Stocks/STRR

STRR

Star Equity Holdings, Inc.
Healthcare·Medical - Diagnostics & Research
$11.62
$43M market cap
Claude Rating
2/10SHORT
Revenue
$190.3M
Free Cash Flow
$-13.4M
Rev Growth
+287.3%
FCF Margin
-7.0%
P/FCF
--
EV/FCF
--
Fwd EV/EBITDA
11.9x
Fair Value
$6.00
Upside
-48.4%

Star Equity Holdings, Inc. provides healthcare solutions in the United States and internationally. It operates through four segments: Diagnostic Services, Diagnostic Imaging, Construction, and Investments. It offers imaging services primarily to cardiologists, internal medicine physicians, and family practice doctors; and imaging systems, including nuclear cardiac and general purpose nuclear imaging systems to physician offices and hospitals. The company also develops, sells, and maintains solid

2-Year Price History

$11.48-24.8%
$10$12$14$16$18volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q150.0-0.5---2.3---2.0-0.89.2----------
Est2027-Q454.01.4---1.1---0.8-1.111.2----------
Est2027-Q360.03.0--0.3--1.2-0.912.0----------
Est2027-Q257.02.3---0.6--0.3-1.010.8----------
Est2027-Q148.0-1.0---2.6---2.4-0.710.5----------
Est2026-Q452.01.0---1.6---1.3-1.012.9----------
Est2026-Q358.02.6---0.3--0.9-0.914.2----------
Est2026-Q255.01.9---0.8---0.6-1.013.4----------
Act2026-Q150.1-3.7-4.0-3.8-1.4-2.7-1.313.926.83.7-28.2%-284.9x--
Act2025-Q456.80.2-0.1-1.7-3.9-4.9-1.015.926.43.5-0.8%----
Act2025-Q348.0-0.9-1.6-1.8-2.7-3.4-0.619.323.03.3-11.5%----
Act2025-Q235.50.0-0.2-0.7-1.7-2.4-0.716.81.03.2-11.0%----
Act2025-Q112.9-1.6-2.9-1.20.60.2-0.416.60.93.2-105.8%-86.9x--
Act2024-Q417.14.73.6-2.5-1.5-3.9-2.417.01.13.2159.8%1555.3x--
Act2024-Q313.7-4.3-5.3-2.00.60.4-0.215.81.33.2-190.2%----
Act2024-Q235.70.1-0.2-0.4-1.9-1.9-0.014.71.13.2-7.0%----
Act2024-Q19.1-2.3-3.0-2.2-2.4-2.6-0.220.23.44.1-35.3%----
Act2023-Q414.1-0.2-0.81.70.0-0.1-0.123.23.64.1-5.6%----
Act2023-Q310.4-1.1-1.7-2.60.80.5-0.425.02.24.1-19.1%----
Act2023-Q28.9-1.4-2.025.6-4.3-4.4-0.126.21.84.1-21.5%----
Act2023-Q125.71.80.70.45.15.0-0.19.213.24.112.1%67.5x--
Act2022-Q432.13.42.11.9-3.6-4.3-0.77.95.44.151.5%10.8x--
Act2022-Q311.10.4-0.5-1.9-3.2-3.7-0.511.717.74.1-4.3%----
Act2022-Q216.8-0.3-0.8-1.63.63.2-0.416.217.74.1-6.7%----
Act2022-Q125.1-1.5-2.6-3.7-0.6-1.0-0.416.220.04.1-29.7%-7.7x--

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude2/10SHORTFV: $6.00

Star Equity Holdings is a micro-cap conglomerate with a highly complex capital structure, persistent operating losses, and questionable capital allocation. Despite 57% revenue growth from the Hudson merger, EBITDA losses widened and the massive Q1 2026 EPS miss (-$1.17 vs -$0.29 est) reveals that scale is not translating into profitability. The Building Solutions backlog is deteriorating (0.72x book-to-bill), Business Services faces secular headwinds in global staffing, and corporate costs have nearly tripled post-merger. The multi-layered preferred stock structure with cumulative perpetual dividends and poison pill rights creates a permanent value trap for common shareholders. Annual dilution of 12.7% is destructive. The GEE Group acquisition bid signals empire-building rather than disciplined capital return. With ~18 months of cash runway, negative FCF margins, and an analyst downgrade to Hold, this is a classic value trap masquerading as a diversified holding company.

Catalyst Successful monetization of the $20M in non-core real estate and private equity assets could provide liquidity relief and a near-term positive catalyst, as could a sharp recovery in the construction backlog or global hiring cycle improvement in H2 2026.
Risk Cash burn continues or accelerates, forcing dilutive equity issuance or preferred dividend deferral, while the complex capital structure ensures common shareholders are last in line for any residual value. The 18-month cash runway with negative FCF is the existential risk.
Trend
DETERIORATING
Mgmt
4/10
Quarter
2/10
Exp. Move
-12.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Star Equity Holdings reported mixed Q1 2026 results, with revenue jumping 57% year-over-year to $50.1 million following its late 2025 merger. Despite the top-line growth, the company posted an adjusted EBITDA loss of $1.6 million due to seasonal weather disruptions in its Building Solutions division and a challenging global hiring environment for its Business Services segment. However, the Energy Services division performed exceptionally well, gaining market share in geothermal and mining sectors and contributing $1.0 million in adjusted EBITDA. Management highlighted successful cost-saving measures, with merger synergies reaching $2.6 million, surpassing expectations. They also discussed strategic initiatives, including a potential acquisition bid for GEE Group and the ongoing monetization of $20 million in non-core real estate and private equity assets. While Q1 was seasonally soft, CEO Jeff Eberwein expressed confidence in a recovery, pointing toward a strong project pipeline and analyst expectations for a return to profitability in Q2. The company remains active in its share repurchase program, signaling a belief that the market is undervaluing the long-term potential of its diversified business model.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$11.62
Market Cap$43M
Enterprise Value$56M
P/S Ratio0.2x
P/FCF--
EV/FCF--
FCF Margin (TTM)-7.0%
FCF Yield-31.2%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution16.8%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$190.3M
Net Income$-8.0M
Free Cash Flow$-13.4M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+287.3%
EBITDA Margin-2.3%
Net Margin-4.2%
FCF Margin-7.0%
CapEx % of Revenue1.9%
SBC % of Revenue0.2%
ROIC-12.9%
WC Change % Rev-9.0%
Interest Coverage-334.5x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$-0.29
-102.5% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$-11M
− Net Debt$13M
= Fair Equity$-1M
Revenue Growth3.8% → 2.0%
FCF Margin-7.0% → 3.0%
Discount Rate16.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float0.2%
Short Shares0.0M
Days to Cover1.4
Change (vs Prior)-2.1%
Short % Float History
0.20%-0.10pp
0.5%1.0%1.5%04-3007-1509-3011-2801-3004-30

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+11.9%
Forward FCF Margin-1.6%
Forward EBITDA Margin2.2%
Forward P/FCF--
Forward EV/FCF--
Forward Int. Coverage21.7x
Model Risk Score8/10
Bankruptcy Odds12%
Est. Borrow Rate12.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x
LT Growth2.0%
LT FCF Margin3.0%

Employees

Headcount194
Revenue / Employee$981,206
Gross Profit / Employee$427,995

Cash Runway

12.5months
WATCH

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NEUTRAL
Net flow · still filing
No float data — flow unavailable.

Ownership composition

Active
16.6%(-12.7% YoY)
18 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
3.0%(-4.8% YoY)
3 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.0%(+0.0% YoY)
1 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
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
Mink Brook Asset Management LLC$3.2M$12.63+$17K+$523K+0.1%$179M
Cable Car Capital, LP$1.0M$10.84+$439K+$1.0M-23.4%$238M
RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC$832K$15.46+$23K+$119K+1.2%$63.91B
North Star Investment Management Corp.$565K$10.28+$565K+$565K-0.4%$1.65B
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$549K$16.02+$0−$60K-0.2%$5.69T
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$430K$33.93−$144K−$307K-0.4%$480.92B
RBF Capital, LLC$289K$40.67+$0+$0+0.2%$2.03B
Manatuck Hill Partners, LLC$272K$22.57−$54K−$344K-2.0%$305M
BRIDGEWAY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC$252K$28.80+$0+$25K-2.3%$4.93B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$251K$23.39−$70K−$28K+2.3%$1.61T
HOTCHKIS & WILEY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$123K$40.67+$0−$3.2M-0.1%$31.89B
Rothschild Wealth LLC$116K$11.25−$565K+$116K-6.3%$1.10B
CWM, LLC$22K$10.28+$22K+$22K-0.1%$37.83B
SBI Securities Co., Ltd.$5K$11.12+$0+$5K+0.9%$3.62B
Tower Research Capital LLC (TRC)MM$3K$16.83−$0+$3K-0.6%$3.84B
ROYAL BANK OF CANADA$1K$21.75+$0+$1K-0.2%$526.36B
FEDERATED HERMES, INC.$0$23.54−$0−$0-1.1%$61.33B
MORGAN STANLEY$0$20.69+$0−$8K-0.3%$1.65T
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL WEALTH MANAGEMENT CO$0$10.28+$0+$0+0.0%$162.09B
UBS Group AG$0$36.90−$1K+$0-0.3%$562.11B
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)BEARISH
Holders
-3.78%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-3.67%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-9.45%
6 buyers · $0.00B in
Sellers (this Q)
-5.77%
7 sellers · $0.00B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-17.7%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
-3.6%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-12.6%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
-6.8%
outflows — trims may be forced
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+6.0%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
+1.5%
Holder mid (any stock)
-1.4%
Holder rally (any stock)
-7.8%

Top Holders Over Time

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

0300K601K901K1.2M$8.51$17$25$33$412021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
HOTCHKIS & WILEY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC12KHEARTLAND ADVISORS INCJACOB ASSET MANAGEMENT OF NEW YORK LLCRENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC81KMink Brook Asset Management LLC316KHighTower Advisors, LLCManatuck Hill Partners, LLC27KPERRITT CAPITAL MANAGEMENT INCMariner, LLCInformed Momentum Co LLC

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2021-2023)

Direct Pay$6.5M
Incentive & Other$0.0M
Total Compensation$6.5M
% of Revenue2.1%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$70K
10 txns · 4 insiders · 6,902 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$4.30M
19 txns · 1 insider · 409,444 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$3.73M
12 txns · 1 insider · 417,960 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-05-21BUYEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer4,198$10.90$46K$11.55M
2026-05-21BUYFruhbeis Todd Michaeldirector400$10.98$4K$148K
2026-05-20BUYEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer406$10.18$4K$10.74M
2026-05-20BUYFruhbeis Todd Michaeldirector1$10.25$10$134K
2026-05-19BUYEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer13,799$10.09$139K$10.64M
2026-03-31BUYZabkowicz Jacobofficer: CEO Hudson Talent SolutionsLLC150$10.61$2K$1.92M
2026-03-30SELLEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer7,722$9.95$77K$7.60M
2026-03-27SELLEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer7,354$9.98$73K$7.70M
2026-03-27BUYFruhbeis Todd Michaeldirector800$10.12$8K$132K
2026-03-27BUYParks Louis A.director1,500$10.01$15K$93K
2026-03-26BUYFruhbeis Todd Michaeldirector800$10.16$8K$125K
2026-03-26SELLEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer424$9.83$4K$7.66M
2026-03-25BUYColeman Richard Kenneth Jr.officer: Chief Operating Officer977$9.95$10K$189K
2026-03-25SELLEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer7,500$9.95$75K$7.76M
2026-03-25BUYFruhbeis Todd Michaeldirector800$9.78$8K$112K
2025-12-31BUYEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer1,977$11.09$22K$11.18M
2025-12-30BUYEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer5,291$11.26$60K$11.33M
2025-12-30SELLEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer4,365$9.12$40K$7.18M
2025-12-29BUYEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer9,709$11.25$109K$11.25M
2025-12-29SELLEberwein Jeffrey E.director, 10 percent owner, officer: Chief Executive Officer2,635$9.25$24K$7.32M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

62.6%retail+18.9pp
1.3%dark-1.9pp
week of 2026-04-13
0%20%40%60%80%24-1125-0525-0925-1126-0126-0326-04retail (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 (2025-Q2)
Building And Construction$15.1MNEW
Energy Service$3.3MNEW
Investments Division$0.1MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

Star Equity Holdings: A Complex Web of Preferred Layers and Poison Pills

Overall Risk
7/10
Fraud
3/10
Dilution
9/10
Insolvency
5/10
Earnings Overstated
4/10
Hidden Liabilities
6/10
Legal
4/10
Audit Warnings
5/10
Hidden Upside
2/10
Contextually Acceptable
4/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

In May 2026, Star Equity Holdings reported a massive Q1 earnings miss, with an EPS of -$1.17 compared to the estimated -$0.29, a -395% negative surprise. Revenue of $50.1 million also fell short of the $52.57 million consensus. The net loss attributable to common shareholders more than doubled to $4.4 million from $1.8 million year-over-year. Additionally, the company recently announced a controversial proposal to acquire GEE Group (JOB) for $0.30 per share in a stock-for-stock deal, a move viewed skeptically by some due to GEE's 95% stock decline over the last decade (Zacks, GuruFocus).

🐻 Bear Case

The bear case centers on structural unprofitability and deteriorating operational metrics. The Building Solutions segment's book-to-bill ratio plummeted to 0.72 in Q1 2026, signaling a significant slowdown in future revenue. Management cited 'severe winter weather' and 'macroeconomic pressures' as primary drags, but the persistence of adjusted EBITDA losses—widening to $1.6 million from $0.7 million—suggests that merger synergies from the 2025 Hudson Global deal are not yet offsetting rising corporate and operational costs (The Motley Fool, Stock Titan).

🚩 Red Flags

A major red flag is the widening gap between revenue growth and profitability; despite a 57% revenue jump post-merger, net losses and EBITDA losses both increased significantly. Corporate costs ballooned to $1.7 million in Q1 2026 from $0.6 million a year prior. Furthermore, Maxim Group downgraded the stock from 'Buy' to 'Hold' following earlier price target cuts, and the stock has significantly underperformed the S&P 500, dropping ~16% year-to-date in 2026 while the market rose (GuruFocus, MarketBeat).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

STRR faces intense cyclical and macro-driven competition across its fragmented divisions. The Building Solutions segment is currently losing momentum due to a broader slowdown in both commercial and residential construction activity. Meanwhile, the Business Services (staffing) arm is struggling in a 'challenging talent environment' and saw an 8% drop in gross profit in its Asia-Pacific operations, suggesting a loss of market share or pricing power in key international markets (The Motley Fool).

💬 Customer Sentiment

While management claims underlying demand remains intact, the practical sentiment is reflected in 'delayed contracting awards' and a sharp decline in the project backlog. The significant drop in the book-to-bill ratio suggests that customers are hesitating to commit to new projects under current macroeconomic conditions, particularly in the modular housing and construction sectors (Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-05-12

Operator: Greetings, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Star Equity Holdings First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. Please be advised that the discussions on today's call may include forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements involve certain risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. Please refer to Star Equity's most recent 10-K, 10-Q and other filings for a more complete description of risk factors that could affect these projections and assumptions. The company assumes no obligation to update forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Please also note that on this call, management may reference non-GAAP financial measures, including EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per share, which are all financial measures not recognized under U.S. GAAP. As required by SEC rules and regulations, these non-GAAP financial measures are reconciled to the most comparable GAAP financial measures in our earnings release issued yesterday afternoon. If you did not receive a copy of the earnings release and would like one after the call, please contact Star Equity at (203) 489-9500 or its Investor Relations representative, Lena Cati of The Equity Group at (212) 836-9611. Also, this call is being broadcast live over the Internet and may be accessed at the Star Equity's website via www.starequity.com. Shortly after the call, a replay will also be available on the company's website. It is now my pleasure to introduce Jeff Eberwein, Chief Executive Officer of Star Equity.
Jeffrey Eberwein: Thank you, operator, and welcome, everyone. We greatly appreciate your interest in Star Equity Holdings and we thank you for joining us today. I'll begin by reviewing the first quarter results for 2026 at the holding company level. After that, Jake Zabkowicz, Global CEO of Hudson Talent Solutions, will give us an update on the performance of our Business Services division. Finally, Rick Coleman, our Chief Operating Officer, will provide additional insights into the performance of our Building Solutions and Energy Services divisions. As highlighted on Slide 3 of our earnings slides deck, our first quarter results reflect the merger we completed last August with revenue and gross profit showing strong year-over-year growth. These increases were driven largely by the inclusion of Star operating companies' results beginning after the merger closed August 22, 2025. We have realized approximately $2.6 million of merger synergies on an annualized basis, as shown on Slide 4. And that beats our initial expectation of about $2 million in merger synergies. Going back to the first quarter, we were impacted by the timing of new project starts and broader macroeconomic conditions. Despite these near-term pressures, we continued to make progress advancing our strategic priorities and strengthening our operating platform. Revenue increased 57% year-over-year to $50.1 million. Gross profit increased 25% to $20.6 million. We reported an adjusted EBITDA loss of $1.6 million compared to a loss of $0.7 million in the prior year period. At the division level, our performance was mixed. Energy Services delivered a strong quarter and continued to gain market share across key end markets. Business Services was worse than expected in a challenging talent environment and we continue to invest for growth. Building Solutions was impacted by delayed project awards and weather-related disruptions. That said, we're already seeing signs of improvement as we move through the second quarter, supported by new business wins, improving activity levels and continued operational and cost focus across the organization. As shown on Slide 5, we ended the first quarter with $10.3 million of total cash, including $2.2 million of restricted cash. During Q1, we used $1.4 million in operating cash flow. We generated a little over $3 million from the sale-leaseback transactions. We repurchased about $700,000 of stock on our share repurchase program and we have $1.8 million remaining under the current authorization. Over the last 12 months, we've repurchased approximately $3.3 million of stock. And we continue to believe our stock is undervalued. And we view share repurchases as an extremely attractive use of our capital. Across the company, we remain focused on disciplined execution, cost management and investing in growth initiatives that we believe will enhance our competitive position and drive improved financial performance over the balance of the year. Now, I'll turn it over to Jake to discuss our Hudson Talent Solutions business.
Jacob Zabkowicz: Thank you, Jeff, and good morning. Our Business Services division continued to demonstrate solid top-line growth in the first quarter despite the challenging macroeconomic environment impacting many industries. As shown on Slide 10 of the deck, revenue increased by 9.8% and HTS year-over-year gross profit increased 6.4%, reflecting steady improvement despite continued macroeconomic sustained pressures in the Talent market. Regionally, the Americas and EMEA performed well with gross profit growth of 21% and 11%, respectively, partially offset by an 8% decline in Asia Pac market, where the conditions remained more challenging. We have maintained a strong focus on innovation and operational efficiencies, including the expanded deployment of our Agentic AI solutions to enhance recruiter productivity, improve candidate matching and deliver greater value to our clients. These efforts are helping us navigate the current environment while positioning us to capitalize on improving market conditions in the future. As an example, new business activity accelerated meaningfully in the first quarter of 2026, exceeding levels seen in any quarter of 2025. We've also achieved multiple renewals in Q1 with many of our existing clients opting for a noncompetitive engagement process. This shows the depth and breadth of our partnerships in a very competitive market. We continue to take steps to strengthen our partnerships, maintain a disciplined approach to our investments and grow the business. We are executing our playbook of land-and-expand with recent wins coming off the acquisition in Japan, giving us a foothold to address previously untapped opportunities. We have also taken steps to recalibrate our business in the Middle East, maintaining our commitment to have a presence in the region, but being realistic about the opportunity there given the broader macroeconomic environment. Additionally, the enhancements to our geographical footprint and our product offerings, particularly our digital offering, have driven robust new logo interest. We have seen an uptick in customer conversations in recent months and are focused on forging long-term client relationships. We'll continue to take a disciplined approach as we execute our playbook for the remainder of the year. Looking ahead, we are focused on creating a more resilient, agile and growth-oriented business for the longer term. Now, I'm turning the call over to Rick, who will discuss the financial and operational performance of our Building Solutions and our Energy Services divisions. Rick?
Richard Coleman: Thanks, Jake, and good morning, everyone. I'll start with Building Solutions highlighted on Slide 8. First quarter performance, which normally -- while normally soft in the quarter, was below our expectations. A combination of delayed contract awards, severe winter weather across our key markets and continued macroeconomic pressures put downward pressure on both commercial and residential construction activity. Revenue for the quarter was $11.6 million. Gross profit was $1.6 million and adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $900,000. While these results were impacted by near-term factors, our sales pipeline and customer conversations indicate underlying demand remains intact. We're also encouraged by recent wins, including a $4.2 million New Hampshire multifamily housing project we announced in April. Moving on to Slide 9. Our quarter end backlog was $8.0 million, while the book-to-bill ratio of 0.72 is a significant decline from Q4. It partially reflects the timing of significant projects, which slipped from Q1 to Q2. We expect backlog to rebuild as activity normalizes throughout the remainder of the year. Consistent with the strategy we outlined previously, we remain focused on disciplined project selection, operational execution and margin management. We believe these priorities, combined with improving market conditions, position the business for stronger performance as the year progresses. Turning to Slide 13. The Energy Services division delivered a strong quarter, maintaining the momentum we highlighted last quarter. Revenue was $3.5 million, gross profit was $1.5 million and adjusted EBITDA was $1 million. The business continues to gain share in core markets with particularly strong mining and geothermal performance. These results reflect disciplined execution and the benefits of our diversified exposure across billing applications, which continues to differentiate the platform and support consistent growth. Importantly, the division's strong growth has come as a result of market share gains in a declining rig count environment. We continue to invest in new tools to support this growth and believe the division is positioned to perform well in all conditions. Recognizing that we represent a relatively small percentage of our customers' -- our largest customers' purchases, we're also incorporating their specific needs in our investment decisions. In general, we believe we have significant opportunities to expand our presence in the geographies and markets we serve. I'll now turn the call back over to Jeff for closing remarks. Jeff?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Thank you, Rick. While the first quarter reflected expected seasonality and some near-term challenges, we're encouraged by improving activity levels, recent business wins and the continued strength of our Energy Services platform. As we look ahead, our priorities remain consistent, driving organic growth, improving operational efficiency and maintaining a rigorous approach to capital allocation. In parallel, we continue to evaluate accretive M&A opportunities across our operating divisions as well as potential new verticals where we can apply our operating model. Our confidence in the path forward is grounded in the progress made over the past year. 2025 marked a pivotal period for Star following the August merger. We're beginning to realize the benefits of shared services, enhanced collaboration and a more diversified holding company structure. This has strengthened our operating and financial position, expanded our strategic flexibility and increased our capacity to execute on a multipronged growth strategy. Across the organization, we're investing in people, technology and processes to enhance scalability, deepen competitive advantages and drive margin expansion and cash generation. This disciplined approach, combining organic execution with targeted external growth positions us to compound value over time. With a stronger platform and a clear strategic road map, we believe we're well positioned to navigate the current environment and deliver improved performance over the balance of the year. We remain confident in our long-term outlook and continue to believe our shares are undervalued relative to the strength of our business and the opportunities ahead. Operator, can you please open the line for questions?
Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question today comes from Joe Gomes with NOBLE Capital.
Joseph Gomes: Jeff, I don't know if you could give us a little more insight into your recent announcement on GEE Group and what you think your game plan for that investment is?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Sure. Thanks for asking, Joe. We identified GEE Group as an interesting investment, partly because it was trading below cash per share, which you don't see very often. And also, we thought it could potentially be a good fit for our Business Services division and could have some synergies with our Hudson Talent business. And on top of that, Star itself is an amalgamation of a few different companies. And we completed a merger last year where we initially thought we would realize cost savings of $2 million and that number came in at $2.6 million. So we've shown -- we believe we've shown that merging another microcap into our structure, we can reduce a significant amount of unneeded duplicative costs. And on GEE Group specifically, we were glad that they hired a financial adviser and that they decided to run a more formal process. And we are participating from the outside. We only have public information. We don't have any material nonpublic information on GEE Group at this time. And we decided to really kick off the bidding process, for lack of a better term, by throwing a number out there. And importantly, our bid is contingent on the management team there agreeing to more normal and customary severance. So we'll see how it plays out. There's scenarios where we could be the winning bidder. There's scenarios where other people outbid us. And when we enter into these situations, we like to own somewhere between 5% and 10% of the target. So if we are outbid, we make money in our investment. And it also gives us more credibility when we go public and bid, that we are also a shareholder. So we'll just have to wait and see how it plays out. But either way, either one of those outcomes would be positive for us if we end up being a winning bidder or if someone outbids us and we make a nice profit on our investment.
Joseph Gomes: Okay. Thanks for the uptake. And then one of the things we've talked about in the past is monetization of some of the real estate assets and/or some of the private investments that you guys have. And maybe you could give us an update there? And kind of similarly, you've got the Oxford Maine plant that you've talked about potentially restarting. Where does that stand at this point?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Yes. Great -- Another great questions, Joe. So we have talked about having, we believe, at least $20 million of assets that don't really generate any EBITDA or certainly not meaningful EBITDA, that will get -- we believe will get converted to cash over time. And we did demonstrate that by completing the sale leasebacks on the assets that came with the Alliance Drilling Tools acquisition that we made a little over 1 year ago. And the 2 remaining significant pieces of real estate we own, one is the real estate that came with the Timber Technology acquisition 2 years ago. And then as you pointed out, we have an idle factory in Maine. And both of those pieces of real estate we believe could either be monetized via sale-leaseback transaction or just sold for cash. And I think -- I can't remember the estimate off the top of my head, but it's in our investor deck, it's somewhere in the $8 million to $10 million range for those 2 added together, we believe. And then on the Catalyst MedTech investment, the majority shareholder there is a private equity firm in New York City. And that business is doing well once again, completing acquisitions, having nice growth, having a nice future. And like all private equity investments, the private equity firm will exit at some point. And our policy has always been -- we're just going to mark this investment using the same methodology that the PE firm does. And so there was a downturn -- a temporary downturn in the performance of that company. And so the PE firm marked it down on their books. This was in the -- I think really the 2024 time frame, that might have continued into 2025. And so we just marked it down on our books the same way they marked it down on their books. And then, now that performance has improved, they have marked it back up to our original mark from when we closed that transaction in May of 2023. But under GAAP accounting, we are not allowed to do that. So we're in the uncomfortable spot of having a different NAV for the exact same investment as what the PE firm has. But long story short, that will get converted to cash whenever the PE firm feels like it's right to investigate alternatives.
Operator: The next question comes from Theodore O'Neill with Litchfield Hills Research.
Theodore O'Neill: For Rick, on the Building Solutions, can you talk about geographically where you're seeing some strength going here in the second quarter?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Go ahead, Rick.
Richard Coleman: Thanks, Steve. Sure. Happy to address that. We have good visibility to our pipeline, particularly in KBS, our modular home company in Maine, where we have larger projects, so higher revenue projects. And we can see beginning, at the early stage of the pipeline where the opportunities are. And then as we move through the pipeline and we begin talking about building modular components for our construction partners, we call that the active pipeline. The active pipeline are those projects where we're negotiating the terms, we're doing the initial design work, but we still haven't signed a contract. So as we look into the active pipeline, we feel pretty confident there is strong demand still for more construction activity. But with interest rates where they are and a lot of uncertainty about interest rates, as well as now we have war in the Middle East and a number of other things, it's just been very difficult to move those projects out of the pipeline and into construction-ready mode. But I think that based on what we're seeing here recently, we're going to see significant improvement in the second quarter.
Theodore O'Neill: Okay. And I don't know if this is a question for you, Rick. But on the Energy Services, you or Jeff, could you talk about if there are any dynamics related to the change in oil price and the drilling service business?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Yes, I'll take that, Theo. Being from Texas originally, this is a sector I've followed most of my career. And we're very happy -- I'll get to your question in a second. We've been very happy with this acquisition and we feel like it's really thrived inside of Star. We have invested for growth. They had a plan to increase their market share. And we've executed really well on that plan since we completed the acquisition in March. And if we just look at Q1 results, 2026 versus 2025, for example, if you look at the pro forma table in our press release, pretty nice year-on-year growth and that was way before any increase in oil prices. And in fact, the industry shrank in Q1 2026 versus Q1 2025, if you just look at the rig counts in the U.S., for example. And they did a very good job of growing in some nontraditional sectors and winning business in things like geothermal, which has really -- a really good growth outlook in the U.S. They've always been active in mining opportunities, water wells. They've also gotten into some carbon capture and some hydrogen drilling, which were really kind of off the radar screen a few years ago. So we're excited about that business. It was performing very well. And if activity improves later this year and into the next year, and we think it will, we're poised to continue to have good growth there. So I'd say it's a little early for the clients to all of a sudden just flip a switch and start spending more capital, but the early indicators are certainly there and the conversations are happening.
Theodore O'Neill: Okay. My last question is about -- can you give us any sort of thoughts about Q2 operating expenses and whether we should be looking for them to be similar to the Q1 levels?
Jeffrey Eberwein: We don't give -- that's a really good question. We don't give guidance line by line on that, but we do look at where the consensus is on Bloomberg. And the Q1 results were disappointing to us. Just -- We didn't hit our budget. And it's short-term temporary factors. But when we look out into Q2, when we look into the second half of the year, I think the Bloomberg consensus for adjusted EBITDA is above $2 million, $2 million to $2.5 million, something like that. We're comfortable with that. And if we hit that number, we'll be positive -- We'll have positive results for the first half of the year. So in other words, the Q1 positive EBITDA should exceed the -- the Q2 positive EBITDA should exceed the Q1 loss. And then if we look out to the second half of the year, the Bloomberg consensus is that our adjusted EBITDA should be -- I think it's $9 million. It's in the $8 million to $10 million range. And we're very comfortable with that. Is that an absolute guarantee? No, it's not, but that's what we're projecting internally. It could be higher than that, could be lower than that. But that is our best guess based on everything we're seeing in the business and based on what we see in the market and conversations with customers, what we see in our pipeline, historical conversion rates of that pipeline into backlog, which then translates into revenue.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Michael Mathison with Sidoti.
Michael Mathison: A couple of questions from me. First, sort of a big picture one for Business Services. In light of higher energy prices, global tensions, inflation, all the things we read about, can you comment on hiring trends in the 3 regions where Business Services operates?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Yes. I'll -- I'm going to turn that over to Jake. But just at a high level, I would say our clients predominantly are Fortune 500 companies. And in general, we're asking them to sign multiyear contracts. And we had some really nice significant long-term contract renewals from 2 of our 5 top clients in Q1. And so that was really refreshing. But whenever there's uncertainty, regardless of the cause, just everything else being equal, it's not conducive to the Fortune 500 making long-term commitments. So it is -- it's not helpful, but we don't want to use it as an excuse. We want to fight through it and keep pushing and keep providing good services. Jake, I'm going to turn it over to you to get a little more granular.
Jacob Zabkowicz: Yes. Thank you, Jeff. Thank you for the question. So when you look at the overall macro hiring, what we're seeing, it's truly spotty. And what I mean by spotty is we definitely see some green shoots and some tailwinds in certain areas with some of our businesses. And quite conversely, we've also had some of our clients say, "Hey, hold on a second, let's reevaluate where we're investing." But if you look at each region, right, and you take the APAC region in general at first, the hiring volumes in APAC were still relatively strong, but the mix was different. And what I mean by the mix, you saw a lot of more internal mobility or internal hiring and movements internally versus hiring externally and bringing new people into the businesses. And in our -- in some of our fee structures in that region, an internal placement is on a lower fee structure than an external placement for multiple purposes. One is that we're sourcing internally; and two is there's an optics of that cost of just moving internal placements around. When you look at EMEA and you look at the broader EMEA market, I don't have to give you guys an update on what's happening over there. But it's causing a lot of pause and rethinking investments across all of the countries in EMEA. As I mentioned in the earnings call, we did take a structured approach to reevaluate our Middle East presence. We're going to continue to be in the Middle East. We're going to continue to have entity and resources there and will help support our enterprise-level clients in the Middle East. But it is taking a drain in a lot of the hiring activity there and having our clients rethink again and pause in certain pockets we think of where they're going to make investments. In the Americas, we're seeing some pretty good signs of strength in the Americas right now. Latin America continues to be a growth market for us. We're signing new contracts there, a couple this week already. So that's exciting. But it is at a smaller clip and a smaller pace than what we normally see. So we will see contracts, as Jeff mentioned, multiyear contracts. We can hire anywhere from 100 to 1,000 people, if not north of that, every single year. But now we're seeing some more project-based hiring. And where we're seeing project-based hiring is a specific time frame of less than 1 year and a specific number of anywhere from 20 to a couple of hundred. So you get to more of the project-based versus that long-term forecast. I would say, as a whole, we're still seeing relatively low attrition across all of the markets. There are some pockets where we are continuing to see some growth, which is great in many of our businesses. But to Jeff's point and to what we were talking about before, with our land-and-expand strategy and offering services in markets that were untapped to us before, is a critical strategy for our business. And we're doing that in the likes of Japan, Latin America and we're going to continue to grow in those areas. So Michael, I hope that answered your question, sir?
Michael Mathison: It certainly did. Very, very helpful. Turning to Energy Services. The revenue growth is striking, as you pointed out in your prepared remarks, speaking of market share gains and so forth. Do you feel like past a certain point, Alliance will have to invest in more drilling equipment just to fulfill demand?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Yes. We feel like we've already done that. The CapEx levels there might -- we see them basically being flat with the Q1 run rate. So we did -- after we acquired it, we kind of took a countercyclical approach. And we saw an opportunity to increase share and enter some of these new markets. And so we approved one step at a time a higher CapEx spend and that higher CapEx spend very quickly led to revenue growth. And so we got positive feedback on our thesis very quickly. But we're -- it's really -- a lot of that was just kind of a onetime increase that was needed to grow the business. And I think from here, we can keep that level flat and still have really good growth.
Michael Mathison: Great. Great. I'll close out with one more question coming back to Building Solutions. Obviously, the weather in the Northeast was horrendous and that clearly played a role. In the balance of the year, do you see the book-to-bill coming back to 2025 levels?
Jeffrey Eberwein: Short answer is...
Richard Coleman: I -- I'm sorry, Jeff, why don't you go ahead.
Jeffrey Eberwein: Go ahead. I was going to say short answer, yes, and turn it over to Rick. Go ahead, Rick.
Richard Coleman: The problem is the numerator in that equation. So as revenue picks up, we expect that, that's going to continue to improve. So I guess that's the -- all the color that I can provide on that for now.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] That concludes today's question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call over to Jeff Eberwein for closing remarks.
Jeffrey Eberwein: Well, thank you for joining us. Thank you for your interest in our company and we're available. Our contact information is on our website and is in the press release and our corporate materials. So reach out if you have any follow-up questions. Thank you for your interest.
Operator: Thank you for joining the Star Equity Holdings first quarter conference call. Today's call has been recorded and will be available on the Investors section of our website, www.starequity.com. Thank you for participating and have a pleasant day.