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Date

March 16, 2026, at 4:30 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Rob Dawson
  • President and Chief Operating Officer — Ray Bibisi
  • Chief Financial Officer — Peter Yin

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Takeaways

  • Net sales -- $19 million, nearly flat year over year; management attributed this to a more diversified mix of products, customers, and end markets.
  • Gross profit margin -- 32.3%, an increase of 250 basis points year over year, reflecting improved price realization and operational efficiency, according to management.
  • Operating income -- $177,000, triple the $56,000 reported in the prior year.
  • Consolidated net loss -- $50,000, or $0.00 per diluted share; improved from a net loss of $245,000, or $0.02 per diluted share, in the prior year.
  • Non-GAAP net income -- $659,000, or $0.06 per diluted share, compared to $397,000, or $0.04 per diluted share, year over year.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $1.1 million, or 5.6% of net sales; up 22% from $867,000, or 4.5% of net sales, in the prior year.
  • Sequential sales trend -- Revenue declined 16% sequentially from $22.7 million due to seasonal softness, per management commentary.
  • Backlog -- $18.6 million as of the call date, up from $14.4 million at quarter end and $12.4 million in mid-January; growth driven by orders across integrated systems and custom cabling.
  • Cash position -- $5.1 million in cash and cash equivalents, and working capital of $14.6 million as of quarter end.
  • Current ratio -- Approximately 1.8:1, with $33 million in current assets and $18.4 million in current liabilities.
  • Net debt -- Reduced by $4.8 million year over year and $744,000 from the previous quarter; $7.1 million borrowed on the revolving credit facility as of quarter end.
  • Inventory -- $13.8 million, relatively stable from $13.7 million year over year, indicating disciplined inventory management.
  • Segment resilience -- The custom cable segment delivered strong performance, offsetting delays in integrated systems bookings.
  • Diversification -- The company is actively serving new verticals, including aerospace, industrial, medical, data centers, and government, mitigating risk from any single market.
  • Diversified customer base -- Management emphasized a "high-value product portfolio" now targeting both CapEx and operating-budget spend with major communications companies.
  • DAC thermal cooling traction -- Direct air cooling (DAC) systems lower energy costs by "up to 75%" and are seeing significant customer interest, including early installations and trials in edge data centers.
  • Operational leverage -- Management cited increased operating leverage due to a capital-light model and supply chain redundancy, allowing for demand flexibility without higher fixed costs.
  • Go-to-market progress -- Sales team development in targeted verticals contributed to growth and backlog increases; strategy refined for broader market coverage.
  • Adjusted EBITDA margin target -- The company reiterated a focus on delivering adjusted EBITDA margins of "10% or greater as a percentage of net sales" for future periods.
  • Backlog composition -- Backlog driven by integrated systems, DAC thermal cooling, and custom cabling orders from multiple end markets, including aerospace and industrial.

Summary

RF Industries (RFIL 12.71%) reported a quarter characterized by expanded profitability and a significant increase in backlog, supported by diversification across products, customers, and end markets. The custom cabling and integrated systems segments were primary contributors to order momentum and backlog growth, with management highlighting traction in DAC thermal cooling solutions for edge data centers and industrial markets. The company emphasized execution of a capital-light model, enhanced operating leverage, and improved credit terms, resulting in reduced net debt and strengthened liquidity. Management provided guidance that revenue growth is expected to accelerate in the second half of the year, supported by the substantial increase in backlog and bookings across a broadened customer base. Strengthening supply chain redundancy, disciplined inventory management, and investment in product development were presented as structural factors contributing to financial and operational resilience.

  • The DAC thermal cooling product addressed a "significant unmet need at the edge of the network," with early customer trials and installations noted as drivers for anticipated future growth.
  • Direct air cooling (DAC) systems were said to lower energy costs by "up to 75%" compared to conventional solutions, with repeat orders from aerospace customers reinforcing credibility in new verticals.
  • Supply chain repositioning, including sourcing redundancy and alternative suppliers, was executed to minimize trade and tariff risk, as indicated by management statements.
  • Backlog growth was paced by order diversity, including substantial contributions from small cell, custom cabling in the aerospace and industrial markets, and integrated systems.
  • Executive management stated, "we expect to accelerate through the year," referencing both historical sequential patterns and the current enlarged backlog as leading indicators.
  • Product and engineering teams advanced development of new small cell configurations, producing "meaningful bookings" and signaling responsiveness to customer requirements.

Industry glossary

  • DAC (Direct air cooling): An energy-efficient cooling system utilizing ambient air to dissipate heat in electronics or data center infrastructure, reducing reliance on traditional AC-based climate control.
  • Small cell: Low-power wireless access nodes used to increase network density and coverage, especially for 5G deployments and edge infrastructure.
  • NEMA 4: A U.S. standard describing enclosures designed to provide a degree of protection from windblown dust, rain, splashing water, and hose-directed water, relevant for outdoor or harsh environment installations.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Donni Case: Thank you, Tom, and good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to RF Industries, Ltd. First Quarter Fiscal 2026 earnings conference call. With me today are RF Industries, Ltd.'s Chief Executive Officer, Rob Dawson; President and COO, Ray Bibisi; and CFO, Peter Yin. We issued our press release after market today, and that release is available at rfindustries.com. I want to remind everyone that during today's call, management will be making forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Please note that information on this call today may constitute forward-looking statements under the Securities Exchange laws. When used, the words anticipate, believe, expect, intend, future, and other similar expressions identify forward-looking statements.

These forward-looking statements reflect management's current views with respect to future events and financial performance and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from the outcomes contained in any forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause these forward-looking statements to differ from actual results include the risks and uncertainties discussed in the company's reports on Form 10-K and 10-Q and other filings with the SEC. RF Industries, Ltd. undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. Additionally, throughout the call, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. Today's earnings release and related Current Report on Form 8-K describe the differences between our GAAP and non-GAAP reporting.

With that, I will turn the conference over to Rob Dawson, Chief Executive Officer. Go ahead, Rob.

Rob Dawson: Thank you, Donni. Good afternoon, everyone, welcome to our first quarter fiscal 2026 conference call. I will lead off with highlights from the quarter, Ray will provide a progress report on sales and operations, and Peter will cover our financial results before we open the call to your questions. I am pleased to report that we are off to a great start in fiscal 2026. Net sales were $19 million in the quarter. This was just shy of our record first quarter last year in absolute numbers, but for totally different reasons. Last year in fiscal Q1, we had a large project that created a welcome anomaly and produced increased sales in what is historically a seasonally softer period.

Net sales for Q1 this year, however, reflected a far greater diversity of products, customers, and end markets, which I believe will set the stage for upcoming quarters. That said, for me, the big takeaway for this quarter was the meaningful expansion in profitability. Compared to the first quarter last year with similar net sales, gross profit margin improved 250 basis points to 32.3%. Operating income tripled to $177,000 and adjusted EBITDA decreased—sorry, adjusted EBITDA increased—would not be positive if I said decreased. Increased. EBITDA increased 22% to nearly $1.1 million.

To our long-term shareholders, thank you for your patience and confidence we would deliver on what we promised: a more diversified sales base and increased profits from our significant operating leverage. What is exciting to me is that our entire team is feeling the momentum. And in our business, momentum does not just happen. It is earned when strategy and execution move together in lockstep. Over the past few years, we have worked hard to reach this inflection point where we have a clear line of sight to scale both our business and profitability.

As you saw in our earnings press release, I would also like to note that momentum has produced a huge increase in our backlog, which currently stands at $18.6 million. That is an increase of over $6 million since we last reported earnings in mid-January when the backlog was $12.4 million. Now I will share specifics on why our business model and strategy are working, and why we believe it is sustainable. First, we have worked our way up the food chain with the largest communications companies in the country. We are no longer just a vendor, but a solutions provider with a portfolio of technology-forward products and solutions that address many applications within telecom.

This expanded access and our high-value product portfolio led to new opportunities that in some cases fall squarely into the operating budgets versus the CapEx spend. This makes us far less reliant on the cyclical Tier 1 wireless capital spending and aligns RF Industries, Ltd. to participate more consistently in the year-round maintenance and replacement schedule that is critical to maintaining network quality and integrity. Next, our state-of-the-art systems like direct air cooling and small cell are gaining traction. Our DAS systems are especially adaptable to many applications in new end markets.

Equipment at the edges of networks requires temperature control to operate efficiently, and our DAC’s ability to lower energy costs by up to 75% while being rugged and easy to maintain delivers a compelling customer proposition. We are serving an impressive and growing customer list here. These solutions have opened doors to many new customers and markets. We are now reinforcing our presence in new verticals such as wireline, cable, and edge data centers. We believe that we have identified a significant unmet need at the edge of the network, close to where data is generated and consumed.

While most know that hyperscale data centers require massive cooling systems, we believe that the small buildings, cabinets, enclosures at the edges of networks are just as important, and our DAC systems provide a powerful and cost-efficient solution. Additionally, our custom cabling solutions team is engineering, producing, and delivering high-quality mission-critical solutions to customers across several markets including industrial, communications, and aerospace, where we continue to win repeat orders from a leader in this market. The strong performance and commitment to innovation and quality from our team continues to add to our credibility and reputation. We refined our go-to-market strategy to specifically target new markets for RF Industries, Ltd.

Our sales team is doing a terrific job of developing relationships in our target markets that have opened doors and elevated our opportunity set. Our customer roster is amazing. It includes a host of well-known names. For competitive reasons, we generally do not name customers, but our client list certainly makes the team proud. Ray will talk more about our go-to-market progress and operations in his remarks shortly. Structurally, our company is in great shape. Our team has done an outstanding job in diversifying our supply chain with redundant manufacturing sources, both international and domestic, that feed into our U.S. production operations. This allows us to flex up for more demand without incurring any material increase in overhead or CapEx.

This capital-light approach has been a big factor in increasing our operating leverage. Financially, RF Industries, Ltd. is also in good shape. We significantly improved our free cash flow over the past several quarters, reflecting our operational execution, margin expansion, and tighter capital discipline. Last year, we renegotiated our revolving credit facility with improved terms, which should drive significant annual savings. All of this has allowed us to greatly reduce our net debt. While fiscal 2025 was a breakout year for RF Industries, Ltd., our team is even more excited about 2026.

We feel confident that we can execute against our strategic priorities, and similar to the trajectory in 2025, and supported by the large increase in our backlog, with what we know today, we expect revenue growth to accelerate in the back half of the year. Finally, I want to thank the RF Industries, Ltd. team that continues to execute and deliver great results. Thank you to our customers for allowing us to partner with you, and to our shareholders for your support. I will now turn the call over to Ray.

Ray Bibisi: Good afternoon, everyone. As Rob highlighted, the momentum we are feeling across this organization is real, and it is earned. I would like to take a few minutes to walk you through how we are actively managing the key levers across our business to drive growth, reduce vulnerability, and create lasting shareholder value. I will take you through sales, product management, engineering, and operations and the levers driving our strategy forward. Let me begin with the commercial momentum and market position. With the focus and execution of our team, we can maintain momentum even when specific opportunities take longer to close, something in prior years that could have had a significant impact on quarterly results.

This resilience comes directly from the diversification we have deliberately built across markets, product areas, and customers, which allows us to manage possible softness or delays in one area with strength in others. Revenue and bookings are, without question, the scoreboard, but they do not tell the whole story. Equally important is how we achieve these results. A big part of that answer is diversification. As Rob mentioned, this diversification is real, and it is working. Today, we are actively serving and winning business across aerospace, telecommunication, industrial, medical, data centers, and government and military markets, amongst others.

And the strength of that diversification showed in Q1, where strong performance in our custom cable segment helped offset timing delays in integrated systems. This is not accidental. It is the result of our strategic and deliberate effort to broaden RF Industries, Ltd.'s addressable market and reduce concentration risk. We are also seeing a resurgence in previously delayed opportunities, which is strengthening both our pipeline and our backlog. This improved visibility gives us real confidence heading into upcoming quarters and positions us well to capture growth, manage risk, and continue building sustained shareholder value.

Turning to engineering and product management, this is an area of significant focus and investment for us, and one where I believe the work we are doing today will be a key differentiator for RF Industries, Ltd. going forward. We remain focused on delivering high-value, high-quality solutions that address evolving customer needs. By streamlining our development process and prioritizing high-impact projects, we are driving towards faster time to market and more predictable revenue streams. Close collaboration between product management, engineering, and sales ensures that our innovation aligns tightly with market demands. This allows us to respond quickly to shifts in customer requirements and capture new opportunities as they emerge.

During the quarter, we continued to advance our new product road map through development, quality qualification, and gate stages. Our work on small cell configurations resulted in meaningful bookings this quarter, demonstrating how close collaboration between engineering, product management, and sales translates into revenue. Our engineering team is building solutions designed not just for today’s requirements, but for where our customers are headed. That forward-looking mindset is what we believe will make RF Industries, Ltd. the trusted partner of choice across the markets that we serve. A good example of this is our thermal cooling solutions, which are gaining traction in edge data center and industrial applications.

This demonstrates our ability to anticipate customer needs and leverage core capabilities across diverse end markets. Operations is a key differentiator for us, and I want to be clear about how seriously we take it. Across all areas of our business, we are enhancing process efficiency, improving visibility, and reinforcing execution discipline. This ensures that we can scale quickly, maintain consistent quality, and protect margins as demand grows. Aligning our resources tightly with our strategic priorities creates the foundation for predictable, sustainable performance, even as we manage multiple moving parts across the portfolio. On the supply chain side, we have taken deliberate steps to strengthen supplier relationships, improve inventory position, and reduce single-source dependencies where possible.

And as the tariff environment continues to evolve, be assured that we have a close eye on the impact and continue to proactively take steps to mitigate risk. This is not new work. It is an effort we have been advancing for some time. In this quarter alone, we continued the ongoing strategic qualification of alternative suppliers in different regions and the proactive repositioning of our supply chain to reduce exposure. Based on this, we executed supplier transitions of certain key component categories. We continue this disciplined approach as the trade environment evolves, all aimed at making our operation more resilient and our customer commitments more reliable. These are not one-time actions.

They reflect a sustained commitment to running a leaner, more agile organization. Collectively, the levers we are pulling across the organization—diversified revenue streams, disciplined operations, and market-driven innovation—work together to reduce vulnerability and create opportunity. This approach allows us to manage risk while capitalizing on new opportunities. Importantly, it positions the company to convert pipeline and backlog momentum into measurable performance gains without compromising margin or operational integrity. In closing, I would categorize Q1 2026 as a quarter of meaningful progress made during a period when customers and markets were still settling into the new year. We are executing with discipline while preparing to capture the opportunities ahead.

Our diversified portfolio, operational focus, and innovation mindset create a unique platform for growth, reducing vulnerability, and delivering shareholder value. We are confident in our ability to deliver results and unlock the full potential of our business across all segments. I will now turn the call over to Peter to walk you through the financial results. Peter?

Peter Yin: Thank you, Ray, and good afternoon, everyone. As Rob mentioned, we are pleased with our first quarter results. First quarter sales were relatively flat at $19 million compared to $19.2 million year over year. As expected, sales were down 16% from $22.7 million on a sequential basis, reflecting our seasonally slow first quarter. Our gross profit margin increased 250 basis points to 32.3% from 29.8% year over year. This improvement reflected our team's strong execution to drive price realization and operational efficiencies while also focusing on cost control. As a result of this, we saw improved operating income, consolidated net loss, non-GAAP net income, and adjusted EBITDA.

First quarter operating income was $177,000, up from the $56,000 we reported last year. First quarter consolidated net loss was $50,000, or $0.00 per diluted share, and our non-GAAP net income was $659,000, or $0.06 per diluted share. This compares to a net loss of $245,000, or $0.02 per diluted share, and a non-GAAP net income of $397,000, or $0.04 per diluted share in 2025. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $1.1 million, or 5.6% of net sales, compared to adjusted EBITDA of $867,000, or 4.5% of net sales in Q1 2025. We continue our focus on delivering adjusted EBITDA of 10% or greater as a percentage of net sales.

Moving to the balance sheet, as of January 31, 2026, our balance sheet remains healthy with a total of $5.1 million of cash and cash equivalents and working capital of $14.6 million. Our current ratio was approximately 1.8 to 1 with current assets of $33 million and current liabilities of $18.4 million. As of January 31, 2026, we had borrowed $7.1 million from our revolving credit facility and continue to manage our working capital to strengthen our liquidity and overall capital position. Our net debt was reduced by $4.8 million compared to Q1 2025 and down $744,000 compared to our Q4 2025.

Our inventory remained relatively consistent at $13.8 million compared to $13.7 million last year, reflecting a prudent approach to inventory management that balances discipline with customer demand. Moving on to our backlog, as of January 31, our backlog stood at $14.4 million on bookings of $17.9 million. As of today, our backlog currently stands at $18.6 million. While we are pleased with the increase since quarter end, as I have mentioned before, our backlog is a snapshot in time and it can vary based on when orders are received and when orders are fulfilled. We view backlog as a general gauge of health.

We know that it can swing significantly between reporting periods and, therefore, may not accurately indicate our near-term sales outlook. Overall, we are excited to start fiscal 2026 with an upbeat quarter that builds upon the operational momentum that we achieved in fiscal 2025. We are heads down on execution, and we believe we are well positioned for the periods ahead. With that, we will open the call to your questions.

Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the floor is now open for questions. If you would like to join the queue to ask a question at this time, please press 1 on your telephone keypad. We do ask if listening on speakerphone this afternoon that you pick up your handset while asking your question to provide optimal sound quality. Once again, please press 1 on your keypad at this time if you wish to join the queue to ask a question. Please hold a moment while we poll for questions. And the first question today is coming from Josh Nichols from B. Riley Securities. Josh, your line is live. Please go ahead.

Matthew: Hi. This is Matthew on for Josh. Thanks for taking my questions. I guess to start off, coming off—hi. Coming off a breakout fiscal 2025, with revenue up 24%, you ended the year with a double-digit EBITDA margin. I am wondering, how are you thinking about the full-year growth trajectory for fiscal 2026, and where do you see the most meaningful drivers?

Rob Dawson: Yeah. Thanks for the question. So I think, as I tried to share in my comments, I think we expect the trajectory of growth to be the similar sort of quarter-to-quarter movement as we had last year. And it is important to note last year, our first quarter was actually a few hundred thousand dollars larger than our second quarter. So I think this year, we expect to be more sequential in the growth that we have and sort of our normal trajectory starting with Q1, which is always seasonally an interesting quarter to navigate. So we expect to accelerate through the year. The backlog increase is obviously a nice sign to show the support of that.

That it is not just words, but we are actually seeing the orders and the items that have been in our pipeline for some time starting to print through as actual orders and going into our system with timing and an expected time frame for shipment. So we expect to accelerate in Q2 versus Q1, and then we think it is going to continue going from there, similar to what we saw last year. The drivers of that really are across the various product lines.

Our diversity, I think, is starting to not just print through, as Ray talked about in some detail, but it really helps to smooth out the interesting periods where there may not be projects in one market that are seasonally driven or CapEx driven. We are starting to see that get a little more consistent throughout the year.

And I think with that, the product lines that are coming from different customers in different markets give us a lot of comfort that the pistons can all be running at different speeds and paces, but it will start to smooth out those results, make them predictable, and make it much easier to manage the supply chain and give us some visibility, certainly as we get into the later part of the year.

Matthew: Excellent. Thank you. And gross margin came in especially strong this quarter. I am wondering how durable are the factors driving that improvement, and how should we see that flowing throughout the rest of the year?

Rob Dawson: Yeah. Great question on gross margin. I think the big thing for us is sales compared to last year's first quarter were roughly flat, down a little bit, not surprising. But with that, our margins went up almost three full points, which is great to see. And I think there were a lot of questions on the last earnings call about how sustainable the 30-plus margins are. We feel pretty good about those and our ability to stay there.

The things that have gotten us consistently above that 30% level really are things like being good at pricing for the value that we believe we are providing to our customers, the mix of products a lot of times helps us—some of our items have a higher value maybe than the historical more fragmented product lines that we are selling—and then lastly, the higher the sales number, the better those are going to be.

We have a pretty simple P&L when you break it down with a lot of operating leverage below the line that is largely driven by what happens on the top line and then the gross margins that go along with it based on pricing and mix and just overall efficiency of building things.

Matthew: Got it. And you mentioned the backlog, how it bounced post quarter. It is sitting around $18.6 million today, and that is mainly a timing thing based on contracts. But I am wondering if you can give us an idea on the composition of that backlog and what is driving most of that replenishment, especially after the quarter?

Rob Dawson: Yeah. Sure. The backlog usually has a pretty healthy mix of different items in it. I think the increase that we have seen is especially healthy. You have four different pretty significant product lines across several customers. So we are seeing it in our integrated systems and our custom cabling, which are the two areas that we expect larger percentage growth than what we get out of our interconnect products. Those are largely distribution-friendly on the interconnect side, and we expect growth there, but a lot of times those are not project-based and things that are going to show up in a backlog increase. They may come and go in a short period of time.

So the increases we have seen, you have some small cell in there. You have some DAC thermal cooling. You have some custom cabling in the aerospace market. You have some custom cabling in the industrial market where we continue to see some great blue-chip customers ordering from us that have been with us for years. So it is a good healthy mix across the different product lines that drove that increase in backlog.

Matthew: Great. I guess just one last question, mainly regarding DAC thermal cooling. I am wondering if there is an update on how that is progressing in terms of customer interest in the NEMA 4 product.

Rob Dawson: Yes. Thanks for that. So the DAC thermal cooling product is one that we have seen significant growth. We saw significant growth in 2025 compared to prior years. So we continue to see that trajectory increase. And we are seeing a lot of interest. I think we are starting to see customers making installations and trials to see how well it works in their various systems. A lot of cases, these are edge data center applications.

If the system is performing great, whether that is the NEMA 4 or some of the other versions, we are basically producing exactly what we say we are going to do—significant savings—and the equipment runs flawlessly without having to use air conditioning all the time, which is expensive and high maintenance as well. So we are seeing some early stages of newer in cable and edge data centers that are new markets for us or new customers for us. I expect that will be a meaningful part of our growth, not only later this year, but in the subsequent years.

Matthew: Got it. Great. That was it for me. Thanks for taking my questions.

Rob Dawson: Thanks, Matt.

Operator: Thank you. And as a reminder, if anyone would wish to ask a question at this time, you may press 1 on your keypad to join the queue. Once again, that will be 1 to join the queue to ask a question. And there are no further questions in queue at this time. I would now like to turn the floor back to Rob Dawson for closing remarks.

Rob Dawson: Thank you, Tom. Appreciate it. I was hoping for a lot more because I have a lot of other answers, but I will save those for the next call. I want to thank everyone for participating in today's call. We appreciate your support and look forward to sharing our progress on our Q2 earnings call in June. Have a great day.

Operator: Thank you. This does conclude today's conference call. You may disconnect at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you once again for your participation.