
Image source: The Motley Fool.
Date
- Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025, at 1 p.m. ET
Call participants
- Chief Executive Officer — Joseph Cutillo
Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email [email protected]
Takeaways
Acquisition announcement-- The company signed a definitive agreement to acquire CEC Facility Services for $505 million in total upfront consideration, split as $450 million in cash and $55 million in Sterling common stock.
Acquisition valuation-- The deal is valued at 9.6 times the midpoint of CEC’s estimated 2025 EBITDA.
Contribution timeline-- Management expects the CEC acquisition to close in Q3 2025, with approximately five months of financial contribution in 2025.
Earn-out structure-- An earn-out is included, contingent upon CEC achieving certain operating income levels by December 31, 2029.
Mission-critical exposure-- Over 80% of CEC’s sales derive from mission-critical markets, such as data centers, semiconductors, and advanced manufacturing.
Geographic footprint-- Slightly over half of CEC’s business is based in Texas, with active expansion into the Rocky Mountains and Southeast regions.
Backlog visibility-- CEC’s combined contracted backlog, unsigned backlog, and future phase opportunities represent approximately 1.9 times its 2025 revenue expectations.
2025 CEC revenue guidance-- Expected 2025 revenues of $390 million to $415 million.
2025 CEC EBITDA guidance-- Projected 2025 EBITDA of $51 million to $54 million, reflecting a 13% EBITDA margin.
Adjusted EPS accretion-- Management projects $0.63 to $0.70 of accretion to Sterling's adjusted EPS on an annualized basis in 2025, or approximately 8% uplift to adjusted EPS guidance (non-GAAP) for 2025.
Service revenue mix-- In 2024, approximately 6% of CEC revenue was from on-demand services and about 20% of overall backlog related to work on existing facilities in 2025; service revenue is currently highest in the semiconductor market, according to management.
Leadership continuity-- Ray Waddell will remain in a strategic leadership role, and Daniel Williams will continue as CEO of CEC.
Platform strategy-- CEC will be integrated under Sterling's e-infrastructure segment, with plans to grow an electrical and mechanical platform and pursue additional "tuck-in" acquisitions within the next 6-12 months.
Margin initiatives-- CEO Cutillo stated, "We feel very confident in the data center space. If we can couple the electrical with the site development and do it all at the same time, ... we think that we can drive productivity, improve margins, and actually take out significant time in the overall project timeline."
Growth targets-- Management noted CEC’s substantial earn-out requires the business to "just about double" in size by 2029, with the earn-out contingent upon achieving certain operating income levels through December 31, 2029, with current leadership expressing confidence this can be achieved organically.
Summary
The acquisition of CEC Facility Services for $505 million in upfront consideration positions Sterling Infrastructure (STRL 10.45%) to expand its e-infrastructure offerings into electrical contracting for critical sectors, with immediate annualized accretion to adjusted EPS projected at 8% in 2025. Over 80% of CEC’s sales come from mission-critical markets such as data centers, semiconductors, and advanced manufacturing, with customers including Texas Instruments (TXN 1.69%), Samsung, Intel (INTC 4.15%), and Meta Platforms (META -1.24%), and highlights a robust pipeline -- backlog and future phases totaling approximately 1.9 times 2025 revenue expectations. Sterling plans to drive margin improvements and accelerate organic growth, supported by CEC’s advanced in-house training and modular fabrication capabilities, while the sizable earn-out structure incentivizes nearly doubling revenue within five years (through Dec. 31, 2029) without relying on additional acquisitions.
- CEO Cutillo said, "The most important thing to our customers is reliability and cycle time. If you can do it faster, you're adding significant value," underscoring the strategic rationale for combining electrical and civil contracting services.
- Expansion into the Southeast and Rocky Mountain regions is supported.
- The company indicated that CEC’s high-margin, capital-light model and leadership continuity were key deal criteria, which align with Sterling’s multi-year growth and cash flow conversion objectives.
Industry glossary
- Mission-critical markets: Sectors -- such as data centers, semiconductor fabs, and manufacturing facilities -- where infrastructure reliability, project timeline, and system uptime are essential for customer operations.
- Backlog: The total dollar value of signed contracts, unsigned commitments, and identified future project phases for which a company expects to perform work and recognize revenue.
- Tuck-in acquisition: A smaller-scale acquisition intended to add complementary capabilities or expand geographic presence within a company’s existing business platform.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Joseph Cutillo: Thanks, Noelle. Morning, everyone. Over the last year or so, we've discussed the strategic rationale of adding electrical and mechanical services to our e-infrastructure segment and the value we believe it would bring to our core customers. During that time, we looked at multiple businesses but were unable to find the right one. Today, I'm excited to let you know we have found that business and have signed a definitive agreement to acquire CEC Facility Services, a leading nonunion electrical contractor focused on high-growth, mission-critical end markets, and provides design, installation, and maintenance services for complex electrical infrastructure. We're excited to welcome their outstanding team to the Sterling family.
We've been disciplined in our search for the right electrical or mechanical contractor to complement our infrastructure platform. We wanted to make sure that the business had significant exposure to mission-critical markets like data centers, semiconductors, and manufacturing, had high margins and strong free cash flow, a great entrepreneurial management team, a scaled platform with opportunities to grow, and most importantly, a culture aligned with ours. CEC is a very strong fit with these characteristics and checks every box. As we look at the combined service portfolio of Sterling and CEC, we begin to touch the full project life cycle. Within our e-infrastructure business, Sterling is typically engaged at the earliest phases of large-scale mission-critical construction projects.
This early involvement gives us valuable visibility into our customers' project pipeline. Based on the strengths we're seeing in the data center market, we believe there's an opportunity for strong, durable growth for many years to come. Additionally, the semiconductor and manufacturing markets should continue to strengthen into the later part of the decade. We're already delivering the earthwork and much of the underground infrastructure, including duct banks and conduit, for these mission-critical sites. With CEC, we can now own the next critical phase of pulling wire, installing power systems, and supporting long-term maintenance and service. Together, our combined capabilities allow us to deliver high-value, end-to-end e-infrastructure services.
This combination will improve project execution, accelerate project timelines, create even stickier customer relationships, and allow us to better capture value across the full life cycle of a facility. In terms of the structure of the transaction, the total upfront considerations at closing totaled $505 million, consisting of $450 million in cash and $55 million in Sterling common stock. This represents a 9.6 times multiple at the midpoint of CEC's 2025 estimated EBITDA range. Additionally, the company has an earn-out, contingent upon achieving certain operating income levels through Dec. 31, 2029. Our current timing expectations suggest that the deal will close in the third quarter, for about five months of contribution to Sterling. The Hart-Scott-Rodino review is currently underway.
Now I'd like to give you a little more detail on why CEC is such a good fit. One of the first things that drew us to CEC is that over 80% of sales are from mission-critical markets, including semiconductors, data centers, and advanced manufacturing. CEC's customers in these markets include Texas Instruments, Samsung, Intel, and Meta. All these customers demand excellent execution and service, which CEC delivers. We believe their ability to consistently deliver superior service to their customers is a key element in CEC's top-tier financial performance. Strategically, we believe we can leverage the strengths across the business to unlock new customer relationships and drive geographic expansion. Sterling brings a strength of data centers.
We can pull CEC into those relationships. CEC brings depth in semiconductors. They can help expand our reach into that market. From a geographic perspective, CEC is strongest in Texas with reach across the Rocky Mountain, Southwest, and Southeast regions. We believe that we can pull CEC into some of our projects in the Southeast while CEC can help provide a springboard for growth in Texas. In addition, the new construction CEC brings recurring service revenue capabilities, including maintenance, retrofits, and system upgrades, allowing Sterling to stay engaged throughout the asset life cycle. Further, CEC's advanced in-house training center, CEC University, and modular fabrication capabilities are impressive differentiators that enhance safety, quality, and efficiency and reduce build times.
As I've said many times before, the most important part of any acquisition is the people. The CEC team shares our values of safety, quality, and commitment to excellence. Ray Waddell, CEC's founder, built this business from the ground up. We are pleased to announce that Ray will remain with Sterling in a strategic leadership role overseeing the success of CEC and helping drive growth and strategy across our new electrical platform. Daniel Williams, who has served as CEC CEO, will continue to lead the organization. Shifting to the financial profile, CEC has top-tier performance within the electrical contractor space, a testament to their strong customer relationship and execution.
CEC has a long track record of growth, which we're expecting to continue into 2025 and beyond. Margins that are well above the industry average, strong cash flow conversion, driven by a capital-light model, and a high-return business with excellent return on invested capital. Moving to backlog, we see robust tailwinds continuing across CEC's key markets, giving us high confidence in the strength of the pipeline and long-term demand outlook. The combined value of CEC's contracted backlog, unsigned backlog, and future phase opportunities is approximately 1.9 times their 2025 revenue expectations, reinforcing our conviction. Our expectations for full-year 2025 CEC results include revenues of approximately $390 million to $415 million, which represents a 12% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.
EBITDA of $51 million to $54 million, a 13% margin, adjusted EPS accretion of approximately $0.63 to $0.70 per fully diluted share on an annualized basis, which represents roughly an 8% increase to Sterling's 2025 adjusted EPS guidance. The portion of CEC's revenue and earnings contribution to Sterling in 2025 will depend upon the timing of the closing. This acquisition marks a major step forward in Sterling's e-infrastructure strategy. It expands our reach, deepens our capabilities, and positions us to better serve the high-growth, high-demand sectors shaping our economy. We're thrilled to welcome the CEC team to Sterling, and we're confident that together, we'll deliver even greater value for our customers, our people, and our shareholders.
With that, I'd like to open it up for questions. Thank you.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Please press star followed by the two. And if you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. First question comes from Adam Thalhimer at Thompson Davis. Please go ahead.
Adam Thalhimer: Hey, good morning, guys. Congrats on closing the deal.
Joseph Cutillo: Hey, Adam. Thanks. Joe, can you give a little more detail on how much of the business is based in Texas and how you see that changing moving forward?
Adam Thalhimer: Yeah. A little over half of the business is based in Texas, but we've seen rapid expansion with them, especially in the data center space reaching out into the Rocky Mountains and down in the Southeast. So what's interesting to us is their kind of expansion is following where we're expanding. As you recall, we expanded into the Rocky Mountains a little over a year ago with data centers. We're currently actually working on a data center in Wyoming with CEC. And down in the Southeast is obviously growing very rapidly, so they've expanded into there. And we think it's a great opportunity.
We can further that expansion much more rapidly through the Southeast and leverage both those teams and maybe some facilities and assets in the Rocky Mountains for both of us to expand faster.
Adam Thalhimer: Oh, okay. So you guys actually have experience working together. That's interesting. Are you thinking that this will go into the e-infrastructure segment, or do you see this being its own standalone segment in the financials?
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. So it will go into e-infrastructure. Now we will drive the electrical and the mechanical platform to expand that strategically so that we'll go beyond just the... We're not going to limit it to that area. But it will fall under our e-infrastructures.
Adam Thalhimer: Okay. And just lastly, what were the actual amount of shares for the deal, just for modeling purposes?
Joseph Cutillo: Don't have the exact number. It's off a twenty-day average trailing twenty-day average, which is a little over $190 a share. So you can back into the math on that.
Adam Thalhimer: Perfect. Thanks a lot.
Operator: Thank you. The next question comes from Louis DiPalma at William Blair. Please go ahead.
Louis DiPalma: Joe and Noelle, good afternoon.
Joseph Cutillo: How are you, Louis?
Louis DiPalma: Doing well. Congrats on the deal. It seems there are significant cross-selling opportunities. Joe, can you provide more color on your comment about Sterling being able to use CEC's Texas presence as a springboard to expand your e-infrastructure business in Texas?
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. I mean, CEC has a very strong presence in Texas. There's obviously a lot of projects both in data center and in the semiconductor space either taking place or coming up. We think we can certainly leverage some of the relationships in the semiconductor space to build those relationships back with us. And as we talked about, we're actually getting ready and looking at incremental jobs within Texas in the data center space and doing that from today from either Utah or Atlanta. With their presence and their footprint, this may help us expand that not only from afar but also from an organic standpoint with the beachhead in Texas, Louis. So we're leveraging both. Customers, existing customers.
They're leveraging can leverage our customers. We'll start from a distance, but it'll just help us drive that ability to either put an organic beachhead here. We're still looking for acquisitions in Texas. We just haven't found anybody of size or the right one to do that.
Louis DiPalma: Great. And I know you just hired a new CFO, but from your perspective, how do you think of CEC's margins at 13%? Do you see any ability to drive those margins higher as you for data center customers and semiconductor customers, you bundle the electric and mechanical work with your other services?
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. Well, anybody that's followed us knows we're very good at continuing to drive margins higher and higher, and we will work on the same thing with CEC. We feel very confident in the data center space. If we can couple the electrical with the site development and do it all at the same time instead of these are done in series instead of in parallel. That not only takes a significant amount of time for the customer, but it also costs a lot more because you're doing several of the operations, the same operations multiple times. So we think that we can drive productivity, improve margins, and actually take out significant time in the overall project timeline.
That's the value proposition to the end of the day. It's easier for them. It's more efficient. They save another month to two months of build time. It's of high value.
Louis DiPalma: Fantastic. Thanks, Joe and Noelle.
Joseph Cutillo: Thanks, Louis.
Operator: Thank you. The next question comes from Brent Thielman at D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.
Brent Thielman: Hey, guys. Good morning. Congrats on the transaction.
Joseph Cutillo: Thanks, Brent.
Brent Thielman: Joe, I want to follow up just on the revenue synergy discussion. How advanced are those conversations with some of those customers and their respective footprints just in terms of pulling one another into those territories where maybe there isn't critical mass in revenue? And I think what I'm getting at, Joe, is this something that we can see leveraged relatively quickly?
Joseph Cutillo: Well, we haven't been able to talk to the outside world about CEC, obviously. But we have talked to our customers about the value of adding electrical mechanical to the portfolio. And we've had high receptivity. You may recall, we did a really small acquisition here last in about six months ago that does the dry conduit, dry utilities, I should say, in data centers. And we were very able to rapidly move those into existing contracts. This package will take a little bit longer, Brent, from a standpoint that they would go into the next generation of builds or new builds coming up.
It's not something we would be able to replace like the dry utilities and existing work that we're doing. Maybe we get lucky and something like that happens, but we're not planning on that. So what we're working on and will be working on very quickly is matching the teams up and getting into the 2026 build schedule and how do we start leveraging that for expanded growth.
Brent Thielman: Okay. And then it looks like it's coming with the backlog. I guess we're approaching midyear here. Maybe you could just talk about the levels of visibility for the business out in the 2026 as we sit here today.
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. So what we like about the business is their backlog is very much like ours. It falls into three categories. Obviously, signed backlog that's in and that's projects they're actively working on beyond their web schedules today. They've got what we'll call one where there's an LOI or some sort of commitment, but the contracts aren't signed. There's a small piece of that's in there. But they also have the same future phase work that we have, which is they're on sites doing work, entire project hasn't been released to them. They're getting it released in segments. And then they continue on.
And the piece we haven't really talked about a lot that we're also excited about is the ongoing maintenance that takes place after these facilities are built and getting into that service recurring revenue side. How do we continue to drive that, grow that, and do more? But they've got very good visibility for the rest of the year, very good visibility into '26 in the project pipeline. That's coming out for the remainder of '25 into '26. It's extremely positive for them at this point in time.
Brent Thielman: And I guess just the last one, I mean, this seems to be a platform to build off of within this sort of mix of services. Joe, presuming they may come with their own M&A pipeline to the table and any of your thoughts on how you want to approach this over the next few years in terms of this particular vertical.
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. No. That's certainly something we've already started looking at, and they have some very good ideas that they've brought to the table. We think we can do tuck-ins over the next twelve months in this space. They're going to be smaller, obviously. And then, you know, if the right larger size deal is strategic and fits in, we certainly wouldn't be shy of doing that. But right now, I'd like to get them on board, do a couple of tuck-ins here in the next six to twelve months, and lever that on a couple of different fronts, geographic expansion potentially along with a couple more capabilities that we're looking at. And we'll continue to grow out the platform.
You know, the earnout is a pretty substantial earnout as far as targets to hit. They have to just about double the business in that time frame, and that team is pretty confident they can do that. And that's without acquisitions. That's organic. So we're excited about the growth projections and the opportunities over the next three to five years.
Brent Thielman: Okay. Excellent. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. The next question comes from Julio Romero at Sidoti and Company. Please go ahead.
Julio Romero: Thanks. Hey, good morning and congratulations on the deal.
Joseph Cutillo: Thanks, Julio.
Julio Romero: Hey. So, you know, we know, Joe, you've had a high bar with regards to acquisitions in terms of the number of deals you've evaluated in the past. So I guess what attracted you to CEC in particular? What did CEC bring from a capability perspective that perhaps other deals you've looked at perhaps didn't bring to the table?
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. So as we talked, we've looked at a lot of deals in this space. We've looked at a lot of deals in general. We've looked at a fair number of deals in the space. And what I've said to others is a lot of the deals we've looked at, it wasn't that they were necessarily bad businesses. It was their customer concentration and service offering. A lot of the electrical mechanical businesses we looked at are kind of 75, 80% work in the commercial space and have, you know, five to 10% in mission-critical. That could be some data centers or some semiconductors or some manufacturing.
And what we really like with CEC is their portfolio looks a lot more like ours. They've got well over 50%, close to 80% of their work is in mission-critical space. When you start looking at their work and backlog. And that's the heaviest is semiconductor. As I've said, we really wanted somebody with semiconductor experience because that's where we have the weakest relationships. But the demands and needs of a semiconductor facility are the exact as a data center. So that helps us bridge and build those connections to that customer base. Our strength is in data centers. They've been doing data centers for the last couple of years. It's growing very rapidly.
They saw kind of year-over-year growth similar to what we've seen on a percentage basis. And we feel like we can really lever that with the conversations we have had with our customers and their capabilities to expand the data center piece. And the manufacturing is pretty easy. It's pretty straightforward. We'll work collaboratively on that. So we looked at kind of the, you know, I call it puzzle pieces that fit together and puzzle pieces that don't. They fit very well with our core capabilities, where we're going strategically, where they could help us get strategically, where we could help them get strategically. And their financials were as good or better than any that we've seen out there.
So we put it all together and pretty excited about it. And then you couple that where they've got a great team of people, very entrepreneurial, very excited about what Sterling can help them with and what they can help us with. So it was just a good fit, good marriage.
Julio Romero: Really helpful there. And then, Joe, you mentioned that your customers have been talking to you about adding to the portfolio for some time now. Does adding CEC help you win more work as these mega projects and semiconductor fab facilities come to market over the, you know, call it, 2027 to 2029 time frame? And does that full-service offering, you know, make you a more attractive bidder for those types of projects?
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. The way we look at it is, you know, the most important thing to our customers is reliability and cycle time. Right? They have to know that they can trust their partners to get the job done. And if you can do it faster, you're adding significant value. So we just inherently know that by combining these two pieces of business, we can do both of those better. And if we make our customers' lives easier and their projects months shorter in total time to build, we feel like we'll get more work. Or more importantly, we'll pick the work that we want and take the most attractive and the best projects.
Julio Romero: Very helpful. And then last one for me would just be on touched on it a little bit earlier, but it looks like service revenue is about 6% of the CEC revenue mix from 2024. I think I believe that's something that's new in the structure. Is it? Okay.
Joseph Cutillo: Yeah. Yeah. So it's close to 20% of work on existing facilities. Julio is about a little 19%, so about 20% of backlog, and it's trending higher. So it's a little tough to on-demand services, you're right, is more like six when you start to look at work on existing facilities, it's higher than that. And strategically, it's important to us because as we look at it, you know, we certainly have a three to five-year good visibility into the build cycle continuing. But we're also realistic that at some point in time, the build cycle will slow down.
And we believe the next play there is retrofitting a service program to get you to the retrofit of these facilities for the next generation of technology that then comes in. So this is where we'll be talking more and more about the life cycle of a facility and how we get a bigger piece of that pie. And once we're in, we stay there until something else comes along and takes out the facility.
Julio Romero: And is the services piece way too any in market in particular?
Joseph Cutillo: It's greater today in the semiconductor space. Yes.
Julio Romero: Got it. Great. Well, congrats again.
Joseph Cutillo: Thank you, Julio.
Operator: Thank you. We have no further questions. I will turn the call back over to Joseph Cutillo for closing comments.
Joseph Cutillo: Thanks, Joanna. Thanks again, everybody, for joining the call today. If you have any follow-up questions or would like to set up follow-up calls, please contact Noelle Dilts. Her information is in the press release. I hope everybody has a great day and is excited about this as we are. Thanks.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating, and we ask that you please disconnect your lines.