SC
Shimmick Corp (SHIM)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 revenue was $104M with consolidated gross margin of -20%, driving a net loss of $38M and adjusted EBITDA of -$27M; Shimmick Projects remained positive gross margin but Legacy and Foundations weighed heavily .
- Backlog ended at $822M (87% Shimmick Projects), and total liquidity was $100M supported by a new $15M credit agreement replacing the MidCap revolver; management signaled stronger execution and margin mix in 2025 .
- FY2025 guidance: Shimmick Projects revenue up 10–15% with overall gross margin 9–12%, Legacy+Foundations revenue $50–$60M with -5% to -15% margin, and adjusted EBITDA $15–$25M; cadence expected to be 3Q-heavy as projects ramp .
- Stock reaction catalysts: resolution of legacy issues (Golden Gate Bridge $97M settlement), improving backlog mix, and pivot to lower-risk alternative delivery/electrical expansion; management emphasized optimism and risk controls .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Backlog quality improved: $822M backlog with 87% Shimmick Projects (vs. 85% in Q3), reflecting disciplined bidding on more profitable work .
- Liquidity strengthened to $100M, aided by the new $15M credit agreement and prior settlements/sale-leaseback; CFO highlighted comfort funding operations and growth .
- Strategic wins aligned to core markets and delivery methods (Santa Cruz Murray Street Bridge & Headworks; North Hollywood BRT collaborative delivery; Palisades Fire debris removal), supporting the transformation to lower-risk portfolio .
Quote: “We have a comprehensive strategy… improve our backlog and project performance… already made substantial progress in the last three months.” — CEO Ural Yal .
What Went Wrong
- Consolidated gross margin deteriorated to -20% in Q4 (vs. 7% in Q3 and 0% in Q4 2023) with Foundations (-189% GM) and Legacy (-69% GM) driving a larger net loss; adjusted EBITDA fell to -$27M from $30M in Q3 .
- Shimmick Projects GM compressed to 2% in Q4 (from 6% in Q3 and 11% in prior year) due to increased costs, schedule extensions, and wind-down effects despite new project margins .
- Equity in JV swung to a $4M loss in Q4 (from $1M gain prior year) on schedule extensions; legal fees on legacy claims and cost overruns persisted into quarter-end .
Financial Results
Segment Revenue and Gross Margin
Key KPIs
Notes:
- Q3 2024 included ERP impairment ($16M) and Golden Gate settlement accounting, boosting reported GM/EBITDA but still producing net loss; Q4 lacked such offsets and faced heavier legacy/foundations headwinds .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy pillars: “This strategy is designed around 3 strategic pillars: sustainable backlog, operational excellence, and people and culture.” — CEO Ural Yal .
- Market focus: expanding across water, climate resilience, energy transition, technology/sustainable transportation; addressable market ~$106B/year adjusted for presence .
- Electrical growth thesis: “Electrical construction will grow to be a much larger contributor… from 15%… to over 30% in 2027.” .
- Margin expectations: “Based on… remaining backlog on the active projects, I'm feeling comfortable with 9% to 12% [gross margin].” — CEO bridging Q4 to FY25 .
- Tone: “I'm extremely optimistic about our future… ready to take advantage of healthy market conditions.” .
Q&A Highlights
- Gross margin bridge: Management expects Shimmick Projects GM to move from 2% in Q4 to 9–12% in FY2025 based on profitable remaining backlog, scope growth discussions, and new high-margin wins; acknowledges Q4 headwinds from wind-down projects .
- Year cadence: Expect 2Q better, 3Q best, Q4 flat — implying back-half weighted margin cadence typical for construction .
- Negotiated vs bid mix: Target 50/50 balance by 2027–2028; North Hollywood BRT illustrates collaborative delivery; negotiated awards require 9–18 months preconstruction .
- Funding backdrop: No observed funding pullbacks; portfolio more tied to IRA; EPA SRF steady; outlook is pause not rollback if any .
- Liquidity and FCF: Liquidity at $100M; controls tightened; new $15M revolving facility secured for three years; intend to finish 2025 in strong cash position .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus estimates via S&P Global were unavailable at the time of this analysis, so comparisons to consensus for Q4 2024, FY2024, and FY2025 could not be performed. We attempted retrieval, but SPGI returned a daily limit error.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q4 printed a significant margin/earnings air pocket driven by Legacy/Foundations; monitor FY2025 execution against targeted 9–12% overall gross margin and the mix shift toward Shimmick Projects to validate the margin recovery narrative .
- Backlog composition is improving (87% Shimmick Projects) and should support margin quality; watch conversion of collaborative delivery pipeline and negotiated awards into booked backlog through 2026–2027 (North Hollywood BRT is an early proof point) .
- Liquidity is solid ($100M) with a freshly inked $15M facility; reduced legal drag post Golden Gate settlement decreases risk of outsized period costs and JV losses, supporting cash stability into 2025 .
- Electrical expansion is a structural growth lever (target >30% of revenues by 2027) tied to AI/data centers and electrification; this self-perform capability can lift blended margins and reduce project risk .
- Expect seasonal/operational cadence: margins improving into 2Q and peaking in 3Q as projects ramp; position tactically ahead of bid wins and alt-delivery conversions .
- Risks: Legacy wind-down still creates volatility; Foundations drags until fully exited; JV schedule extensions and any funding delays could pressure near-term GM/EBITDA .
- Catalysts: New project awards in water/climate resilience/transport, further alt-delivery wins, visible margin inflection in Shimmick Projects, and evidence of cash generation tracking toward management’s confident outlook .