Construction Partners - Earnings Call - Q2 2025
May 9, 2025
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered strong year-over-year growth: revenue up 54% to $571.7M, Adjusted EBITDA up 135% to $69.3M, and a record $2.84B backlog; diluted EPS turned positive to $0.08 from a loss in Q2 FY24.
- Guidance raised across all key metrics: FY25 revenue to $2.77–$2.83B, Adjusted EBITDA to $410–$430M, Adjusted EBITDA margin to 14.8%–15.2%, and Adjusted net income to $122.5–$133.5M.
- Consensus vs actual: revenue modestly above Street ($571.7M actual vs $561.3M consensus*) and EPS materially above negative consensus ($0.079 actual vs -$0.055 consensus*), driven by margin execution and integration benefits; Street models likely need to reflect raised FY25 guidance and acquisition contributions.
- Catalyst: sustained backlog strength, margin expansion, and raised FY25 outlook, alongside the PRI platform acquisition in Tennessee to support organic and acquisitive growth.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Highest Q2 adjusted EBITDA margin in CPI’s history at 12.1%,” supported by strong plant and project performance, vertical integration, and scale effects.
- Record backlog reached $2.84B, supported by healthy federal/state funding and steady commercial demand across fast-growing Sunbelt markets.
- Strategic execution: addition of PRI as Tennessee platform (nearly 300 employees), with pavement preservation expertise and mid-teens margin profile; integration expected to enhance organic growth and services breadth.
What Went Wrong
- Interest expense rose sharply to $21.6M vs $4.6M prior year, weighing on net income despite operating improvements.
- Leverage elevated at 3.23x debt/TTM EBITDA post-transactions; management targets ~2.5x within four quarters via operating cash conversion of ~80–85% of EBITDA.
- Input cost dynamics atypical: crude fell but liquid asphalt stayed flat in Q2; diesel down since quarter end but natural gas up—net cost environment “stable” yet volatile by line-item.
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Greetings and welcome to Construction Partners' second quarter earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Investor Relations, with Rick Black. Thank you. You may now proceed.
Rick Black (EVP)
Thank you, Operator, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for the Construction Partners conference call to review second quarter results for fiscal 2025. This call is also being webcast and can be accessed through the audio link on the events and presentations page of the Investor Relations section of constructionpartners.net. Information recorded on this call speaks only as of today, May 9th, 2025. Please be advised that any time-sensitive information may no longer be accurate as of the date of any replay listening or transcript reading. I would also like to remind you that the statements made in today's discussion that are not historical facts, including statements of expectations or future events or future financial performance, are considered forward-looking statements made pursuant to the safe harbor provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
We will be making forward-looking statements as part of today's call that, by their nature, are uncertain and outside of the company's control. Actual results may differ materially. Please refer to our earnings press release from this morning for our disclosure on forward-looking statements. These factors, as well as other risks and uncertainties, are described in detail in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Management will also refer to non-GAAP measures, including adjusted net income, adjusted EBITDA, and adjusted EBITDA margin. Reconciliations to the nearest GAAP measures can be found at the end of the earnings press release. Construction Partners assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. I would like to turn the call over to Construction Partners CEO, Jule Smith. Jule?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Thank you, Rick. Good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us on the call today. With me this morning are Greg Hoffman, our Chief Financial Officer, and Ned Fleming, our Executive Chairman. I want to begin today's call by focusing on our organizational model and how important people are to our strategy at CPI, as we surpassed 6,000 employees this month. The core of our business happens in our local markets, now numbering approximately 100 distinct market areas in eight states. In each of these, our local management team and workforce perform higher-margin, lower-risk projects and generate recurring revenue for repeat customers each year. Our people are the crucial element as we seek to take great care of our valuable customers and operate profitably. This local market model also provides a stable and predictable environment for our teams to bid, win, and build work in their communities.
In our family of companies structure, nowhere are character, experience, and talent more important than in the management teams at our platform companies. In each state, these management teams steward our company culture, drive operational excellence, and cultivate both organic and acquisitive growth opportunities. This is why last week we were so excited to have PRI join us as our platform company in Tennessee. PRI instantly expands our coverage to the full length of the state and will include our pre-existing operations in the Nashville metro area. A key strategic criterion in our platform acquisitions is an established and deeply experienced leadership team that fits our culture, our focus on safety, and our relative market share growth strategy for further expansion.
Under the leadership of Jon Hargett, Greg Ailshie, and PRI's entire management team, our new platform company will benefit from decades of collective experience and the technical expertise of seasoned industry veterans. Tennessee is growing, and we see excellent organic and acquisitive growth opportunities within the state, driven by strong economic expansion, favorable demographic trends, and a healthy transportation funding program. Turning now to the quarter, outstanding operational performance led to Q2 year-over-year revenue growth of 54% and adjusted EBITDA growth of 135%. In addition, this marked our highest Q2 adjusted EBITDA margin in CPI's history at 12.1%. This strong margin expansion during the winter quarter was driven by great project and plant performance. The company's vertical integration assets and aggregates, services, and AC terminals performed well. We continue to focus on building a great organization, and as we build scale, the benefits contribute to higher margins.
For CPI, tariffs have not and are not expected to be a significant issue for the business, as most of our supply chain and raw material inputs are sourced domestically. Our Sunbelt states continue to benefit from healthy federal and state project funding, in addition to a population migration that is driving a steady workflow of commercial projects. We are not currently seeing any sign of degradation to these fundamental factors that have been supporting healthy and growing markets through our footprint for years. Our backlog is evidence of this continued steady demand for our services, as it grew to a record $2.84 billion. Heading into the heavy work season of our fiscal year, we are raising our outlook ranges, which Greg will discuss in his remarks.
Taking a closer look at market conditions in our Sunbelt states, local markets are growing, and states remain focused on maintaining and improving the quality of their roads, as well as increasing capacity to handle the significant migration to their states. For CPI customers in our public markets, the IIJA and state funding will continue to provide healthy bidding environments. The IIJA provides for significant funds that have not yet been deployed, and Congress is focused on the next five-year reauthorization of the surface transportation bill now. Secretary Duffy's comments in the past few weeks were positive on a reauthorization that continues to focus spending on hard infrastructure, which is a positive for CPI. For commercial and private customers, we continue to experience steady bidding availability. Manufacturing moving back to the United States, and specifically the Sunbelt, is also a positive for CPI.
Turning now to our strategic growth model, we remain focused on both organic and acquisitive growth. Organic growth and our revised guidance envisions a strong second half of the year, and we continue to have an extremely active acquisition pipeline. Our southeastern states have great opportunities, and as we enter new states in the southwest, the map expands, and even more opportunities present themselves. In the past year, we have entered into two new states, Texas and Oklahoma, with platform acquisitions. Through PRI, we now have a platform company in Tennessee. As with our existing platforms, these new companies serve as growth engines for CPI to both expand into new areas through bolt-on acquisitions and to increase market share organically. In both cases, we're able to grow revenues and, more importantly, expand margins in what remains an extremely fragmented industry.
Moving forward, we continue to focus daily on our CPI strategy and delivering on our roadmap 2027 goals of top-line growth of 15%-20% annually and EBITDA expansion of 50 basis points per year through our three margin levers: building better markets, vertical integration, and scale. In closing, we are very pleased with the second quarter results, and we're excited and ready for the busy spring and summer work season ahead. I'd now like to turn the call over to Greg.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Thank you, Jule. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin with a review of our key performance metrics for the second quarter of fiscal 2025 compared to the second quarter a year ago. I'll then discuss our revised outlook for fiscal 2025. Revenue was $571.7 million, an increase of 54% compared to the same quarter a year ago. The mix of our total revenue growth for the quarter was seven percent organic revenue and 47% from recent acquisitions. As a reminder, we began presenting acquisition-related expenses last quarter as a separate line item from general and administrative expenses on our income statement. G&A expenses are now presented in a manner that differentiates spend and encourages support day-to-day operations from those expenses associated with acquisitive activity within the quarter. The prior year quarter also reflects this presentation.
Reflecting these changes, G&A expenses as a percentage of the total revenue in the second quarter of fiscal 2025 were 8.2%, compared to 9.7% in the second quarter last year. As we continue to build scale, we are targeting G&A expenses for the fiscal year to be approximately 7.2%-7.3% of revenue. As a reminder, fiscal year 2024 G&A expenses were 8.3%. Net income was $4.2 million in the second quarter and $0.08 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $1.1 million and diluted loss per share of $0.02 in the same quarter last year. Adjusted EBITDA was $69.3 million, an increase of 135% compared to the second quarter of fiscal 2024. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 12.1%, compared to 7.9% in the second quarter of last year. In addition, as Jule mentioned, we are reporting a project backlog of $2.84 billion at March 31st, 2025.
As a reminder, historically, CPI's backlog has declined sequentially during our heavy spring and summer work seasons. If this were to occur this year, we would not view it as a cause for concern. Rather, we would view it as a return to more seasonal patterns, albeit at a much higher percentage of the next 12 months' contract revenue and backlog than in prior years. Turning now to the balance sheet, we had $101.9 million of cash and cash equivalents and $248.4 million available under our credit facility at quarter-end, net a reduction for outstanding letters of credit. As of the end of the quarter, our debt-to-trailing 12-month EBITDA ratio was 3.23 times. We remain on pace with our strategy of reducing the leverage ratio to approximately 2.5 times in the next four quarters to support sustained profitable growth.
Cash provided by operating activities was $55.6 million, compared to $18.2 million in the same quarter a year ago. As discussed last quarter, the higher-than-expected level of billings and revenue in Q1 was realized as improved cash flow in this quarter. We remain on pace for FY2025 to convert 80-85% of EBITDA to cash flow from operations. Capital expenditures for the second quarter were $41.4 million. We continue to expect total capital expenditures for fiscal 2025 to be in the range of $130-$140 million. This includes maintenance CapEx of approximately 3.25% of revenue, with the remaining amount invested in new growth initiatives. Turning now to our outlook. Based on our recent outperformance and our current expectations for the remainder of this fiscal year, including the addition of PRI, we are raising all of our ranges for fiscal year 2025 results.
The increased ranges are as follows: revenue in the range of $2.77 billion-$2.83 billion. In regard to our overall revenue mix for the year, we now expect organic revenue to be in the range of 8%-10%, up from our prior expectation of 7%-8%. Net income in the range of $106 million-$117 million. Adjusted net income in the range of $122.5 million-$133.5 million. Adjusted EBITDA in the range of $410 million-$430 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 14.8%-15.2%. With that, we will open the call to questions. Operator?
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now conduct a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in a question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Once again, that's star one at this time. One moment while we pull up our first question. The first question comes from Kathryn Thompson with Thompson Research Group. Please proceed.
Kathryn Thompson (Founding Partner and CEO)
Hi. Thank you for taking my questions today. Just first focusing on just the broader macro view and understanding that you generally have more quick-type projects that are completed in 12 months, in a 12-month period. What, if any, project delays or cancellations are you seeing in your end, given just some of the broader macro uncertainty in the U.S. market?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Hey, Kathryn, good morning. For us, we're seeing just business as usual. We do have projects that we book and burn within a year. We continue to do a lot of those projects. The overall macro economy, I feel like there's a little bit of a disconnect between what you might read in the news and what we're experiencing on the ground. We haven't seen any delays. We still have a healthy bid sheet in the commercial markets. I would say we're really just business as usual.
Kathryn Thompson (Founding Partner and CEO)
That's helpful. Could you tell a little bit more about, you've had two acquisitions kind of on the heels of each other, one in Texas last year and then in Tennessee, announced last week. It both appears to have higher structural margins versus CPI's core. Tell us a little bit more about what you can in terms of kind of why the margin differential and what it is that you're looking for from an M&A standpoint.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah. So we're excited about PRI joining us. And you're right. The acquisition of Lone Star helped us raise our margin profile going into this year. But what we've, as I said in our prepared remarks, what we really look for in these platform acquisitions is a great management team. That's going to be the basis for years of future growth and performance. So PRI, we're excited. They do have a nice margin profile in the mid-teens. They do a great job in Knoxville, but also throughout the state. And the pavement preservation expertise that they bring is something that's going to be very valuable to CPI. As far as overall acquisitions, I'd just love to let Ned weigh in a little bit on some of his thoughts from a board level.
Ned Fleming (Executive Chairman)
Hello, Katherine. I hope you're doing well today. I think we see a lot of opportunity. Jule's done a great job of making sure the organization is ready. Greg's done a great job to make sure that the balance sheet is ready. We look at a lot of acquisitions and we pass on a lot of them because from the very start, especially when we look for platform companies, we're looking for great people, excellent markets, good assets, bolt-on opportunities in growing markets. One of the things that I think is really key, and we really, I think, proved that up with the Lone Star acquisition, is integrations are core competency. It has been since we founded the business. It was in the previous company that Charles ran. This is an organization that is prepared for and understands how to integrate companies.
Interestingly enough, we see a lot of opportunities because of the culture that's been built here from the start. They want to be part of this team. Jule, building the organization and really having a family of companies is key to it. Greg has done a terrific job of keeping the balance sheet. Yeah, we may tip a little bit above three like we are today, and then it'll go down. When you look at our cash flow generation at 85%, it's pretty phenomenal. We are going to always look for great platform companies that are generally led by people that we want to bring on as part of our team. There are a lot of those opportunities. Make no mistake about it, we pass on a lot of opportunities.
Kathryn Thompson (Founding Partner and CEO)
Very helpful. And then final question, just on the capital allocation. You have 80%+ cash flow through and recently announced acquisition, obviously, which you just talked about. How should we think about capital allocation priorities in 2025 and in terms of where debt-to-EBITDA levels and how you're managing that? Thank you.
Jule Smith (CEO)
As Greg said, we're on track to get back within our leverage ratio, our target leverage ratio in four quarters. We're on track for what we said when we acquired Lone Star. From a capital allocation standpoint, with the cash flow that's generated, we're going to pay down debt. We're also going to make good, smart acquisitions and continue to run our strategy as a growth company.
Kathryn Thompson (Founding Partner and CEO)
Perfect. Thanks so much. Good luck.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Thank you, Katherine.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Tyler Brown with Raymond James. Please proceed.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Hey, good morning, guys.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Morning, Tyler.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Hey, Charles.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Hey, Jule. I kind of want to come back to PRI and maybe just talk a little bit more about that business. I think it only came with maybe one HMA plant. Does that kind of imply that it's just more focused on paving crews or specialty services? Or is there something unique about Tennessee where you can just buy FOB and don't need plants? Maybe just a little more color there.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah, Tyler, good question. It's a little bit of all that. So PRI, as we said, stretches almost the length of the state of Tennessee, which is a long state. In Knoxville, they do a lot of traditional things that we do in their east division. In their central and west division, they do paving, but they also do a lot of pavement preservation, which we're excited about because we do that to a certain degree in Alabama and Georgia. These guys are experts at it. To your point, in the west, they have really good relationships with some producers there, and so they've chosen to buy FOB and to maintain their market share that way. We're going to be expanding over time, just like we do with all our platform companies.
We're excited to have Tennesseans taking over our Nashville operations, which is something we, back in 2022, we had as a goal, but we had to find the right platform management team. Our Tennessee operation and folks led by Josh Miller, they're excited to be part of PRI. I see PRI following the typical platform model of integrating into our family of companies and then just looking for great growth opportunities.
Ned Fleming (Executive Chairman)
Tyler, this is Renee. I think one of the things that Jule and the team has done terrific is this is just the first chess move and really the second chess move in Tennessee. This is a growing state. There is lots of opportunity there. Not only did we get a wonderful company that has got nice margins, but we got a great management team that we can grow and add bolt-ons on. This is just our start in Tennessee.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Yeah. Speaking of chess moves, I mean, it sounds like there's something unique about the pavement preservation piece. Is that something that you can replicate at the other platforms?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah. I mean, Tyler, you're right. Pavement preservation is, in a sense, just another way of taking care of the infrastructure. Every DOT, cities, and counties use this as a tool in their toolkit to maintain infrastructure. We certainly have participated in that, but PRI does it at a different level. Whether it's chip sealing, fog sealing, crack sealing, there are just different ways that states extend the life of their pavements.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Interesting. Okay. Great. If I could switch gears, Greg, can you just kind of help us a little bit with the modeling? Just based on what we know today, kind of what is the implied revenue contribution from M&A? I could probably do the math and back it out, but that's always scary. How much do you think hangs over into 2026 already based on what you've already completed?
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah. First of all, I'll start with that. Hanging over into next year is about $150 million-$160 million in revenue. That's part of the answer. The other part of the answer is for kind of backing into 8%-10% organic growth for the full year. I think that kind of will lead you to the breakdown of acquisitive and organic.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Okay. Yeah. I can kind of work that math. And then just real quickly on the enterprise value, just to make sure that I have it all correct. Do you have what you've spent year to date on M&A? Basically, I'm just curious what the balance sheet looks like pro forma here into Q3. Was there any equity component to PRI, or is it an all-cash deal?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Tyler, it was an all-cash deal at the typical multiples that we typically pay. We expect our leverage ratio and our balance sheet to trend back down pretty steadily toward that 2.5 over four quarters.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Okay. Okay. That's helpful. All right. Thanks, guys. I appreciate it.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Thanks, Tyler.
Tyler Brown (Associate VP)
Thanks, Tyler.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Adam Thalhimer with Thompson Davis. Please proceed.
Adam Thalhimer (Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning, guys. Congrats on the quarter and the PRI acquisition.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Thanks, guys.
Adam Thalhimer (Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst)
Jule, you mentioned Southwest Acquisitions. Could that be a new state, or are you referring to Tuckins and Oklahoma and Tennessee?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah. Adam, specifically, what I was talking about is as we move into a new state like Texas and Oklahoma, our map expands. We just have more conversations with folks in those states. We see that happening. We are also talking a lot to folks in the southeastern states as well. It is a busy time for acquisitions. As Ned said, we pass on quite a number of them, but there are ones that we see as just great strategic fits. I was specifically referring that as we move into new states, we just have more opportunities to talk to folks in those states.
Adam Thalhimer (Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. You briefly mentioned tariffs, but I was curious. I can't remember if you said anything about whether there's any inflation related to tariffs or not. Are you seeing that?
Jule Smith (CEO)
We're not. Most of our supply chain is domestic, almost all of it. We've not seen anything related to inflation from tariffs. As you know, should things go up, we would simply put it in our pass-through model and pass it on. It has really been pretty much a non-issue for us, both on the supply chain and cost side, but also on the demand side in working with our customers. It's not been a real factor so far.
Adam Thalhimer (Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Lastly, can you just remind us what assets that you had in Nashville and kind of how they're going to integrate with PRI?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Sure. Sure. Back in 2022, we made the deal with Blue Water, and we got three asphalt plants and a construction operation. Our asphalt plants are all in the Nashville suburbs east of Nashville. We have been managing that from Huntsville. Our Alabama guys have done a great job of stewarding those assets. We always knew that we wanted to find a Tennessee management team and platform company. That is what we were able to do this month.
Adam Thalhimer (Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst)
Perfect. Thanks, guys.
Jule Smith (CEO)
All right, Adam. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Michael Feniger with Bank of America. Please proceed.
Michael Feniger (Managing Director of Equity Research)
Great. Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions. I did want to just ask, the organic growth, 11% in Q1, in Q2, seven percent. It's clear based on the guide. Greg, you guys are going to still be doing high single-digit organic growth in the second half. We're seeing the national data, like construction spending, especially on the private side, is slowing. Do you think it's slowing in? Is it just not slowing in your regions, or is the underlying market slowing and you guys are gaining share because you've bought some assets over time, giving them bonding capacity so they're able to kind of go out that and maybe win more work? Kind of just a question.
When we see the organic growth, how much do you kind of think is you guys gaining some share out there, or how much is it just really strong markets in your core regions?
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah. That's a great point. I think you're right to bring that up because that's a good part of our story in that as we make these acquisitions, they're generating new organic growth. So it is new volumes to us. We're creating essentially our own growth through some of our acquisitive growth. Generally, though, I would say that, and I'm not sure what metric you're citing there, but we believe that in our markets, they're still very strong both on the public and private side. We're continuing to see new bidding activity every year, year over year.
Michael Feniger (Managing Director of Equity Research)
Great. I just would love to talk about the price versus cost. We're seeing lower oil. I'd imagine over time that filters through to lower liquid asphalt. Just how are you seeing the pricing in the backlog that's going to come through in the back half? Just the bidding environment, your margins have actually expanded. I'm just wondering with this price versus cost spread, how we kind of think about this as we kind of move through the year with what we're seeing right now in diesel and liquid asphalt.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah. So it's interesting, Michael. Usually, a barrel of crude and liquid AC correlate pretty well. Interestingly, they didn't at all in Q2, our Q2. Crude went down. Liquid AC basically stayed flat. It has come down a little bit in April and on into May, but not proportionally. As far as diesel and natural gas, diesel has come down. Not in Q2, but since Q2, the natural gas has gone up. Everything is moving in really strange directions. I think generally, overall, when you talk about our cost environment, it's stable.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Michael, I just wanted to circle back just for a minute on the organic growth. We give this number to you guys quarterly just to help you. The reality is you've really got to look at organic growth sort of on an annualized basis to get a meaningful number. That's why we try to give you an annualized basis of 8%-10%, which was higher than we saw at the beginning of the year. You're exactly right. As you've heard us say before, today's acquisitions become tomorrow's organic growth. When we do a bolt-on acquisition or a platform with CPI behind them, they're going to find ways to take advantage of opportunities in their market over time. That's really what drives organic growth.
Michael Feniger (Managing Director of Equity Research)
Helpful, Jule. If I could squeeze one last in there, are you hearing or seeing anything on the funding side from your DOTs in terms of pauses or delays that might have occurred? How do you think about going forward? It might be getting ahead of ourselves, but how do you think about that reauthorization at some point next year? Is that coming up in conversations at all? How do you guys kind of manage towards that if that is something you kind of have to manage towards? Just kind of curious if you could comment on your DOTs, what they are seeing in the funding levels, any delays, and how you think about that reauthorization. Thanks, everyone.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah, Michael. It's not too early to talk about it because those conversations are going on in Washington on Capitol Hill. We had one of our platform company presidents, Ty Johnson, testify in front of the Transportation Committee last week on reauthorization. We are very encouraged by what we're hearing from this administration. Just to speak on the current funding, when people hear that the larger grant projects got paused, I would say two things. First, most of what CPI does is through the formula dollars anyway that go to the states. Even the grant projects, most of those, as the administration has said, are going to continue on. They just want a chance to look at it and make sure that those dollars are being spent for the best and highest purpose.
I would say this administration's focus on hard infrastructure and making sure dollars go to hard infrastructure is good for CPI. The White House just last Friday released their budget. Even though a lot of the federal spending areas were reduced, the transportation budget actually increased. We feel like this administration is focused on building the infrastructure it needs to support economic growth. That is a good thing for CPI.
Michael Feniger (Managing Director of Equity Research)
Thank you, everyone.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Thanks, Michael.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Andy Wittmann with Robert W. Baird. Please proceed.
Andy Wittmann (Senior Research Analyst)
Great. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to start with some questions on the backlog. Specifically, if you could comment on how the margins be implied as bid margins in your backlog today compared to the profit margins that you've recognized over the last year or so. Secondly, I guess maybe for Greg, a technical question, but I'm just kind of curious as to how much of your backlog that was reported this quarter was due to acquisitions.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Andy, I'll answer the first part, and Greg can answer the second. Our backlog margins continue to be healthy, as is shown by our raised guide for EBITDA. I would also say CPI is typical that as our crews and our teams go build the projects, they find ways to win and grow margin in the backlog. That creates good quarters like the one we just reported. We are seeing a lot of bid opportunities, and that creates a healthy bidding environment. We find ways to go grow the margin. That is typical for CPI. I'll let Greg answer on the breakdown of that backlog ad.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah. Of that, Andy, about $133 million-$134 million was due to acquisitions and $50 million-$60 million due to just organic growth sequentially quarter over quarter.
Andy Wittmann (Senior Research Analyst)
Very helpful. For my follow-up, I wanted to ask a little bit, Jule, about I'm thinking back to the analyst day, actually, and you talked about becoming increasingly vertically integrated. This has always been part of something you've done. I thought at that day, it seemed like there were other areas that you were thinking about. It always seemed to me like these would be areas for really good Tucking acquisitions inside your platform companies. I would just like to hear you talk about that a little bit in terms of progress on that initiative to kind of fill in other services around the platform companies that you already have. What you've done, if any, there, or what you see as potentially happening here inside of your M&A pipeline?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah. Andy, you're right. Part of our vertical integration strategy is services as well as liquid asphalt terminals and aggregates, which, as I said in our remarks, those facilities really contributed very much to this quarter. That part of our strategy is working well. On the services side, as we've said before, two of the most value-added acquisitions we've done in the last few years did not have any asphalt plants. They were in our existing markets and added services. We continue to look for those kind of opportunities. I will say we can also grow those services organically. We just this month were awarded our first project in the upstate of South Carolina in Greenville that has a significant grading component. Our platform company, King Asphalt, is going to be growing those services organically in-house with some grading and utility crews.
That is an example of being able to vertically integrate more services. Whether we do it organically or make a good acquisition, it is a way to capture more margin.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah. Andrew, let me add to that that some of those, to Jule's point, do not show up in the M&A side. They show up in the, we talk a lot about our organic CapEx, right? If we are spending 5%, 5.5% CapEx, 3.25% of that is maintenance CapEx. That other percentage to get to that 5%, 5.5% is focused often on those adding services in the various companies.
Andy Wittmann (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. Those are all my questions for today. Thank you so much.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Thanks, Andy.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Brent Thielman with D.A. Davidson. Please proceed.
Brent Thielman (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, thanks. Good morning. Great quarter, guys. Just to follow up on Greg, I'm not sure if you said it, but your CapEx expectations for this year, just with PRI added now.
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah. Still around $130-$140 million. $130-$140 million. Sorry.
Brent Thielman (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Yeah, obviously, you've done PRI, Jules. I'd love to hear what are the attitudes of sellers right now? I mean, obviously, a lot of noise in the world, in the market, maybe in your corner of the country, things are great. Have you sensed any shift in attitude? Maybe that's encouraged the pipeline to grow a little bit more because folks are getting a little bit nervous about the environment. Just be curious what you're hearing from potential targets.
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah, Brent, good question. I would say that we have a very active pipeline, and sellers are reaching out and talking to us. It feels very much like it's still the typical things that drive them, which is their families planning, their life planning. I really do not think any sellers that I've talked to, and we've talked to a lot recently, are being driven by the headlines of today. They're more focused on what's long-term best for their business and their families. A lot of them think that getting their employees and their businesses to be a part of CPI will be a good thing for their organization. That is helping us get to sit down in front of a lot of them.
Brent Thielman (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Maybe just the last question, maybe from just a balance sheet management perspective. I mean, you've scaled the business a ton here in the last 12 months. I guess part of the question is, with that scaling up, is there a certain level of cash you want to maintain on the balance sheet? I guess the second part of it would be, obviously, you want to maintain leverage targets. You're going to grow EBITDA. Is there any sort of appetite to reduce debt levels here in the next 12 months?
Greg Hoffman (CFO)
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, we said in the remarks that we're going to generate from EBITDA about 80%-85% of that would turn into cash from operations. Sure, we're going to use whatever makes sense to pay down debt there. Certainly, that's factored into our discussion of leverage ratio over the next four quarters and getting back down to that two and a half times. As far as cash on the balance sheet, I guess we're always thinking somewhere in the neighborhood of 3%-5% of revenue just as a way to keep our operations rolling every day.
Brent Thielman (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. If I could slip one more in, I think I'm about to clean up here. Just on, Jule, when you look across the platform and state budgets, are there some markets you're particularly excited about when you look at those budgets and what you see coming here in the next 6 to 12 months in terms of funding for infrastructure projects?
Jule Smith (CEO)
Yeah, Brent. I read an industry report a couple of weeks ago that talked about how with the federal infrastructure increase that IIJA created with the Surface Transportation Bill and the states doing their own initiatives, certainly in our footprint, there has been a sort of a snowball effect in contract awards. I agree with that. We are seeing that. All of our states, we have healthy bid lists, clearly being in Texas and Florida. Those are just outsized programs because of the outsized growth of those states. When you look at Tennessee and South Carolina and Georgia and North Carolina, it is just a healthy environment right now. All of those states have taken initiatives to supplement the increased federal funding. We feel like 2026 is going to be a very, continue to be a significant increase in transportation funding.
In 2025, contract awards in our states are up around 15%-16% just over last year. So just as we've been saying for a while now, it's a healthy bidding environment.
Brent Thielman (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Yep. All right. Very good. Thanks for taking the questions. Best of luck here.
Jule Smith (CEO)
All right. Thank you, Brent.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn the call back over to management for closing comments.
Jule Smith (CEO)
I'd like to thank everyone for joining us today, and we look forward to talking next quarter.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. This does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a great day.