--- title: "Insteel Industries Balances Q2 Hit With Recovery Hopes" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/283067972.md" description: "Insteel Industries, Inc. reported a cautious outlook during its Q2 earnings call, highlighting a 49% drop in net earnings to $5.2 million due to weak volumes and rising costs. Despite challenges from severe winter weather and project delays, management noted a recovery in shipments and improved pricing power, with average selling prices up 14.2% year-over-year. Operating cash flow turned positive at $4.8 million, and liquidity remains strong with $15.1 million in cash. The company is focused on cost discipline and targeted capital spending, anticipating gradual demand recovery supported by positive macro signals." datetime: "2026-04-17T00:15:11.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/283067972.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283067972.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/283067972.md) --- # Insteel Industries Balances Q2 Hit With Recovery Hopes Insteel Industries, Inc. ((IIIN)) has held its Q2 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 30% Off TipRanks - Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions - Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks Insteel Industries’ latest earnings call struck a cautiously optimistic tone as management balanced weak second‑quarter results against improving trends. Severe winter weather, project delays, rising input and freight costs, and tighter margins drove a sharp drop in earnings, yet price hikes, better April orders, solid liquidity, and leaner inventories underpinned confidence in a gradual recovery. ## Pricing Power Offsets Volume Weakness Average selling prices rose 14.2% year over year and 1% sequentially, reflecting multiple pricing actions across late fiscal 2025 and early 2026. Management also implemented another increase in April, which should lift realized pricing further and help offset higher steel and logistics costs as demand normalizes. ## Shipments Rebound After Winter Disruptions Shipments fell 5.9% from a year earlier as prolonged winter weather and project delays pushed deliveries into later quarters. However, volumes have begun to recover, with shipments up 6.9% sequentially and April activity running ahead of forecasts, suggesting some of the lost demand is being recaptured. ## Cash Flow Turns Positive and Liquidity Stays Strong Operating cash flow swung to a positive $4.8 million versus a $3.3 million use in the prior year’s quarter, easing pressure from working capital swings. The company ended the period with $15.1 million in cash and no borrowings on its $100 million revolver, leaving ample flexibility to navigate volatility and fund key initiatives. ## Cost Discipline Lowers SG&A Burden Selling, general, and administrative expenses dropped to $9.7 million from $10.8 million a year ago, falling to 5.6% of net sales from 6.7%. The decline was led by a $1.1 million reduction in incentive compensation, highlighting management’s focus on cost control while weathering near‑term demand softness. ## Inventory Management Supports Future Spreads Inventory was cut by $13.3 million in the quarter as Insteel scaled back raw material purchases and tightened working capital. Stocks now represent roughly 3.4 months of shipments, down from 3.9, and are carried at costs near the quarter’s cost of sales, positioning the company to benefit as higher prices flow through. ## CapEx Remains Targeted and Disciplined Capital spending reached $4.4 million in the quarter and $5.9 million year to date, with management reaffirming a full‑year budget of about $20 million. Investment is being directed toward engineered structural mesh growth, cost‑reduction projects, and systems upgrades, signaling a continued long‑term focus despite short‑term headwinds. ## Macro Signals Turn More Supportive Key construction indicators are edging higher, with the Architectural Billing Index rising to 49.4 from 43.8 and the Dodge Momentum Index up 1.8% in March. Management cited sustained strength in data center builds and roughly 1% year‑over‑year growth in total construction spending as reasons to expect a gradual demand recovery. ## Earnings and EPS Under Pressure Net earnings dropped to $5.2 million, or $0.27 per diluted share, from $10.2 million, or $0.52, a decline of about 49%. The fall underscored how lower volumes, compressed margins, and higher costs are weighing on profitability, even as pricing and cost actions begin to gain traction. ## Volume Impact from Weather and Project Delays Year‑over‑year shipments declined 5.9%, with management pointing to prolonged winter conditions and several project delays, some unrelated to weather. These factors deferred deliveries into later quarters rather than canceling them outright, which could support a rebound as conditions normalize. ## Gross Margin Compression Reflects Cost and Volume Strain Gross profit fell by $8.0 million to $16.5 million, with gross margin narrowing to 9.6% versus last year and down 170 basis points sequentially. The squeeze stemmed from reduced spreads, lower volumes, and higher unit conversion costs as plants ran below planned rates during the weather disruptions. ## Rising Steel and Conversion Costs Tighten Spreads Published wire rod prices, the company’s main raw material, increased by $90 per ton in the quarter, and U.S. prices remain 50% to 100% above global levels. Combined with curtailed domestic capacity, these dynamics have eroded spreads and pushed up working capital needs, challenging Insteel’s ability to fully pass through costs. ## Working Capital Still Elevated Despite Inventory Cuts Net working capital is up about $45 million over the past year as the company imported part of its raw material supply, adding to funding needs. In Q2, working capital used $1.4 million, as a $6.8 million increase in receivables offset the sizable inventory reduction, keeping balance‑sheet efficiency in focus. ## Weather and Staffing Imbalances Weigh on Efficiency Severe, extended winter conditions impacted 9 of 11 facilities, constraining shipments and plant performance. Insteel had staffed up for expected seasonal demand, so under‑utilized labor and equipment raised unit conversion costs and fixed‑cost absorption, adding temporary pressure on margins. ## Freight and Logistics Costs Add Another Headwind Freight expenses climbed on higher diesel prices, a tighter driver market, and carrier load rejections, pushing up inbound and outbound logistics costs. While price increases should eventually cover much of the rise, the timing mismatch has added to near‑term margin pressure and complicated spread management. ## Macro and Policy Risks Cloud the Outlook Management flagged several external risks, including the potential for renewed inflation, uncertain timing of interest rate cuts, and shifts in tariff policy. Geopolitical developments that influence energy and shipping costs, along with changes in trade rules, could affect the pace of construction and the cost structure facing Insteel. ## Guidance Points to Gradual Margin Recovery Management expects demand postponed by weather and delays to flow into the rest of fiscal 2026, supporting a gradual margin recovery starting in Q3. They reiterated an effective tax rate around 23%, maintained a $20 million CapEx plan, highlighted $15.1 million in cash plus undrawn revolver capacity, and noted April shipments are trending above forecasts as prices and improved inventories support better fixed‑cost absorption. Insteel’s call painted a picture of a business caught between cyclical pressures and improving fundamentals, with Q2 earnings sharply lower but key indicators turning. Investors will be watching whether stronger pricing, leaner inventories, and better demand can offset elevated costs and policy risks, validating management’s cautiously optimistic outlook for the balance of the year. ### Related Stocks - [IIIN.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/IIIN.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [Insteel Industries; the Infrastructure Input That Cannot Be Swapped Out](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286813861.md) - [Insteel (IIIN) Q1 Earnings Report Preview: What To Look For](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282775354.md) - [Compugen Reports First Quarter 2026 Results | CGEN Stock News](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286758883.md) - [US Plains HRW Wheat-Basis bids mostly steady on slow farmer sales, higher futures](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286809224.md) - [EuroDry Ltd. Sets Date for the Release of First Quarter 2026 Results, Conference Call and Webcast | EDRY Stock News](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286790992.md)