William L. Ballhaus
Thanks, Tyler. Good afternoon. Thank you for joining our Q2 FY 2026 earnings call. We delivered Q2 results that were ahead of our expectations, with solid year-over-year growth in backlog, revenue, and adjusted EBITDA and robust free cash flow. Our ability to accelerate progress on a number of our customers' high-priority programs once again contributed to strong results this quarter, including record first-half revenue. Today, I'll cover three topics. First, some introductory comments on our business and results. Second, an update on our four priorities: performance excellence, building a thriving growth engine, expanding margins, and driving free cash flow. And third, performance expectations for the balance of FY 2026 and longer term. Then I'll turn it over to Dave, who will walk through our financial results in more detail. Before jumping in, I'd like to thank our customers for their collaborative partnership and the trust they put in Mercury to support their most critical programs. I'd also like to thank our Mercury team for their dedication and commitment to delivering mission-critical processing at the edge. Please turn to Slide four. Our Q2 results support our expectations for robust organic growth with expanding margins and positive free cash flow. Bookings of $288 million and a 1.23 book-to-bill resulting in a record backlog approaching $1.5 billion. Revenue of $233 million with first-half revenue up 7.1% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA of $30 million and adjusted EBITDA margin of 12.9%, up 36.3% and 300 basis points, respectively, year-over-year. And free cash flow of $46 million, well ahead of our expectations. We ended Q3 with $335 million of cash on hand. These results reflect ongoing focus on our four priority areas with highlights that include solid execution across our broad portfolio of production and development programs, backlog growth of 8.8% year-over-year, a streamlined operating structure enabling increased positive operating leverage and significant margin expansion, and continued progress on free cash flow drivers with net working capital down $61 million year-over-year, or 12.9%. Please turn to Slide five. Starting with our four priorities and priority one, performance excellence. Where our efforts positively impacted our results primarily in two areas. First, in Q2, we recognized $4 million of net adverse EAC changes across our portfolio, which is in line with recent quarters, reflecting sound execution on our development and production programs. Second, accelerated progress across a number of programs, and generated approximately $30 million of revenue, $10 million of adjusted EBITDA, and $30 million of cash primarily planned for the third quarter. This acceleration contributed to top-line growth, adjusted EBITDA margins, and free cash flow that exceeded our expectations for Q2 and will also factor into our outlook for Q3, which I'll speak to shortly. Notably, our focus on accelerating customer deliveries led to record first-half revenue and the highest first-half point-in-time revenue since FY 2021. Beyond this solid performance across our portfolio of programs, we progressed on a number of actions in the quarter to increase capacity, add automation, and consolidate subscale sites in our ongoing efforts to drive scalability and efficiency. Notably, we continue to build out our highly automated manufacturing footprint in Phoenix, Arizona, and progressed on bringing online an additional 50,000 square feet of factory space to support ramp production for our common processing architecture programs and to allow for efficient scaling if potential market tailwinds materialize. This is just one of many actions we have taken along with prior investments across a number of critical technology developments that are driving our ability to accelerate delivery of vital capabilities to our warfighters and our allies. Please turn to Slide six. Moving on to priority two, driving organic growth. We delivered another strong quarter with $288 million of bookings, resulting in a book-to-bill of 1.23 and a record backlog approaching $1.5 billion. Q2 awards reflected a mix of franchise program extensions, competitive new design wins, and follow-on production awards across both domestic and international customers. Bookings were led by a scope expansion on a long-standing cost-plus development program supporting modernization efforts within a core missile defense platform. Extending Mercury's role through additional hardware content, and further strengthening our position as the program progresses toward future production. We also captured two key new design wins during the quarter in exciting growth markets. These included a major RF and processing subsystem, supporting a leading advanced air mobility manufacturer's development of its ground control infrastructure, as well as a new design award supporting a space-based application with a leading aerospace and defense prime. Expanding Mercury's capability set within the fast-growing space market. Importantly, these design wins represent new platform entry points and future production potential, positioning Mercury for continued growth as these programs mature. Follow-on production awards were another contributor, including incremental quantities on a key US missile franchise reflecting continued customer confidence as those programs ramp along with additional awards supporting deployed naval platforms and international land-based radar and electronic warfare applications underscoring the durability of Mercury's installed base. Finally, the quarter included approximately $20 million follow-on awards that leverage our common processing architecture and include embedded anti-tamper and cybersecurity software from our recent acquisition of StarLab, reinforcing the strategic value within the key set of capabilities. These awards are important not only because of their value and impact on our growth trajectory but also because they reflect those customers' trust in Mercury to support their most critical franchise programs with our proven capabilities and latest innovations. Beyond our backlog growth, customer conversations continue to progress on the potential for higher demand on multiple programs across our portfolio driven by increased defense budgets globally and domestic priorities like Golden Dome. Although these potential opportunities are still in early pipeline phases, I remain optimistic that they may have a positive impact on our demand environment if funding is allocated across certain program priorities to our customers over the next several quarters and beyond. Please forward to Slide seven. Now turning to priority three, expanding margins. In our efforts to progress toward our targeted adjusted EBITDA margins in the low to mid-twenty percent range, we are focused on the following drivers: backlog margin expansion as we convert lower margin backlog and add new bookings aligned with our target margin profile, ongoing initiatives to further simplify, automate, and optimize our operations, and driving organic growth to realize positive operating leverage. Q2 adjusted EBITDA margin of 12.9% was ahead of our expectations and up 300 basis points year-over-year. This margin performance was driven by the conversion of backlog previously contemplated to be delivered later in FY 2026 and higher operating leverage. Gross margin of 26% was slightly down year-over-year, driven by an increased mix of low margin backlog converted in the quarter. We expect average backlog margin to continue to increase as we convert lower margin backlog and bring in new bookings that we believe will be in line with our targeted margin profile. Operating expenses are down year-over-year as a result of fully realizing the impact of previously implemented actions to further simplify, streamline, and focus our operations and ongoing initiatives to drive efficiency. Please forward to Slide eight. Finally, turning to priority four, improve free cash flow. We continue to make progress on the drivers of free cash flow. And in particular, reducing net working capital, which at approximately $414 million is down $61 million year-over-year and is at the lowest level since Q1 FY 2022. Net debt is now down to $257 million, also the lowest level since '2. We believe our continuous improvement related to program execution, accelerating deliveries for our customers, demand planning, and supply chain management, will lead to continued reduction in working capital and net debt over time. In addition, we continue to expect to allocate factory capacity in FY 2026 to programs with unbilled receivable balances which will help drive free cash flow, although with little impact to revenue. Please turn to Slide nine. Looking ahead, I am optimistic about our team, our leadership position in delivering mission-critical processing at the edge, the market backdrop, and our expected ability over time to deliver results in line with our target profile of above-market top-line growth, adjusted EBITDA margins in the low to mid-twenty percent range, free cash flow conversion of 50%. We believe our strong first-half results reflect continued progress toward this target profile. With an aggregate 1.17 book-to-bill, 7.1% top-line growth, 14.3% adjusted EBITDA margins, 400 basis points of margin expansion year-over-year, and $41 million of positive free cash flow over the last two quarters. Coming out of Q2, we maintain our full-year view on FY 2026, which excludes any further accelerations within or into FY 2026 or upside bookings store plan tied to domestic priorities like Golden Dome, or increased global defense budgets. We continue to expect annual revenue growth of low single digits. Given our Q2 and first-half overperformance of approximately $30 million, we expect Q3 revenue to be down year-over-year absent any additional accelerations, followed by a ramp in Q4. We continue to expect full-year adjusted EBITDA margin approaching mid-teens. Given the accelerations into the first half, and positive impact on first-half margins, we expect Q3 adjusted EBITDA margin approaching double digits as we convert low margin backlog and realize lower operating leverage. We continue to expect Q4 adjusted EBITDA margin to be the highest of fiscal year. Finally, with respect to free cash flow, we continue to expect free cash flow to be positive for the year. As discussed, we pulled forward approximately $30 million of cash receipts into Q2, which impacts Q3, and we expect will result in free cash outflow for the quarter. In summary, with our momentum coming out of Q2 and the first half, I expect FY 2026 performance to represent another positive step toward our target profile. Additionally, I'm gaining optimism regarding the potential for tailwinds associated with increased global defense budgets, and domestic priorities like Golden Dome to materialize and upside bookings to our plan over time. I look forward to providing updated commentary as we progress through the year. With that, I'll turn it over to Dave to walk through the financial results for the quarter and I look forward to your questions. Dave?