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DATE
Tuesday, May 12, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President and Chief Executive Officer — John Kiernan
- Chief Financial Officer — Bradley Heine
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TAKEAWAYS
- Net Income -- $11.4 million for the quarter, reversing a net loss of $111.4 million in the prior year period.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $16.9 million, compared to $12.7 million last year, for the three-month period ended March 31, 2026.
- Total Revenue -- $5.3 million for the quarter, down from $18 million in the prior year period, reflecting the exit from citrus operations.
- Land Sale -- Closed a $26.9 million transaction in January for approximately 2,950 acres, generating a $19.8 million gain and bringing year-to-date land sales to $34.6 million.
- Share Repurchase -- Deployed $10 million to repurchase 245,399 shares through April 2026.
- Land Entitlement -- Received unanimous approval from the Collier County Board of Commissioners for Corkscrew Grove East Village, covering 1,446 acres with entitlements for up to 4,502 dwelling units and 238,000 square feet of retail and office space.
- Conservation Commitment -- Nearly 5,000 acres to be placed into permanent conservation as part of Corkscrew Grove East Village.
- Land Utilization -- Approximately 97% of farmable acres now generate revenue through agricultural partnerships, reducing operational complexity.
- Cash Position -- $52.9 million at quarter end, up from $38.1 million at fiscal year-end, supporting development initiatives and extending runway through fiscal 2028.
- Debt Levels -- Total debt of $85.5 million and net debt of $32.6 million at quarter end, with $92.5 million in available borrowings under credit facilities.
- Guidance -- Maintained 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance at approximately $14 million and updated year-end cash guidance to $40 million with net debt guidance at $45 million, reflecting share repurchases.
- Development Pipeline Valuation -- Management estimates present value of Parks Corkscrew Grove Villages, Bonnett Lake, Saddlebag Grove, and Plant World at $335 million–$380 million, expected to be realized over the next 5 years from roughly 5,500 acres.
- Total Land Portfolio Value -- Management analysis values remaining 46,000 acres at $650 million–$750 million, using $4,000–$5,000 per acre as basis.
SUMMARY
Alico, Inc. (ALCO +1.28%) delivered a marked recovery in profitability as it completed its citrus business exit and advanced core value realization through land monetization and entitlements. The company’s successful $26.9 million land sale and substantial share repurchases reflect a disciplined focus on capital allocation and returning value to shareholders. Unanimous local approval for Corkscrew Grove East Village signals a significant regulatory milestone, unlocking new development opportunities and positioning Alico for future cash flows. Revenue from diversified land partnerships now dominates the business model, enhancing operational flexibility and reducing reliance on single commodities.
- Kiernan stated, "The approved East Village encompasses 1,446 acres and authorizes up to 4,502 dwelling units, including 362 affordable housing units for essential workers."
- Heine noted, Land management and other operations revenue increased 113% in the quarter, driven by farm lease and Sod revenue as we shift our focus to diversified land usage.
- Kiernan confirmed roughly 46,000 acres remain in the portfolio with management estimating total asset value between $650 million and $750 million, based on conservative per-acre assumptions.
- Alico’s development pipeline (Parks Corkscrew Grove Villages, Bonnett Lake, Saddlebag Grove, and Plant World) retains an estimated value of $335 million–$380 million, targeted for realization within 5 years.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Land Entitlement: Regulatory approvals required to develop raw land for residential, commercial, or mixed-use purposes, typically involving local, state, and federal permitting agencies.
- Adjusted EBITDA: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, adjusted for one-time items or non-operating activities, commonly used to measure underlying operating performance in land and agricultural businesses.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Operator: Good morning, and welcome to Alico's Second Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to your host, John Mills, Managing Partner at ICR. Please go ahead, sir.
John Mills: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for Alico's Second Quarter 2026 Conference Call. On the call today are John Kiernan, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Brad Heine, Chief Financial Officer. By now, everyone should have access to the second quarter 2026 earnings release, which went out yesterday at approximately 4:15 p.m. Eastern Time. If you've not had a chance to view the release, it's available on the Investor Relations portion of the company's website at alicoinc.com. This call is being webcast, and a replay will be available on Alico's website as well. Before we begin, we'd like to remind everyone that the prepared remarks contain forward-looking statements.
Such statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in these statements. Important factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include risks detailed in the company's quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, annual reports on Form 10-K, current reports on Form 8-K and any amendments thereto filed with the SEC and those mentioned in the earnings release. The company undertakes no obligation to subsequently update or revise the forward-looking statements made on today's call, except as required by law. During this call, the company may also discuss non-GAAP financial measures, including EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA and net debt.
For more details on these measures, please refer to the company's press release issued yesterday. And with that, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to the company's President and CEO, Mr. John Kiernan.
John Kiernan: Thank you, John, and good morning, good afternoon and good evening to everyone here on the call. Our second quarter results demonstrate continued execution of our strategy and our commitment to delivering on our near-term and long-term goals. With net income of $11.4 million, adjusted EBITDA of $16.9 million and cash of $52.9 million at quarter end, we've extended our financial runway through fiscal '28 while maintaining the flexibility to advance our development initiatives. Let me walk through the key accomplishments during and subsequent to the quarter. First, we closed a $26.9 million land sale in January. This transaction involved approximately 2,950 acres and generated a gain of approximately $19.8 million, bringing our year-to-date land sales to $34.6 million.
The transaction reflects the strong demand for our Florida properties and validates our land monetization strategy. Our land portfolio continues to attract qualified buyers seeking prime agricultural and development-ready properties across Southwest Florida's growth corridors. With approximately 46,000 acres remaining in our Florida portfolio, we believe our diversified holdings provide continued opportunities for strategic land monetization that balances near-term cash generation with long-term development optionality. Second, we deployed $10 million through our 10b5-1 share repurchase program, acquiring 245,399 shares through April. This reflects our balanced approach to capital allocation and our confidence in the embedded value within our portfolio.
We continue to assess optimal capital allocation decisions, including potential additional share repurchases, dividends and strategic investments in our development pipeline, as we execute our value creation strategy. Third and most significantly, in late April, we received unanimous approval from the Collier County Board of Commissioners for Corkscrew Grove East Village. This local entitlement represents a meaningful regulatory milestone for what we believe has the potential to be a significant development project for Southwest Florida. The approved East Village encompasses 1,446 acres and authorizes up to 4,502 dwelling units, including 362 affordable housing units for essential workers and approximately 238,000 square feet of neighborhood scaled retail and office space.
The project aligns with Collier County's rural land stewardship area program and reflects our commitment to responsible development that balances growth with conservation. Corkscrew Grove East Village will enhance public infrastructure while permanently protecting thousands of acres of sensitive land and restoring wetlands and uplands to native habitat. As part of this plan, Alico will place nearly 5,000 acres into permanent conservation at no cost to taxpayers. The project reflects our emphasis on connected open space, preservation and restoration and landscape scale habitat connectivity. With local approvals now secured, we're focusing on working closely with the South Florida Water Management District, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service to continue to show that this project is thoughtfully planned, environmentally responsible and aligned with all requirements necessary to secure state and federal permits. We remain on our time line of expected state approval by early 2027 and federal approval by the end of 2028, keeping us on track for potential construction commencement in 2028 or 2029. And fourth, our diversified land utilization strategy continues to perform as intended. Approximately 97% of our farmable acres now generate revenue through agricultural partnerships with citrus growers, farmers, cattle ranchers, mining companies, sugarcane producers and sod farming operations. These programs reduce operational complexity while maintaining agricultural use of our land.
I'm also pleased to announce that Eric Speron joined our Board of Directors this quarter. Eric brings proven expertise in real estate and finance from his work at First Foundation and previously at JPMorgan. He currently serves on the Board of Kiwina Land Association and Tejon Ranch Company, and his experience will be valuable as we advance our development pipeline. Our development pipeline continues to advance with Parks Corkscrew Grove Villages, Bonnett Lake, Saddlebag Grove and Plant World, which total a total of 5,500 acres, maintain their estimated present value of between $335 million and $380 million, which we expect to realize within the next 5 years. This represents significant value creation potential from just 10% of our land holdings.
Our balance sheet is strong with $52.9 million in cash at quarter end and $92.5 million of available borrowing under our line of credit, we have the financial resources to execute our strategy. That cash positions -- that cash position extends our runway through fiscal 2028, giving us the time and flexibility to advance our development projects on our time line, not driven by liquidity constraints. In addition, because of our strategic decision to exit the citrus business, we have now dramatically improved our operating cash flow and essentially removed the current headwinds of fuel and fertilizer costs facing many industries today. Management's NPV analysis of our approximately 46,000 acres indicates asset value between $650 million and $750 million.
With our current market capitalization and net debt of approximately $32.6 million at quarter end, we believe Alico represents value for investors seeking exposure to Florida's growth. What differentiates Alico is our combination of strategic land holdings across 7 Florida counties, more than 125 years of local relationships and conservation credibility, a management team with expertise in both agriculture and real estate development and a balanced portfolio approach with 75% of our land continuing in agricultural use. Our priorities for fiscal 2026 remain unchanged.
Optimize agricultural operations by maximizing revenue from diversified leasing programs while maintaining cost controls, advance our development projects through the entitlement process with particular focus on securing remaining approvals for Corkscrew Grove Villages, balance required entitle investments with shareholder returns while maintaining financial flexibility and to pursue operational excellence by leveraging our experienced team and local relationships to execute efficiently. The foundation is in place. The Collier County approval represents meaningful progress, and we're positioned to advance through the remaining permitting processes. Our balance sheet and revenues from diversified agricultural operations provide the resources to execute our strategy. And with that, I'll turn it over to Brad Heine, who will walk through our detailed financial results.
Bradley Heine: Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. I'll walk you through our second quarter fiscal 2026 financial results and provide additional details on our financial position. For the 3 months ended March 31, 2026, we reported total revenue of $5.3 million compared to $18 million in the prior year period. For the 6-month period ended March 31, 2026, we reported total revenue of $7.2 million compared to $34.9 million in the prior year period. Looking at our business segments, the Alico citrus results reflect the ongoing wind-down of citrus operations that began in 2025. Revenue decreased significantly as expected, while cost of sales declined correspondingly. We completed our last significant citrus harvest in April 2025.
And while we may see some residual activity during the wind-down period, the reduced scale demonstrates our successful exit from capital-intensive citrus production. Land management and other operations revenue increased 113% in the quarter, driven by farm lease and Sod revenue as we shift our focus to diversified land usage. For the 6 months ended March 31, 2026, revenues increased 97%, primarily from farm lease revenue, rock and sand royalties and Sod revenue. Our diversified programs now utilize approximately 97% of our roughly 32,500 farmable acres, representing approximately 89% of our total 46,000 agricultural acres.
Our net income attributable to Alico common stockholders for the 3 months ended March 31, 2026, was $11.4 million or $1.49 per diluted share compared to a net loss of $111.4 million or $14.58 per diluted share in the prior year period. The improvement was principally driven by the wind-down of our citrus operations and the $26.9 million land sale we closed in January. We achieved positive EBITDA of $16.7 million for the 3-month period ended March 31, 2026, compared to negative $14.7 million in the prior year period, a $31.4 million improvement. Our adjusted EBITDA was $16.9 million for the 3-month period ended March 31, 2026, compared to $12.7 million last year.
This positive EBITDA generation validates the cash-generating capability of our transformed operating model. From a balance sheet perspective, we continue to demonstrate financial strength. Cash and cash equivalents at quarter end were $52.9 million, up from $38.1 million at fiscal year-end. This increase reflects the $26.9 million land sale in January, partially offset by $8.4 million in share repurchases during the quarter and operational uses of cash. Working capital was $52.2 million with a current ratio of 9.63:1, while total debt was $85.5 million and net debt was $32.6 million at quarter end compared to $85.5 million and $47.4 million, respectively, at fiscal year-end.
Available borrowings under our credit facility were approximately $92.5 million, and our minimum liquidity requirement was $5.8 million, providing substantial financial flexibility. Through April 2026, we repurchased 245,399 shares for $10 million through our share repurchase program, demonstrating our commitment to returning capital to shareholders when we see value. We are maintaining our 2026 guidance for adjusted EBITDA of approximately $14 million, and we are updating our year-end cash guidance to approximately $40 million and net debt guidance to approximately $45 million, reflecting the $10 million share repurchase program completed through April 2026. We expect to end the fiscal year with only the minimum required balance of $2.5 million on our revolving line of credit.
The fundamentals are working as intended. We're generating cash flow from diversified land usage while maintaining optionality to pursue higher-value development opportunities. The Tiger County Pool Corkscrew Grove East Villages represents meaningful progress and our balance sheet provides the resources to advance through the remaining permitting processes. Now I'd like to turn the call back to John for his closing remarks.
John Kiernan: Thank you, Brad. Before we open the call to questions from research analysts, I want to emphasize a few key points. First, Alico is delivering on what we committed to do. The land sales, the share repurchases, the entitlement approvals, the high land utilization rates we've achieved really demonstrate a consistent execution of our strategy. Second, our financial position provides the runway and flexibility to advance our development projects. The extension of our cash runway through fiscal '28 gives us the time to maximize value from our regulatory process and development pipeline. Third, our business model is working.
We've created multiple revenue streams through land leasing and management while advancing high-value development projects that we believe will generate substantial returns over the next 5 years. We're very pleased to have received unanimous approval from the Collier County Board of Commissioners for Corkscrew Grove East Village. We remain on our time line of expecting state approval by the end of 2026 or '27 and federal approval by the end of 2028, keeping us on track for potential construction commencement in 2028 or 2029. And finally, we remain focused on responsible land stewardship and conservation.
Wildlife Underpass partnership with the Florida Department of Transportation and our commitment to preserving more than 6,000 acres of conservation areas for the entire Corkscrew Grove Villages project reflects our values and differentiate Alico in the development community. Katie, we will now open the call for questions.[Operator Instructions] Our first question will come from Gerry Sweeney with ROTH Capital.
Gerard Sweeney: Bill, congrats on the Collier County approval of Corkscrew Ranch. You also laid out the next sort of, I guess, hurdles for the state and federal approval. However, I wanted to discuss with you, and I understand that it could be early, if you have gone or reviewed how you'll develop Corkscrew Ranch, whether or not you'll partner with somebody, do it yourself, et cetera. And again, I know it may be a little bit early for that question, but I figured to ask it.
John Kiernan: It's a highly relevant question. We've been discussing it publicly over the last 2 years. And right now, our answer has not changed, but certainly, the time horizon is starting to shrink a little bit. Alico still reserves the optionality to sell the land outright once it's entitled for entitled value to national or local homebuilders. We reserve the right to actually partner with these homebuilders at the same time where we would get a little money upfront and then share as the development progresses over time or Alico reserves the right to potentially bring in-house capabilities inside and basically develop this ourselves. Right now, we continue to have meetings in a number of those areas.
And clearly, in the next year or so, we will probably have to commit to one path or another. But it really is going to depend on a number of factors. That would be the timing of the approval process and the success that we have on staying on the 2027 and the 2028/'29 approvals and also kind of what the market bears. We have a very, very good team in-house, but we really are not construction experts. But this is a prime location. It is a very well thought-out plan. I think the approvals that we got at the local level reflect the fact that it's been very thoughtful, and we think it's highly marketable.
But at this point, we have nothing to announce on which path we're continuing to go down.
Gerard Sweeney: Got it. That's helpful. And so within a year, so it's getting close -- so I appreciate that. Separately, obviously, nice land sale in January, by my math, a little over $9,100 per acre. I think you have about 46,000 acres left, you said. And some of that is Corkscrew Grove and Bonnet Lake and some other maybe potentially developable land. How much shall we say, maybe for lack of a better word, I know agricultural land or the sand land is available for sale? And that $9,000 per acre number is up considerably from 5, 6, 7 years ago.
How much could you get for that remaining land, understanding that maybe some of -- not all land was created equal and some have different value scenarios?
John Kiernan: Sure. We ask that you give us another week. We're going to be seeing an investor conference next week, and we will give you a more detailed breakdown of kind of the buckets that we previously had discussed for what management believes is potentially their net present value. However, we just reiterated it, we think the entire portfolio, which is now 46,000 acres instead of the 50,000 plus that we had 2 years ago, is still worth between $650 million and $750 million, and that is supported primarily by the large percentage of acres that will be tied to agricultural for the long term, simply because the price point we had said previously was between $4,000 and $5,000 per acre.
And the trades that we've done over the last year and change have been in the $9,000 range. We can't say that the portfolio is worth $9,000. We're not saying that at all. We're continuing to actually be conservative. And we -- again, beg your indulgence, but when we come out with our revised investment presentation next week, we should have a detailed slide that will break that out in detail.
Gerard Sweeney: So in other words, that $650 to $750 was using $4,000 to $5,000 per acre. Some of the land -- some -- not all that land has probably increased. So the average price may have increased is what you're saying?
John Kiernan: Correct. That is correct. And we put that out as an analysis. We don't think we're making that up.
Gerard Sweeney: Got it. And then one last question. Obviously, you have local approval, you have state approval, federal approval, you laid that out. You discussed that development path are going to go down over the course of the next year. Any other major sort of steps, milestones that we should be aware of over the next couple of years? Or do you think that's the majority of them?
John Kiernan: I mean, as far as Corkscrew Grove, East Villages, it's -- you actually hit the third point, which is making a decision on how potentially we would monetize this on behalf of the shareholders would be kind of the next big news item outside of the state approval and the federal approval for that.
Operator: This concludes our Q&A session. I'll now turn the call back over to John Kiernan for any final or closing remarks.
John Kiernan: Thank you, Katie. And to everyone, we really appreciate your continued interest in Alico. We look forward to updating you on our progress in the quarters ahead. We hope to talk to you again in August. Have a good day.
Operator: Thank you. That brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.
