Bruce J. Labovitz
I am going to start with a little off-script nod to Gary in light of recent announcements. When I came to Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. in 2013, we were a $50,000,000 company with around 450 employees. Gary's vision of achievement at the time was a diversified $100,000,000 revenue company where people could thrive and grow. For the past thirteen years, he has been deliberate in his leadership with a conviction about growth and a steadfast commitment to our culture. So, with $490,000,000 in revenue to end the company's thirtieth anniversary year, and 2,500 committed professionals living our values every day, I think it is fair to say Gary is qualified for membership in the Overachievers Club. On behalf of everyone at Bowman Consulting Group Ltd., I want to publicly thank you for all you have done. Okay. Turning to the fourth quarter and full year 2025, I am pleased to be here today discussing another breakout year for Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. With quarterly gross revenue of $129,000,000, we have now had two consecutive quarters at a revenue run rate of greater than $500,000,000. Net service billing, which we use interchangeably with net revenue, was $14,600,000 in the quarter, up 16.2% compared to last year. At an 89% net-to-gross ratio, up 200 basis points over last year, gross was disproportionately achieved through net revenue. For the full year, gross and net revenue were up 14.914.5% to $490,000,000 and $434,800,000 while maintaining a net-to-gross ratio of 89%. We again generated double digit growth of organic net revenue at 12.4%. Gross margin for the quarter was 55%, up 190 basis points from last year, and 53.4% for the full year, up 120 basis points over last year. SG&A for the full year was down 250 basis points compared to the prior year. Combined overhead for the year, in other words, the combination of all labor, both direct and indirect with SG&A, was down 400 basis points compared to the prior year. We believe this reflects an evolving mix of business in the scaling strategy we have been working towards for several years. Pretax net income for the year was $11,200,000 as compared to a loss of $8,900,000 in the prior year. Net income was $12,800,000 for the full year as compared to $3,000,000 for the prior year. With issues related to research and experimentation capitalization resolved, tax benefits had a lesser impact on our fourth quarter and the full-year results. Moving forward, tax is projected to have a more normalized impact on our statements, including simplifying the calculation of changes in working capital on our operating cash flows, no longer splitting the effect above and within the working capital. With Section 174 capitalization no longer an issue, it is key to note that we do still benefit from other permanent research and development credits that reduce our effective tax rate and never expire. We believe the turnaround in pretax GAAP profitability this year is the result of the improved labor utilization, scale, and full integration strategy we have been executing to achieve efficiency in operations. We are pleased to see meaningful increase in EPS, both GAAP-based and adjusted. On a GAAP basis, our basic and diluted EPS of $0.74 and $0.73 were up 300% year-over-year. On an adjusted basis, our basic and diluted EPS of $1.72 and $1.68 were up nearly 40% from the prior year. Holding our share count through buybacks also helped. With absolute growth in all market verticals this year, we continue to advance our objective of increased revenue diversification. Revenue distribution continued to shift positively in 2025, with transportation at 21.2%, power and utility at 22.4%, natural resources at 11.5%, and building infrastructure down to 44.9%. We expect this trend and trajectory to continue in 2026. Our geospatial operations continue to be increasingly consequential and represented approximately 26% of 2025's gross revenue as a service that was spread across all markets. In the aggregate, around 30% of total gross revenue was derived from government or public funded work assignments, an area where we expect to continue to grow over the short and long term. Organic net revenue growth was 11% in the fourth quarter and 12.4% for the full year, excluding UP E3I, SOLAs, and RPT. Broken down by vertical for the quarter and for the full year, Natural Resources led the way with 2927% growth, and utilities delivered 1113% growth. Transportation grew 622%. And building infrastructure was up 96%. Organic growth rate in transportation in the fourth quarter was a function of delayed contracting and notices to proceed in 2024. While we caught up in 2024, the delay created a skewed growth curve for the year. All is well within our transportation business, and we continue to win consequential new awards. I think it is also worth pointing out the steady increase in organic net revenue growth in building infrastructure throughout the year. I am optimistic that this represents a developing trend for that market. Backlog increased 20% to $479,000,000 on 12/31/2025, up from $399,000,000 at the 2024. While every vertical is up, the biggest gainer was power and utilities, where we were particularly active with business development and acquisitions. Excluding purchase backlog in place at year end, the increase was 18.5% at $473,000,000. Sales of new work after closing an acquisition would not be considered acquired backlog. In the case of RPT, while we have very strong visibility into projects and schedules, work is released in more frequent phases that keep their forecasts high but their backlog low relative to the overall companies. Cash from operating activities for the full year increased by nearly 50% to $35,800,000 from $24,300,000 in the prior year. Net working capital increases adjusted for the UTP changes represented the equivalent of a roughly four-month investment in gross revenue. Reducing that investment by 25% through process automation and operational efficiencies could add seven to eight percentage points to cash flow conversion. This is high on our to-do list in 2026. Net debt at the end of the year was $179,000,000, including the all-cash acquisition of RPT on December 5. Leverage was 2.45x trailing twelve months, and 2.06x the midpoint of our 2026 guidance. We expect increased cash flow from operations during the year to continue to reduce this debt throughout 2026. On March 3, we executed a third amendment to our credit facility with BofA, TD Bank, and PNC to increase the maximum borrowing to $250,000,000. We increased the facility to ensure we have sufficient access to affordable capital to continue funding investments in organic growth, innovation and efficiency, accretive acquisitions, and stock repurchases. As of today, we have available liquidity of approximately $150,000,000. During 2025, we periodically repurchased $18,800,000 worth of our common stock at an average price of $27.51 per share. We continue to view stock repurchases as a means of addressing liquidity and valuation dislocations, as opposed to a commitment to the return of capital. Assuming market stability and a rational valuation of our equity, our top priorities remain investment in organic and inorganic growth. We remain steadfast in our commitment to investment and innovation. The BIG Fund, our internal technology incubator, is funding ideas presented by our employees to make impactful investments that advance our capabilities, improve the efficiency of our workforce, and decouple revenue growth from headcount growth, increase the value of our services, and extend customer engagement. It is admittedly a tricky time in our industry with respect to innovation in AI. We need to be sure we are prioritizing investment in processes and services relating to deliverables sold at stable values, as opposed to efficiencies that merely cannibalize the work of work sold by the unit. We are making significant investments this year in our fleet of geospatial imaging assets, including high-resolution, high-altitude scanners, along with improved capture vehicles, including planes, UAVs, drones, boats, all of which increase collection rates and data processing efficiencies by as much as 30% to 40%. We continue to integrate the technologies we have developed in-house with tools we purchased in the recent Orcus acquisition, and we are launching PAC, our Port Asset Conditions Kit, which provides GIS-enabled, digital twin-based life-cycle asset management to port and marine operators. As opposed to the traditional software-as-a-service subscription model, we have put forward a services-powered-by-software model that engages our integrated digital platforms with customers through a professional services arrangement that combines process automation and professional intervention. As we develop our suite of AI- and GIS-enabled tool sets, we believe we are well positioned to monetize the library of assets in our growing digital services and advisory practice into a unique value proposition for our customers and shareholders. In connection with yesterday's release, we increased our full-year 2026 guidance to a range of $495,000,000 to $510,000,000 and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 17% to 17.5%. At an 88% net-to-gross ratio, this would represent $563,000,000 to $580,000,000 of gross revenue. Increased net revenue guide includes the recent RPT acquisition without contemplating any future acquisitions. At the midpoint of our net revenue guidance, this represents approximately 16% absolute growth over last year. Pro forma, to exclude RPT's 2025 revenue from the basis and from next year, from this year, we are projecting just over 12% organic net revenue growth. We expect revenue during the year to again be nonlinear, with the first and fourth quarters representing around 47% of net revenue and the second and third to be around 53% of net revenue. This should not be construed as quarterly revenue guidance, but rather as a guideline for relative weighting of the quarters throughout the year. I am now going to turn the call over to Dan Swayze, our Chief Operating Officer, who is joining us today to provide insight into the question of where we are winning and why. Dan has been with Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. for over three and a half years, and spent two decades in senior leadership roles in civil and engine and energy-related engineering. At Bowman Consulting Group Ltd., Dan's focus as the Chief Operating Officer is on the management and execution of our portfolio of services across markets. Dan, welcome.