Mayville Engineering Company, Inc. (NYSE:MEC) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

Mayville Engineering Company, Inc. (NYSE:MEC) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript March 5, 2025

Operator: Hello, and welcome everyone, to the Mayville Engineering Company Fourth Quarter 2024 Earnings conference call. My name is Becky, and I will be your operator today. During the presentation, you can register a question by pressing star followed by one on your keypad. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. I will now hand over to your host, Stefan Neely with Alum Advisors to begin. Please go ahead.

Stefan Neely: Thank you, operator. On behalf of our entire team, I would like to welcome you to our fourth quarter and full year 2024 results conference call. Leading the call today is Mayville Engineering Company’s President and CEO, Jag Reddy, Todd Butz, Chief Financial Officer, and Rochelle Loehr, our Chief Human Resources Officer. Today’s discussion contains forward-looking statements about future business and financial results. Actual results may differ significantly from those projected in today’s forward-looking statements due to various risks and uncertainties, including the risks described in our periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update our forward-looking statements.

Further, this call will include the discussion of certain non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliation of these measures to the closest GAAP financial measure is included in our quarterly earnings press release, which is available at mechinc.com. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the line for questions. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Jag. Thank you, Stefan, and good morning, everyone.

Jag Reddy: During a period of softer demand within our core vertical markets, our team maintained focused execution in 2024. We delivered consistent profitability, disciplined networking capital management, and significant year-over-year growth in free cash flow generation when compared to 2023. Similar to the third quarter, our fourth quarter performance was impacted by lower customer program activity as OEM customers continue to drive normalization in channel inventories. Lower demand contributed to an 18% year-over-year decline in revenue, which resulted in reduced overhead absorption and lower utilization. During the first half of 2025, we anticipate that the ongoing softness in demand will persist across most of our end markets, consistent with what we have seen during the second half of 2024.

Based on current customer discussions, together with new projects in backlog, we expect demand conditions to gradually recover during the second half of 2025. Our business development team is actively engaged in discussions with both new and current customers within high-value emerging end markets, and particularly those that capture multi-year investable pieces. These new opportunities, which include exposure to industrial infrastructure investments, such as the ongoing domestic data center build-out, have the potential to increase our revenue base across growing less cyclical end markets. Our business continues to generate strong free cash flow, positioning us to execute on our capital allocation strategy that includes continued debt reduction, along with opportunistic repurchases of our common stock.

In 2024, we generated free cash flow of nearly $78 million, including $25.5 million from a recently announced legal settlement. Excluding the settlement, organic free cash flow more than doubled versus 2023 levels. During the fourth quarter, we repaid more than $31 million in debt, reducing our net leverage to 1.3 times at year-end. This is well below our stated targeted net leverage ratio range of between 1.5 times and 2 times by the end of 2024. As we have continued to reduce our net leverage ratio, we have been increasingly committed to a systematic approach to share repurchases under our existing $25 million authorization. To that end, during the quarter, we repurchased nearly $4 million worth of company common stock. For the full year 2024, we repurchased $5.9 million of company common stock, partially offsetting the dilution from the shares awarded in 2024 relating to our stock-based compensation program.

With $19 million remaining under the existing authorization, we will continue to repurchase shares on a regular basis going forward. With respect to commercial growth, our team remains actively engaged in efforts to expand our serviceable market across both new and existing verticals. In 2024, we booked more than $100 million in new business wins, an increase of 12% year-over-year, and remain focused on driving continued order growth across a broad array of end markets over the coming year. Importantly, even as current demand conditions have evolved, we have had no unexpected customer contract cancellations, a testament to the durability of our customer relationships. Looking ahead, we continue to seek diversification across less cyclical, higher-value opportunities through a combination of existing business development activities together with targeted inorganic growth.

Todd will discuss the outlook in more detail shortly. But I would highlight that our assumption is that entering 2025, customer demand will remain muted as channel inventory destocking continues. While each customer and end market are slightly different, we broadly expect that the inventory destocking trend will be a headwind for year-over-year growth and margin expansion in the first half of the year. Current expectations are that customer channel inventories will begin to normalize entering the third quarter. Consequently, we anticipate that we will begin to experience ratable demand improvement during the second half of 2025 relative to the first half. Turning now to a more detailed review of market conditions across our primary end markets.

Let’s begin with our commercial vehicle market, which represents approximately 38% of our trailing twelve-month revenues. During the fourth quarter, commercial vehicle revenue decreased by 10.5% on a year-over-year basis. Our net sales to this end market were relatively comparable to the broader commercial vehicle market, as evidenced by a reported 10.4% year-over-year decrease in North American Class 8 truck production according to ACT Research. As we look forward into 2025, ACT Research currently forecasts that Class 8 vehicle production to decrease 4.8% year-over-year in 2025 to approximately 316,000 units. Strength in vocational truck demand and continued demand in truck orders suggest leads at repairing for 2027 EPA regulations. These factors are driving demand to modestly increase through most of 2025 prior to a recovery in 2026.

The latest forecast shows ACT projecting 2026 full-year demand to increase by 11.7% relative to 2025. The powersports market represented approximately 17% of our trailing twelve-month revenues and decreased by 29.1% on a year-over-year basis in the fourth quarter. Performance during the quarter continues to be driven by customer channel inventory destocking, soft consumer demand due to elevated financing rates, and production cuts. This was partially offset by the impact of incremental volumes from new project startups. Given the current market conditions, we anticipate elevated rates will continue to weigh on demand. However, new product launches should provide incremental improvements to our performance. Next is the construction and access market of our trailing twelve-month revenues, which represented approximately 16%.

Construction and access revenues decreased 34.5% on a year-over-year basis in the fourth quarter. This reflects continued soft demand across both non-residential and public infrastructure markets. We expect demand to remain soft through the first half of 2025. Entering the second half of 2025, we anticipate demand to increase based upon increased activity in public infrastructure and non-residential construction. For the agricultural market, represented approximately 8% of trailing twelve-month revenues, then decreased by 46.5% on a year-over-year basis during the fourth quarter. Our results reflect weakness in both large and small agricultural markets. The outlook remains uncertain due to interest rates, continued inventory destocking, and crop prices.

Due to these factors, we are not anticipating a recovery until 2026. Turning now to an overview of substantial new business wins during the fourth quarter. We have continued to expand our share with our commercial vehicle customers as they launch their next-generation models leading into the EPA regulation changes. Many of these products support future growth launching in 2026 and 2027. We are continuing to see growth in our thermal management market share, picking up additional new products during the quarter as our customer continues to grow their market share. We remain focused on diversifying our end markets by targeting content related to power generation, supporting the rapid expansion of data centers. In the quarter, we secured a new aluminum extrusion program with one of our large powersports customers.

This program leveraged existing relationships at Mayville Engineering Company and will lead to future growth over the coming years. We have continued to gain additional market share with our access customer as they evaluate their global supply base. Our US manufacturing plants located in close proximity to customer facilities continue to provide the best value in their supply chain as they look to increase their volumes. Our sales team is continuing to prioritize the diversification of our end market exposure and customer base. As we have mentioned before, we are in active discussions with new and existing customers to support potential programs in the data center space, including but not limited to cooling, electrical infrastructure, and standby power applications, which could come into fruition in the next twelve to eighteen months.

A close-up of a heavy-duty machining tool forming a steel component.

As before, our MDX framework continues to guide our value creation priorities. Even as demand conditions remain soft, we continue to deploy targeted initiatives around strategic pricing, commercial growth, and capital efficiency that over time have positioned Mayville Engineering Company to outperform the broader market. Since September 2022, our team has completed over 275 MBX Kaizen events. As a result of these events, the company was able to reduce its legacy manufacturing square footage space by 5% and headcount by 12%, along with removing over $5 million in other costs. Additionally, the success of our MBX efforts was evident in our robust free cash flow generation. During the fourth quarter, our free cash flow was over $35 million, even when excluding the recent $25.5 million settlement with a former fitness customer.

Our free cash flow conversion for the quarter exceeded 100% of adjusted EBITDA. The strength in our free cash conversion is owed to improving efficiency and networking capital management. This execution positions us for long-term improvements in our financial profile to drive sustainable shareholder value throughout the cycle. We are positioning ourselves to become a leaner, more efficient organization equipped to capitalize on a future demand recovery. Our healthy financial position enables our team to focus on executing our long-term strategy. We will remain disciplined in our capital allocation, prioritizing debt repayment, opportunistic share repurchases, and accretive strategic acquisitions. M&A remains a key part of our long-term strategy as we look to accelerate our expansion into high-growth adjacent end markets.

Our team has built a pipeline of acquisition targets that meet our criteria. While we plan to pursue M&A, building on our market-leading capabilities, we will remain disciplined and ensure that we are positioned to capitalize on multiyear secular growth trends in front of us. Finally, I would like to briefly comment on our longer-term outlook. As we first highlighted at our 2023 Investor Day, Mayville Engineering Company has been on a multiyear value creation journey, one that prioritizes a combination of commercial growth, operational discipline, and high-return capital deployment. Since that time, we have demonstrated the organic growth potential of the business, realized sustained operational efficiencies, and continue to deploy capital through a combination of reinvestment in the business and share repurchases.

While our team has successfully executed on our strategic plan, demand conditions within our core markets have been challenged and remain in flux. While a recovery in the second half of 2025 is likely, given what we see from our customers today, the pace of a full demand inflection could take longer. We remain committed to the targets introduced back in 2023. However, the timing of achieving those targets remains subject to how demand conditions shape or determine quarters. Our 2025 guidance reflects our customer conversations and the MBX-related efficiencies that we continue to realize across the organization. I am confident that the actions we have taken to reposition the business during a transitional period have created a foundation for growth that will deliver value to our shareholders over the long term.

Before I turn the call over to Todd, I want to thank him for his hard work and dedication in leading and building a strong finance organization. Todd’s leadership has been instrumental in Mayville Engineering Company’s growth for the past seventeen years, and we wish him well in his next chapter. With that, I will now turn the call over to Todd to review our financial results.

Todd Butz: Thank you, Jag. I will begin my prepared remarks with an overview of our fourth quarter and full-year financial performance, followed by an update on our balance sheet and liquidity, and I will conclude with a discussion of our 2025 guidance. Total sales for the fourth quarter decreased 18.4% on a year-over-year basis to $121.3 million. The decline in net sales was driven by customer destocking activities and weaker end-user demand, which was partially offset by new project launches. Our manufacturing margin was $10.8 million in the fourth quarter as compared to $18.2 million in the same prior-year period. The decrease was primarily driven by the corresponding decline in net sales. Our manufacturing margin rate was 8.9% for the fourth quarter of 2024, as compared to 12.3% for the prior-year period, or a decrease of 340 basis points.

The decrease in our manufacturing margin rate reflects the impact of lower fixed cost absorption from lower customer sales and two fewer working days in the quarter. Other selling, general, and administrative expenses were $7.9 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, as compared to $7.2 million in the same prior-year period. The increase was primarily driven by higher costs related to compliance requirements and annual wage inflation, partially offset by a reduction in legal expenses relating to our former fitness customers. Interest expense was $2 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, as compared to $3.6 million in the prior-year period, due to a reduction in borrowings relative to the fourth quarter of last year. The decrease of $67.9 million in borrowings over the past year reflects our continued strong free cash flow generation.

Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was $9.2 million versus $17.7 million for the same prior-year period. Adjusted EBITDA margin decreased by 430 basis points to 7.6% in the current quarter as compared with 11.9% in the same prior-year period. Our fourth-quarter adjusted EBITDA margin is a low point in the cycle and should begin to improve sequentially as we enter 2025. Now I would like to provide a brief summary of our full-year 2024 results. Net sales for the full year were $581.6 million, a decrease of 1.2% as compared to the prior year. Our 2024 manufacturing margin was $71.1 million as compared to $69.7 million in 2023. This reflects a manufacturing margin rate of 12.2%, or an increase of 40 basis points as compared to 11.8% in 2023.

2024 adjusted EBITDA was $64.4 million as compared to $66.1 million in 2023, which resulted in an adjusted EBITDA margin for 2024 of 11.1%, as compared to 11.2% in 2023. Turning now to our statement of cash flows and balance sheet. Free cash flow during the fourth quarter of 2024 was $35.6 million as compared to $19.9 million in the prior-year period. The increase in free cash flow as compared to the prior year reflects the $25.5 million received from the recently announced legal settlement and our continued focus on net working capital efficiency. As of the end of the fourth quarter of 2024, our debt, which includes bank debt, financing agreements, and finance lease obligations, was $82.3 million as compared to $150.2 million at the end of the fourth quarter of 2023, resulting in a net leverage ratio of just under 1.3 times adjusted EBITDA.

Now turning to a review of our 2025 financial guidance. For 2025, we now expect the following: net sales are between $560 million and $590 million, adjusted EBITDA of between $60 million and $66 million, and free cash flow between $43 million and $50 million. Please note that our midpoint assumes demand conditions gradually recover during the second half of 2025, with customer destocking activities and consumer demand normalized. Additionally, embedded in this guidance is the following view of our current end markets as compared to 2024: commercial vehicle, flat to slightly down; construction and access, flat to a low single-digit increase; powersports, low single-digit decrease; agriculture, low to mid-twenty percentiles decline; military, comparable to the prior year; and other end markets, low to mid-single-digit increase.

Due to its high interest rate sensitivity and current channel inventory levels, we believe our powersports market bears the most uncertainty. If our end markets were to perform below these expectations, it would push our guidance to the lower end of the range. Conversely, if second-half market conditions improved at a faster pace than expected, we would anticipate being near the higher end of our guidance. But given the uncertainty of the current demand cycle, we will continue to monitor and report throughout the year any material changes to this outlook. Furthermore, embedded within our 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance is $1 million to $3 million of cost improvement driven by our MBX operational excellence and strategic value-based pricing initiative, net of inflationary pressure.

As it relates to free cash flow guidance, we expect that our capital expenditures for the year will be in a range of between $13 million and $17 million, and we will continue to focus on high-return capital-led automation advancements with payback periods of less than eighteen months, further supporting our planned growth and increasing efficiency. Based on our free cash flow guidance, and excluding any M&A activity, we expect to be below one times net debt leverage by year-end. Lastly, I would like to reiterate that our financial position enables the team to focus on executing our long-term strategy. We will remain disciplined in our capital allocation, prioritizing debt repayment, opportunistic share repurchase, and accretive strategic acquisition, positioning the company to capitalize on the multiyear secular growth trend ahead of us.

With that, operator, that concludes our prepared remarks. Please open the line for questions as we begin our question and answer session.

Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please ensure your device is unmuted locally. Our first question comes from Ross Sparenbleck from William Blair. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Ross Sparenbleck: Hey. Good morning. This is Sam Carlo Vonfer Ross. Thanks for taking my questions. Morning, Sam. I want to touch on your margin guidance for 2025. I know you plan to use your plant shutdowns in the fourth quarter as an opportunity to execute on some additional MBX initiatives. Was wondering if you could update us on the progress that you have made and then give us a sense of how much of this progress is contemplated in your 2025 margin guidance.

Todd Butz: Yeah. As it relates to, you know, Q4, certainly, we had a lot of activity. We closed a facility, and like we indicated in our remarks, that is the low point. When you look at 2025, you know, we anticipate $1 to $3 million of improvement driven by MBX as well as pricing, and that is net of inflation. So you have to keep that in mind. The gross number is a bit higher, but that impact is somewhat muted. Meaning that our volume in the first half, you know, it continues to be in a depressed situation or low point. And so the pull-through when you think about all these MBX and cost-saving initiatives gets a little bit muted. And so as we begin in the second half and even into 2025, all these cost initiatives that we have done will really see the benefit of that and add pull-through in a much more substantial manner as we enter the back half of 2025 and into 2026.

Jag Reddy: Just to add to that, Sam, we conducted a significant number of MBX Kaizen in Q4. As we indicated in our prepared remarks, we also started Q1 with significant activity in many of our plants. We continue to drive cost reduction, productivity improvement projects across our plant network. We have not, you know, taken the gas pedal or pedal off the gas pedal, I guess. Right? We continue to drive additional product enterprise.

Ross Sparenbleck: Got it. That’s super helpful. And then given your 2025 guidance does not reflect any impact from tariffs, can you help us frame where the company is most exposed to potential tariffs? From an end market perspective? And then I know the situation is still fluid, but maybe help us frame what the sensitivities could look like if the proposed tariffs remain in place for an extended period of time.

Jag Reddy: Absolutely. First, I want to remind everyone that we are, as pure play domestic, manufacturer, as it can get. All of our manufacturing footprint is US-based. Ninety-five percent of our inputs are domestically sourced. Less than five percent of our inputs, i.e., hardware, some casting, some forgings, aluminum, etc., are subject to any potential tariffs. So if you think about that, you know, within that five percent or less, the majority of that is really the aluminum we get from Canada. And all of our steel and aluminum costs are passed through to our customers. So we are pretty confident that the current tariff regime, at least what was announced yesterday, will have limited impact on Mayville Engineering Company as a whole.

Of course, we will continue to try to mitigate any impact to our customers by finding additional sources, alternative sources to reduce any tariff impact. But on the steel end, aluminum as a whole, it is a pass-through expense for us. So we do not expect any dollar margin impact from these tariffs. But, obviously, if the steel prices go up, aluminum prices go up, it will have an impact on our margin percentage rather than dollar impact.

Ross Sparenbleck: Got it. That’s helpful. I’ll leave it there. Thanks, guys.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question is from Ted Jackson from Northland Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Ted Jackson: Thanks very much. Hey, Todd. First of all, I want to tell you that I’m sad that you’re leaving. I’ve really enjoyed working with you, and I look forward to hopefully keeping in touch and the great things that you’re going to do with the rest of your life. Hey, Patrick. Question. I have a couple of questions. So one of them is you just you talked fast and I write slow. Can you provide the guidance you gave for Power Sports again, please?

Todd Butz: Power Sports, we had the market declining, you know, low single digits, and then we had in the twentieth percentile decline, meaning twenty to twenty-five percent year over year. Does that clarify your point?

Ted Jackson: That is it. That is it. Then jumping over to tariffs, is there a case to be made that over the longer term that the change in tariff structures could be good for you? And where I’m going with that is as many of your customers might be forced to bring some of the manufacturing that they do overseas back into this country that they’re going to need, you know, partners like Mayville Engineering Company to make that kind of stuff. And, you know, does that resonate with you? Have you had any kind of dialogue with any of your customers or any potential customers as they start rethinking their supply chains and how they might be able to reconfigure them to meet this, you know, kind of new dynamic that Trump is bringing into force?

Jag Reddy: Yeah. Ted, great question. We’ve said this before. There are parts of our end markets and customers that have the flexibility to outsource to low-cost countries and regions. And primarily, those components are in the power sports market. We have seen some of our customers go to Asia, as an example, or Mexico to manufacture some of these components. So we do anticipate if these tariffs stick, we don’t know. Right? It changes day to day, hour to hour. But if these tariffs stick, we do expect some level of return to the US. So we will be a beneficiary of that trend if the tariffs remain. At the same time, we have seen a reasonable amount of interest from many of our existing customers to start thinking about completely changing or at least dual sourcing their components to US manufacturers like Mayville Engineering Company.

We have seen increased activity in our quoting team. And we anticipate that we’ll be in the long run a tailwind for Mayville Engineering Company.

Ted Jackson: Yeah. That’s how I would think about it myself. I mean, I understand there’s disruptions, but, you know, I think over, you know, the longer term, if anything, it’s probably a positive for the company. Third question, just kinda when you gave the free cash flow guidance for 2025. It’s a honestly, it’s a robust number. I wonder if

Jag Reddy: And then pass on to Todd. In the end of 2022, Ted, we had 6.2 turns of inventory performance. We ended 2024 at 9.1 turns of inventory. That just shows you the power of MBX and then how we are driving down our work in process inventories and our planning of our raw material purchases, etc. So net working capital reduction has been a huge lever for us. In addition to working with our customers and our suppliers to change payment terms. So those are some of the actions that we have taken over the last couple of years to drive this level of performance and we continue to drive similar activities going into or coming into 2025. And as Jag mentioned, I mean, certainly, working capital is a big driver, and that really is the result of MBX initiatives.

Right. Not only inventory, but as Jag mentioned, you know, our terms with suppliers, we’ve changed things with our customers to collect quicker. In addition to that, we’ve also, you know, we’re reducing a bit on our capital expenditure, thirteen to seventeen million versus last year. All those factors are playing into why we expect to be at that, you know, seventy-two to seventy-six percent conversion rate as it relates to 2025. And I’ll certainly, you know, the first quarter will probably be a bit muted, but you’ll see in as we historically have done, you’ll see quarters two, three, and four, we’ll see that nice free cash flow generation.

Ted Jackson: Okay. And then my last question, just on the M&A side. I know it’s something you talk about a lot. It’s nice to know that you have a good pipeline in place. You know, the balance sheet is as strong as it’s been in years. You know, you’re below target in terms of your leverage. I have to imagine that some of the market dynamics that are impacting the top line are, you know, hopefully impacting some of the, you know, the valuation metrics for the targets that you have on that list. Can you talk a little bit about, you know, the areas that, you know, kind of when you look at that list, you know, like, I guess, the I go to, you know, the areas that are kind of the higher on the list in terms of the top possibilities, the likelihood that we see something in 2025, and what you’re seeing in terms of, you know, kind of target values for, you know, the values for the kind of acquisitions that you’re looking at?

How about that? In size maybe. Thanks. That’s my last one.

Jag Reddy: Yeah. As we laid out last quarter, I believe, our targeted range would be somewhere between $50 million and $150 million in revenues. And we want these acquisitions to be margin accretive on day one and provide market diversification for us. As you know, we have mentioned, many of our end markets are, you know, highly cyclical. So we’re looking for more secular growth end markets. So some of them, you know, will include, and we’re, you know, actively pursuing them, are in the power infrastructure, standby power, related to new investments in data centers and similarly long-term highly profitable, and growth-oriented end markets. So having said that, we can never predict the timing of any of these transactions. Our M&A team continues to be very active, engaging with potential targets, working with investment banks, and continuing to generate our list of relevant targets based on our framework.

At the same time, we have not seen any changes to the multiples. I would say that the multiples have been part of the reason is the interest rate regime that which remains high, helps us in terms of multiples even though our interest expense might be higher. But certainly, right, our purchase price will be slightly lower given the current interest rate regime we’re, you know,

Ted Jackson: Okay. Alright. Well, thanks for the time. Talk to you soon.

Operator: Alright. Thanks, James. Thank you. Our next question is from Andy Kapolewitz from Citi. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Andy Kapolewitz: Hey. Good morning, guys. This is actually Jose on for Andy. Good morning.

Jag Reddy: Morning, Lewis.

Andy Kapolewitz: Both on your release and during the call, you’ve mentioned the muted demand conditions and yet expectation for the first half to be weaker and for gradual improvement in the second half. Could you comment though on how you’re seeing the path to the 14% to 16% EBITDA margin targets you had set at your Investor Day when your 2025 guidance at the midpoint looks to be around 11%? And, obviously, with the understanding that revenues haven’t really grown at the levels you had initially expected back then.

Jag Reddy: It’s a great question. As we mentioned in our prepared remarks, we continue to see the 2023 Investor Day targets for 2026 as achievable. At the same time, the current base business needs to come back to a normalized level. So those targets are based on those assumptions. Given the current market conditions, we are expecting the timeline of achievement of those targets will take a little longer. At the same time, we continue to drive significant productivity within our manufacturing network. And 2026, the CV end market will be much higher than 2025. That’s a significant volume given it is 38% of our overall sales. Higher volumes will help us absorb better and volume leverage will help us get into that range in 2026.

Todd Butz: Yeah. The other comment I would make was there. As you look at, you know, our annual 2025 guidance, you know, not to look at it in a silo. Meaning, we talked about first half, second half, and this really is a first half versus second half story. We expect, you know, volume to be down in the first half as we stated. That’s going to have an impact on our margin rate. And so we look at first half, we’re probably in that 8% to 10% range. The second half, we’re growing to that 11% to 13% range. And so when you think about how that, you know, margin cadence and build up as we enter 2026, you know, we still see a very solid pathway to achieving that 14% to 16%. It’s really the same market volume dependent, you know, timing situation.

Andy Kapolewitz: Yeah. I appreciate the color, guys. And then just as a follow-up, I did want to touch on Hazel Park and see if you could provide us an update on how that ramp has been progressing for you guys. Sort of exit run rate that you closed 2024 with, and how should we be thinking about revenues in 2025 versus 2024?

Jag Reddy: Yeah. Nothing has changed with our expectations of Hazel Park. Certainly, current end market demand has impacted top-line sales, but we remain on track with our new product launches and that we’re, you know, well-positioned to meaningful bottom-line improvements as markets recover.

Andy Kapolewitz: Got it. Thanks for the time, everyone.

Operator: Thank you. We currently have no further questions, so I’ll hand back to Jag Reddy for closing remarks.

Jag Reddy: Once again, thank you for joining our call. We appreciate your continued support of Mayville Engineering Company, and we look forward to updating you on our progress next quarter. Should you have any questions, please contact Noel Ryan or Stefan Neely at Valum, our investors relations council. This concludes our call. You may now disconnect.

Operator: Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.

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