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DATE
Wednesday, May 13, 2026 at 8 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- Co-CEO — Craig Hurlbert
- President and Chief Executive Officer — Kathleen Valiasek
- Interim Chief Financial Officer — Anthony Hughes
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TAKEAWAYS
- Revenue -- $13.3 million, a 15% increase year over year and a 7% sequential rise from Q4.
- Adjusted EBITDA Loss -- Improved to $5.7 million, reflecting a 35% year-over-year improvement and a slight sequential betterment from a $5.8 million loss in Q4.
- Adjusted G&A Expense -- Decreased to $4.1 million, down 30% year over year and sequentially from $4.3 million in Q4.
- Adjusted Gross Margin -- Approximately 29% on an adjusted basis, stable relative to the prior year and consistent with 2025 levels.
- GAAP Net Loss -- $12.7 million, down from $37.7 million in the prior year period, attributed in part to lower interest expense post debt restructuring.
- Cash Position -- Closing cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash totaled $18.8 million, compared with $10.7 million at year-end, reflecting a $15 million strategic investment during the quarter.
- Patent Award -- Received a U.S. patent in February for proprietary computer vision and AI-driven growing optimization underpinning the Stack & Flow platform.
- Operating Capacity -- All three facilities are running at full harvestable capacity, with the entire run rate capacity committed to customers.
- New Retail Accounts -- Launched with two retail customers; one features a 6-SKU arrangement covering over 250 stores, and the other serves a large regional retailer.
- Product Highlights -- Caesar Romano Salad Kit awarded new distribution with a national retailer, set to launch imminently following a 75% increase in baseline velocity in the fourth quarter of '25.
- Yield Improvements -- Tower upgrades yielded approximately a 10% increase in run rate yield capacity across Georgia, Texas, and Washington facilities.
- California Facility Investments -- Select upgrades are expected to improve yield for living butterhead lettuce by up to 20% as projects proceed.
- Debt Restructuring -- A $25 million equity raise and $197 million in debt principal plus accrued interest was canceled and repayments deferred until April 2027 as of the first quarter of 2025.
- Convertible Note Funding -- $10 million secured in Q3 2025 and an additional $15 million in Q1 2026 through convertible notes, with an associated $10 million reduction in senior secured debt.
- Commercial Commitments -- Secured new and extended supply agreements advancing key customer relationships through Q1 2027, spanning major product lines including baby leaf lettuce and organic butter lettuce.
SUMMARY
Local Bounti (LOCL +6.52%) detailed disciplined execution and quantifiable improvement in financial and operational results, notably supported by both technical innovation and strategic investment. Management emphasized a sharpened commercial strategy, citing ongoing partnership discussions and successful channel diversification aimed at enhancing margins. The company's optimization efforts have produced historic yield levels, while continued capital restructuring has bolstered balance sheet flexibility. Management described the outlook as rooted in ongoing revenue growth, stable margins, and rigorous expense control as the path toward adjusted EBITDA profitability.
- The interim CFO referenced the continued benefit from cost actions realized in 2025, noting, "we are now seeing the full benefit of the roughly $10 million reduction in annualized expenses we delivered in 2025."
- Kathleen Valiasek stated that "agriculture are designing supply chains today that contain CEA as permanent infrastructure."
- Kathleen Valiasek highlighted that running facilities at full capacity has driven "network-wide consistency that translates directly into stronger yields."
- The Q1 cash increase is directly linked to "the $15 million investment we received during the quarter from an existing strategic investor."
- The company intends to leverage proprietary technology to address industry shortages in arugula supply and communicate this focus to retail partners throughout 2026.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Stack & Flow platform: Local Bounti's proprietary cultivation system combining stacked vertical and hydroponic flow growing technologies, now augmented by AI-driven optimization.
- CEA (Controlled-Environment Agriculture): A farming method where crops are grown in a regulated indoor setting to maximize yield and quality, insulated from outdoor weather variability.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Craig Hurlbert: Thank you, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. As I always do, I want to start by recognizing the work the Local Bounti team has put in to delivering these results. It's an honor to be able to work with each and every one of you. The first quarter is the next data point in the trajectory we've been building toward: disciplined execution quarter after quarter across every part of the organization. We told you what we were going to do, and we're doing it. When I spoke with you in March, I described 2025 as a year we did the hard work to position Local Bounti for what comes next. Q1 reinforces that view.
Two specific developments this quarter underscore where we're headed. First, in February, we were issued a U.S. patent covering our computer vision and AI-driven growing optimization. This formally protects the proprietary technology that underpins our Stack & Flow platform, the same capabilities Kathy will speak to in detail when she walks through our operational progress. Second, the $15 million investment from an existing strategic investor that we discussed last quarter, closed during Q1. That's a partner who has watched this business closely for years and chose to commit additional capital at this stage. Both signals: one technical, one financial, point in the same direction.
Local Bounti has earned the right to be selective about its next moves, and that gives me great confidence in the path ahead. And with that, I will now turn it over to Kathy.
Kathleen Valiasek: Thank you, Craig. The theme I'd wrap around Q1 2026 is straightforward: continued progress. The work we did throughout 2025 laid the foundation, and Q1 is the next data point showing how that foundation is producing results. Revenue grew 15% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA loss improved 35%. And adjusted G&A came down 30%. Each metric extends the trajectory we showed quarter-by-quarter through last year and, in several cases, shows additional sequential improvement on top of an already strong fourth quarter. We're doing what we said we'd do, and it's showing up in our results.
Following the facility optimization work we completed last year, each of our 3 state-of-the-art facilities continues to operate at full harvestable capacity, with our entire run rate capacity committed to customers. I'd characterize our progress through 2 complementary threads: commercial momentum and operational discipline at scale. Both continued to advance in Q1. Starting with our commercial progress and ongoing strategic partnership discussions. Those conversations remain active and are central to Local Bounti's long-term growth strategy. The quality and velocity of our engagements continues to build. The market shift we described last quarter is real and it's holding. Retailers and strategic partners who were once cautious about controlled-environment agriculture are designing supply chains today that contain CEA as permanent infrastructure.
They are actively seeking the right partners to build with, and that's the position we have been working towards. We remain deliberate in how we approach these opportunities so we can best position Local Bounti to realize durable, long-term value. Our commercial strategy continues to focus on the quality of our volume rather than simply adding capacity, specifically on achieving targeted diversification of our channel mix to enhance our margin profile. The 2 new retail accounts we announced last quarter have launched. The first is a 6-SKU placement with a large premier retail customer, covering more than 250 stores. The second is a large regional retailer. We are also seeing extensions to supply agreements within our existing customer base.
In the first and early second quarter of 2026, we were awarded new bids covering supply arrangements that advance these relationships through the first quarter of 2027. These commitments span several of our key product lines, including baby leaf lettuce and organic butter lettuce. The awards underscore the strength of our relationships with blue-chip retail partners and reflect those customers' continued confidence in our ability to deliver consistent, high-quality products over the long term. These are precisely the sort of outcomes our commercial team has been targeting, and they reinforce the channel mix improvement that has been a core priority moving through 2026.
Our pipeline reflects the strong commercial momentum we've been building, and we continue to have visibility to additional distribution opportunities as we move through the year. Our Caesar Romano Salad Kit is another good example of the focused commercial strategy I described last quarter. The product continues to gain traction with consumers. After realizing a 75% increase in its baseline velocity or units sold per store per week during the fourth quarter of '25, we were awarded an additional distribution center with a national retail customer in the first quarter of 2026 that is set to launch this month. When customers and consumers provide feedback, we listen.
And Caesar Romano demonstrates what Local Bounti can deliver when we apply that approach. That same discipline extends to our baby leaf greens portfolio, which remains an area of genuine strength with consistent quality and strong yields across our facilities. We see significant runway with arugula in particular where there's a notable supply gap in the market. Our retail customers continue to tell us that the conventional arugula supply is unreliable and falling short of customer needs. We intend to maximize our Stack & Flow capabilities to capture that demand with a more reliable, longer-lasting, ready-to-eat, greenhouse-grown arugula supply, a message we are actively reinforcing with the retail partners throughout 2026. Shifting over to operations.
The cohesion between our commercial and operations teams has continued to strengthen, an operational rhythm we built through 2025 carried directly into Q1. We are seeing continued progress on our service performance, freight lane management, packaging standardization and labor efficiencies. The same building blocks I walked through in March are compounding. Running at full capacity continues to enable a level of network-wide consistency that translates directly into stronger yields. Our yields remain at their highest levels in our company's history. The tower upgrades we completed across Georgia, Texas and Washington, paired with the computer vision and AI-driven growing optimization, are delivering as promised with approximately a 10% increase in run rate yield capacity.
Texas continues to benefit from the steady-state operational rhythm that comes with running consistently at full harvestable capacity, and we are seeing throughput and labor productivity gains that the new automated harvester was designed to deliver. Beyond our Stack & Flow facilities, we are also focused on expanding our #1 market position in living butterhead lettuce. In support of this, we are making selective investments in our California facilities to improve operational efficiency in those legacy assets. We believe these investments can improve yield by as much as 20%, resulting in increased throughput and enhanced margins as those projects progress through the year.
Running at full capacity is also informing our ongoing cost optimization efforts within each facility, allowing for better visibility into cost drivers and the tools to address them. That has translated into a more consistent adjusted gross margin profile and meaningful sequential and year-over-year declines in adjusted G&A. The net effect is showing up clearly in our rapidly improving adjusted EBITDA trajectory. Before I turn it over, I'd like to take a moment to introduce Tony Hughes to those of you joining us today. Tony has served as Local Bounti's Senior VP of Finance and Chief Accounting Officer since June 2022, and was appointed Interim CFO in December of last year.
Tony has been instrumental in the financial work we have executed over the past several years and he brings more than 30 years of finance leadership experience to this role. We are fortunate to have him in the seat. And I'm pleased to hand it over to him for the financial review today. Tony?
Anthony Hughes: Thank you, Kathy, and good morning, everyone. While this is my first earnings call in the Interim CFO role, I've had the privilege of working alongside Kathy in various finance and accounting leadership roles for more than a decade across several organizations, and I'd like to thank Kathy and the Board for this opportunity. The financial trajectory we are reporting on this morning reflects the combination of positive forces that are making a measurable impact in our results, including the great work we've done to improve our capital structure. Now turning to our results. First quarter revenue grew 15% to $13.3 million, reflecting continued sequential and year-over-year growth driven by consistent production improvement across our full network of facilities.
On a sequential basis, revenue was up approximately 7% from Q4, which speaks to the underlying production consistency we are now achieving. Beyond the incremental distribution, we continue to see strong contribution from our focused accounts, including the e-commerce and direct-to-consumer customer relationship we highlighted last quarter, which continued to support year-over-year growth in the first quarter. Adjusted gross margin for the first quarter was approximately 29%, excluding depreciation, stock-based compensation and other noncore items, in line with the prior year period and consistent with the gross margin profile we delivered throughout 2025. Gross margin stability has been a deliberate part of the story we are telling.
Predictable performance at this level becomes the foundation for operating leverage as we scale. Adjusted G&A expense for the first quarter was $4.1 million, down from $5.8 million in Q1 2025, representing a reduction of approximately 30% year-over-year. On a sequential basis, that is also down, $4.3 million in Q4. Combined with our COGS-related savings actions, we are now seeing the full benefit of the roughly $10 million reduction in annualized expenses we delivered in 2025. Adjusted EBITDA loss for the first quarter improved to $5.7 million, compared to a loss of $8.8 million in Q1 2025, a 35% year-over-year improvement and a modest sequential improvement from the $5.8 million loss in Q4.
Revenue growth, stable adjusted gross margins and lower adjusted G&A continue to converge to improve adjusted EBITDA performance. This is exactly the operating leverage we said would compound as the network matured. I'd also like to highlight that our Q1 GAAP net loss was $12.7 million, compared to $37.7 million in the prior year period. The improvement reflects both substantially lower interest expense resulting from our 2025 debt restructuring and the operational progress underway. With respect to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash of approximately $18.8 million, up from $10.7 million at year-end. The improvement reflects the $15 million investment we received during the quarter from an existing strategic investor.
As Craig noted, this is a meaningful signal. A partner who knows our business and our technology chose to increase their stake. It provides additional financial flexibility as we continue to advance our commercial and strategic priorities. As a reminder, on our broader capital structure, we completed a $25 million equity raise and executed a comprehensive debt restructuring in the first quarter of 2025 that canceled approximately $197 million of debt principal and accrued interest, and deferred cash repayments until April 2027. In the third quarter of 2025, we secured an incremental $10 million of working capital through a convertible note investment, which was paired with a corresponding $10 million reduction in our senior secured debt principal.
We were also able to secure additional financing through an equipment sale-leaseback arrangement. And in the first quarter of 2026, we secured an additional $15 million through a convertible note investment. Combined, these transactions position Local Bounti with the financial flexibility to be strategic about growth and partnership decisions as we advance towards profitability. In terms of our outlook, we expect the trajectory of improvement we demonstrated throughout 2025 and into the first quarter to continue. Revenue growth, gross margin stability and declining G&A all point toward continued progress against our goal of achieving positive adjusted EBITDA. There's still work to do to get there and we want to be clear-eyed about that.
But everything we're seeing reinforces our confidence in the path. With that, I'll turn it back to Kathy for closing remarks.
Kathleen Valiasek: Thank you, Tony. In closing, the strategic and commercial environment around us remains favorable, the operational rhythm we built last year is compounding, and the financial trajectory continues to move in the right direction. The cumulative progress we have made will become even more visible as we move through the rest of 2026. I'm grateful to the entire Local Bounti team for their commitment and to our investors and partners for their continued confidence. That concludes our prepared remarks. Thank you for joining us today and for your continued interest in Local Bounti.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference call. We thank you for attending. You may now disconnect your lines.
