--- title: "Trex Company Balances Margin Headwinds With Growth" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/285787858.md" description: "Trex Company (TREX) reported modest Q1 revenue growth of 1% to $343 million, driven by steady consumer demand. Gross profit reached $139 million with a gross margin of 40.5%, exceeding expectations. Adjusted EBITDA rose 2% to $103 million, but management warned of potential margin declines in Q2. Free cash flow was negative at $143 million, though improved from last year. The company executed a $100 million share repurchase and emphasized its recycling infrastructure as a competitive advantage. New product launches and marketing investments are expected to enhance growth despite macro uncertainties." datetime: "2026-05-09T01:20:51.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/285787858.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/285787858.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/285787858.md) --- # Trex Company Balances Margin Headwinds With Growth Trex Company ((TREX)) has held its Q1 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 55% 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 Trex Company’s latest earnings call struck a tone of cautious confidence, as modest top-line growth combined with stronger-than-expected profitability and disciplined execution. Management emphasized structural advantages in recycling, capacity and channel reach, while also underscoring near-term margin headwinds, higher SG&A and macro uncertainty that temper the otherwise positive narrative. ## Modest Revenue Growth Net sales in the first quarter rose 1% year over year to $343 million, reflecting steady consumer demand and some channel stocking ahead of the peak decking season. Management framed the modest growth as consistent with a flat-to-down repair and remodel backdrop, noting that distributor inventories remain lean at roughly 30–40 days of supply. ## Strong Gross Margin Performance Trex posted gross profit of $139 million and a gross margin of 40.5%, coming in about 100 basis points above internal expectations. The upside was driven by favorable mix toward higher-margin decking products and continued operational improvements, though management warned that a portion of this benefit will unwind in coming quarters. ## Adjusted EBITDA Expansion Adjusted EBITDA increased 2% year over year to $103 million, supported by pricing discipline, mix gains and tight cost controls. Management cautioned that Q1-to-Q2 adjusted EBITDA margins are likely to step down, and that second-quarter margins could come in below the prior year as temporary tailwinds fade. ## Improving Free Cash Flow Trajectory Free cash flow remained negative at $143 million in the quarter, reflecting typical seasonal builds in inventory and receivables ahead of the main selling season. Even so, this represented nearly a 40% improvement from the prior year, and Trex signaled a clearer path toward structurally lower capital spending as Arkansas investments wind down. ## Balance Sheet and Leverage Strength Trex ended the quarter with net debt at roughly 1x EBITDA, the low end of its 1x–2x target range, giving the company notable financial flexibility. Management highlighted this balance sheet strength as a key enabler of ongoing investments in growth, capacity and marketing while still supporting shareholder returns. ## Aggressive Share Repurchase Execution Capital allocation leaned heavily toward buybacks, with Trex executing a $100 million accelerated share repurchase as part of a broader $150 million program. The board also authorized an additional 10 million shares for future repurchases, underscoring confidence in the long-term earnings power and valuation of the franchise. ## Distribution and Retail Wins The company reported meaningful shelf-space gains at a national home center, as well as expanded territories with two major distributors, deepening its channel penetration. These wins are expected to support both near-term sell-in and longer-term brand visibility, particularly as peak season traffic builds. ## Material and Environmental Advantage Trex stressed its vertically integrated recycling infrastructure, which uses roughly 95% recycled content, primarily recycled LDPE, as a core competitive moat. This model helps stabilize input costs and provides insulation from volatility in virgin resin and broader petrochemical markets, while resonating with environmentally focused consumers. ## Lead Generation and Marketing Momentum Increased investment in marketing and digital capabilities has produced a significant double-digit rise in leads, with early signs of higher-quality professional inquiries and more sample orders. Management views this funnel expansion as critical to capturing share in a sluggish remodeling market and expects to lean further into brand-building. ## New Reporting and Long-term Capacity Trex introduced rolling 12-month sell-in and sell-out metrics, showing 7% and 6% growth respectively, to give investors a smoother read on underlying demand. The company also reported that Arkansas capacity additions effectively more than double its revenue potential over time, with limited incremental CapEx once the build-out is complete. ## New Product Expansion The launch of Trex Refuge, a PVC product, marks the company’s entry into an estimated $0.5 billion PVC decking market. Early regional rollouts, particularly on the West Coast, have been encouraging, broadening Trex’s portfolio and giving it another lever to compete across price points and materials. ## Negative Free Cash Flow in Q1 While Q1 free cash flow remained firmly negative, management characterized the draw as largely seasonal and tied to working-capital needs ahead of peak demand. The nearly 40% year-over-year improvement reinforces the impact of tapering large-scale capital projects and better inventory discipline. ## Full-Year Gross Margin Headwind Trex reiterated expectations for a roughly 250 basis point adjusted gross margin headwind in 2026, primarily from Arkansas depreciation and a higher mix of lower-margin railing. The company plans to counter these pressures through mix management, pricing actions, cost-outs and operational efficiencies as the new capacity ramps. ## Quarterly Margin Reversal Risk Management cautioned that more than half of the Q1 gross margin outperformance is expected to reverse in the second quarter. As a result, Q2 adjusted EBITDA margin is projected to be lower than both Q1 levels and the prior-year Q2, reflecting normalized operations and higher spending. ## SG&A Step-Up and Timing Selling, general and administrative expenses were $56 million in Q1, or 16.2% of sales, coming in below internal plans. However, Trex guided to a significant sequential increase in SG&A dollars in Q2 and reiterated a full-year target of around 18% of sales as it funds marketing, digital and innovation initiatives. ## Lower Q1 Volume from Level-Loading The company deliberately reduced first-quarter production volumes to level-load manufacturing and match lean channel inventories, limiting early-period sell-in. Management argued this strategy positions Trex to fulfill peak-season demand more efficiently and avoid excess stock later in the year. ## Market and Geopolitical Uncertainty Executives described their outlook as deliberately conservative, citing macroeconomic ambiguity and ongoing geopolitical conflict as key risks. This backdrop is shaping guidance assumptions and could cap upside if global instability persists, even as underlying brand and channel fundamentals remain solid. ## Regional Weather Impact Northern U.S. markets were down double digits in the quarter, with cold weather delaying projects and depressing near-term volumes. Management believes much of this softness is timing-related and could shift into Q2 as conditions normalize and outdoor work resumes. ## Railing Portfolio Margin Pressure Railing is one of Trex’s faster-growing categories but carries lower margins than core decking, creating a 70–80 basis point mix headwind for the full year. The company is pursuing cost-reduction initiatives and design changes to improve the economics of railing while maintaining its growth trajectory. ## Arkansas Facility Delay and Depreciation Completion of the Arkansas facility slipped beyond the original first-quarter timeline, extending interest capitalization and deferring some P&L impacts. As decking lines reach production readiness, associated depreciation is ramping, adding to expense and contributing to near-term margin pressure. ## Input Cost Exposures Despite the recycled LDPE advantage, Trex is seeing cost inflation in areas such as diesel, aluminum and tariffs, though tariff exposure is under 5% of total cost. Management is responding with pricing actions and ongoing cost-out programs to protect margins against these inflationary forces. ## Guidance Implies Moderated Growth Full-year guidance calls for net sales between $1.185 billion and $1.230 billion and adjusted EBITDA of $340 million to $350 million, implying roughly 3% sell-in growth. This outlook is more subdued than the trailing 12-month sell-in and sell-out metrics, underscoring management’s measured stance despite healthier underlying demand trends. ## Forward-Looking Guidance and Outlook For the second quarter, Trex expects net sales of $388 million to $403 million, with margins stepping down from Q1 as temporary tailwinds fade and SG&A rises. Over the medium term, the company is targeting adjusted gross margins near 37.5%, CapEx falling to $100 million–$120 million in 2026 and maintenance levels of 5%–6% of revenue by 2027, supported by Arkansas capacity and continued cost discipline. Trex’s earnings call painted the picture of a company balancing near-term margin and macro challenges with durable structural strengths in recycling, capacity and brand. Investors will be watching how management navigates the planned SG&A ramp, margin headwinds and geopolitical uncertainty, but the combination of disciplined capital allocation and expanding market reach suggests a constructive long-term story. ### Related Stocks - [TREX.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TREX.US.md) - [XHB.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/XHB.US.md) - [NAIL.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NAIL.US.md) - [VAW.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/VAW.US.md) - [MXI.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/MXI.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [The Splintering Truth: 78% of Wood Deck Owners Regret Their Choice | TREX Stock News](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286942386.md) - [State of New Jersey Common Pension Fund D Has $2.44 Million Stock Holdings in Trex Company, Inc. $TREX](https://longbridge.com/en/news/285519744.md) - [Home Depot says its customers are healthy, but here's where they are holding back](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286948933.md) - [Hartford Funds Management Co LLC Raises Stock Position in Lowe's Companies, Inc. $LOW](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286877689.md) - [Home Depot Q1 Preview: Wall Street Is Slashing Targets For A Stock Already At 3-Year Lows](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286807226.md)