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DATE
Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- Chief Executive Officer — Perry W. Moss
- Chief Financial Officer — Brett W. Johnston
- VP Investor Relations — Ryan Coleman
TAKEAWAYS
- Revenue -- $61.7 million, down 10% year over year, but up 5% sequentially from the fourth quarter, reflecting lower industrial volumes primarily from a few clients and improvement in non-industrial segments.
- Industrial Revenue Impact -- Revenue from the industrial segment declined by approximately $4 million year over year due to lower production volumes at select clients.
- Mall Business Divestiture -- The first quarter of the prior year included $3 million of revenue from mall-related operations, which were divested in 2025.
- Gross Profit -- $9.7 million, representing a decline of almost 12% year over year and a sequential increase of 6% compared to the fourth quarter, with gross margin noted as 15.7%.
- SG&A Expense -- $8.4 million, reflecting a sequential increase of 9% mainly from resumed bonus expenses, and a year-over-year decrease of $3 million or 26% due to cost containment.
- Operating Cash Flow -- Slightly positive at approximately $0.2 million, driven by improvements in billing, collections, and vendor payments, offset by modest ABL refinancing outflows.
- Net Notes Payable -- $63.4 million, following a $2 million voluntary prepayment on Monroe term debt, with new ABL and covenant easements extending financial flexibility into 2027.
- Cash Balance -- $1.1 million at quarter-end.
- DSOs -- Finished in the mid-70s, largely unchanged sequentially, but improved from the 80s a year ago as customer retention rates normalized.
- Working Capital Days -- Reduced to 11.5 days, an eleven-day improvement compared to one year ago.
- Customer Diversification -- New multi-million-dollar quick-service restaurant (QSR) client onboarded May 1, representing over 50% of the franchisee's portfolio, with ample potential for additional wallet share growth.
- Sales Pipeline -- Ongoing traction in both new business and share-of-wallet initiatives, with the share-of-wallet pipeline about 50% the size of the new business pipeline.
- Operational Excellence -- Improved performance from exception management, cost containment, productivity initiatives, and technology enhancements for vendor invoice management.
- Strategic Focus -- Continuing efforts to diversify beyond industrial markets into retail, hospitality, grocery, and health care, with technology cited as a key business differentiator.
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RISKS
- Management warned that “the industrial portfolio as a whole remains challenged as a result of the softer manufacturing environment,” directly impacting volumes from major customers.
- Ongoing “recent geopolitical events as well as the risk of an extended period of elevated fuel prices” may negatively affect operating costs and future profitability.
- Although growth initiatives offset some declines, Brett W. Johnston noted, “we expect to continue to experience some margin pressure in 2026, both in a challenged industrial volume environment as well as from the mix impact of our land-and-expand strategy.”
SUMMARY
Quest Resource Holding Corporation (QRHC 1.82%) reported sequential improvement in revenues and gross profit, driven by non-industrial segment growth and new client contributions, despite notable year-over-year declines linked to persistent industrial headwinds and divested operations. Management cited positive trends exiting the quarter and completed onboarding of major new business as key to enhanced financial performance. The company refinanced its ABL facility, extended debt covenants, and accelerated term debt repayment to address cost of capital and liquidity. Customer retention rates have stabilized, and operational focus remains on cost containment, technology-driven efficiency, and balancing growth through both new clients and share-of-wallet expansions.
- CEO Perry W. Moss said, “we are acutely focused on what we can control,” highlighting operational excellence, cost containment, and enhanced billing and collections as tactical priorities.
- The asset-light QSR win, according to Perry W. Moss, represents a “seven-figure account” with “plenty of room for continued expansion.”
- Brett W. Johnston emphasized that the majority of industrial revenue shortfalls were “mostly confined to a few clients,” and that broader customer retention has returned to historical norms.
- The technology platform’s automated identification of invoice exceptions is driving both service-level improvements and internal efficiencies, per management’s comments.
- SG&A reductions were achieved “by $3 million, a 26% reduction year over year,” providing incremental financial flexibility for debt paydown and growth investments.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- DSO (Days Sales Outstanding): Average number of days required to collect payment after a sale, used to assess billing and collections efficiency.
- ABL (Asset-Based Lending): A revolving credit facility secured by company assets, often used for working capital management in industrial businesses like waste management.
- Share of Wallet: The portion of a client’s total spend in a category that is captured by the company, relevant for expansion within existing major customers.
- Asset-Light Provider: A business model that minimizes ownership of physical assets in favor of utilizing third-party vendors or partners, common in outsourced service industries.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Ryan Coleman: Thank you, operator, and thank you, everyone, for joining us for the Quest Resource Holding Corporation first quarter 2026 earnings call. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that this conference call may include predictions, estimates, and other forward-looking statements regarding future events or future performance of the company. Use of words like anticipate, project, estimate, expect, intend, believe, and other similar expressions are intended to identify those forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements are based on the company's current expectations, estimates, projections, beliefs, and assumptions, and involve significant risks and uncertainties.
Actual events or the company's results could differ materially from those discussed in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors, which are discussed in greater detail in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such statements and to consult SEC filings for additional risks and uncertainties. The company's forward-looking statements are presented as of the date made and the company undertakes no obligation to update such statements unless required to do so by law. In addition, this call may include industry and market data and other information as well as the company's observations and views about industry conditions and developments.
Data and information are based on the company's estimates, independent publications, government publications, and reports by market research firms and other sources. Although Quest Resource Holding Corporation believes these sources are reliable and the data and other information are accurate, we caution that Quest Resource Holding Corporation does not independently verify the reliability of the sources or the accuracy of the information. Certain non-GAAP financial measures will also be disclosed during this call. These non-GAAP measures are used by management to make strategic decisions, forecast future results, and evaluate the company's current performance. Management believes the presentation of these non-GAAP financial measures is useful to investors' understanding and assessment of the company's ongoing core operations and prospects for the future.
Unless it is otherwise stated, it should be assumed that any financials discussed in this call will be on a non-GAAP basis. Full reconciliations of non-GAAP to GAAP financial measures are included in today's earnings release. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Perry W. Moss, Chief Executive Officer.
Perry W. Moss: Thanks, Ryan. Thanks everyone for joining this afternoon. Our first quarter marked a steady monthly sequential improvement in the business from the fourth quarter, which was consistent with the seasonal trend we typically observe, though slightly better than the prior year. Revenue from our industrial customers increased primarily due to seasonality, though we did see some incremental revenue from certain customers above the usual seasonal acceleration. However, the industrial portfolio as a whole remains challenged as a result of the softer manufacturing environment. Meanwhile, non-industrial parts of the business performed largely in line or better than anticipated as our focus to diversify the business into sectors like restaurants, hospitality, and retail helped to partially offset the lower industrial volumes.
Notably, our performance improved from month to month throughout the quarter and we ended the quarter with an encouraging trend. While it is far too early to determine the durability of this trend, we are cautiously optimistic given the exit rate of the quarter. This is tempered in part by recent geopolitical events as well as the risk of an extended period of elevated fuel prices. As we continue to communicate, we are acutely focused on what we can control. We continue to demonstrate a firm grasp on the operations of the company as our operational excellence initiatives deliver improved performance across the business, from exception management, wallet share expansions, billing and collections, and overall productivity and cost containment efforts.
We are controlling costs very well and taking proactive measures to give ourselves incremental financial flexibility as macroeconomic conditions approve. We are very encouraged by our progress on each front and expect these initiatives to drive additional efficiencies going forward. These efforts also began to deliver important sales momentum during 2025, which included the launch of a significant expansion of an existing retail customer, the onboarding of a new full-service restaurant customer, and expanded share-of-wallet wins with two major customers. While each of these wins were delivering incremental revenue shortly after their announcement, the one-time costs associated with onboarding these clients had been masking their profitability contributions.
I am pleased to report that each of these recent wins finished the first quarter as full contributors to our financial results, as we have completed the onboarding period of one-time costs to execute the service change-outs to serve these new or expanded programs. Our new sales pipeline remains active and we continue to engage with several exciting opportunities to add large national companies to our portfolio. While the overall macroeconomic environment continues to slow the overall decision-making process for many of these prospective customers, we are encouraged by the discussions we are having as the Quest Resource Holding Corporation value proposition continues to resonate with key prospective customers.
We ended 2025 with better momentum, though saw opportunities get pushed into 2026. We remain very engaged with these prospects and believe that we will be able to successfully win and onboard our share of these potential customers as the macro backdrop improves and confidence returns. Just recently, we won a new contract with one of the largest franchisees in the quick-service restaurant industry. This customer is a large national operator that carries plenty of white space for wallet share expansion as we execute effectively. It also marks another important win to diversify the business and will help to offset the seasonal fluctuations of our larger industrial customers. We onboarded this new customer on May 1 with minimal service change-outs.
We also remain encouraged by the number and size of share-of-wallet opportunities with existing customers, which remains a central focus of ours. Last year, we heightened our focus on this sales channel and structured more robust internal systems and processes to track, evaluate, and pursue these opportunities. We are very happy with the early successes we have had and we have broadened the number of waste streams that we are handling for some clients, added new value-added services, and captured a larger share of customer locations.
Our growing pipeline of opportunities across both new sales and wallet share expansions leaves us confident that these initiatives will contribute to greater levels of organic growth for us going forward and be strong contributors to gross profit dollar growth as we continue to execute our land-and-expand strategy and optimize service levels. We also continue to diversify the portfolio as we grow in non-industrial end markets like retail, hospitality, grocery stores, and expand into new markets like health care and more. Our technology and capabilities continue to be key differentiators for us and are driving improved customer service levels and vendor management practices.
Our technology platform's ability to identify exceptions in vendor invoices is central to our value proposition of cost avoidance, cost reduction, and improved service levels. The platform's ability to identify these exceptions continues to improve and, importantly, we have invested in automated no-touch capabilities to enable our team to effectively rectify these exceptions. Customer- and vendor-facing advancements like these create real value and make it easier to do business with Quest Resource Holding Corporation, but also help to optimize our internal processes and overall profitability. Overall, macroeconomic conditions and a softer industrial environment continue to flow through to reduced volumes from our large industrial customers.
However, we continue to make very encouraging progress streamlining our overall business and growing in non-industrial end markets. We remain as confident as ever that we are on very solid footing for when conditions improve and as our softer year-over-year revenue is a function of volume and not one of customer attrition. The operational improvements we have implemented over the past year will drive higher leverage when conditions normalize. We are encouraged by the trend we finished the first quarter on and cautiously optimistic as we look out to Q2 and the rest of 2026. Looking ahead, our key priorities remain unchanged in 2026.
We remain focused on growing the business with new and existing customers, driving margin improvements as we execute our operational excellence initiatives, continuing the development of our operating platform, improving cash generation, and reducing our debt balance. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Brett to review our first quarter financial results in greater detail.
Brett W. Johnston: Thanks, Perry. Good afternoon, everyone. Revenue for the first quarter was $61.7 million, a 10% decrease from one year ago, but a sequential increase of 5% compared to the fourth quarter. The year-over-year decline was primarily driven by ongoing headwinds from certain clients in the industrial end market, which reduced revenue by approximately $4 million compared to the prior year. These headwinds are mostly confined to a few clients and are primarily related to lower waste volumes and services that are directly tied to the clients' lower production volumes. Notably, the year-ago period also included $3 million of revenue from our mall-related business, which was divested in 2025.
Excluding these specific headwinds, the business continued to grow by approximately $2 million, mostly related to new clients and the expansion of client business, or wallet share, during 2025. This growth in business was partially offset by client attrition of $1.7 million, primarily related to a single client loss in 2025. While this growth was modest, it speaks to the efforts of the entire team to offset the impact of the industrial headwinds. It also speaks to what should be less noisy comparable year over year, as we have now sunset the higher-than-normal attrition experienced in 2024 and 2025.
As a reminder, this attrition was isolated and mostly related to customers that were acquired and absorbed into the incumbents' waste solution. Since then, we have returned to normalized customer retention rates, which have been very sticky historically. On a sequential basis, the improvement was driven by higher seasonal volumes from our industrial customers and continued growth across much of our non-industrial portfolio, with performance strengthening across the quarter. Moving on to gross profit, in the first quarter, gross profit dollars totaled $9.7 million, a decline of almost 12% compared to the prior year but a sequential increase of 6%. This resulted in a gross margin of 157%.
The declines in both gross profit and gross margin compared to the prior year were primarily isolated to the headwinds from the select industrial clients, which contributed to lower volumes as well as isolated margin pressure. These declines were slightly offset by both improved gross profit and gross margins across the remainder of the business as operating initiatives matured and margins from new clients and wallet share expansions continued to take hold. The sequential improvement was in line with our expectations provided last quarter and representative of the seasonal improvement from industrial customers as well as the contribution of recent onboarded customer wins and share-of-wallet expansions, as we have cleared the one-time costs associated with those launches.
As we look ahead to Q2, we expect sequential growth in gross profit dollars as recent new business wins and wallet share expansions finished Q1 as full contributors to our financial results. Additionally, the new quick-service restaurant customer we will launch in Q2 is expected to begin ramping fairly quickly, as it requires fewer associated service provider change-outs, which means minimal startup costs and thus should contribute gross profit dollars more quickly than a typical new client win.
While we expect to continue to experience some margin pressure in 2026, both in a challenged industrial volume environment as well as from the mix impact of our land-and-expand strategy, we anticipate we will be able to help offset these pressures through optimizing service levels, growing our share of wallet with existing clients, optimizing the client wins from the previous years, and continuing to drive operational improvements across the business. Moving on to SG&A, which was $8.4 million and better than our SG&A estimate for the quarter that we provided on the last call. Sequentially, SG&A grew 9% driven mainly by the resumption of our bonus expense.
Our operational excellence initiatives continue to deliver strong productivity and cost containment results, and we remain focused on maintaining this discipline going forward. To that, compared to the prior year, SG&A has decreased by $3 million, a 26% reduction year over year. Moving on to a review of the cash flows and balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $1.1 million in cash and approximately $63.4 million in net notes payable. As a reminder, in March, we refinanced our ABL with Texas Capital Bank to replace the prior ABL with PNC. Concurrently, we negotiated with Monroe Capital, who holds our term debt, to provide both fixed charge and leverage covenant easements across 2026 and into 2027.
Those combined efforts will provide ample cushion to operate in this challenging operating environment while we continue to focus on the execution and completion of our initiatives to drive additional efficiencies and operating leverage across the business, while also investing in driving growth through new clients and wallet share. Additionally, the new arrangement with Texas Capital Bank gives us more flexibility to use the excess availability on our ABL to make voluntary early payments on our high-interest term debt, which is currently about a 500-basis-point spread between the two credit facilities.
Accordingly, during the first quarter, we made a $2 million early payment on the Monroe term debt, which will reduce interest expense and should free up additional cash to allocate toward debt paydown. We anticipate executing similar early payments as appropriate throughout the year as we work to reduce our overall cost of debt and strengthen our balance sheet. Our operating cash flow in the quarter was slightly positive, roughly $0.2 million. This was a sharp improvement compared to the prior year despite lower revenue and gross profit dollars and was driven by the ongoing optimization of our billing and collections process and our improved vendor payment processes, which both continue to drive improvements in our cash cycle.
This progress was partially offset by some of the moving pieces of the ABL refinancing, which used a modest amount of cash at the time of the transaction. Our DSOs finished the quarter in the mid-70s, which was largely unchanged from the fourth quarter. Accounts receivable was up $3 million and in line with the sequential increase in revenues, but the overall trend in DSOs remains downward, falling from the 80s one year ago, and we continue to implement measures to improve our cash cycle. We remain committed to reducing DSOs going forward and believe we have incremental initiatives in our control to drive improvement.
During the first quarter, we also reduced the number of working capital days to 11.5, roughly an eleven-day improvement from a year ago. Our financial strategy remains focused on managing our cost structure, leveraging our operational excellence initiatives to drive cash flow, and paying down debt. We also continue to seek ways to elevate our billing and collection and further optimize working capital. We expect these measures, along with our focus on continuous improvement, to improve our cash cycle, strengthen our balance sheet, and provide incremental financial flexibility as the operating landscape improves. With that, I will turn the call back over to Perry for some closing comments before we open it up for Q&A.
Perry W. Moss: Great. Thank you, Brett. Our first quarter saw improved performance from the fourth quarter, with results getting better throughout the quarter. Some of this was the typical seasonal acceleration, but it was modestly better than the prior year. It is also clear that the business is benefiting from the team's strong execution, and it is evident in the numbers driven by the now fully onboarded recent new wins and wallet share expansions. It remains a difficult operating environment, but we are confident that we are better positioned to drive improved financial performance.
We believe that with continued execution, we will be well on our way to delivering improved shareholder returns and achieving a valuation that is more reflective of the inherent value of the business. With that, I would like to turn the call over to our operator to move us to Q&A. Operator?
Operator: We will now open the call for questions. At this time, we will pause just momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question will come from Aaron Michael Spychalla with Craig-Hallum. Please go ahead.
Aaron Michael Spychalla: Yes. Good afternoon, Perry and Brett. Thanks for taking the questions. Maybe first for us, on the new win in QSR, congrats on that. Could you give details you can give on size, number of locations? You talked a little bit about white space for land and expand, so just curious on how many waste streams. And then it sounded like minimal service provider changes, so it sounds like that can ramp pretty quickly as well.
Perry W. Moss: Yes, that is right, Aaron. As you know, we do not give specific details about these clients, but this is consistent with all of our new growth targets being seven- to eight-figure. So this is a seven-figure account. We landed a little over 50% of the portfolio, so there is plenty of room for continued expansion. This came from another asset-light provider, so they saw value in the Quest Resource Holding Corporation program over the program they were currently on.
Early reports indicate the other award winner was also an asset-light company, and some early indications are that our launch process and transition is much smoother than our competitor, so that leaves me optimistic that there is some growth potential there. The material streams here are typical municipal solid waste and recyclables.
Aaron Michael Spychalla: Understood. And then on the share-of-wallet initiatives, is there a way to think about just potential growth you see there, whether it is penetration rates or average number of waste streams? It just seems like you saw good success coming out of the last year and are optimistic moving forward.
Perry W. Moss: Yes. As you know, we put some additional focus and discipline around our share of wallet beginning last year. We do not really talk about all of the share-of-wallet wins that we have had. We have had several dozen of those wins, but some of them are not material enough to really mention. The share-of-wallet opportunities that we typically talk about again fall into that same category as new business, so these are large opportunities to expand. We have, I would say, five or six opportunities with some of our largest customers to bring on a whole other segment of their business, and we are in very opportunistic discussions with them.
We have rolled out plans on how to implement this new business. The business has not been sold yet, but the conversations are very positive, and I expect to see a lot more growth in the share-of-wallet sector. If you recall, because of the uncertainty in the general economy, we decided that instead of only focusing on new business, which we are still doing, we would put added emphasis on share of wallet because these are existing relationships. These are customers that already trust us; they already know that we execute. So it is an easier yes than with a new prospect. I would tell you that we do not give the value of our pipelines.
The new business pipeline is very robust; the share-of-wallet pipeline is about 50% of the size of the new business pipeline, so it is significant.
Aaron Michael Spychalla: Alright. Thank you for the color there. And then just maybe one last one. What are you seeing on inflation across the commodity space on the business? Any impact to customer decisions or your vendor network, just how you are managing that and thinking about it moving forward?
Perry W. Moss: Yes, it is a really good question. Certainly with the current fuel situation, we got out in front of this and started working with our vendors and our customers before this really fast ramp-up in fuel. We have good protection in our contracts where uncontrollable costs can be passed through. But one of the value propositions that we deliver to our customers is we always fight on their behalf. So instead of simply just taking on cost increases and passing them through, we do everything within our capabilities to push those off or to minimize them.
I would say that we have not seen anything significant to affect the business so far, but we have been proactively working on plans should significant cost increases come through. But so far, so good.
Aaron Michael Spychalla: Thank you for taking the questions. I will turn it over.
Operator: Our next question will come from Gerard J. Sweeney with ROTH Capital. Please go ahead.
Gerard J. Sweeney: Good afternoon, Brett and Perry. Thanks for taking my call. Do you ever disclose, or even directionally, how big the industrial business is for you guys in terms of revenue?
Brett W. Johnston: No, Jerry, not directly. We have tried to do a good job over the last year or so to call out the variance that is taking place with those select customers within the industrial group. As a reminder, the industrial group is larger than the clients that are driving the variances. We are only speaking to the select couple of clients that sit in an isolated industry market as the variance, but we have not called that out largely.
Gerard J. Sweeney: Got it. Alright. The reason I ask is we are starting to see data from the ISM that is turning positive for the first time in years. I think there is some freight data that is showing maybe some price increases, indicating a real goods economy is, dare I say, starting to expand a little bit. These are maybe forward-looking indicators. I am just curious if you have any thoughts on that, or are some of these industrial clients sort of in their own little select world that may not be benefiting from what I am talking about?
Perry W. Moss: Jerry, I think these few customers that Brett referenced are in a specific category of the industrial manufacturing sector that has really been pretty soft. I think we have said they operate in the ag sector. If we look at sequential volume increases from Q4, they were largely what we would expect. But if you compare the increase to last year, the increases that we realized in Q4 this year were slightly better. We are not predicting any significant increase in volume yet. We are cautiously optimistic. We did see some good trends. We do not control our customers' production volumes. If they continue to perform like they did, particularly in March, I think we will see some nice trending.
We have built this business over the last year to take every advantage of any tailwind that we can get. We just have not had any. March, we may have had a little breeze, and I think we took advantage of it. So if those early indicators flow through to these specific customers in the ag sector, I think we will benefit from that.
Brett W. Johnston: I would also remind you, from a year-over-year perspective, if you look back at when we started really talking about those struggles on the industrial side, it was in Q1 of last year. So from a year-over-year comparison, we are kind of sunsetting some of those challenges. We did see some additional reductions across last year, but the bulk of the decline in those clients came largely in 2024 and even 2025. Despite some continued pressure there, maybe we do not get back to the same volumes we had a year and a half ago, but from a year-over-year comparison, it is not going to hold us back from showing growth.
Gerard J. Sweeney: Got you. Switching gears, the QSR win. I think you talked a little bit about it, but I do not know if I caught all of it. You said, I think, you had 50% of the portfolio, and it sounded like another asset-light company got the other 50% of the portfolio. I am just wondering if that is stores or locations, or was it service lines?
Perry W. Moss: Jerry, that is a good question. Those represent locations. I do not have that based on service lines. I would expect that it would probably be linear, that we got a little over half the locations as well as a little over half of the service lines.
Gerard J. Sweeney: Got it. Is that QSR in meat, fish, or chicken?
Perry W. Moss: The answer is yes. These are major brands that are very recognizable. In fact, our end came from a referral from one of our corporate customers who operates some of those brands and made the recommendation that this franchisee should look at our model.
Gerard J. Sweeney: Got it. Alrighty. I will jump back in queue. Thanks a lot.
Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Perry Moss for any closing remarks.
Perry W. Moss: Great. Thank you, operator. Thanks to all of you for joining this afternoon. We always appreciate your support and continued interest in Quest Resource Holding Corporation, and we look forward to updating you all next quarter. Thank you.
Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect your lines.
