Robert Olander
Analyst · Craig-Hallum
Thank you, Bryon. I'll start with a review of the income statement for the first quarter of 2026 compared to the first quarter of 2025. Consolidated net sales were $225 million, $2 million lower than in the prior year. This reflects a 4% reduction in volumes sold or 3.7 million gallons, partially offset by a 4% increase in the average sales price per gallon from $1.93 to $2 on a consolidated basis. The primary drivers impacting revenues were the net overall reduction in volumes sold, which was mainly related to the production curtailment at our Pekin campus, an improved product mix of higher renewable fuel export sales, reflecting both an increase in volumes sold and a significantly higher premium compared to domestic renewable fuel sales than last year contributed $6.7 million. High-quality alcohol volumes sold decreased by 1.3 million gallons, reflecting continued weak alcohol consumption and increased competition. In addition, the premium versus domestic fuel grade values were lower than last year. As a result, revenues declined by $1.4 million. Co-product protein feed and fuel prices improved, supported by strong gains in corn oil used in renewable biofuels, which added an additional net $2.2 million in revenues. Coupled with a 4% lower cost of corn, our consolidated return on essential ingredients improved to 53.4% from 48.2% a year ago. Gross profit was $9.2 million compared to a gross loss of $1.8 million reported for Q1 2025 for an $11 million positive swing to profitability. In addition to the revenue variances I just covered, the change in gross profit also encompassed the following factors: A seasonally strong market crush margin of $0.17 per gallon for Q1 2026 compared to $0.02 per gallon for the same period last year accounted for approximately $5.2 million of benefit. An increase in net unrealized gain on derivatives contributed $6.4 million as a result of our high-quality alcohol hedges associated with future shipments improved in relation to the rise in the market price of ethanol as we locked in the premium on our contracted fixed price, high-quality alcohol commitments. And we incurred $500,000 less in production labor costs to the staffing reduction that we completed during the first quarter of 2025. These positive trends were partially offset by the following negative variances. Natural gas and electricity costs collectively increased $5.3 million due to higher prices related to volatile weather conditions and rising demand. Repair and maintenance expenses were $2.4 million higher this quarter compared to last year. This was driven by the acceleration of work at the wet mill originally planned for the second quarter, as Bryon mentioned, as well as increased costs from the planned outage at Columbia. The increased repair and maintenance costs at Columbia were the primary contributors to the $1.1 million gross loss in our Western Production segment for the first quarter of 2026. SG&A expenses decreased by $500,000 to $6.7 million, also reflecting our decision to right-size staffing levels last year. With respect to 45Z transferable tax credits, as mentioned on the fourth quarter call, for 2026, we expect to qualify approximately 90 million gallons of combined production at the Columbia and Pekin dry mill facilities on an annual basis at $0.20 per gallon, resulting in approximately $15 million in net proceeds after all monetization costs. We recorded $3.9 million in 45Z credit earnings for the first quarter of 2026. The sale of all of our 2025 45Z tax credits is currently underway at values consistent with our previously recorded estimates, and we expect to close on that transaction this month. We are working diligently to qualify additional gallons and further reduce our carbon intensity scores to capture more of the 45Z benefit, and we will provide updates as these efforts materialize. As a result of an improvement in gross profit, lower SG&A expenses and recognition of 45Z tax credits, we reported net income attributable to common stockholders of $4 million or $0.05 per share for Q1 2026, an increase of $16 million compared to a net loss of $12 million or $0.16 per share for the first quarter of 2025. Adjusted EBITDA increased $9.1 million to $4.7 million compared to a negative adjusted EBITDA of $4.4 million for last year's first quarter. As a reminder, the $6.4 million increase of unrealized derivative gains is excluded from the calculation of adjusted EBITDA. Turning to our balance sheet. As of March 31, 2026, our cash balance was $20 million. During the first quarter, we generated $4 million in cash flow from operating activities. As mentioned on last quarter's call, we plan to spend about $25 million in capital expenditures during 2026 on both maintenance and optimization projects with strong projected returns. With the major projects earmarked for the next three quarters, capital expenditures for the first quarter were only $1 million. We paid $16.6 million in principal on our term debt in the first quarter as planned and ended the quarter with $38.4 million outstanding on the term loan. With a lower debt balance, interest expense decreased by $531,000. This reflects our focus on minimizing idle cash and maximizing excess borrowing capacity in order to reduce our interest expense burden. We ended the quarter with total borrowing availability of $94 million, consisting of $29 million under our operating line of credit and $65 million under our term loan facility. With that, I will now turn the call back to Bryon.