American Superconductor - Earnings Call - Q1 2026
July 31, 2025
Executive Summary
- Q1 2026 delivered an outsized beat: revenue $72.36M (+79.6% YoY) and non-GAAP EPS $0.29–$0.30 versus S&P Global consensus $64.97M and $0.12; GAAP diluted EPS was $0.17 and gross margin reached ~34%, driven by strong grid mix and semiconductor demand. S&P Global values marked with * (disclaimer below).
- Guidance for Q2 2026: revenue $65–$70M and non-GAAP EPS ≥$0.14; management characterized Q1 as a “near perfect quarter” and said Q2 guidance is stronger than the Q1 guide, but the EPS guide is slightly below S&P consensus ($0.153*). S&P Global values marked with * (disclaimer below).
- Cash and equivalents jumped to $213.4M after a June equity raise, positioning AMSC for capacity additions and potential acquisitions; operating cash flow was $4.1M for the quarter.
- Catalysts: accelerating orders and backlog in semiconductors/data centers, continued momentum in traditional energy, and a robust M&A pipeline; watch margin sustainability as mix-normalization could moderate gross margin from this quarter’s high level.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Revenue surged to $72.36M (+80% YoY), with Grid contributing ~$60.09M and Wind ~$12.27M; non-GAAP EPS reached ~$0.29–$0.30 and GAAP diluted EPS was $0.17, reflecting strong execution and scale benefits.
- Gross margin approached ~34%, with management citing “ideal” product/market mix, pricing actions, and high factory utilization; CEO: “In many ways, it was a near perfect quarter”.
- Balance sheet strength: quarter-end cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash of $213.4M, supported by ~$124.6M net proceeds from a June offering, enhancing strategic flexibility.
What Went Wrong
- Mix tailwind caution: CFO noted elevated margin was driven by favorable mix and higher-content shipments in semiconductors; while no “one-time” accounting items, the team acknowledged some anomaly-like elements in mix that may not repeat.
- Working capital dynamics: accounts receivable rose and operating cash flow was modest ($4.1M) relative to revenue growth, reflecting timing of collections and project-driven working capital needs.
- EPS guidance for Q2 (non-GAAP ≥$0.14) is slightly below S&P consensus ($0.153*), suggesting conservative near-term profitability versus Street expectations despite strong demand signals. S&P Global values marked with * (disclaimer below).
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Welcome to the AMSC first quarter fiscal 2025 financial results conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Miss Nicole Golez, Director of Communications at AMSC. Please go ahead, ma'am.
Nicole Golez (Director of Communications)
Thank you, Chuck. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to American Superconductor Corporation's first quarter of fiscal year 2025 conference call. I am Nicole Golez, AMSC's Director of Communications. Joining me today are Daniel McGahn, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, and John Kosiba, Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. Yesterday, after market close, American Superconductor issued its earnings release for the first quarter of fiscal year 2025. A copy of the release is available on the investors' page of the company's website at www.amsc.com. During today's call, remarks that management may make regarding American Superconductor's future expectations, including financial results, plans, and prospects, constitute forward-looking statements.
Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements due to various factors, including those outlined on Form 10-K for the year ended March 31, 2025, which the company filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 21, as well as their other filings, all of which are available on our website. The company disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements. On today's call, management will refer to the non-GAAP net income, a non-GAAP financial measure. Tables of reconciliation of GAAP to adjusted financial measures can be found in the company's earnings release. With that, I will now turn the call over to Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, Daniel McGahn. Daniel?
Thanks, Nicole. Good morning, everybody. I'll begin today by providing an update and sharing a few remarks on our business. John Kosiba will then provide a detailed review of our financial results for the first fiscal quarter, which ended June 30, 2025, and provide guidance for the second fiscal quarter, which will end September 30, 2025. Following our comments, we'll open the line up to questions from our analysts. We kicked off fiscal 2025 with accelerated growth. Our results surpassed expectations, highlighting the strength and discipline fueling our business. This was our strongest quarter in years, a clear signal that our strategy is delivering consistent positive results and that the financial leverage we've talked about can happen. One of the key highlights for the quarter was a request from a customer who asked us to accelerate delivery for a specific project.
This boosted our results, reflects the strong relationship we have with our customers, and demonstrates the rising demand across multiple markets, especially in the materials sector. We crossed a major milestone this quarter. Revenue exceeded $70 million for the first quarter. This is the acceleration we've been signaling over the past month. Total revenue came in above our guidance range, growing by 80% versus the year-ago period, significantly driven by organic growth. Our grid revenue led the way, accounting for over 80% of AMSC's total revenue and growing over 85% versus the year-ago period. Meanwhile, our wind business posted extremely strong growth as well, up nearly 55% from the year-ago quarter. We delivered net income of over $6 million, marking our fourth consecutive quarter of profitability. Gross margins topped 30%, driven by a combination of higher revenues and increased operating leverage through a near-ideal product mix.
A key thing to note is that this quarter truly showcased the margin profile and operating leverage we've been working towards. In many ways, it was a near-perfect quarter, one the team feels very proud of and one made possible by the relationships we have with our customers. We closed the quarter with a strong balance sheet of over $210 million in cash. Simply put, the business really is thriving. This quarter, the materials sector was a main growth driver, driven directly by semiconductor capacity expansion. We believe this sector growth is fueled by demand for artificial intelligence applications and data center infrastructure. We closed the quarter with a 12-month backlog of over $200 million, up from $160 million the year-ago quarter, and a total backlog of over $300 million. Over the past two quarters, we brought in an average of just under $70 million in new orders each quarter.
This is above the trailing four-quarter average of over $60 million of new orders per quarter. We continue to see strength across a range of industries. Revenue this quarter came from a diverse set of sectors. About one quarter of our sales came from traditional energy projects, with another quarter from renewable energy projects. Materials projects driven by semiconductor accounted for nearly 25%, while military and other industrial sectors made up the remaining portion. First quarter orders exceeded $63 million and reflected demand across renewables, traditional energy, materials, specifically semiconductors and mining, as well as industrials and utilities. Notably, the semiconductor industry is in the midst of a major capital expenditure cycle, and we are seeing the benefits of this. We see more semiconductor orders on the horizon and more broadly in the materials sector. I'm including semiconductors in the materials sector along with mining metals and other specialty materials.
Traditional energy appears to be robust in the coming quarters as well. We feel encouraged by our strong momentum and believe the business is exceptionally well-positioned for the future. Now I'll turn the call over to John Kosiba to review our financial results for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 and provide guidance for the second quarter, which will end September 30, 2025. John?
John Kosiba (SVP, CFO, and Treasurer)
Thanks, Daniel. Good morning, everyone. AMSC generated revenues of $72.4 million for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 compared to $40.3 million in the year-ago quarter. Our grid business unit accounted for 83% of total revenues, while our wind business unit accounted for 17%. Grid business unit revenues increased by 86% in the first quarter versus the year-ago quarter. This year-over-year increase was led by organic growth and the contribution of NWL revenue. Wind business unit revenues increased by 54% in the first quarter versus the year-ago quarter. This year-over-year change was driven by increased ECS shipments. Looking at the P&L in more detail, gross margin for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 was 34%. This is up from 30% in the year-ago quarter.
Gross margin for the quarter was favorably impacted by increased revenues, a favorable product, project, and market mix, which includes beneficial impacts across the business due to pricing increases across our product lines. Lastly, we continue to experience high levels of factory utilization. This was an ideal culmination of events that yielded these elevated gross margins. Moving on to operating expenses, R&D and SG&A expenses for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 were $18.5 million compared to $11.2 million in the year-ago quarter. Approximately 23% of R&D and SG&A expenses in the first quarter of fiscal 2025 were non-cash. Our net income in the first quarter of fiscal 2025 was $6.7 million or $0.17 per share. This compares to a net loss of $2.5 million or $0.07 per share in the year-ago quarter.
Our non-GAAP net income for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 was $11.6 million or $0.30 per share, compared with non-GAAP net income of $3 million or $0.09 per share in the year-ago quarter. Please see our press release issued last night for a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results. We ended the first quarter of fiscal 2025 with $213.4 million in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash. This compares with $85.4 million on March 31, 2025. In June, we completed a public offering generating total net proceeds of $124.6 million, including the follow-on options. We generated $4.1 million of operating cash flow in the first quarter of fiscal 2025. Now turning to our financial guidance for the second quarter of fiscal 2025, we expect that our revenues will be in the range of $65 to $70 million.
Our net income on that revenue is expected to exceed $2 million or $0.05 per share. We expect our non-GAAP net income to exceed $6 million or $0.14 per share. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Daniel.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Thanks, John. During the first fiscal quarter, the business accelerated faster than projected, and the results speak for themselves. The business outperformed. We saw revenue grow sequentially now for the past five quarters. We reported our fourth consecutive quarter of net income. We achieved our eighth consecutive quarter of non-GAAP profitability with more than $10 million this quarter, outpacing even our internal scenarios for the quarter. We showed significant gross margin expansion, and our backlog continues to be very healthy. This was a remarkable and exceptionally strong quarter. We have sustained an average quarterly revenue above $65 million for the past three quarters, elevating our business to a higher performing level. You can see we are bullish about our expectations that this trend could continue next quarter. We are growing. We are ahead of schedule, and we are executing with discipline and focus.
These results reflect our progress in scaling the business, diversifying revenue, and driving outstanding financial performance. We see major tailwinds and long-term opportunities across our core sectors. In 2025, traditional energy, led by oil and gas, will see over $1 trillion in capital expenditures. Mining projects have over a $1 trillion global pipeline. Defense spending nears $3 trillion. Renewables will attract over three quarters of a trillion dollars, and global data centers are set to exceed half a trillion dollars in capital investments. Semiconductors driven by AI and data demand will see approximately $160 billion in investments in 2025. Our footprint outside the U.S., particularly in renewables, positions us well to benefit from international investments. In India, for example, wind capacity is set to double by 2030. These are massive, durable tailwinds, and we believe we are well positioned to benefit. What's next?
We see a strong business continuing in materials driven by semiconductors. This quarter was exceptionally strong because, as I previously mentioned, one key customer pulled in systems earlier than expected, highlighting our ability to execute. Even with that pull forward, our outlook remains strong with revenue levels over $65 million a quarter. The guide for our second quarter is better than we communicated for our first quarter. We also see continued strength and a healthy pipeline in traditional energy. We're making inroads in the data center infrastructure projects, which we believe could become a meaningful growth driver going forward. It is early days for us here. Looking further ahead to next year, we see increasing potential in the renewables market, particularly in India, where the ramp is projected to continue. We anticipate continued strength in materials and expect traditional energy to accelerate even further.
We also believe our military business could expand. As a reminder, we now serve military needs in three key ways: protecting ships, powering critical onboard systems, and supporting essential manufacturing capacity at shipyards. Stay tuned for some potential progress here. In summary, the momentum we've generated has set a strong foundation. We're excited about the future, and we're exceptionally well positioned to capitalize on the opportunities ahead. Our backlog remains robust. Our orders pipeline shows some large potential orders on the horizon. We do feel several tailwinds potentially pushing the business more rapidly. There is a robust pipeline of acquisition targets that we might be able to add to our product portfolio. We're actively looking at how to best expand our business. We've been looking at both our grid and military offerings. We are in discussions with several targets, and we plan to remain disciplined in our approach.
Our future-facing technologies help harmonize the world's desire for decarbonization and clean energy with the need for more reliable, effective, and efficient power delivery. I look forward to reporting to you again following the completion of our second fiscal quarter of fiscal year 2025. Chuck, we'll now take questions from our analysts.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, please press star then one on your touch-tone phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we'll pause momentarily to a standby roster. The first question will come from Eric Stine with Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC. Please go ahead.
Eric Stine (Analyst)
Hi, Daniel. Hi, John. Good morning.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Hey, happy Thursday.
Eric Stine (Analyst)
Hey, happy Thursday. Maybe just to start on the gross margin number, I believe that's your all-time high number, but it sure seems like from your commentary that while I think you said nearly perfect, there were no one-time items in there that skewed that. I guess first I'd like to confirm that, but then second, your confidence level that this can be, given the momentum in the business, a 30%+ gross margin business going forward.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah, we've been talking about getting to 30 and above. We've posted 30, I think, before, but I think you're right, maybe not this high. We've talked about getting in the mid-30s. As you can see with this revenue level, with this mix, it's possible. My hope is a lot of the times when we have these conversations on what the potential in the business is, having the proof point, I think, is extremely valuable. John, if you want to dig into any of the puts and takes in the margin, feel free.
John Kosiba (SVP, CFO, and Treasurer)
Yeah. Hi, Craig. To answer your question directly, there are no, what I would say, one-time, you know, call it non-recurrent events like that, special events. We did have a very strong product mix within our product profiles and our market mix. We had, for lack of a better term, an ideal mix within our products, but not per se like a, call it an inventory correction or something unique in an accounting calculation. No, I would say this was just a remarkably strong quarter with, you know, and I gave you the whole bullets, right? When you have an ideal, first, you've got to have strong revenue, which gets the factories full. Second, you've got to have a good mix, and we had both of those. It was a great, great quarter all around when it comes to contribution margin in the business. Yep. No, that's great.
Eric Stine (Analyst)
Thanks for that. Maybe turning to wind then, I think last quarter, Daniel, I believe the direct quote was that INOX was on the cusp of a historic volume ramp. Curious, I mean, another step up in wind? Does this kind of give you the confidence that that historic volume ramp is underway or, you know, maybe the trends you see there, I guess both on the order front and, but also, you know, throughout the remainder of fiscal 2025?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah, I tried to be deliberate in what I said, that this is something that we expect maybe as early as next year. Why I'm saying that is it gets down to the lead time on product and the demand that INOX is seeing from their customers appears to be growing, which should improve their cash position, which should then translate into the demand to us. We try to be very careful and not overly optimistic that something dramatically in their behavior is going to change. Their business seems to be doing very well. They have a tremendous amount of backlog that they're able to either maintain or grow, and they're in a really good position to be able to ramp for their customers. A lot of what their effort right now is in construction, so getting things constructed and then connected and handed over to their customers is important.
We're there trying to support them as the best partner we possibly can be. We love the relationship with them. It's a well-run company, a great family that's involved in it, and we think that they're really in a great position, not just for the next quarters or year, but for the coming years, we hope. At least that's what it looks like from how they talk about their business. Things can always change, but it feels really strong at this point.
Eric Stine (Analyst)
Right. Just to confirm, when you talk about a potential ramp early next year, are you talking calendar year or fiscal year?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
To me, you know, they're almost the same, right? It's the only quarter off. Yeah, you know, I try to try to things in general trend. I don't know what specific quarter we're going to start to see the change happening. You know, we're at a level now. We've been much healthier than we've been, and their backlog is commensurate with the potential higher revenue level for us in that business. I think the best part of the whole conversation about American Superconductor is they're one of a series of great customers. They're a piece of the puzzle and a piece of the business. It's not the main driver for the business quarter to quarter or for growth year to year. It's a business that we want to be able to be present with them. We feel a great responsibility to them to help make their business go.
We're in a much healthier position to do that today than we've ever been.
Eric Stine (Analyst)
Okay, thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question will come from Colin Rusch with Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. Please go ahead.
Colin Rusch (Analyst)
Thanks so much, guys. As you look at the growth in the business and the fact that you had high utilization rates here this quarter, can you talk a little bit about how you're thinking about capacity expansion, the capabilities that you might want to weave into that incremental capacity, either from a design or manufacturing flexibility perspective, as you look at taking another step function with the business over the next three to five?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah, we're looking pretty seriously at how we can expand capacity. That could be bringing labor in. It could be adding some additional tooling. As we've said kind of consistently, our manufacturing model is pretty CapEx-like. Nothing that we're thinking is a huge capital investment. I think as we're mindful of the potential targets for acquisition that we look at, maybe there's some leverage there that could be done where we could also think about expanding maybe in a different way than we've done in some of the most recent acquisitions. Not that that would be a driver for it, but certainly, we got to look at any and all options. I feel very comfortable, and John, please comment how you feel. Incrementally expanding labor, we've been able to do it in the markets that we're in.
We've talked about expanding beyond this level of revenue in the past, and I think the capability is still there.
John Kosiba (SVP, CFO, and Treasurer)
Yeah. Just to add to that, Colin, when you look at capacity, you first have, call it, labor capacity, and then secondly, you have space capacity. For us, we're still in the labor capacity constraint, not in the space. We're really, for most of our plants, very well utilized on one shift. That's an important note. We carefully monitor that to not go to a second shift because you hit a different level of utilization if you trip into the second shift. We're still on one shift in almost all of our plants. The good thing for us is we keep on hiring people within one shift, and we're able to keep it in the existing footprint. At some point, we go to a second shift, and if that second shift becomes fully utilized, we would look at, call it, plant expansions.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
It gives us the leverage like we had this quarter where a customer says, "Hey, can you do it faster?" and we want to service our customers as best we can. We had that instance here with this quarter. It's something we tried to get ahead as quickly as we could. I think it's really a testament to the team that they were able to accelerate some shipments of pretty large systems, which changed the financial profile of the company. We try to let our customers dictate what they need, and our financials are an output as opposed to a driver for these things. We have a benefit of a great quarter, but it's really because of some great customers.
Colin Rusch (Analyst)
Excellent. If you look at ways to drive revenue growth, could you talk a little bit about the potential for geographic expansion if that's a consideration or the potential for increased pricing, monetization of the value creation that you guys are providing? It looks to me like, particularly in some of the higher tech areas, you guys are providing a power quality solution that saves not only CapEx but also reduces the risk on operations for facilities.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah, I think both of those levers can be pulled on. To go to the second one, what we're seeing is the value creation of the combined offering post the series of the multiple acquisitions is greater than the sum of the parts. We're able to do more, I think, today with what we have than we could have done separately as the different entities. If the value is higher and you can convince customers that it is, then obviously pricing can scale with that. We try to do that as best we can. It's not always the case, but we're finding more and more in projects where we're bidding in a lot more content per order than we were even a couple of years ago. The second one is international, something strategically we look at and examine. We kind of made a purposeful pivot back to the U.S.
a long time ago when we were trying to reconstitute the business and grid and really focused on execution at home and build a business, get the nascent business in the military going. I talked about the multiple shots on goal there with that one. It feels like there's more expansion potentially in the U.S. and North America. There obviously is a lot of fertile ground globally that we could go into in Europe or even Latin America or geographies that we participated in but maybe haven't really had a full offering from an operational standpoint there. That's something strategically you look at, but you kind of need the right situation, and that might be something that through acquisitions helps kind of get us there quicker. That all remains to be seen. I don't want to tell you, Colin, definitely that's where we're going to head.
It definitely is something that we need to look and consider, and it really then continues to expand the markets we can participate in. I think the team has done a really good job of proving what we can do here in the U.S., proving how we can be responsive to customers, proving the value of the technical expertise and the technology itself. If we can expand the market globally, we'll certainly look at that in the coming years.
Colin Rusch (Analyst)
Excellent. Thanks so much, guys.
Operator (participant)
The next question will come from Justin Clare with Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead.
Justin Clare (Analyst)
Good morning, guys. Thanks for the questions, Pierre. I wanted to just follow up on the gross margin. Wanted to see if you could share maybe a little bit more detail on potentially what end markets or particular product lines might have driven the higher gross margins in the quarter. For example, does the semi-business tend to have higher margins than the corporate average? Just as we think through, as you scale revenues here, if you are delivering revenues, let's say at $70 million or above, would you anticipate gross margins at 30% plus? Is that kind of a fair assumption here?
I might have lost you guys.
Operator (participant)
Pardon me, this is the operator. It seems that our speaker line has disconnected. Please hold while we reconnect. Pardon me, we have our speaker line reconnected. Please proceed.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
That was a fun little glitch. Can you hear us okay, Justin?
Justin Clare (Analyst)
Yeah, I got you. Did you hear my question?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah, I got through all, but I started to answer, and then I started to hear music again. Sorry about that.
Justin Clare (Analyst)
Okay.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
I guess it's so good that there's music in the air for everything that we're doing today.
I guess specifically to the margin, part of it is materials and semiconductor. There was an acceleration in that for some key projects that we had. To be very blunt, the content, I'll say, I won't say the pricing is different, but the content that we shipped was things that, as you put in the period, have a higher margin. On the total project, when you look at them, they're similar to the rest of the business. It was a little bit of maybe an anomaly or a one-time kind of thing from that standpoint. I don't want you to feel like the semiconductor business is substantially different. Most of our projects are about the same margin. The challenge we have sometimes is there'll be either a push or a pull on a part or a full project, and that may change.
Justin Clare (Analyst)
That's partly what we put into the range of the guidance there. We feel really good about the material part of the business, and we feel great about grid. You want to comment more specifically, John? You said you talked about $70 million plus in revenue and 30% gross margin.
John Kosiba (SVP, CFO, and Treasurer)
Yeah, I mean, you saw this quarter on, you know, north of $70 million. We were in, you know, call it the upper low 30s, $34 million, right? Given a normal mix, I mean, of course, there's going to be scenarios where, call it, the opposite happens, a really bad mix. We could be in the upper 20s, maybe. I would say, you know, when you're looking at a, if we had a, call it, a normal mix, but just, you know, normal, call it, run-of-the-mill mix, I would say $30 million is, you know, a number we should be very comfortable with when we're approaching 70%, $70 million in revenue.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
We purposely didn't put out a target like that because we knew it was going to happen. We figured for the audience that the proof is in the pudding. It's better to do it than talk about it. We don't talk about the targets and where we can go. I know sometimes people get particularly annoyed with me when they ask those questions. A lot of it is, let's just show you. The business really has come a long way from $40 million, $55 million a quarter to now, you know, we're guiding to above the mid-$60 million. It's really a robust business, and the operating leverage is there. We don't have to say it will be there. We can show now that it is.
John Kosiba (SVP, CFO, and Treasurer)
I mean, just look at last year, we averaged $55 million a quarter in revenue, and we were at 28% gross margin. All the evidence is there. I don't get too worked over any one quarter. This was a great quarter. We're proud of it, but when you look at the business over a longer period of time, when you look at this business at the end of the year, if we were pushing $70 million a quarter for all four quarters, I mean, we're going to have a good result. No question.
Justin Clare (Analyst)
Yeah, certainly. It's definitely good to see. I guess then maybe just shifting over, you had talked about inroads into data center infrastructure projects. Just wondering if you could give us an update on how you're pursuing that market. Are you in conversations with data center developers, or is it primarily with utilities or EPCs? Just trying to think through, you know, would your products be more likely to be suited at the substation, or do you think there are opportunities within the data center infrastructure, within the building that are areas that you could pursue?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
I don't want to be trite and say the answer to everything you said is yes, but I think the answer is yes, and we're trying to figure it out. What we're finding is that the EPCs, the end customers, they're clamoring for capacity. I think what we figured out is I think we have something that works for them at the substation level. Do we have something that fits inside? It looks like we might, you know, but ask me when we'll see realizable revenue for that. It's not in the coming quarters. I want to be careful. I don't want people to get overly excited that, hey, this is going to impact you in the next six weeks, right? We're now thinking in the next six quarters or so. You know, how can we further impact the business? Could this have some meaningful piece to it? Yeah.
You know, again, just like we try to toot our horn with diversity, we're trying to build in all these markets in parallel. I think there is a tailwind on the grid side with data centers and AI, and we're trying to do our best way to navigate it and try to sell what we think is some value to what customers, to some critical customers, need today. Some of these are EPCs that know us really well, which makes the conversations very straightforward. I'll leave it at that. You know, again, don't feel like this is going to dramatically change quarter on quarter. The kind of acceleration that we had this quarter is really just trying to help a customer with their immediate demand and getting their project to meet a certain timetable. Most of our lead times on product are nine months plus.
In some cases, it can be 15 months plus.
Justin Clare (Analyst)
Got it. Okay. Just one more. Wanted to just check in. You know, what do you see as the key factors that are enabling your success in the semiconductor market? Is this proprietary technology? Is it the breadth of the portfolio that you have? You know, are you able to put together a solution that is unique here given the wider portfolio that you have? Maybe you could just speak to what's enabling you to win there.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah, I think, again, just to answer yes to all the different pieces that you're saying there, I think it's more content. It's more valuable content. It's more proprietary content. I think we have something that is unique in the market. I think that we've been able to hone our chops in getting projects and bigger projects. You're starting to see more significant capital spend in the semi-space, but also broader in materials and mining and metals and the processing of all those materials. Most of those processes are very electrically intensive, which means power quality, power resiliency, and power supply are all critical to the operation. We're now able to sell, I'll say, a more complete solution, and we're benefiting from that.
Justin Clare (Analyst)
Okay. It's good to see. All right. Thanks, guys.
Operator (participant)
The next question will come from Tim Moore with Clear Street. Please go ahead.
Tim Moore (Analyst)
Thanks, and impressive execution on your strategy and the profit margin expansion. Part of our investment thesis when we launched Coverers recently was really your operating leverage step up of absorbing the fixed costs and adding acquisitions helped to really drive higher incremental margin, seen in the June quarter you just reported. One question I actually have is, if I back out our rough estimate of possible sales contribution from acquisitions, I mean, organic growth, it just seems phenomenally strong, maybe 35% in the quarter, the June quarter. What do you think is it, looking at your backlog and the lead times you mentioned in conversion and where they stand, what do you think might be a realistic organic sales growth piece for this year? Is 20% possible on the organic growth side? Is the university acquisitions?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
You asked fantastic questions, Tim. I think your thesis got proved pretty quickly in the leverage. Kudos to you to come in and say that's what you thought could happen to us, and now it's happening. You're doing the reverse math, and I had the answer in case, you know, and we grew quarter by quarter by almost 15%. I don't want to say I simply don't know. We've been growing at 20% to 25% when we look at the organic business. Some quarters it might be 15%. Some years it might be 15%. It feels like today that we're going into a bigger market. It feels like there's a lot more investment in the areas that we're seeing benefit from. I tried to go through a bit of that in the prepared remarks.
We're just trying to hang in here with key customers and be able to deliver as rapidly as we can. That's why John can answer the questions about capacity pretty succinctly because these are things that we're thinking about every day. I don't want to dodge your question totally, Tim, but I don't really know how much it could be, but we've demonstrated we can do 20% to 25%. Organic, I guess we've now demonstrated we can do 35%. If the markets continue to hold, the business wants to be able to respond with the growth that the customers drive us to. Again, it really comes down to what the offering is, the proprietary nature to it, and these key customer relationships. We've gotten designed in with so many industries now that it gives us multiple shots on goal and more diversification in the markets that can drive us.
Tim Moore (Analyst)
That was actually very helpful. I appreciate the color. Another question that we have is, obviously, the strengthening of the U.S. electrical grid has been a theme in the last couple of years. From what we're seeing in some of our coverage, it's really accelerating more since the April executive order, maybe by the administration. Have you seen any more incoming calls or inquiries just for better awareness of your brand and your solutions out there for grid reliability and efficiency?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah.
Tim Moore (Analyst)
Have you seen an uptick on that the last couple of months?
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
Yeah. In general, I'll say yes. I think what you're seeing is a signal in the market that maybe there's a bit more stability in the policy that can help drive solve some of the problems that have been with the grid now for us for the better part, I'll say, of a decade that are becoming more exacerbated as our general thesis on why we're so relevant is that the grid is not designed to do what we're asking it to do. In many ways, we try to step in and fix incrementally the existing grid to make the next project work, be it on the power generation side or be it on the power consumption side or just in the grid itself, hardening the grid, making it more robust and making it more resilient.
In a lot of ways, I think the thesis is our time has kind of come here. This is the investment in the grid that people have thought needs to happen, should happen. I think the demand for electricity is really what's ultimately driving that investment. As long as that continues to persist for the coming years, we want to be in position to take its best advantage of that that we can.
Tim Moore (Analyst)
Great, Dan. That's really helpful. Thanks for sharing that color. That's it for my questions.
Operator (participant)
This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Daniel McGahn for any closing remarks. Please go ahead, sir.
Daniel McGahn (Chairman, President and CEO)
This quarter really has been exceptional. Our first quarter performance confirms we're growing faster, more profitably, and with greater scale than ever before. Our growth reflects the strength of our business and the market demand for our products and services. We are prepared to capitalize on the growing demand for energy and the need for a stable grid to support it. We've delivered another outstanding quarter, and we can see that the fundamentals of our business are well-grounded. The acquisition of NWL has exceeded our expectations. This is truly an exciting time here at AMSC. We approach the remainder of fiscal 2025 with confidence in our team and business. Thank you all for listening today.
Operator (participant)
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.