady grew 19%, driven by continued outperformance in the energy vertical. Revenue in the energy sector more than doubled for the 3rd consecutive quarter as our team continues to leverage our strong market position and deep client relationships to capture share in this growing market. Our on-demand business is also showing improved trends, especially in the territories where we have invested in sales resources. We were encouraged to see the East region of the U.S. return to growth this quarter. Despite the workers’ compensation headwind I mentioned earlier, PeopleReady segment profit margin was up 10 basis points, driven by targeted cost actions to deliver efficiencies and improve profitability. PeopleManagement revenue declined 6% due to lower on-site volumes, primarily in the retail vertical and consistent with the macro conditions in that space.
While client volumes declined for the quarter, we are building momentum, having secured $13 million in annualized new business wins during the first quarter alone and positioning the business well to drive revenue expansion. Our commercial driver business also continues to outperform, delivering its ninth consecutive quarter of growth as our strong client relationships and deep expertise drive continued success capturing rising demand. PeopleManagement segment profit margin was up 50 basis points due to disciplined cost management actions to drive improved efficiencies and greater scalability. People Solutions revenue grew 2%, with HSP performing in line with expectations and driving the year-over-year growth. On an organic basis, People Solutions declined 7% as overall hiring volumes remain subdued. While clients continue to navigate evolving market conditions, we are encouraged to see signs of stabilization, with growing momentum in new business wins and expansions.
We are adding new clients to our portfolio and expanding existing relationships, especially with higher-skilled roles and serving growing end markets with long-term secular tailwinds. As clients hiring volumes return, the scale of these engagements position us well to accelerate growth. PeopleSolutions segment profit margin was up 150 basis points, primarily driven by cost actions to deliver efficiencies and greater operating leverage. Let’s turn to the balance sheet. We finished the quarter with $24 million in cash, $74 million of debt, and $36 million unused on our borrowing base, resulting in total liquidity of $60 million. Effective January 30th, we transitioned our revolving credit agreement to an asset-backed structure, creating greater flexibility given our strong working capital position.
We also reduced the size of the facility to better align with our capital priorities, resulting in cost savings as we lowered the fees associated with the unused portion of the facility. We remain committed to managing a strong liquidity position and financial foundation to ensure we are well-positioned to capitalize on the growth opportunities ahead. Looking ahead to the second quarter of 2026, we expect revenue growth of 2%-8% year-over-year as we continue to build on our success in recent quarters. With strong momentum in attractive markets, we expect growth across all of our skilled businesses and a return to double-digit segment profit margins for our PeopleSolutions segment. We expect sequential gross margin expansion of 130 to 170 basis points, paired with continued cost discipline leading to improved profitability.
Also, keep in mind that we typically see our highest volumes in the second half of the year due to the seasonality of our business. While we expect improved operating leverage in the second quarter, our lean cost structure will lead to further margin improvement as we move through 2026. Additional information on our outlook can be found in our earnings presentation shared on our website today. Before we open the call up for questions, I want to turn it back over to Taryn for some closing remarks.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thank you, Carl. As you have heard from us today, our strategic focus is producing meaningful results, and there is still more work to be done. We are executing our growth strategy with discipline and focus, strengthening our market position with an enhanced sales model and market expansion, while unlocking efficiencies through technology and operational excellence to deliver sustainable, profitable growth. We have the right people, structure, and strategy to propel TrueBlue forward. As our focused actions drive improved results, we are well-positioned to deliver on our commitment to accelerate growth, enhance shareholder value, and advance our mission to connect people and work. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, please open the call now for questions.
Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove yourself from the queue. For participants using the speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. We’ll pause for a moment to pull for questions. Our first question today will come from Kartik Mehta with Northcoast Research.
Kartik Mehta, Analyst, Northcoast Research: Hey, good afternoon, Taryn and Carl. Taryn, maybe we could just talk a little bit about the core on-demand business, maybe your perspective on how the new business is doing. I apologize for that. you know, if you look at it, are we at a positive inflection point for that business?
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Hi, Kartik. Thank you for the question. We are encouraged by the positive results we’re seeing in our PeopleReady on-demand business. We continue to see strong performance across our territories and sales organizations, with results reflecting improved growth and profitability. A majority of our territories in PeopleReady on-demand have returned to growth for the year, driven by local account business growth. Weekly trends have been improving, while there is more work ahead, we are confident in our ability to continue building on this momentum.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Just to build on that with a few data points here, Kartik. You know, as we mentioned in prepared remarks, our PeopleReady East region returned to growth in Q1. I’d also say that the momentum is shifting positively across the U.S. While it’s not uniform, we’re seeing those more territories move back into growth each month as we move on. We’ve also been able to make these as sales investments while managing our costs. SG&A for PeopleReady declined 10% for the first quarter, reflecting a more efficient cost structure. I’d say the progress is really a result of our ongoing efforts to optimize our fixed cost base, enhance our digital capabilities, which will give us room to invest in growth while protecting our margins.
I’ll just leave you with, you know, momentum does continue to build in PeopleReady on-demand, and our outlook for the second quarter reflects trends that are aligned to our historical sequential performance when we start to build this business from spring into the summer.
Kartik Mehta, Analyst, Northcoast Research: Yeah. Thanks, Carl. Taryn, you know, the one question almost all my companies are getting, as you can imagine, is AI. I’m wondering, you know, if you look at TrueBlue, one, how maybe TrueBlue might be using AI to become a little bit more efficient, maybe how you’re using it to better serve your customers. Just from a competitive standpoint, if you’re seeing AI have an impact on your ability to serve your customers.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Sure. Thanks for the question. We’re embracing AI. It is differentiating TrueBlue services in ways that improve scalability, productivity, and satisfaction, ultimately increasing value for our customers and our associates. AI is embedded across all of our proprietary technologies, JobStack, Affinix, and StaffTrack. It’s really helping us to enhance every stage of the staffing life cycle. As importantly, AI is driving significant growth in demand for data centers. What often gets overlooked is that AI depends on physical infrastructure. Data centers require enormous amounts of reliable power, and that power and the skilled workforce behind it is where we have an opportunity to play a critical role. We’ve seen increased project volume in our utility scale solar business, and addressing the power needs of data centers now represent approximately a third of our active energy projects.
Our PeopleReady skilled trades business has also seen an increase in revenue, from the construction of data centers.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Just to add a little bit onto this, and talk about kind of the P&L benefits that we’re seeing of this work as well. You know, from a revenue perspective, as Taryn just mentioned, you know, we’ve seen our skilled business outperform the market with about 50% growth in Q1. From a cost and efficiency perspective, we’re seeing positive trends in some of the important metrics we track. Our cost of delivery has gone down with revenue per headcount increasing. We’ve also seen increased fill rates and lower costs due to recruiter efficiency. Really, we’ve seen kind of both top line growth and margin expansion as a result of AI opportunity.
Kartik Mehta, Analyst, Northcoast Research: Yeah. Just one last question, Taryn. Maybe just a pricing environment, you know, as a job market maybe isn’t as tight as it used to be. Are you seeing any pricing competition for any of the segments?
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: I would say that we’re seeing the typical pricing pressure, that we would in this type of environment, not only from competitive forces, but also our clients are remaining very cost conscious during, you know, what remains an uncertain time. Our team’s doing a great job of managing pricing discipline and continuing to look for ways to make sure that we’re delivering enhanced efficiencies and values so that we can remain competitive across all of our service offerings.
Kartik Mehta, Analyst, Northcoast Research: Perfect. Thank you very much. I appreciate it.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thanks, Kartik Mehta.
Operator: Our next question we’ll hear from Mark. Mark Marcon with Baird.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Hey, good afternoon, thanks for taking my questions. Really nice to see the revenue growth. Good job there. Wondering if you can talk a little bit more about the elements of the revenue growth. Specifically on the energy side, can you please size that for us? Like, how big was it this quarter, this past quarter? How big was it a year ago?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah, thanks for the question, Mark. You know, our renewable energy business, as we mentioned, kind of more than doubled for the third consecutive quarter. Renewables is part of our skilled trades business within PeopleReady. You know, we’ve noted in previous quarters that our skilled businesses represent about a fourth of our staffing businesses. You know, with the significant growth that we’ve experienced, that’s gonna be approaching about a third.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: one third of both, People Ready and Managed?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah, that’s a good proxy across both of those segments.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: A year ago, it would have been a quarter of it?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yep.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Okay. Really good growth there. Is the element that is tied to data centers increasing at an even faster rate, or is it a fairly I mean, obviously doubling is great, how sustainable or how long do you think the runway is for that growth?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah, no, I think we’ve got a really strong pipeline in our renewable business. We stay really close to, you know, our customers here. I’d say solid pipeline in renewables. We have several projects expected to ramp in Q2, supporting our outlook for the quarter. Longer term, you know, we think that there’s, you know, an incredible amount of this, you know, need for energy in the space, and we’re well positioned to capture that.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Great. Can you talk a little bit about on the driver’s side, how big is drivers at this point?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: That’s about that 3rd, Marc, in the PeopleManagement segment that we were talking about. One thing I will say, and just add on to there is that, you know, our commercial driver business has been doing well for us. We’re in our 9th consecutive quarter of growth in Q1. You know, it’s been coming at a very challenging environment for transportation. A really encouraging sign for us is at the end of the quarter and into April, we saw an increase in our order volume, which is gonna provide some incremental growth opportunity for that. Really historically over the last 2 years, we’ve been talking about taking share in our managed offerings. This will provide some future growth in our flex and on-demand side.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Yeah, I mean, according to our transportation analysts, at our shop, transportation is actually starting to pick up. If you’ve got a growing market and share gains, that’s obviously a huge positive.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Encouraged.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: With regards to the overall revenue guide, you did 7% growth organically, you know, this quarter. You’re guiding to 2%-8% on an organic perspective. What segments would you expect to slow?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah. Thanks, great question. It’s kind of 5 points at the midpoint. When we look at it, we should see some improvement in our PeopleManagement as we had a slower quarter in Q1. A little bit in People solutions as well as we move into the quarter. For PeopleReady, as we’ve talked about, our on-demand is seeing, you know, good trends as we move into spring to summer. We’re starting to lap some of those really large quarter growths in our renewable business. There’s a little bit less growth coming in on that side within our PeopleReady segment.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Okay. We’re basically going up against tougher comps, that’s gonna slow things down a little bit. You’re not expecting the energy business to continue doubling?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Not doubling, but, we expect for it to continue to grow and grow sizably.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Okay. Then shifting to gross margins, just how big was the impact of the workers’ comp? I know it’s, you know, it basically subtracted 220 BPS relative to a year ago, but, like, what was the actual reversal last year and what did you experience this year?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah, there’d be about $7 million differential in between the quarters.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Then can you talk a little bit about, bill pay spread and, like, what % increase you ended up seeing in the bill rate and the pay rate?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: happy to, Mark Marcon. Pay rates were up about 7.5%, while bill rates were up 6.7%, it led to about a 20 BPS decline in margin for the quarter. The pay rate increase was largely due to statutory minimum wage increases as well as it’s been driven by some role-specific skill scarcity rather than really general labor shortages. you know, as Taryn Owen mentioned earlier, while there’s still some pricing pressure that we’d expect, we’ve been really disciplined in our pricing. I’d also add, what we typically see in the seasonality of our business is that bill pay spread gets better as we move into second and third quarter, and we’re already starting to see that in April.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Okay, great. In terms of the actual, you know, SG&A, obviously it’s projected to You know, it’ll be down relative to a year ago. How much more room do you have in terms of taking the SG&A down, you know, relative to the midpoint of what you’re projecting for the second quarter? Or how should we think about the incremental margin improvement as we go into the second half?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Here’s what I’ll say, Mark. Look, our adjusted SG&A was down about 8% in Q1, and we continue to manage costs very closely. We guided to about -7% year-over-year, so an improvement there. In Q2, we’re guiding to a midpoint of $87 million or down 3%. That includes about, you know, $2 million or so of adjustments. On an adjusted basis, that’ll look more close to $85 million or down 4%. I think there’s an important call out is just, if you remember on a reported basis, the prior year did include a $5 million benefit from government subsidies that we didn’t expect to repeat.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Right.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Overall, you know, we continue to manage our costs very closely, and we feel like with our optimized fixed cost base, we’re poised for significant incremental margins and expanding profitability as we exit this lowest volume quarter in Q1 and the demand improves into the year.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Can you just elaborate a little bit on the incremental margins that you might expect during the second half?
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah, I think I mean, we’re expanded, you know. you know, we’re looking double, you know, from our guide in Q2 here. you know, as we continue to move through the period, we’d expect to see incremental margin, but we guide a quarter at a time, Mark.
Mark Marcon, Analyst, Baird: Okay, great. Thank you very much.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thank you, Mark.
Operator: As a reminder, please press star one if you would like to ask a question. Next we’ll move to Marc Riddick with Sidoti & Company.
Marc Riddick, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Hey, good evening.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Hi, Marc.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Hello.
Marc Riddick, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: I wanted to start maybe with, if we could talk a little bit about the partnership with the leading group purchasing organization that we refer to. Maybe, I guess maybe in baseball’s terms, what inning are we in as far as that opportunity? Are we, you know, sort of early stage? What do we think is the type of opportunity and what type of runway we might have there? Then maybe you could also talk about the scope of it a little bit as far as the reach. Are we talking a nationwide reach? Is it a regional reach? What, what should we be looking at there?
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Yeah. Thanks for the question, Mark. We’re just at the tip of the iceberg here, and we’re very encouraged by the progress that we’re seeing with this strategic partnership. It’s driving new business opportunities and expanding our reach nationwide. As I mentioned in prepared remarks, we have secured approximately $11 million of annualized new business wins in the quarter, and the partnership continues to build momentum as we expand the relationship both into new sectors and across all of our service offerings. We had a couple of recent wins with two nationwide retail stores with work that we expect to begin here in the next couple of quarters. Overall, we’re very excited about the strong pipeline of opportunities ahead with this partnership.
Marc Riddick, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Great. Then sort of along those lines, can you talk a little bit about the, you mentioned in your prepared remarks about the international growth. Maybe you could talk a little bit about the opportunity set there and maybe what, what we might see internationally. Then I have one last follow-up.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Absolutely. As we mentioned, we won a deal with the U.K. law enforcement here in the last quarter in our PeopleScout business to support them with hiring. This follows the landmark deal that we won in the U.K. to provide employer brand and candidate attraction services for the U.K.’s British Armed Forces. Just as a reminder, that deal is in the transitionary phase. Now, we’ll start to see the full value of that opportunity in the early part of 2027, in regards to the new law enforcement agency win. We’ll start to see revenue come online here this year.
Marc Riddick, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Okay, great. The last one for me, maybe you could talk a little shift gears over toward cash usage. Maybe you could talk a little bit about acquisition pipeline and appetite. Maybe if you’re seeing things there and maybe what valuations look like as well as, you know, share repurchase appetite in the, you know, given sort of where we are at this point. Thank you.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thanks, Mark. Yeah, look, we’re focused on balancing ample liquidity first, making strategic growth investments into the business, and then, you know, as we’ve historically done, returning excess capital to shareholders via those share repurchases. Currently with any excess cash and as free cash flow improves through the year, we’re looking to pay down our debt first. We continue to manage our fixed cost base down. Our capital spend is now under 1% of revenue. With the business returning to organic growth, we’d expect to, you know, pay down our debt throughout the year. Just as you asked kind of about share repurchases, they remain important, but balanced with first maintaining a strong balance sheet. We’ve got about $34 remaining under our current authorization.
Marc Riddick, Analyst, Sidoti & Company: Excellent. Thank you very much.
Carl Schweihs, Chief Financial Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Of course. Thanks, Marc.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thanks, Marc.
Operator: Currently, there are no further questions. I would like to turn the floor back to Taryn Owen for any additional or closing remarks.
Taryn Owen, President and Chief Executive Officer, TrueBlue Inc.: Thank you, operator, and thank you everyone for joining us today. I do wanna take this opportunity to thank the entire TrueBlue team for their disciplined execution of our enterprise strategy and for their commitment to advancing our mission to connect people and work. We look forward to speaking with you at upcoming investor events and on our next quarterly call. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. This does conclude today’s teleconference. We thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time.