Elias Sabo
Analyst · CJS Securities
Thank you, Ben, and good afternoon to everyone. We started 2026 committed to a clear plan, and we are delivering against it. Specifically, we sold Sterno's food service business at an attractive valuation despite a muted M&A environment. We completed a sale leaseback at Altor and applied the proceeds directly to debt reduction. We delivered solid subsidiary adjusted EBITDA growth, highlighted by double-digit growth in our Consumer businesses despite uncertainty in the global economy. And collectively, our subsidiaries generated strong operating cash flow in the quarter, a hallmark of the CODI model. Incorporating our current view of the operating environment and reflecting the sale of Sterno's food service business, we are updating our full year guidance. Before Stephen walks through the financials and our updated guidance, I would like to provide additional color on both our strategic focus and operational performance. Let me start with the sale of Sterno's food service business. Throughout this process, we've been asked whether the broader environment, including geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East, tighter private credit markets and other macro factors, would limit our ability to monetize our businesses at attractive values. From the outset, our answer was straightforward. First, there is almost always a market for high-quality businesses. And second, we have an experienced team with a track record of maximizing value across market cycles. We believe the outcome here speaks for itself. We view this as an initial step towards the goals we've established, not the final stop. Our leverage ratio remains above our target range and our shares continue to trade at what we believe is a discount to intrinsic value. Our work is not done. We will continue to pursue deleveraging and value creation, both organically and inorganically, with the same urgency and discipline we have demonstrated so far. And once leverage is within our target range, we will accelerate work to address the gap to intrinsic value, including through the efficient return of capital to shareholders. Alongside our deleveraging efforts, we have initiated a review of our management services agreement. We are actively evaluating our MSA for opportunities to further align incentives and drive incremental shareholder value. The process is underway and we expect to provide further updates in the coming months. Turning to operational performance. Against the backdrop of continued macro uncertainty, our subsidiaries collectively outperformed in the first quarter. Let me walk through a few highlights. Our Consumer businesses led the way, with double-digit adjusted EBITDA growth driven by strength across these businesses. The Honey Pot continued its exceptional momentum in the first quarter, with revenue growth of nearly 25% and EBITDA growth of over 40% compared to the prior period. We continue to see the brand gain share across the feminine care category, reflecting the strength of the product portfolio, expanded distribution and growing consumer adoption as the brand continues to extend beyond its origin into the broader period care category. The Honey Pot is now firmly established as a leading better-for-you brand in the feminine care, and we believe it has significant runway for continued growth. BOA delivered another strong quarter, with revenue growth of 6.5% and EBITDA growth of 11% compared to the prior-year period. We believe the performance of the BOA Fit System is unmatched. And that technical edge continues to drive category-leading adoption across snow sports, cycling, workwear and more. The company's focus on differentiated solutions and operational efficiency supports their category-leading margins. And with continued innovation and expansion into new performance applications, we see meaningful opportunity for growth ahead. 5.11 Tactical delivered solid margin performance and strong cash flow in the quarter, despite some modest top line pressure. The business continues to generate durable cash flow from its core professional customer base, and we are encouraged by the steps the team is taking to expand 5.11's appeal to the broader adventure-oriented consumer. This includes a recent grand opening of its next-generation retail format in Seattle, which significantly outperformed the chain average on opening weekend. Early customer response has been strong and we are seeing encouraging traction. While this is an early signal, it reinforces our belief that 5.11 has meaningful runway to broaden the brand's reach over time. And finally, within our Consumer businesses, a new leadership team is getting up to speed at PrimaLoft. It's only month 3, but we are pleased with management's progress, laying the groundwork to accelerate future growth while remaining a highly profitable, low working capital business. Much more to come in future quarters. Turning to our Industrial businesses. Arnold delivered a standout quarter with adjusted EBITDA nearly doubling year-over-year, despite ongoing geopolitical dynamics around rare earth supply including continued export restrictions out of China. While these dynamics create near-term headwinds, they also reinforce the long-term tailwinds for the business. Demand for geopolitically secure rare earth magnet supply continues to build as customers increasingly prioritize reliable non-China sources. Arnold's Thailand facility is ramping up, adding capacity and supply chain redundancy. We believe this uniquely positions Arnold to serve aerospace, defense and industrial customers who prioritize supply chain security and performance reliability. Altor remains a work in progress. The business faced a challenging first quarter, reflecting competitive pressure in the cold chain market and continued consumer headwinds in the appliance market. The team is focused on execution, optimizing the combined platform following the Lifoam acquisition and driving commercial progress. And we remain confident in Altor's long-term positioning even as near-term results continue to reflect current market conditions. Finally, let me turn to Rimports, which is the business we retained following the sale of the Sterno food service business. Rimports is a home fragrance platform, supplying scented wax, wax warmers and essential oils under a range of in-house and private-label brands to many of the nation's largest retailers. We want to be clear about what to expect. The balance of 2026 will be a transition period. Rimports will absorb some stranded costs from the separation of the food service business during the year, and we are working through an updated commercial relationship with a large customer. Both of these factors will weigh on near-term results, but are expected to improve in 2027. We have confidence in the leadership team and believe the long-term opportunity remains attractive as the team focuses on the go-forward business. Before I hand the call over to Stephen, I want to underscore that the actions this quarter are part of a disciplined, sequenced plan. Our path is clear: deleverage, drive continued operational performance, further align management incentives, and over time, close the gap between our share price and intrinsic value. That is the priority we are executing against. With that, I'll turn the call over to Stephen to walk through the financial results.