Frankie S. Renda
Analyst · Sidoti & Company
Thank you, Alex. Good morning, and thank you for joining Southland's Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Conference Call. The fourth quarter and full year 2025 results we are reporting today were significantly impacted by a number of discrete items, the most substantial of which we will address directly before turning to our capital structure and the performance of our underlying business. Before we review the details of the quarter, let me start by saying that I am extremely disappointed in our financial results for 2025, and I'm committed to providing you with a complete explanation of the challenges we faced and the strategic plan we have implemented to move the Company forward, which I believe tells a more complete and encouraging story than the numbers we reported last night. Revenue for the fourth quarter was $104 million, inclusive of the revenue reversal of $92 million from adjustments related to legacy-dispute negotiation. Gross loss for the quarter was $193 million, and significant drivers include $136 million related to an adverse legal ruling, $44 million related to other legacy-dispute negotiations, and a $22 million impact from our legacy Civil project. The unfavorable adjustment of $136 million is related to the Washington State Convention Center project within our American Bridge subsidiary. This was the result of an adverse trial-court ruling on a construction-contract dispute, combined with the reversal of an expected recovery and related items, this outcome had a material impact on our fourth quarter and full-year reported results. This was a legacy project that Southland took over when we acquired American Bridge from certain sureties in 2020. We believe we were contractually entitled to significant recoveries through an affirmative claim. This January, we received an adverse legal ruling, which ruled in favor of the counterparty, denying our claim and granting their counterclaim. While we intended to appeal this ruling, certain sureties entered into negotiations with the counterparty on behalf of Southland after year-end. Through the rights the sureties have included in their respective general indemnity agreements -- based on these negotiations and due to the events occurring prior to year-end that led to the adverse ruling, we recorded a long-term accrued liability, which significantly impacted results. Any settlement that is agreed will be paid by the sureties under the general indemnity agreements. The sureties agreed to forbear on seeking repayment of any settlement related to Washington State Convention Center until March 27, 2027. Over the past several months, we have also been working closely with our surety partners to bring additional capital into the business and to restructure our Senior Credit Facility. Our objective is to optimize the capital structure for long-term performance and the successful closeout of legacy projects. To date, we have successfully brought in $116 million to support bonded construction projects under our general indemnity agreements with the sureties. This included approximately $14 million before December 31, 2025, and $102 million so far in the first quarter. Repayment terms are expected to be included in a long-term financing agreement and the sureties have agreed not to require repayment prior to March 27, 2027. Separately, we announced in an 8-K this week that the sureties have also replaced our senior lender. As part of this transaction, we paid down and reduced our principal by approximately $14 million and the sureties assumed the remaining $110 million of debt under this facility. The sureties have agreed to waive all scheduled quarterly principal and monthly interest payments through maturity. Based on the current interest rate, this will reduce debt service by approximately $27 million over the next 12 months. Taken together, our sureties have committed to fund any Washington State Convention Center settlement with no repayment required until at least March of 2027 and have provided $226 million in total support. We are now working toward a long-term financing agreement and a Credit Agreement that will formalize these arrangements and expect to provide the flexibility we need to execute going forward. We are grateful for our surety partners' support. Their commitment to this comprehensive capital solution is a significant vote of confidence in Southland, the quality of our project teams, and our strategic path forward. Now I'll discuss our long-term plan. The first step in our strategic plan involved bringing necessary capital into the business. We have the funding and support of our surety partners to successfully closeout our legacy contracts and execute on the strong backlog of new core work. Their decision to provide support reflects their assessment of our work and the quality of the projects in our portfolio. We also took action to restructure our Senior Debt Facility to create greater flexibility and improved cash flow. Next, we have committed to the sureties to monetize idle equipment and non-core assets, including certain real estate. This is a strategic effort to optimize our asset base and ensure our fleet is aligned with our core-project footprint. We are also pursuing the settlement of outstanding disputes. We expect to use the proceeds from these asset sales and certain claim settlements to pay down our Senior Credit Facility prior to maturity, further strengthening our balance sheet as we execute on our project backlog. Moving forward, we will continue to focus our bidding on water-resource, bridge, marine, and tunnel projects in the geographies where our teams deliver the strongest performance and the highest margins. That is where we are most competitive. And by concentrating our resources there, we expect to produce more consistent and predictable results. During the fourth quarter, we added approximately $118 million in new awards in our core end markets. This was led by a $48 million data-center contract in our Civil segment for a private client in the Southwest. This project marks an important milestone for us as it involves installing water pipelines for a major data-center project. We recently broke ground, and the project is progressing well. We expect to complete the work in 2026. We were also awarded a $40 million Construction Manager at Risk or CMAR water resource project in our Civil segment in Texas, and a $30 million pump-station and transmission-main project in the city of Cape Coral, Florida. During the quarter, the Bull Run Filtration Facility project was terminated for convenience. This reduced backlog by approximately $160 million, which brings our total backlog to slightly over $2 billion. Turning toward the broader market, we see a period of robust multi-year demand for the specialized infrastructure services we provide. In the public sector, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act continues to move from authorization to active construction. And in the private sector, the rapid expansion of data-centers has created a unique tailwind for our industry. This is creating a steady pipeline of water-resource, bridge, marine and tunnel projects across our key regions. Our pipeline remains active across both segments. Upcoming opportunities include the Pojoaque Basin Regional Water System Phase 2 design-build in New Mexico, Phase 3 of the Winnipeg North End Sewage Treatment Plant where we are already executing Phases 1 and 2, significant pipeline and treatment plant opportunities across Texas and the Southwest the Claiborne Pell Bridge rehabilitation in Rhode Island and the Liberty Bend Bridge design-build in Missouri. We continue to be selective in our pursuit strategy focused on high-quality work in our core markets. With our recent capital restructuring and strategic plan in place, we are confident that we have the right team to capitalize on these opportunities. In short, the market demand is here. We have the surety-support, and our fleet is being optimized. As we put the legacy impacts behind us and build on the performance of our core backlog, we expect to deliver the strong and consistent results our business is capable of producing. We have the technical capability and the discipline to be highly selective, bidding on the high-margin, high-quality work that we expect to drive Southland's value for years to come. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Keith for a financial update.