Stocks/FSTR

FSTR

L.B. Foster Company
Industrials·Railroads
$41.14
$430M market cap
Claude Rating
4/10UNDERWEIGHT
Revenue
$563.4M
Free Cash Flow
$35.0M
Rev Growth
+23.9%
FCF Margin
6.2%
P/FCF
12.3x
EV/FCF
14.5x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
12.2x
Fair Value
$28.00
Upside
-31.9%

L.B. Foster Company provides engineered and manufactured products and services for the building and infrastructure projects worldwide. The company's Rail, Technologies, and Services segment offers new rail to passenger and short line freight railroads, industrial companies, and rail contractors; used rails; rail accessories, including track spikes and anchors, bolts, angle bars, tie plates, and other products; power rail, direct fixation fasteners, coverboards, and special accessories; and track

2-Year Price History

$38.11+45.2%
$20$25$30$35$40volJun 24Oct 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q1130.05.2--0.0---19.5-3.354.0----------
Est2027-Q4168.014.3--5.4--18.5-5.073.5----------
Est2027-Q3148.013.0--5.6--20.7-3.055.1----------
Est2027-Q2155.012.4--3.9--7.8-3.134.3----------
Est2027-Q1125.04.4---0.6---22.5-3.126.6----------
Est2026-Q4165.013.2--4.6--16.5-5.849.1----------
Est2026-Q3145.012.3--5.1--21.8-3.232.6----------
Est2026-Q2152.011.9--3.3--6.8-3.010.8----------
Act2026-Q1121.14.92.01.5-10.4-13.4-3.04.082.910.66.5%5.8x9.6x
Act2025-Q4160.410.77.82.422.214.4-7.84.467.010.818.2%10.7x9.8x
Act2025-Q3138.311.48.34.429.226.4-2.83.584.410.916.9%9.1x11.0x
Act2025-Q2143.610.97.72.910.47.7-2.74.2101.410.913.6%7.3x10.8x
Act2025-Q197.81.8-1.9-2.1-26.1-28.7-2.62.6102.610.5-3.6%1.6x14.8x
Act2024-Q4128.25.03.1-0.224.322.3-2.02.561.710.68.3%4.9x8.2x
Act2024-Q3137.511.07.335.924.821.7-3.13.178.511.021.9%8.1x9.3x
Act2024-Q2140.88.14.62.9-5.0-7.0-2.14.097.711.114.3%5.5x14.1x
Act2024-Q1124.39.45.64.4-21.4-24.2-2.73.289.311.019.6%8.4x11.4x
Act2023-Q4134.94.10.6-0.422.119.9-2.22.667.111.02.9%3.6x12.4x
Act2023-Q3145.35.61.60.518.617.4-1.33.084.011.06.4%3.9x14.6x
Act2023-Q2148.09.56.73.5-10.3-11.1-0.83.9102.210.920.6%6.0x17.3x
Act2023-Q1115.52.60.5-2.26.96.2-0.72.693.510.82.0%1.8x19.6x
Act2022-Q4137.2-1.6-6.3-43.98.35.2-3.12.9106.010.8-21.2%-1.0x22.9x
Act2022-Q3130.02.6-1.1-2.1-5.5-7.0-1.54.9108.910.7-2.4%2.6x--
Act2022-Q2131.56.52.52.0-5.8-7.0-1.37.760.110.85.7%16.9x--
Act2022-Q198.81.7-2.3-1.6-7.6-9.4-1.86.247.210.7-6.7%4.5x--
Historical Valuation

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.

YearPriceRev GrEBITDA %EBITDAEV/EBITDAEV/FCFP/EP/S
20229.681.8%922.9×n/mn/m0.2×
202321.99+9.3%4.0%2212.4×8.3×140.3×0.4×
202426.90-2.4%6.3%348.2×21.5×5.0×0.4×
202526.95+1.7%6.4%359.8×17.2×36.8×0.5×
TTM41.14+11.7%6.7%380.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×
2027E41.14+5.8%0.1%00.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×

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

Claude4/10UNDERWEIGHTFV: $28.00

L.B. Foster is a low-margin industrial company navigating a multi-year transformation toward higher-value technology and infrastructure solutions. While recent quarters show revenue recovery and balance sheet improvement (leverage down to 1.0x), the investment case is undermined by persistent earnings misses, a contracting backlog signaling slowing demand momentum, meaningful insider selling, and a potentially catastrophic unquantified Portland Harbor Superfund liability. At ~19x TTM FCF with only ~3.7% FCF margins, the stock prices in a transformation that has yet to consistently deliver. The business is highly seasonal and lumpy, making forward visibility poor. Better risk/reward exists elsewhere in the industrial space.

Catalyst Sustained improvement in Rail segment order rates and backlog rebuilding through H2 2026; resolution or favorable allocation of Portland Harbor Superfund liability; successful European Friction Management expansion generating recurring revenue; accretive tuck-in acquisition in Precast Concrete.
Risk The Portland Harbor Superfund site liability ($1.1B+ total site cost) where FSTR holds only $1.6M in reserves. Even a 1-2% allocation would represent a material hit to equity value and could trigger covenant issues or equity dilution.
Trend
IMPROVING
Mgmt
6/10
Quarter
6/10
Exp. Move
+2.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

L.B. Foster delivered a strong first quarter for 2026, with revenue increasing 23.9% to $121.1 million and EBITDA surging 183% to $5.2 million. The Rail segment was the primary growth engine, recovering from previous funding-related delays to post a 38.4% sales increase. Infrastructure Solutions also performed well, led by double-digit growth in Precast Concrete. Profitability was bolstered by a 60-basis-point expansion in gross margins and improved SG&A leverage. Financially, the company significantly de-leveraged, cutting its gross leverage ratio from 2.5x to 1.2x year-over-year. Management highlighted a healthy cash flow profile and reaffirmed full-year guidance, noting that TTM results are already approaching mid-year targets. Strategic focus remains on high-growth platforms like Friction Management, which is currently expanding into European markets. While the total backlog declined due to a prior project cancellation in the steel segment, April orders showed a sharp 15% sequential increase, signaling continued momentum. The company plans to prioritize organic capital expenditure in Precast Concrete while maintaining a disciplined approach to share repurchases and potential tuck-in acquisitions.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$41.14
Market Cap$430M
Enterprise Value$509M
P/S Ratio0.8x
P/FCF12.3x
EV/FCF14.5x
FCF Margin (TTM)6.2%
FCF Yield8.1%
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.4%
Annual Dilution0.4%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$563.4M
Net Income$11.2M
Free Cash Flow$35.0M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+23.9%
EBITDA Margin6.7%
Net Margin2.0%
FCF Margin6.2%
CapEx % of Revenue2.9%
SBC % of Revenue0.5%
ROIC13.8%
WC Change % Rev1.6%
Interest Coverage8.2x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$13.98
-66.0% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$227M
− Net Debt$79M
= Fair Equity$148M
Revenue Growth2.4% → 2.5%
FCF Margin6.2% → 5.5%
Discount Rate15.0%
Terminal EV/FCF10.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float1.2%
Short Shares0.1M
Days to Cover1.0
Change (vs Prior)+6.8%
Short % Float History
1.20%-0.20pp
1.0%1.2%1.4%1.6%1.8%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)55%
Put IV (ATM)46%
ATM Spread12.6%
Call $OI (near money)$54K
Put $OI (near money)$35K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$40.0
Major Expirations3
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$22.50$14.00/$18.500--/$4.800
$25.00$11.50/$16.000--/$4.800
$30.00$7.00/$11.500--/$4.800
$35.00$2.60/$7.500--/$4.800
$40.00$0.20/$5.005$1.50/$5.900
$45.00--/$4.801$5.00/$9.500
$50.00--/$4.801$10.00/$14.000
$55.00--/$4.800$15.00/$19.000
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+4.2%
Forward FCF Margin3.8%
Forward EBITDA Margin7.1%
Forward P/FCF19.1x
Forward EV/FCF22.5x
Forward Int. Coverage11.4x
Model Risk Score7/10
Bankruptcy Odds4%
Est. Borrow Rate7.0%
Terminal EV/FCF10.0x
LT Growth2.5%
LT FCF Margin5.5%

Employees

Headcount1,057
Revenue / Employee$532,981
Gross Profit / Employee$112,864
2022: 1,131 → 2023: 1,065 → 2024: 1,057 → 2025: 1,191 (2% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 4.6% of float, sold 2.6%. 2 filers moved >1% of shares (1 buying, 1 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+2.1% of float (net)
Bought 4.6% · Sold 2.6%
74 filers reported (last quarter: 95)

Ownership composition

Active
39.3%(+11.5% YoY)
96 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
16.5%(+5.4% YoY)
9 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.1%(+0.0% YoY)
3 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
10.5%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
BRANDES INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LP$41.3M$18.23+$3.4M+$13.2M+2.6%$14.13B
22NW, LP$29.8M$14.28−$3.5M−$6.9M-1.0%$127M
GAMCO INVESTORS, INC. ET AL$25.2M$14.36−$465K−$853K-0.0%$10.15B
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$19.6M$21.02−$275K+$2.0M-0.2%$5.69T
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$19.3M$18.38−$42K−$281K-0.4%$480.92B
VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$10.7M$27.90+$10.7M+$10.7M$4.04T
RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC$8.8M$20.08−$396K−$963K+1.2%$63.91B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$6.4M$21.50−$131K+$195K+2.3%$1.61T
STATE STREET CORPPassive$4.3M$22.30+$193K+$510K-0.2%$2.89T
HOTCHKIS & WILEY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$3.8M$22.28−$132K−$289K-0.1%$31.89B
GABELLI FUNDS LLC$3.7M$14.72−$81K−$915K-0.2%$14.68B
ACADIAN ASSET MANAGEMENT LLC$3.6M$21.50+$0−$514K-0.5%$70.48B
Bragg Financial Advisors, Inc$3.2M$19.87+$3K+$15K-0.1%$3.16B
Teton Advisors, LLC$2.8M$26.95−$824K+$2.8M+4.7%$142M
UBS Group AG$2.7M$26.88+$2.2M+$2.3M-0.3%$562.11B
Minerva Advisors LLC$2.3M$11.48+$0+$116K-1.8%$155M
AMERICAN CENTURY COMPANIES INC$2.3M$25.31−$157K−$805K+0.7%$193.48B
Wealthspire Advisors, LLC$2.3M$27.11+$334K+$2.3M-0.3%$12.72B
NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive$2.2M$21.08+$84K+$35K-0.2%$755.34B
BRIDGEWAY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC$1.8M$21.10+$34K+$1.2M-2.3%$4.93B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BULLISH
Holders
+0.59%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
+0.52%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
+1.05%
40 buyers · $0.03B in
Sellers (this Q)
+0.34%
43 sellers · $0.01B out
alpha coverage: 94% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-21.8%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
-11.9%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-5.8%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+1.1%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
-0.2%
Sellers' overall flow ~ flat.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
+2.9%
Holder mid (any stock)
-1.4%
Holder rally (any stock)
-4.7%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

01.1M2.1M3.2M4.3M$9.68$14$19$23$282021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
BRANDES INVESTMENT PARTNERS, LP1.5M22NW, LP1.1MGAMCO INVESTORS, INC. ET AL901KRENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC316KAzarias Capital Management, L.P.RUTABAGA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC/MAFRANKLIN RESOURCES INCAncora Advisors LLC11KAMERIPRISE FINANCIAL INC22KTeton Advisors, Inc.

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Analyst Ratings
2
5
Buy: 2Hold: 5Consensus: Hold
Consensus Estimates
QuarterRevenueEBITDANet IncEPSEPS Range# Analysts
2025 Q3154M17M6M$0.61$0.60 – $0.632
2025 Q4158M17M7M$0.66$0.64 – $0.672
2026 Q1104M11M-2M$-0.21$-0.24 – $-0.182
2026 Q2134M14M5M$0.49$0.48 – $0.502
2026 Q3148M16M7M$0.63$0.60 – $0.652
2026 Q4149M16M6M$0.55$0.53 – $0.571
2027 Q1119M13M-2M$-0.18$-0.19 – $-0.171
2027 Q2155M17M7M$0.70$0.68 – $0.721
2027 Q3158M17M8M$0.77$0.75 – $0.791
2027 Q4154M17M8M$0.71$0.69 – $0.731

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2023-2025)

Direct Pay$28.6M
Incentive & Other$14.5M
Total Compensation$43.1M
% of Revenue2.7%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$272K
1 txn · 1 insider · 10,000 sh
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$7.94M
24 txns · 1 insider · 285,866 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-04-01SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner38,431$28.05$1.08M$28.81M
2026-03-31SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner1,500$28.02$42K$29.86M
2026-03-30SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner1,887$28.01$53K$29.89M
2026-03-27SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner862$28.02$24K$29.96M
2026-03-26SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner8,968$28.02$251K$29.98M
2026-03-25SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner2,716$28.09$76K$30.30M
2026-03-24SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner25,889$28.19$730K$30.49M
2026-03-23SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner78,414$28.51$2.24M$31.58M
2026-03-04SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner5,124$31.99$164K$37.94M
2025-12-12SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner13,512$26.79$362K$31.90M
2025-12-11SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner34,025$26.79$912K$32.28M
2025-12-10SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner11,248$26.83$302K$33.24M
2025-12-09SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner4,800$26.93$129K$33.65M
2025-12-08SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner9,765$27.28$266K$34.22M
2025-12-01SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner101$26.82$3K$33.91M
2025-11-28SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner1,307$27.09$35K$34.25M
2025-11-25SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner1,725$26.94$46K$34.10M
2025-11-24SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner27,003$26.84$725K$34.02M
2025-11-21SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner3,412$27.03$92K$34.99M
2025-11-17SELLEnglish Aron R.10 percent owner400$27.00$11K$35.04M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

8.9%retail-0.8pp
45.1%dark+10.4pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%20%30%40%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2026-Q1)
Product$105.2M+22%
Service$16.0M+42%

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

L.B. Foster Company: Opaque administrative metadata provides no basis for forensic conviction.

Overall Risk
5/10
Fraud
1/10
Dilution
1/10
Insolvency
1/10
Earnings Overstated
1/10
Hidden Liabilities
1/10
Legal
1/10
Audit Warnings
1/10
Hidden Upside
1/10
Contextually Acceptable
10/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

L.B. Foster reported a significant Q4 2025 earnings miss on March 3, 2026, with EPS of $0.22 vs. the $0.66 consensus (a 67% miss). While revenue of $160.4M beat expectations, the bottom line was severely impacted by a 64.8% effective tax rate and margin pressure in U.K. rail operations. More recently, on May 4, 2026, the company reported Q1 2026 results showing a 11.7% year-over-year decrease in backlog and a 4.7% drop in new orders, signaling slowing demand (Source: MarketBeat, Stock Titan).

🐻 Bear Case

The bear case centers on persistent earnings volatility and a contracting backlog that suggests the company's multi-year 'transformation' into a tech-focused provider is struggling to deliver consistent profitability. Management has attributed recent revenue spikes to the 'timing of large orders' rather than sustained growth, while core segments like Rail have seen volume pressure. Furthermore, the company has missed EPS estimates in multiple recent quarters (Q3 2025 and Q4 2025), leading to a decline in analyst sentiment and downward revisions for 2026 forecasts (Source: Simply Wall St, Seeking Alpha).

🚩 Red Flags

A major red flag is the significant insider selling by major shareholder Aron R. English, who sold over 107,000 shares (valued at ~$3.04M) in March 2026. Additionally, the company recently suffered a major infrastructure order cancellation which contributed to a 26.1% decline in that segment's backlog. Zacks Research downgraded the stock to a 'Strong Sell' in March 2026, citing these fundamental weaknesses (Source: TipRanks, MarketBeat).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

L.B. Foster faces intensifying pressure from larger global players in the rail and infrastructure space who possess greater scale and lower cost structures. The company also faces 'talent constraints' in software engineering, which threatens its strategic shift toward higher-margin digital rail solutions. Commodity-price volatility remains a persistent threat to its manufacturing-heavy segments (Source: Matrix BCG).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Customer sentiment appears cautious as evidenced by project deferrals and the aforementioned significant order cancellation in the Infrastructure segment. While government infrastructure spending (IIJA) provides a tailwind, the company's high book-to-bill ratio (0.95:1.00 in Q1 2026) indicates that it is currently depleting its backlog faster than it can secure new business (Source: Stock Titan, Barchart).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-05-04

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Q1 2026 L.B. Foster Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Lisa Durante, Director of Financial Reporting and Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Lisa Durante: Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to L.B. Foster's First Quarter of 2026 Earnings Call. My name is Lisa Durante, the company's Director of Financial Reporting and Investor Relations. Our President and CEO, John Kasel; and our Chief Financial Officer, Bill Thalman, will be presenting our first quarter operating results, market outlook and business developments this morning. We'll start the call with John providing his perspective on the company's first quarter performance. Bill will then review the company's first quarter financial results. John will provide perspective on market developments and company outlook in his closing comments. We will then open up the session for questions. Today's slide presentation, along with our earnings release and financial disclosures were posted on our website this morning and can be accessed on our Investor Relations page at lbfoster.com. Our comments this morning will follow the slides in the earnings presentation. Some statements we are making are forward-looking and represent our current view of our markets and business today. These forward-looking statements reflect our opinions only as of the date of this presentation, and we undertake no obligation to revise or publicly release the results of any revisions to these statements in light of new information, except as required by securities laws. For more detailed risks, uncertainties and assumptions relating to our forward-looking statements, please see the disclosures in our earnings release and presentation. We will also discuss non-GAAP financial metrics and encourage you to carefully read our disclosures and reconciliation tables provided within today's earnings release and presentation as you consider these metrics. So with that, let me turn the call over to John.
John Kasel: Thanks, Lisa, and hello, everybody. Thanks for joining us today for our first quarter earnings call. I'll begin with Slide 5, covering the key drivers for our results of the quarter. As you can see from our earnings release, we carried positive momentum generated at the end of last year into the first quarter, delivering strong results across the board. The robust sales growth in Q1 was as expected, up 23.9% over last year. The growth was highest in the Rail Group, which was up 38.4% over last year, with all business units delivering significant improvements. Sales for Infrastructure segment were also up 5.9%, driven by continuing demand in our precast concrete business. The strong sales growth translated into a significant improvement in profitability, with EBITDA up 183% over last year. The improved profitability was realized within our margins with gross profit up 27.5% and gross margins improving 60 basis points to 21.2% -- we also continue to leverage our operating structure with SG&A as a percent of sales declining 240 basis points compared to last year. Our normal working capital cycle increased total debt $16.9 million during the quarter as we prepared to support our customers' construction season. Our disciplined capital allocation approach reduced total debt $22.8 million compared to last year. Coupled with significant improvement in profitability in the quarter, our gross leverage was cut in half from 2.5x last year to 1.2x at quarter end. So in summary, we're really pleased with the strong start to the year, and we remain optimistic about our prospects for continued progress in 2026. I'll cover the market outlook and our financial guidance for the year after Bill runs through the financial details for the quarter. Over to you, Bill.
William Thalman: Thanks, John; and good morning, everyone. I'll begin my comments on Slide 7, covering the consolidated results for the first quarter. Reconciliations for non-GAAP information and other financial details are included in the appendix of the presentation. Net sales for the quarter were $121.1 million, up 23.9% over last year, primarily due to the strong growth in the Rail segment. As a reminder, last year's sales in Rail were weaker than normal due to a pause in government funding programs that delayed customer project work. As John mentioned, the consolidated gross profit was up 27.5% in the quarter, with gross margins improving 60 basis points to 21.2%. Both segments realized double-digit increases in gross profit in the quarter, highlighting the broad improvement realized in our results. I'll provide more color on segment sales and margins later in the presentation. SG&A expenses totaling $23 million were up $2.1 million or 9.9% compared to last year. The primary driver was higher employment costs, including a $1.2 million increase in incentive compensation expense with the improved results in Q1 compared to last year. This year's incentive expense also includes $0.7 million in accelerated stock compensation expense associated with annual incentive plan grants awarded to retirement-eligible employees. Despite the higher expenses year-over-year, the SG&A percent of sales improved 240 basis points to 19%. EBITDA was $5.2 million, up 183% versus last year, driven by the sales growth and improved gross profit. First quarter cash flow improved over last year with operating cash flow favorable $15.7 million on improved profitability and lower working capital needs. And lastly, consolidated orders and backlog were both lower compared to last year, 4.7% and 11.7%, respectively. I'll cover segment-specific drivers later in the presentation. The financial profile of our results on Slide 8 highlights the seasonality in the business over the last 3 years. We're entering the construction season for our customers, which typically translates to higher sales and profitability during our second and third quarters. Last year, first quarter sales were unusually low due to a pause in government funding impacting rail demand early in the year. These delays were resolved throughout 2025, resulting in an unusually strong fourth quarter last year. So while 2025 looks relatively normal compared to the averages, the quarterly splits last year were far from normal. This year's first quarter results represent a typical level of demand, and we expect the phasing of business to follow a more normal pattern in 2026. I'll cover the segment specific performance on the next couple of slides, starting with Rail on Slide #9. First quarter revenues were $74.8 million, up 38.4% compared to last year's soft start, primarily in Rail Products. The improvement was strongest for Rail Products with sales up 40.8% due to higher demand for rail distribution and transit products. Global Friction Management sales were up 39.5%, as this growth platform continues to perform well. Technology Services & Solutions sales were also up 29.1% due to short-term project work in our U.K. business. Rail margins of 21.6% were down 70 basis points, driven primarily by unfavorable sales mix with the higher Rail distribution volumes this year. Turning to Rail orders and backlog. Q1 orders were down 3.2% due to lower orders for Friction Management after a very strong level attained last year. Rail Product and TS&S orders were relatively flat compared to last year. And the Rail backlog was up 11.3% due to a large multiyear order secured in our U.K. business late last year. Turning to Infrastructure Solutions on Slide 10. Net sales increased $2.6 million or 5.9%. The improvement was realized in Precast Concrete with sales up 17.2%, highlighting the strong demand that continues in this growth platform. Steel Products sales declined $2.3 million, primarily due to lower bridge form volumes. Infrastructure gross profit increased $1.4 million with the margins up 200 basis points to 20.6%. The improvements were realized in Precast Concrete driven by higher sales volumes and favorable sales mix, coupled with improved manufacturing execution. I'll mention here that one cost driver we're starting to see elevate is fuel charges within our freight costs. This was not a big impact in Q1, but something we're working on mitigating starting here in Q2. Infrastructure orders declined $4.4 million due to lower intake for Pipeline Coatings after a very strong level in last year's first quarter. Partially offsetting were Precast Concrete orders up $2.3 million or 5.5%. Infrastructure backlog totaling $107.4 million is down $38 million versus last year. About $30 million of the decline was in Steel Products with $19 million due to the Summit Pipeline Coating order cancellation in Q3 last year. Precast Concrete backlog was also lower $8 million with reduced open orders for CXT buildings. I'll provide some additional color on segment orders and backlog at the end of my review. I'll next cover liquidity and leverage metrics on Slide 11. The chart reflects the ongoing improvement in our management of net debt and leverage. Net debt of $55.7 million was down $24.2 million compared to last year, with the gross leverage ratio cut in half to 1.2x, driven by improved profitability and lower working capital levels. Our capital-light business model has translated into significant cash generation over the last several years. As a reminder, we wrapped up the $8 million per year Union Pacific settlement payments at the end of 2024. Excluding these payments, we generated about $85 million in free cash flow over the last 3 years or approximately $28 million per year on average. We also have about $75 million in federal NOLs available, which should continue to minimize cash taxes for the next several years. We utilize a systematic disciplined approach to deploying capital across our priorities, which I'll now cover on Slide 12. Managing our debt and leverage at reasonable levels remains our top capital allocation priority. At the end of the first quarter, the gross leverage ratio per our revolving credit agreement was just under 1.2x, well within our target range of 1x to 1.5x. Seasonal working capital needs are expected to increase debt further in the second quarter, but we should stay around our target leverage range and remain favorable compared to last year. Capital spending in the first quarter totaled $3 million or 2.4% of sales. We have several targeted organic growth programs within our Precast Concrete business that we expect will increase the 2026 CapEx rate to 2.7% of sales approximately. We've also systematically repurchased our stock over the last 3 years with just over 1 million shares repurchased since early 2023, representing 9.3% of the outstanding shares. We did not make any open market repurchases in the first quarter after buying about 582,000 shares in 2025. We have $28.7 million authorized to spend on buybacks over the next 2 years, which represents approximately 9% of the shares stock value outstanding at today's valuation. As always, we will remain disciplined and conservative in our approach to this important capital allocation priority. And finally, we continue to evaluate tuck-in acquisitions to add breadth to our growth platforms, primarily in the Precast Concrete market space. I'll wrap up my comments with some additional color on order rates and backlog on Slides 13 and 14. We've mentioned in the past that order rates tend to be choppy for our business given the project nature of the work we support for our customers. Generally, orders received are fulfilled within a year with only about 10% of the open backlog relating to projects expected to extend beyond a year. On a consolidated basis, the trailing 12-month book-to-bill ratio at the end of the quarter was 0.95:1, down from both last year's first quarter and the end of 2025. The decline versus last year was driven by the lower ratio in Infrastructure at 0.84:1, driven primarily by the Summit order cancellation and softer Pipeline Coating order intake impacting Steel Products. Rail order rates overall remain positive with the trailing 12-month ratio at 1.03:1, although down from the end of 2025 after the strong finish last year. And lastly, the consolidated backlog reflected on Slide 14 totaled $209.6 million, down $27.6 million from last year, with the decline realized in Infrastructure stemming primarily from lower Pipeline Coating open orders, including the impact of the Summit order cancellation. We're focused on building our backlog across the business during the second quarter to set up a strong second half of the year. John will cover some additional backlog details and developments in his closing remarks. I'll wrap up here by saying we're very pleased with the start of 2026 and remain optimistic about the prospects for further progress this year. Thanks for the time this morning. I'll now hand it back to John for his closing remarks. Back to you, John.
John Kasel: Thanks, Bill. I'll begin my closing remarks on Slide 16, reviewing developments in our key end markets. Starting with Rail, Bill highlighted that the significant growth realized in Q1 was due to a return to normal customer demand levels after last year's slow start. The federal government programs that fund our customers' repair and maintenance projects remain active with no significant disruptions evident as of today. This should provide a favorable demand tailwind in the U.S. for our Rail Products for the foreseeable future. Friction Management had another phenomenal quarter with 39.5% sales growth to start the year. This is on top of 42% growth in the fourth quarter last year and 19% growth for all of 2025. We continue to invest our commercial and technology capabilities for this important growth platform, and we're targeting further domestic market penetration as well as geographic expansion into Western Europe. The total track monitoring product line was somewhat flat in the first quarter, but commercialization of our Rockfall monitoring product line is expected to provide lift in volumes as the year progresses. All in all, we expect a more normal year in demand for the Rail segment in 2026, which would be a significant improvement over last year. Turning to Infrastructure. The end market developments remain favorable as well. Precast Concrete sales were up 17% in Q1 after 20% growth in 2025. As expected, the backlog at the end of the quarter was a bit lower for the CXT buildings product line, which had a record year in 2025. However, civil construction activity remains robust, which is bolstering demand for Precast Concrete products, helping to mitigate the lower building volumes. We're also seeing demand for our Envirokeeper water management solution continue to increase, and we're making capital investments to support further growth of this product line. So all in all, we're off to a great start for Precast and expect growth to continue as 2026 unfolds. Turning to Steel Products. Market conditions continue to improve, driven primarily by the recovery of oil and gas investments and favorable impact on our Protective Coatings product lines. Steel Products sales declined slightly in the first quarter due to softer demand for our bridge forms, while Protective Coatings were essentially flat in Q1 after nearly 43% growth in 2025. Bill mentioned the Infrastructure backlog was down primarily to the Summit order cancellation that was communicated last year, coupled with lower bookings for Protective Coatings. But it's important to note that bidding activity remains robust, and we believe the market recovery for domestic energy and pipeline investments will translate into improving Protective Coatings backlog. In summary, we believe we're well positioned for continuing growth across our key end markets and product lines with ongoing emphasis on our growth platforms, noting that the volatile geopolitical environment has not had a significant impact to date on our end markets or demand of our products. Of course, we'll continue to monitor conditions and adjust as necessary. So in conclusion, we're off to a great start in 2026, which allows us to reaffirm our financial guidance, which I'll cover in my closing remarks now on Slide 17. I'll start by highlighting again the significant progress we made through 2025. I'm very proud with our team's accomplishments and the strong start to 2026 highlights the favorable momentum we've generated in the business. The year-over-year growth and profitability expansion achieved in our first quarter results was primarily driven by a recovery to normal demand conditions for our Rail business. One way to look at the favorable momentum in our results is our trailing 12 months metrics with sales of $563.4 million and adjusted EBITDA of $42.4 million. Both metrics are already at or near the midpoints of our 2026 full year guidance. So as long as quotation activity remains strong and backlog builds in line with expectations, we should be well positioned to deliver a strong year of growth in 2026. So in closing, we're reaffirming our full year financial guidance for now, and we'll revisit our outlook after the second quarter. Thank you for your time and continuing interest in L.B. Foster. I'll turn it back to the operator for the Q&A session.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] And our first question will be coming from Liam Burke of B. Riley Securities.
Liam Burke: John, I mean in your prepared comments, you talked about Friction Management, which is a great driver of growth and margin. How difficult is it to take the North American model and move it over to European markets?
John Kasel: Well, that's -- well, first of all, thanks for joining us today, Liam. And we've been working on that actually for the last 5 years of getting that acceptance, not just here in North America, but getting the excitement of this product over specifically in Western Europe, and we're going through Germany to make that happen. So we started working directly with the largest German transit authority over there, getting acceptance and accreditation of the product, and we're looking for continued interest as well as actual orders and sales happening this year -- end of this year as well as going to next year. So it is a slower adoption, if you will, because of the brand recognition is primarily North America, but they're picking up on the excitement, especially in the transit space over there because it's just adding so much value. They're seeing the value. And the world is -- as far as friction management is relatively small. And so we're pretty excited about what we have right now and the ability to continue to grow that.
Liam Burke: Great. Bill, you had negative operating cash flow for the quarter, which is perfectly normal for seasonality purposes. But on a year-over-year basis, as you point out in your comments, it was significantly better. What contributed to that improvement?
William Thalman: Yes. A few things, Liam. The profitability of the business overall, first of all, was much better. And then working capital needs this quarter were also a bit lower. And then the incentive arrangements for the company were a bit higher last year than they were this year just in terms of the payouts. So we would expect, where our working capital is at the moment, we will start to build further through the second quarter as we start to get ready for the growth expectations we see through the balance of the year. But just timing of some of the [indiscernible] a lot of time thinking about and addressing our U.K. business and the working capital deployed over there. So the model actually requires less working capital, and that's part of the benefit that we saw in Q1.
Liam Burke: So just a quick follow-up, and I'll turn it over. Do you see any change in your overall working capital metrics or is it just normal quarter-to-quarter seasonality?
William Thalman: I would say, overall, we are running at a lower working capital need overall on an average as a percentage of sales.
Operator: [Operator Instructions]. Our next question will be coming from Julio Romero of Sidoti & Company.
Julio Romero: Bill, you mentioned that fuel costs within freight -- fuel charges within freight costs for Infrastructure Solutions are starting to creep up, not a big surprise there given the macro front. But can you highlight if higher fuel and freight costs are isolated to just the Infrastructure Solutions segment or is it the broader portfolio? And then also how you're navigating these costs? And are there other -- are there any other rising input costs that are worth highlighting?
William Thalman: Yes. So maybe just to start with the fuel costs. Certainly, that would be within our inbound and outbound freight cost structure. Obviously, with the current market conditions, that's been an escalating cost that we're seeing across the portfolio. It's the most significant for sure, within Infrastructure, just given the delivery costs associated with the Precast Products being a heavier overall tare weight. But we've had different programs that we're implementing in terms of pricing where we can to mitigate those costs. Just like any other company, that's something that we're looking to pass on. It wasn't a significant driver in Q1, but certainly starting to see it here in Q2, and we're managing that cost with pricing actions where we can. And then I guess to follow up on your other question, in terms of other escalating costs, nothing of significance at this point that we would point to.
Julio Romero: Okay. Very helpful there. You highlighted you're seeing some early signs that the actions taken in the U.K. Rail business are translating into improvements. Is that business becoming less of a drag? Was it less of a drag to your pretax profit here in the first quarter than it was in the fourth quarter? And what kind of sequential improvement in that business is kind of embedded in the 2026 outlook?
John Kasel: Yes. So our actions are definitely taking hold. We made a number of structural changes over there as well as focus on what business that we have and more importantly, what we want to do over there, and so we're seeing the benefits of that. And when Bill was mentioning the working capital as far as the amount of working capital as a percent of sales, that's a big part of our improvement year-over-year. So we're very pleased with where we're at right now, and we'll continue to make sure that we stay in front of what it is. But it's a big part of our company. It's a big part of Rail. When we talk about the year-over-year improvement and the improvement of profitability, that's where the technology innovation is. And when earlier question by Liam, that's a big part of our continued growth that we're doing, specifically in Friction Management, and that's kind of our gateway to make that happen. So we're -- we've been taking quite a bit of action, and we're going to stay focused to make sure that it's where we want it to be. But we are pleased with the first quarter results and coming out of where we ended last year.
Julio Romero: Excellent. And then last one for me would just be if you could touch on the inorganic growth pipeline for Precast Products and any other market penetration initiatives you currently have underway within Precast Products?
John Kasel: Well, first of all, we really focus on organic. I just want to make sure we really hammer that. We got a lot of really good exciting things going on, and that's where we're taking our capital. Bill mentioned we spent $3 million of capital in the quarter, 2.4% of sales. We talked about spending 2.7% as far as the year. That's where we're spending our money because we got great growth, organic growth programs going on right now, specifically in the Infrastructure business and namely in Concrete. And of course, we have our filter related to other inorganic opportunities where it makes sense. We will -- we continue to look at bolt-on type operations and that we will be able to add additional product lines or geographic expansion for us. And they're out there, and we're working through options or opportunities right now. But first and foremost, we're executing on what we have in front of us, and that's some nice growth here organically in those specific businesses. So we're pleased with results to date.
Operator: And I would now like to turn the call back to John Kasel for closing remarks.
John Kasel: Well, thank you, operator. Thank you for joining us today. And I'd like to close with 2 points maybe that didn't come up today in the call or specifically as it relates to the quarter. And Bill mentioned that our order rates are choppy and the project work and that's true that you see in our sales, sometimes it [indiscernible] as we close the quarter, we had a very strong April for order intake about 15% was added to our backlog in the month of April across the entire company. So we talked a lot about momentum in Q4. We had a strong finish to the year. And we're here telling you now that momentum is carried in Q1. [indiscernible] concerns are not with us today. We have plenty of work to be able to achieve what we want to get done this year, and we're seeing that uplift happening across the company [indiscernible] and of course, bidding activity is extremely strong as well. The last point I'd like to leave with you is our ability to pull this off and do it well. And I'd just like to call out the Infrastructure Group, Precast and our Steel Products side, that performed the entire quarter with 0 injuries in our company. And I think that's just a great testament to not just the fact that we're here now 124 years, but we're here really curating a culture of safety and performance and really a commitment to our employees of doing it right. And the Infrastructure Group, led by Bob Ness, has done just a tremendous job of doing it right each and every day and keeping our employees safe and getting our products to our customer. So -- and we'll continue to work on that, and we'll continue to strive into a wonderful second quarter. So we're looking forward to catch up with you at the end of Q2, and I wish everybody a wonderful start to May. Take care. We'll talk to you next time.
Operator: And this concludes today's program. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.