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Mayville Engineering Company, Inc. (MEC)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 net sales were $121.3M, down 18.4% year over year; GAAP diluted EPS was $0.76, boosted by a $25.5M lawsuit settlement (≈$0.92 per diluted share), while non-GAAP adjusted diluted EPS was a loss of ($0.07) .
- Adjusted EBITDA was $9.2M (7.6% margin), down from $17.7M (11.9%) in Q4 2023 and $17.1M (12.6%) in Q3 2024, reflecting demand softness and fixed-cost under-absorption .
- Free cash flow was $35.6M, aided by the $25.5M settlement; excluding the settlement, FCF would have been $10.1M vs. $19.9M a year ago. MEC repaid ~$31.8M of debt and ended Q4 with net leverage of 1.3x; it also repurchased nearly $4M of stock in the quarter .
- FY 2025 guidance initiated: net sales $560–$590M, adjusted EBITDA $60–$66M, FCF $43–$50M; management expects muted H1 demand with gradual H2 improvement. Guidance excludes tariff impacts; capex planned at $13–$17M .
- Management highlighted MBX value creation (pricing, growth, capital efficiency) and opportunities tied to industrial infrastructure and domestic data-center build-outs, positioning MEC for long-term profitable growth .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong free cash flow and deleveraging: Q4 FCF of $35.6M (including settlement) enabled ~$31.8M of debt repayment; net leverage improved to 1.3x, and ~$4M shares were repurchased under the $25M authorization .
- Strategic positioning and pipeline: “Entering 2025, our business development team is actively engaged… including exposure to industrial infrastructure investment… domestic data-center build-out,” with >$100M new business wins in 2024 (+12% YoY) .
- End-market mix resilience: “Other” end markets grew 11% YoY in Q4 on aluminum extrusion demand and new customer start-ups .
What Went Wrong
- Broad-based demand softness: Q4 net sales fell 18.4% YoY on customer de-stocking and lower consumption across core end markets .
- Margin compression and adjusted loss: Manufacturing margin rate fell to 8.9% from 12.3% YoY; adjusted diluted EPS was ($0.07) vs. $0.21 a year ago, driven by lower fixed-cost absorption and fewer working days .
- End-market declines: Q4 YoY net sales down in Commercial Vehicle (-10.5%), Construction & Access (-34.5%), Powersports (-29.1%), Agriculture (-46.5%), Military (-16.5%), while “Other” was +11% .
Financial Results
Segment/end-market net sales
Key operating metrics
Notes: Q4 2024 GAAP EPS includes $25.5M settlement gain; adjusted EPS excludes it . Q4 2024 FCF benefited from the settlement .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “During a period of softer demand within our core vertical markets, our team maintained focused execution… delivered stable margins, consistent profitability, disciplined net working capital management, and significant year-over-year growth in free cash flow generation” — Jag Reddy, CEO .
- “MBX continues to drive EBITDA margin expansion, positioning us to become a leaner, more efficient organization equipped to capitalize on a future demand recovery” — Jag Reddy .
- “We repaid more than $31 million in debt, reducing our net leverage to 1.3x at year-end, and repurchased nearly $4 million of our common stock… Looking ahead, we intend to further prioritize balance sheet discipline… while remaining opportunistic acquirors of complementary assets” — Jag Reddy .
- “We expect demand to gradually improve entering the second half of the year… supported by expectations for improved customer order activity and a more favorable business environment for domestic manufacturers” — Jag Reddy .
Q&A Highlights
- MBX savings cadence: Management expects $1–$3M of 2025 cost improvement from MBX and pricing (net of inflation), with greater pull-through as volumes recover in H2’25 and into 2026 .
- Tariffs exposure limited: ~95% inputs domestically sourced; <5% (mostly aluminum from Canada) potentially exposed; steel/aluminum are pass-through to customers; tariffs more likely to affect margin percentage than dollars .
- Margin path: First half 2025 margins expected ~8–10%, improving to ~11–13% in second half; supports longer-term 14–16% EBITDA margin targets as volume recovers .
- Free cash flow mechanics: Working capital turns improved (inventory turns from 6.2 in 2022 to 9.1 in 2024), tighter terms with customers/suppliers; 2025 FCF conversion targeted at 72–76% with capex $13–$17M .
- M&A pipeline and multiples: Target revenue size $50–$150M; margin-accretive, diversifying into secular growth markets (power infrastructure/data centers); valuation multiples stable; balance sheet capacity improved .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS/revenue/EBITDA for Q4 2024 could not be retrieved due to provider daily request limits. As a result, beat/miss vs. Wall Street was not assessable at this time (S&P Global consensus unavailable via GetEstimates). Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable due to API limits.
Where estimates may need to adjust:
- Given the magnitude of GAAP EPS benefit from the $25.5M settlement in Q4, we expect analysts to focus on adjusted EPS/EBITDA and H1’25 demand softness, with potential downward adjustments to early-2025 margins offset by H2’25 normalization embedded in company guidance .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term demand softness persists, but management guides to H2’25 improvement; use adjusted metrics (not GAAP EPS) to gauge underlying trajectory given the Q4 settlement distortion .
- Cost actions and MBX execution should support sequential margin recovery in 2025, with explicit $1–$3M cost improvements and volume leverage as destocking fades .
- Strong cash generation and deleveraging (1.3x) enable ongoing buybacks and optionality for bolt-on M&A in secular growth areas like data-center infrastructure; monitor capital deployment pace .
- End-market mix matters: “Other” is growing (aluminum extrusion/new projects), while Agriculture remains a headwind into 2026; Powersports is most rate-/inventory-sensitive; CV positioned for EPA-driven recovery by 2026 .
- 2025 guide embeds muted H1; targeting FCF $43–$50M with capex $13–$17M and sub‑1x net leverage by YE (ex M&A); track FCF conversion and WC metrics quarterly .
- Tariff risk appears limited and potentially a reshoring tailwind; steel/aluminum largely pass-through, limiting dollar margin impact .
- Tactical trading: Watch for H1 macro/sector prints (CV builds, dealer inventory movements) and any data-center program awards; H2 narrative inflection could be a catalyst, especially if MBX cost pull-through accelerates .