CLFD
Clearfield, Inc.Clearfield, Inc. manufactures, markets, and sells standard and custom passive connectivity products to the fiber-to-the-premises, enterprises, and original equipment manufacturers markets in the United States and internationally. The company offers FieldSmart, a series of panels, cabinets, wall boxes, and other enclosures. It also provides WaveSmart, which are optical components integrated for signal coupling, splitting, termination, multiplexing, demultiplexing, and attenuation for integration
2-Year Price History
Quarterly Financials & Projections
| Period | Rev | EBITDA | OpIn | NI | OCF | FCF | CapEx | Cash | Debt | Shares | ROIC | IntCov | EV/EBITDA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Est | 2028-Q2 | 46.0 | 3.9 | -- | 2.1 | -- | 1.6 | -1.4 | 104.4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2028-Q1 | 42.0 | 2.5 | -- | 1.3 | -- | 0.2 | -1.3 | 102.8 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q4 | 52.0 | 6.8 | -- | 4.2 | -- | 4.2 | -1.3 | 102.6 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q3 | 50.0 | 6.0 | -- | 3.8 | -- | 3.5 | -1.3 | 98.4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q2 | 40.0 | 2.2 | -- | 0.8 | -- | 0.4 | -1.1 | 94.9 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q1 | 37.0 | 1.3 | -- | 0.2 | -- | -0.7 | -1.0 | 94.5 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2026-Q4 | 44.0 | 4.0 | -- | 2.1 | -- | 2.4 | -1.1 | 95.2 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2026-Q3 | 43.5 | 3.7 | -- | 1.8 | -- | 1.7 | -1.1 | 92.8 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Act | 2026-Q2 | 34.4 | -2.1 | -2.1 | -0.5 | -1.1 | -2.1 | -1.0 | 91.1 | 10.9 | 13.7 | -5.5% | -- | 26.1x |
| Act | 2026-Q1 | 34.3 | 1.3 | -1.8 | -0.6 | -0.1 | -1.1 | -1.0 | 96.4 | 8.1 | 13.9 | -5.1% | -- | 23.7x |
| Act | 2025-Q4 | 17.6 | 6.6 | 4.3 | -9.1 | 11.3 | 11.8 | -0.5 | 106.0 | 8.8 | 13.9 | 8.9% | -- | 34.1x |
| Act | 2025-Q3 | 49.9 | 5.1 | 1.5 | 1.6 | 7.9 | 7.4 | -0.5 | 117.2 | 21.7 | 13.8 | 2.2% | 48.5x | 35.3x |
| Act | 2025-Q2 | 47.2 | 3.7 | 0.3 | 1.3 | 3.1 | 0.4 | -2.7 | 112.0 | 21.6 | 14.1 | 0.4% | 54.0x | 69.4x |
| Act | 2025-Q1 | 29.7 | -0.5 | -2.1 | -1.9 | 7.2 | 5.1 | -2.1 | 113.0 | 20.7 | 14.2 | -4.5% | -5.3x | -- |
| Act | 2024-Q4 | 46.8 | 0.7 | -3.0 | -0.8 | 13.8 | 9.8 | -4.0 | 129.0 | 13.5 | 14.2 | -5.4% | 5.9x | -- |
| Act | 2024-Q3 | 48.8 | 1.3 | -2.3 | -0.5 | 3.9 | 2.7 | -1.2 | 123.8 | 18.5 | 14.3 | -4.2% | 8.8x | -- |
| Act | 2024-Q2 | 36.9 | -6.0 | -9.7 | -5.9 | -3.2 | -5.2 | -2.0 | 142.9 | 15.0 | 14.6 | -15.6% | -59.0x | 1924.5x |
| Act | 2024-Q1 | 34.2 | -4.4 | -8.2 | -5.3 | 7.8 | 5.4 | -2.4 | 162.8 | 16.0 | 15.2 | -13.0% | -34.9x | 14.8x |
| Act | 2023-Q4 | 49.7 | 3.4 | 1.7 | 2.7 | 6.5 | 4.7 | -1.9 | 168.1 | 16.5 | 15.3 | 1.9% | 10.2x | 13.3x |
| Act | 2023-Q3 | 61.3 | 7.2 | 5.6 | 5.2 | 3.3 | 1.6 | -1.7 | 162.1 | 26.2 | 15.3 | 6.0% | 37.0x | 9.0x |
| Act | 2023-Q2 | 71.8 | 13.5 | 12.1 | 10.4 | 9.0 | 6.5 | -2.6 | 157.1 | 23.1 | 15.3 | 14.8% | 120.8x | 17.1x |
| Act | 2023-Q1 | 85.9 | 19.2 | 17.9 | 14.3 | 1.1 | -1.1 | -2.2 | 147.9 | 19.5 | 14.3 | 24.4% | 79.2x | 17.5x |
| Act | 2022-Q4 | 95.0 | 23.5 | 22.3 | 17.0 | 10.3 | 7.9 | -2.4 | 22.5 | 36.9 | 13.9 | 65.8% | 75.5x | 13.1x |
| Act | 2022-Q3 | 71.3 | 17.4 | 16.6 | 12.7 | 2.0 | 0.1 | -1.9 | 18.1 | 13.3 | 13.9 | 71.1% | -- | -- |
| Act | 2022-Q2 | 53.5 | 12.8 | 11.9 | 9.2 | -11.3 | -14.0 | -2.8 | 14.7 | 14.0 | 13.9 | 61.5% | -- | -- |
| Act | 2022-Q1 | 51.1 | 13.7 | 13.1 | 10.4 | -0.0 | -2.1 | -2.1 | 23.1 | 1.9 | 13.9 | 105.0% | -- | -- |
Multiples vs the company's own history — cheap or rich relative to itself? Historical fiscal years, then TTM, then forward projections (E). Forward rows hold today's price against projected earnings, so the multiple compresses if the company grows into it.
| Year | Price | Rev Gr | EBITDA % | EBITDA | EV/EBITDA | EV/FCF | P/E | P/S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 94.14 | — | 24.9% | 67 | 21.1× | n/m | 28.5× | 5.2× |
| 2023 | 29.08 | -0.8% | 16.1% | 43 | 6.6× | 24.6× | 13.5× | 1.6× |
| 2024 | 31.00 | -38.0% | -5.0% | -8 | n/m | 33.7× | n/m | 3.3× |
| 2025 | 29.15 | -13.4% | 10.3% | 15 | 26.1× | 15.8× | n/m | 3.4× |
| TTM | 47.22 | -21.0% | 8.1% | 11 | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× |
| 2027E | 47.22 | +31.4% | 0.1% | 0 | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× |
EBITDA in reporting-currency $M. Historical multiples use year-end market cap (split-adjusted price history); TTM & forward years use today's.
AI Analysis
LLM Evaluations
Clearfield is a niche fiber connectivity play with a fortress balance sheet ($147M cash, no debt) trading at roughly net cash + modest business value. However, the core business is currently operating below breakeven scale, BEAD revenue continues to be pushed out, competition is intensifying, and the stock trades at 35x TTM FCF despite negative net margins. The 14.5% short interest reflects legitimate skepticism about the timing and magnitude of the fiber buildout recovery. While the cash pile provides downside protection and the long-term secular fiber trend is real, the near-term earnings trajectory is weak, management credibility on timing has eroded, and the valuation assumes a recovery that remains speculative. The CEO's 10b5-1 selling plan adds a governance concern. This is a 'show me' story where patience is required but better entry points likely exist.
Latest Earnings Call
Transcript Summary
Clearfield delivered fiscal Q2 2026 net sales of $34.4 million, at the high end of its guidance, despite a 15% year-over-year revenue decline. The company is navigating a transition following the sale of Nestor Cables and a slower-than-anticipated rollout of BEAD funding, which it now expects to impact revenue meaningfully in fiscal 2027. However, a 39% sequential increase in backlog and a 1.3 book-to-bill ratio signal a strong upcoming summer build season. Management is pivoting toward "Fiber-to-the-Anywhere," specifically targeting Edge AI and data center opportunities through its new NOVA Platform and BABA-compliant manufacturing. Clearfield maintained a solid liquidity position with $147 million in cash and no debt, while continuing its share repurchase program. Looking ahead, the company expects a significant rebound in Q3, guiding for sales between $42 million and $46 million and positive earnings. For the full year, management anticipates 10% revenue growth, driven by private financing in community broadband and large regional builds, despite current headwinds in federal funding programs. The company's focus remains on operational excellence and aligning domestic resources for long-term fiber infrastructure demand.
Valuation & Metrics
Market Stats
TTM Financial Snapshot
DCF Fair Value Estimate
Forward Outlook & Risk
Short Interest
Options
| Strike | Call Bid/Ask | Call OI | Put Bid/Ask | Put OI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $25.00 | $17.80/$20.90 | 0 | --/$1.15 | 0 |
| $30.00 | $13.30/$16.10 | 0 | $0.05/$1.05 | 1 |
| $35.00 | $9.10/$11.90 | 0 | $0.15/$1.55 | 9 |
| $40.00 | $5.70/$7.30 | 0 | $2.25/$3.10 | 1 |
| $45.00 | $3.30/$4.50 | 34 | $4.40/$5.50 | 0 |
| $50.00 | $1.85/$2.65 | 86 | $7.00/$9.60 | 0 |
| $55.00 | $0.95/$1.65 | 1 | $10.60/$13.00 | 0 |
| $60.00 | $0.55/$1.30 | 9 | $15.10/$17.60 | 0 |
Forward Projections & Estimates
Employees
Institutional Ownership
Headline & net flow
In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 6.1% of float, sold 3.7%.
Ownership composition
Top holders
| Fund | $ value | Cost basis | Δ QoQ | Δ YoY | α life | Fund AUM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BlackRock, Inc.Passive | $23.8M | $38.96 | −$772K | −$3.6M | -0.2% | $5.69T |
| ACK Asset Management LLC | $19.5M | $29.59 | +$2.9M | +$1.3M | +1.1% | $801M |
| MAIRS & POWER INC | $19.4M | $35.26 | +$41K | −$3.2M | -0.2% | $9.79B |
| VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive | $13.5M | $26.47 | +$13.5M | +$13.5M | — | $4.04T |
| VANGUARD PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT LLCPassive | $9.4M | $26.47 | +$9.4M | +$9.4M | — | $1.91T |
| DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive | $9.4M | $35.11 | +$973K | +$358K | -0.4% | $480.92B |
| STATE STREET CORPPassive | $8.5M | $70.29 | +$1.0M | +$554K | -0.2% | $2.89T |
| PUNCH & ASSOCIATES INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, INC. | $7.7M | $35.15 | +$304K | +$3.0M | -0.3% | $1.72B |
| GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive | $7.6M | $44.60 | +$185K | −$92K | +2.3% | $1.61T |
| ROYAL BANK OF CANADA | $7.5M | $40.95 | +$1.3M | +$330K | -0.2% | $526.36B |
| ROYCE & ASSOCIATES LP | $6.8M | $42.03 | −$3.3M | −$6.0M | -0.9% | $10.09B |
| CITADEL ADVISORS LLC | $6.7M | $39.32 | +$5.1M | +$2.0M | -0.4% | $138.22B |
| JPMORGAN CHASE & CO | $6.2M | $32.84 | −$452K | −$497K | -0.2% | $1.47T |
| Dana Investment Advisors, Inc. | $4.7M | $30.17 | +$1.3M | +$1.7M | -0.1% | $3.35B |
| ACADIAN ASSET MANAGEMENT LLC | $4.3M | $30.69 | +$1.6M | +$4.3M | -0.5% | $70.48B |
| MARSHALL WACE, LLP | $3.7M | $77.28 | −$292K | −$1.2M | +0.6% | $92.71B |
| D. E. Shaw & Co., Inc. | $3.7M | $63.46 | +$148K | +$813K | -0.3% | $118.02B |
| RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC | $3.6M | $29.30 | +$926K | +$2.1M | +1.2% | $63.91B |
| NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive | $3.2M | $46.82 | +$86K | −$24K | -0.2% | $755.34B |
| BANK OF AMERICA CORP /DE/ | $3.0M | $38.48 | +$312K | +$2.2M | -0.1% | $1.36T |
Trading behavior
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Biggest decreases this quarter
New buyers this quarter
Top-5 holders · 39.8%
Top Holders Over Time
5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price
Analyst Coverage
| Quarter | Revenue | EBITDA | Net Inc | EPS | EPS Range | # Analysts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 Q3 | 50M | 7M | 1M | $0.08 | $0.07 – $0.08 | 2 |
| 2025 Q4 | 32M | 4M | -1M | $-0.06 | $-0.06 – $-0.05 | 1 |
| 2026 Q1 | 34M | 5M | -1M | $-0.05 | $-0.06 – $-0.04 | 2 |
| 2026 Q2 | 44M | 6M | 3M | $0.19 | $0.17 – $0.20 | 2 |
| 2026 Q3 | 52M | 7M | 5M | $0.39 | $0.38 – $0.40 | 2 |
| 2026 Q4 | 46M | 7M | 3M | $0.23 | $0.22 – $0.23 | 1 |
| 2027 Q1 | 44M | 6M | 2M | $0.16 | $0.16 – $0.16 | 1 |
| 2027 Q2 | 51M | 7M | 4M | $0.32 | $0.31 – $0.32 | 1 |
| 2027 Q3 | 59M | 8M | 7M | $0.50 | $0.50 – $0.51 | 1 |
| 2027 Q4 | 56M | 8M | 0M | $0.00 | $0.00 – $0.00 | 0 |
Corporate
Executive Compensation (2023-2025)
Insider Trading (last 12mo)
| Date | Side | Insider | Title | Shares | Price | Dollars | Owned $ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-05-11 | SELL | Beranek Cheryl | director, officer: Chief Executive Officer | 2,500 | $45.02 | $113K | $22.71M |
| 2026-05-11 | SELL | Jones Walter Louis JR | director | 2,391 | $46.05 | $110K | $400K |
| 2026-05-08 | SELL | Beranek Cheryl | director, officer: Chief Executive Officer | 5,000 | $40.27 | $201K | $20.42M |
| 2026-02-19 | SELL | Hayward Donald R. | director | 3,595 | $32.00 | $115K | $348K |
| 2025-12-15 | BUY | ROTH RONALD G | director, 10 percent owner, other: Chairman of the Board | 10,000 | $30.06 | $301K | $38.45M |
Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)
Revenue Breakdown
Revenue Segments
| UNITED STATES | $37.4M | NEW |
| Non-US | $12.5M | NEW |
Filing Risk Analysis
Filing Risk Scores
Clearfield, Inc.: Strategic Fire-Sale and Manufactured Equity Support Amid Operating Deficit
Counter-Thesis
Counter-Thesis & Recent News
Clearfield reported a fiscal Q2 2026 net loss of $0.5 million ($0.04 per share) on May 6, 2026, a sharp reversal from the $2.5 million profit in the prior-year period. Net sales fell 15% YoY to $34.4 million, driven by a 'pull-in' of orders by a large customer in the previous year and a general moderation in broadband provider spending. Furthermore, management's Q3 2026 EPS guidance of $0.17–$0.21 came in significantly below the $0.23 analyst consensus, triggering concerns over continued margin pressure.
The core bear thesis rests on a prolonged 'inventory hangover' following the 2021-2022 fiber spending spree. While bulls point to the BEAD (Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment) program as a savior, meaningful revenue is being pushed into late 2026 and 2027 due to deployment delays, government funding uncertainty, and potential domestic fiber shortages. The company's reliance on high sales volume to absorb fixed manufacturing costs makes it highly vulnerable to even minor revenue misses, as seen in the recent gross margin slide to 32.5%.
A major red flag is the downward revision of full-year EPS expectations; while revenue guidance was reiterated at $160M–$170M, the projected EPS range of $0.48–$0.62 is well below the ~$0.69 previously expected by the Street. Additionally, the company is currently operating with a negative net margin (~3.9%), and technical indicators (SMA_20 below SMA_60) suggest a strong bearish trend. Roth Capital recently lowered its price target from $46 to $44 in May 2026, citing deployment timeline risks.
Clearfield faces intensifying competition from larger and more diversified players like Ribbon Communications (RBBN) and Aviat Networks (AVNW), as well as international pressure in its fiber management niche. As the market shifts toward larger regional service providers and MSOs (Multiple System Operators), Clearfield's 'community broadband' focus is under threat from competitors with greater scale who can offer more aggressive pricing and integrated hardware/software bundles, potentially eroding Clearfield's market share in the U.S. rural fiber segment.
Sentiment among Clearfield's core customer base is increasingly cautious. Broadband operators are actively 'slamming on the brakes' regarding new hardware purchases to work through existing stockpiles and navigate tighter monetary policy. There is a visible shift where customers are delaying projects until federal subsidies (BEAD/E-ACAM) are fully disbursed, leading to unpredictable purchase cycles and a book-to-bill environment that remains volatile despite recent modest backlog growth.
Full Earnings Call Transcript
Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q2 • 2026-05-06
Operator: Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to the Clearfield Fiscal Second Quarter 2026 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please also note today's event is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the floor over to Gregory McNiff, Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead. Gregory McNiff: Thank you. Joining me on today's call are Cheri Beranek, Clearfield's President and CEO; and Dan Herzog, Clearfield's CFO. As a reminder, Clearfield publishes a quarterly shareholder letter, which provides an overview of the company's financial results, operational highlights, and future outlook. You can find both the shareholder letter and the earnings release on Clearfield's Investor Relations website. After brief prepared remarks, we will open the floor for a question-and-answer session. Please note that during this call, management will be making remarks regarding future events and the future financial performance of the company. These remarks constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. It is important to also note that the company undertakes no obligation to update such statements except as required by law. The company cautions you to consider risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements contained in today's press release, shareholder letter, and on this conference call. The Risk Factors section in Clearfield's most recent Form 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission and its subsequent filings on Form 10-Q provide a description of these risks. With that, I will turn it over to Cheri. Cheri? Cheryl Beranek: Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us to discuss Clearfield's results for the second quarter of fiscal 2026. I'll begin with an overview of the quarter and our strategic priorities. And then I'll turn the call over to Dan to review the financial details and outlook. Second quarter net sales were $34.4 million, which came in towards the high end of our guidance range of $32 million to $35 million. Our performance was driven by continued strength in our Community Broadband market with year-to-date revenues up 5% over the same period of last year. Our net loss per share of $0.04 was within our guidance range. Our backlog rose 39% sequentially from the first fiscal quarter, resulting in a book-to-bill ratio of 1.3 for the quarter, consistent with typical summer seasonality and supportive of our outlook for the second half of the year. We are focused on consistent execution while investing in Clearfield's next phase of growth. To that end, we are building a significant pipeline of opportunities beyond our traditional broadband customer base. While these adjacent markets have yet to contribute meaningful revenue, reflecting their longer sales cycles, they do represent a compelling avenue for future expansion and early indications are encouraging. In particular, we are seeing increasing engagement linked to data center environments where capacity expansion is driving more consistent infrastructure planning needs. As these opportunities develop, we expect them to contribute meaningfully to revenue, driving a gradual broadening of our revenue base. Recently, Clearfield hosted Fiber to the Future at our headquarters, a program that brought together key thought leaders from across our industry. The event featured demonstrations of our BABA-ready cable extrusion capabilities and optical fiber termination solutions alongside insights from these leaders. Participants included executives from service providers, our top distributors, industry media, and association leaders gained a Clearview of how Clearfield's innovation and operational excellence position us to meet the growing data infrastructure demands driven by fiber-enabled Artificial Intelligence. As Edge AI takes shape, Clearfield demonstrated throughout the day its innovation and thought leadership. From an industry perspective, the pace of the BEAD funding process continues to be the primary constraint on our core business. While we are seeing early-stage planning and design activity across our customer base, the timing of funding disbursements remain uncertain, which is delaying order activity. We continue to expect meaningful BEAD-related revenue to materialize in fiscal 2027 as the program is deployed across the states. In response to the current environment, we have maintained a proactive approach to ensure that we are well positioned as demand materializes. We are deepening engagement with customers as projects progress towards execution and aligning our resources to support anticipated build activity, including the compliance with BABA requirements. Our focus remains on understanding where customers are in their planning process, and how we can best support them as projects take shape. We believe this approach enables us to allocate resources effectively and to stay closely aligned with customers as their deployments advance. Looking ahead, we are increasingly focused on longer-term opportunities tied to distributed compute and edge infrastructure. Industry trends continue to support a shift toward compute closer to the end user, as low-latency AI applications require faster processing capabilities between compute and storage rather than relying solely on centralized data centers. This dynamic will drive the build-out of smaller distributed edge locations that function like compact data centers and require high-density fiber connectivity, particularly in markets served by Community Broadband providers. As a result, there is growing demand for solutions that can be deployed quickly, scaled efficiently, and replicated across numerous sites. We are actively positioning the company to participate in this evolution. Our NOVA Platform announced last quarter, is designed to address this need by enabling the flexibility and scalability required to support the next generation of edge AI infrastructure. The platform has been well received, and we anticipate shipping in the second half of the fiscal year. You can also expect a series of new product launches as we bring proven, hardened, reliable, and scalable outside plant techniques and strategies into this space. With that, I'll turn the call over to Dan to review our financials and outlook in more detail. Daniel Herzog: Thank you, Cheri, and good afternoon, everyone. As a reminder, in November, we completed the sale of our Nestor Cables business. As a result, all financial results presented for fiscal year 2025 and all prior periods reflect the Clearfield segment as continuing operations only. With Nestor results reported under discontinued operations in our Statement of Earnings and Statement of Cash Flows, and reported as assets and liabilities held for sale in our Balance Sheet. With this transaction behind us, our focus and portfolio are now fully centered on the Clearfield business and the execution of our core strategy. Second quarter net sales were $34.4 million, a 15% decrease from $40.6 million in the prior-year second quarter. This decline was partially due to a pull-in by a Large Regional Customer into last year's second quarter from our Fiscal Year 2025, third quarter. Revenue was flat sequentially, primarily due to expected seasonality in the winter months. Gross profit margin was 32.5%, down from 34.4% in the prior-year second quarter and down slightly from 33.2% in the first quarter of fiscal 2026 mainly due to lower sales volume. Operating expenses for the second quarter of fiscal 2026 were $13.2 million in comparison to $12.3 million in the prior-year second quarter. Primarily due to investments to support future planned growth, including in adjacent markets. Net loss in the second quarter of fiscal 2026 was $500,000, or a net loss of $0.04 per diluted share, compared to net income of $1.3 million, or net income of $0.18 per diluted share, in the prior-year second quarter. We ended the quarter with approximately $147 million in cash, short-term and long-term investments and no debt. During the quarter, we repurchased 237,000 shares for $7.3 million as part of our share buyback program. For the third fiscal quarter of 2026, we anticipate net sales from continuing operations to be in the range of $42 million to $46 million. Operating expenses to remain relatively consistent with our second quarter and net income per diluted share in the range of $0.17 to $0.21. The earnings per share ranges are based on the number of shares outstanding at the end of the second quarter of Fiscal 2026 and do not reflect potential additional share repurchases completed. For the full year fiscal 2026, we are reiterating our guidance for net sales from continuing operations in the range of $160 million to $170 million, which represents approximately 10% top-line growth at the midpoint. Operating expenses as a percentage of revenue to remain consistent with Fiscal 2025 and net income per share to be in the range of $0.48 to $0.62 and with that, we will open the call to your questions. Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Ryan Koontz with Needham & Company. Ryan Koontz: I wonder if you could give us a little more color on where BEAD is here. We're hearing from other vendors and just industry press that maybe Operators are starting to see that money in engaging in products. What are you seeing in terms of hard data from Operators that are going to get BEAD [indiscernible]? Are you starting to see forecasts or maybe early orders? Any color there would be great. Cheryl Beranek: Ryan, yes, the BEAD is, unfortunately, I would say, slower than expected. We are expected by the industry, but consistent with our outlook that we believe it is a '27 revenue opportunity for us, starting in late fall, early winter, and moving into next year. We absolutely are seeing customers talking about their planning cycles. We're talking to customers about their network designs and the kind of products that they'll be looking for from us and quoting that activity. I would say that there have been some challenges associated with trying to be able to align the availability of optical fiber from the fiber vendors so that there's a knowledge of when that product -- those materials are going to ship, so they can plan accordingly and to receive their financing. And so I would say today, it is -- I think the government still has some work to do in order to get material or the program underway. But then we're going to have some obstacles associated with just how that fiber -- excuse me, the project financing, the match gets aligned. And then as I indicated, some of the fiber that needs to be able to come from the domestic providers. Ryan Koontz: Maybe on the regional service providers, any updates there in terms of puts and takes and how you're thinking about this build season with the regionals broadly... Cheryl Beranek: I would say that that's -- we started with the negative, which is the things we can't control, which are the programs under BEAD. But as it relates to private financing, both in Community Broadband as well as in the Large Regional, we're seeing a strong build season, which is why we're looking at forecasting a 10% increase over last year. After -- for the year after a pretty slow start for the first half of the year. There has been some uncertainty in the Large Regional as they have been acquired by the Tier 1, so that those accounts have a little bit of learning to do. In regard to where the bathroom is in the new place or how they place their purchase orders, I guess, is a better way to say it. But we also are seeing other Large Regionals start to come into play and start to be more active in their deployments. So I think across the board, the Large Regionals are a nice healthy marketplace that will continue to build both with internal financing and with private financing from other vendors. Operator: [Operator Instructions] Since there are no more questions, this concludes the question-and-answers session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Cheri Beranek for any closing remarks. Please go ahead. Cheryl Beranek: Thank you so much. While it's unfortunate and disappointing that the BEAD programs are going to be delayed into '27 for any meaningful revenue. We are extremely proud and pleased with the work that we've done to stay alongside our customers and to be supporting them in their planning process. We thank our shareholders for continuing to be patience with us as we continue to support our customers, and are very excited about where that will go as we move forward. Also, want to reiterate the strength of private financing and the work that's being done to allow fiber-to-the-home to continue to expand as we know that fiber-driven networks do provide the best average revenue increase per subscriber for our shareholders or our service provider customers and are pleased and excited about where that will go. Finally, I did want to point out or remind everyone that Clearfield is about a Fiber-to-the-Anywhere opportunity. And our strategic plan very strongly supports our core marketplace and making sure that we protect our core, but we are investing over the course of the last, really, 18 months in adjacent market opportunities. Both bringing our existing product line to new markets as well as to be able to introduce new customers to new product lines. So continue to look forward to telling you about those in the coming months and quarters ahead. With that, we're excited about the Build Season. And unfortunately, well, fortunately, we're looking forward to warmer weather; it's a little chilly here in Minnesota today. Thanks so much. We appreciate your support. Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.