Operator
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us today. My name is Claude and I will be leading today's presentation. Following the prepared remarks, Eyal Cohen, Chief Executive Officer; and Moshe Zeltzer, Chief Financial Officer, will be available to take your questions. Before we begin, a brief reminder that this call contains forward-looking statements relating to BOS business, financial condition and results of operations. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. Such statements include, but are not limited to, matters relating to product demand, pricing, market acceptance, economic conditions and technology development as further detailed in the company's filings with the various securities authorities. With that said, let's get started. BOS is a company built around one idea: that supply chains can be smarter, faster and more efficient, and that the right technology makes that possible. We pursue that idea through 3 specialized divisions. Our Robotics division replaces manual labor with automated solutions, transforming how inventory is handled. Our RFID division brings precision to tracking and end-of-line automation, from sorting to packing across the supply chain. And our Supply Chain division works even closer to our clients, integrating our franchised electromechanical components directly into their products. Together, these 3 divisions give BOS a broad and complementary platform, one that allows us to serve clients across multiple touch points in their operations. How we grow. Now when we talk about growth at BOS, we think about it in 2 ways: organic growth, building on what we have and strategic acquisitions that expand our reach. Over the past 4 years, the story has been primarily organic and the numbers speak for themselves. Revenue grew from $33.6 million in 2021 to $51 million in 2025. That is meaningful, sustained growth built on real demand from real clients. And we believe that demand is only accelerating. Three tailwinds, in particular, give us confidence. The first is the global increase in defense budgets. This is not a short-term cycle. It is a structural long-term shift in how governments around the world are prioritizing security. BOS is well positioned to benefit from this trend for years to come. The second is closer to home. The replenishment and expansion of the Israeli Defense Forces inventory, driven by the conflict that began in October 2023, has created significant and ongoing demand that directly supports our business. The third is newer and very promising. India is rapidly emerging as a major subcontracting hub for global defense programs, and the numbers are already telling that story. In the first quarter of 2026 alone, we received $3.3 million in orders from Indian customers compared to just $172,000 in the same quarter last year. To capture this momentum and build on it, we appointed an Indian representative company in March 2026 to establish a dedicated presence in that market. We are only at the beginning of what we believe is a significant long-term opportunity. Alongside organic growth, we are actively building our acquisition pipeline, and we have the financial strength to act on it. Our balance sheet is solid. Shareholders' equity stands at $29 million, and we hold $9.5 million in cash net of loans. That gives us real flexibility. We are targeting companies valued at up to $20 million with 2 nonnegotiable criteria. First, financial strength, a proven track record of profitability and consistent growth; second, strategic fit, companies that deepen and expand what we can offer to our existing clients. On the financing side, approximately half of each acquisition will be funded through long-term bank loans with the remainder coming from our own resources. I want to be clear on one point. No shareholder dilution is expected. Let me now turn to where we stand heading into the rest of 2026, and the picture is an encouraging one. When you combine our backlog of $31 million as of March 31, 2026, with Q1 revenues, we are already at $42.4 million, 83% of our full year target after just 1 quarter. As a result, we now expect to exceed our previously announced annual revenue target of $51 million. The depreciation of the U.S. dollar against the new Israeli shekel is creating pressure on our profitability. And as a result, we are maintaining our net income target of $3.6 million for the full year at this stage. We are responding on 2 fronts: accelerating revenue growth and actively working to improve our gross profit margins. Both of these efforts are already showing up in our Q1 results. Our gross profit margin reached 24.9%, up from 23.9% in the same quarter last year, and our backlog grew 29% during the first quarter from $24 million to $31 million. As we monitor the progress of these initiatives, we will reassess our net income outlook for the full year and update accordingly. I want to close with something that we believe deserves your attention. BOS is a company with a growing backlog, accelerating revenues, a clean balance sheet and exposure to some of the strongest structural trends in the global economy, defense spending, automation and supply chain modernization. And yet, BOS currently trades at book value. The Russell 2000, the index of small-cap companies we are measured against, trades at approximately 2.6x book value. Our price-to-earnings ratio stands at roughly 11x compared to 22x for the index. We believe this gap exists primarily because not enough investors know our story yet. That is what we are working to change and calls like this one are part of that effort. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes the prepared remarks. We will now open the floor for questions. Eyal Cohen and Moshe Zeltzer are ready to take your questions. [Operator Instructions]