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2024-05-22


                                 UNITED STATES                                  
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION                       
                             Washington, D.C. 20549                             
                                      FORM                                      
                                      8-K                                       
                                 CURRENT REPORT                                 
     PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934     
               Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported):                
                                  May 22, 2024                                  

DYCOM INDUSTRIES, INC.

             (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)             

                    Florida                                 001-10613                           59-1277135              
 (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation)      (Commission file number)      (I.R.S. employer identification no.) 
                                           11780 U.S. Highway One, Suite 600                                            
              Palm Beach Gardens,                   FL       33408   
                                  (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)                                   

             Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (              
                                      561                                       
                                       )                                        
                                    627-7171                                    
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to 
simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of 
the following provisions:

Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 
230.425)

Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 
240.14a-12)

Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange 
Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange 
Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4c))
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

             Title of Each Class               Trading Symbol(s)   Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered 
 Common stock, par value $0.33 1/3 per share          DY                    New York Stock Exchange          

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as 
defined in as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 ((s)230.405 of 
this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
((s)240.12b-2 of this chapter).

Emerging growth company
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has 
elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new 
or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) 
of the Exchange Act.
..


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Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.
On May 22, 2024, Dycom Industries, Inc. (the "Company") held a webcast and 
conference call to review its fiscal 2025 first quarter results and provide 
forward guidance. A copy of the transcript is furnished as Exhibit 99.1 to 
this Current Report on Form 8-K and is incorporated herein by reference.
The transcript contains the financial measures of Non-GAAP Adjusted EBITDA, 
Non-GAAP Adjusted Net Income (Loss), Non-GAAP Adjusted Diluted Earnings (Loss) 
per Common Share and certain amounts relating to organic contract revenue, 
which are Non-GAAP financial measures within the meaning of Regulation G 
promulgated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Non-GAAP Adjusted 
EBITDA, defined by the Company as earnings before interest, taxes, 
depreciation and amortization, gain on sale of fixed assets, stock-based 
compensation expense, and certain non-recurring items, is not a recognized 
term under GAAP and does not purport to be an alternative to net income, 
operating cash flows, or a measure of earnings. Non-GAAP Adjusted Net Income 
(Loss) is not a recognized term under GAAP and does not purport to be an 
alternative to GAAP net income (loss). Non-GAAP Adjusted Diluted Earnings 
(Loss) per Common Share is not a recognized term under GAAP and does not 
purport to be an alternative to GAAP diluted earnings (loss) per common share. 
Organic contract revenue is not a recognized term under GAAP and does not 
purport to be an alternative to GAAP contract revenue. Because all companies 
do not use identical calculations, the presentation of these Non-GAAP 
financial measures may not be comparable to other similarly titled measures of 
other companies. The Company believes these Non-GAAP financial measures 
provide information that is useful to investors because it allows for a more 
direct comparison of the Company's performance for the period reported with 
the Company's performance in prior periods. A reconciliation of these Non-GAAP 
financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is provided 
in the conference call materials referred to on the webcast and conference 
call, a copy of which has been furnished as Exhibit 99.1 to the Company's Form 
8-K previously filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 22, 
2024.
The information in the preceding paragraphs, as well as Exhibit 99.1, shall 
not be deemed "filed" for purposes of Section 18 of the Exchange Act, or 
otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section. It may only be 
incorporated by reference into another filing under the Exchange Act or the 
Securities Act if such subsequent filing specifically references this Current 
Report on Form 8-K.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forward Looking Statements
The transcript of Dycom Industries, Inc.'s webcast and conference call held on 
May 22, 2024 (the "Transcript") included in this Current Report on Form 8-K 
contains forward-looking statements as contemplated by the 1995 Private 
Securities Litigation Reform Act. These statements are subject to change. 
Forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations, 
estimates and projections. These statements are subject to risks and 
uncertainties that may cause actual results for completed periods and periods 
in the future to differ materially from the results projected or implied in 
any forward-looking statements contained in this press release. The most 
significant of these risks and uncertainties are described in the Company's 
Form 10-K, Form 10-Q, and Form 8-K reports (including all amendments to those 
reports) and include future economic conditions and trends including the 
potential impacts of an inflationary economic environment, changes to customer 
capital budgets and spending priorities, the availability and cost of 
materials, equipment and labor necessary to perform our work, the adequacy of 
the Company's insurance and other reserves and allowances for doubtful 
accounts, whether the carrying value of the Company's assets may be impaired, 
the future impact of any acquisitions or dispositions, adjustments and 
cancellations of the Company's projects, the impact to the Company's backlog 
from project cancellations or postponements, the impacts of pandemics and 
public health emergencies, the impact of varying climate and weather 
conditions, the anticipated outcome of other contingent events, including 
litigation or regulatory actions involving the Company, the adequacy of our 
liquidity, the availability of financing to address our financials needs, the 
Company's ability to generate sufficient cash to service its indebtedness, the 
impact of restrictions imposed by the Company's credit agreement, and other 
risks and uncertainties detailed from time to time in the Company's filings 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These filings are available on a 
web site maintained by the Securities and Exchange Commission at http://www.sec.
gov. The Company does not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking 
statements.
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Item 9.01 Financial Statement and Exhibits.

(d)    Exhibits                                                                                  
99.1   Transcript of Dycom Industries, Inc.'s webcast and conference call held on May 22, 2024.  
104    Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded within the Inline XBRL document)               

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                                   SIGNATURES                                   

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the 
Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the 
undersigned thereunto duly authorized.


Dated: May 22, 2024

DYCOM INDUSTRIES, INC.                                            
(Registrant)                                                      
By:      /s/ Ryan F. Urness                                       
Name:    Ryan F. Urness                                           
Title:   Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary  

                                                                    Exhibit 99.1
Dycom Industries, Inc. (NYSE: DY) Q1 2025 Results Conference Call May 22, 2024 
9:00 AM ET

CORPORATE PARTICIPANTS

Steven E. Nielsen
, President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom Industries, Inc.
Ryan F. Urness
, Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary, Dycom Industries, Inc.
H. Andrew DeFerrari
, Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom Industries, Inc.

OTHER PARTICIPANTS

Alex Rygiel
, Analyst, B Riley Securities, Inc.
Adam Thalhimer
, Analyst, Thompson, Davis & Company, Inc.
Sangita Jain
, Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets, Inc.
Alexander Waters
, Analyst, BofA Securities, Inc.
Steven Fisher
, Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Brent
Thielman
, Analyst, D.A. Davidson & Co.
Rob Palmisano
, Senior Equity Research Associate, Raymond James & Associates, Inc.
Eric Luebchow
, Analyst, Wells Fargo Securities LLC
Christian Schwab
, Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC
Alan Mitrani
, Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC

MANAGEMENT DISCUSSION SECTION

Operator

Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Dycom Industries' First 
Quarter Fiscal 2025 Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants 
are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a 
question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that 
today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference 
over to your host, Mr. Steven Nielsen, President and Chief Executive Officer. 
Please go ahead, sir.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Thank you, Operator. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for attending this 
conference call to review our first quarter fiscal 2025 results. Going to 
slide 2. During this call we will be referring to a slide presentation which 
can be found on our website's investor center main page. Relevant slides will 
be identified by number throughout our presentation. Today we have on the call 
Drew DeFerrari, our Chief Financial Officer, and Ryan Urness, our General 
Counsel. Now I will turn over the call to Ryan Urness.

Ryan F. Urness
Vice President, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary, Dycom Industries, Inc.
Thank you, Steve. All forward-looking statements made during this conference 
call are provided pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private 
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include 
all comments reflecting our expectations, assumptions or beliefs about future 
events. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and 
uncertainties which may cause actual results to differ materially from current 
projections, including those risks discussed in the Company's filings with the 
US Securities and Exchange Commission. Forward-looking statements are made 
solely as of the original broadcast date of this conference call and we assume 
no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. Steve?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Thanks, Ryan. Now, moving to slide 4 and a review of our first quarter 
results. As we review our results, please note that in our comments today, and 
in the accompanying slides, we reference certain Non-GAAP measures. We refer 
you to slides 14 through 19 for a reconciliation of these Non-GAAP measures to 
their corresponding GAAP measures.

Now for the quarter. Revenue increased year over year to $1.142 billion, an 
increase of 9.3%. Organic revenue increased 2.5%. As we deployed gigabit 
wireline networks, wireless/wireline converged networks and wireless networks, 
this quarter reflected an increase in demand from two of our top five 
customers.

Gross margin was 19.3% of revenue and increased 95 bps compared to the first 
quarter of fiscal 2024. General and administrative expenses were 8.3% of 
revenue. And all of these factors produced Adjusted EBITDA of $130.9 million 
or 11.5% of revenue, and earnings per share of $2.12. Liquidity was solid at 
$573.6 million
.
Pro-forma for our recently closed five-year extension to our senior credit 
facility, liquidity was $707 million. In May, we completed an acquisition that 
extends our geographic footprint to Alaska. And finally, during the quarter we 
repurchased 210,000 shares of our common stock for $29.8 million.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Now, going to slide 5. Today major industry participants are constructing or 
upgrading significant wireline networks across broad sections of the country. 
These wireline networks are generally designed to provision gigabit network 
speeds to individual consumers and businesses either directly or wirelessly 
using 5G technologies.

Industry participants have stated their belief that a single high-capacity 
fiber network can most cost effectively deliver services to both consumers and 
businesses, enabling multiple revenue streams from a single investment. This 
view is increasing the appetite for fiber deployments, and we believe that the 
industry's effort to deploy high-capacity fiber networks continues to 
meaningfully broaden the set of opportunities for our industry.

We are encouraged that a number of our customers are pursuing strategic 
transactions aimed largely in part to increase access to capital and expand 
fiber deployment programs.

Increasing access to high-capacity telecommunications continues to be crucial 
to society, especially for rural America. The Infrastructure Investment and 
Jobs Act includes over $40 billion for the construction of rural communications 
networks in unserved and underserved areas across the country under the BEAD 
program. This represents an unprecedented level of support and meaningfully 
increases the rural market that we expect will ultimately be addressed. All 
states and territories have submitted their initial BEAD proposals. As of 
early this week, eight states and territories have completed all 10 required 
steps while 45 others have completed 9 of the 10. Once all 10 steps are 
completed, a state can request 20% or more of its allocated BEAD funding. To 
date, approximately $6 billion, or 14% of the program total, has received 
initial proposal approval.

In addition, substantially all states have commenced programs that will 
provide funding for telecommunications networks even prior to the initiation 
of funding under the Infrastructure Act.

We are providing program management, planning, engineering and design, aerial, 
underground, and wireless construction, and fulfillment services for gigabit 
deployments. These services are being provided across the country in numerous 
geographic areas to multiple customers.

These deployments include networks consisting entirely of wired network 
elements and converged wireless/wireline multi-use networks. Fiber network 
deployment opportunities are increasing in rural America as new industry 
participants respond to emerging societal initiatives.

We continue to provide integrated planning, engineering and design, 
procurement and construction and maintenance services to several industry 
participants.

Macro-economic conditions appear stable. In addition, the market for labor has 
improved in many regions around the country. Automotive and equipment supply 
chains are also improving, although the supply of mid-duty chassis is still 
somewhat constrained. Prices for capital equipment continue to increase, but 
at a moderating rate.

For several customers, we expect the pace of deployments to increase this 
year, including two significant customers whose capital expenditures were more 
heavily weighted toward the first half of calendar year 2023. Within this 
context, we remain confident that our scale and financial strength position us 
well to deliver valuable service to our customers.

Moving to slide 6. During the quarter revenue increased 9.3%. Our top five 
customers combined produced 56.4% of revenue, which was essentially flat 
organically. Demand increased from two of our top five customers. All other 
customers increased 5.7% organically.

AT&T was our largest customer at 18.9% of revenue, or $215.5 million. AT&T 
grew sequentially for the second consecutive quarter. Lumen was our second 
largest customer at 13.7% of total revenue, or $156.8 million. Lumen grew 
organically 15.0%. This was our ninth consecutive quarter of organic growth 
with Lumen. Revenue from Comcast was $105.0 million, or 9.2% of revenue. 
Comcast was Dycom's third largest customer. Charter was our fourth largest 
customer at $89.1 million, or 7.8% of revenue. Charter grew 121.8% 
organically. And finally, Verizon was our fifth largest customer at $78.2 
million, or 6.8% of revenue.

This is the twenty-first consecutive quarter where all of our other customers 
in aggregate, excluding the top five customers, have grown organically. Of 
note, fiber construction revenue from electric utilities was $96.0 million in 
the quarter.

We have extended our geographic reach and expanded our program management and 
network planning services. In fact, over the last several years we believe we 
have meaningfully increased the long-term value of our maintenance and 
operations business, a trend which we believe will parallel our deployment of 
gigabit wireline direct and wireless/wireline converged

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

networks as those deployments dramatically increase the amount of outside 
plant network that must be extended and maintained.

Now, going to slide 7. Backlog at the end of the first quarter was $6.364 
billion vs. $6.917 billion at the end of the January 2024 quarter, a decrease 
of $553 million. Of this backlog, approximately $3.863 billion is expected to 
be completed in the next 12 months. Backlog activity during the first quarter 
reflects solid performance as we booked new work and renewed existing work. We 
continue to anticipate substantial future opportunities across a broad array 
of our customers.

During the quarter we received from Frontier, a construction and maintenance 
agreement in Illinois. For Comcast, a construction agreement in Washington. 
Various rural fiber construction agreements in Washington, Arizona, Tennessee, 
and Georgia. And various utility line locating agreements in California, 
Virginia, and Georgia. Headcount was 15,689.

Now I will turn the call over to Drew for his financial review and outlook.

H. Andrew DeFerrari
Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom Industries, Inc.
Thanks Steve and good morning, everyone.

Going to slide 8. Contract revenues were $1.142 billion and organic revenue 
increased 2.5%. Revenues from our recently acquired businesses were $71.2 
million in Q1. Adjusted EBITDA was $130.9 million, or 11.5% of contract 
revenues, compared to $113.5 million, or 10.9% in Q1 2024, an increase of 60 
bps.

Gross margin improved 95 bps to 19.3% of revenue compared to 18.4% in Q1 2024. 
G&A expense was 8.3% of revenue compared to 7.9% in Q1 2024. The increase in 
G&A reflects higher stock-based and performance-based compensation as well as 
an increase in professional fees, including costs related to acquisitions. Net 
income was $2.12 per share compared to $1.73 per share in Q1 last year.
Results for the quarter include income tax benefits resulting from the vesting 
and exercise of share-based awards of $5.9 million, or $0.20 per share, 
compared to $2.7 million, or $0.09 per share, in the year ago quarter. 
Including these benefits, the change in net income reflects the $17.4 million 
increase in Adjusted EBITDA and higher gains on asset sales, offset by $7.9 
million of higher depreciation and amortization, $1.5 million of higher 
interest expense, and higher stock-based compensation and income tax expense.


Going to slide 9. Our financial position and balance sheet remains strong. We 
ended Q1 with $500.0 million of Senior Notes, $310.6 million of Term Loan, and 
$55.0 million of revolver borrowings outstanding. Cash and equivalents were 
$26.1 million and liquidity was $573.6 million. In May, we amended our Senior 
Credit Facility to expand capacity and extend the maturity to January 2029. 
Under the new Facility, we now have $450 million of Term Loan outstanding and 
an undrawn $650 million Revolving Credit Facility. On a pro forma basis, if 
the new facility was in place as of April 2024, total liquidity would have 
increased by approximately $133 million to $707 million reflecting increased 
cash on hand and higher revolver availability. Our capital allocation 
continues to prioritize organic growth, followed by M&A and opportunistic 
share repurchases, within the context of our historical range of net leverage.


Going to slide 10. Cash flows used in operating activities were $37.4 million 
to support the sequential growth in Q1. The combined DSOs of accounts 
receivable and net contract assets were 110 days,
a reduction of 10 days sequentially reflecting normal seasonal impacts and 
collections from customers during the quarter. Capital expenditures were $29.3 
million, net of disposal proceeds, and gross CapEx was $42.0 million. During 
Q1 we acquired a telecommunications construction contractor based in the 
Midwest United States for $13.0 million, net of cash acquired. Additionally, 
during Q2 we have acquired another telecommunications construction contractor 
for $ 20.8 million, net of cash acquired, that expands our geographic 
footprint to Alaska. During Q1, we repurchased 210,000 shares of our common 
stock for $29.8 million.

Going to slide 11. As we look ahead to the second quarter ending July 27, 
2024, we expect organic contract revenues to grow by high-single digits as a 
percentage of contract revenues compared to Q2 2024. In addition to the 
organic revenue growth, we expect approximately $70 million of acquired 
revenues. We also expect Non-GAAP Adjusted EBITDA percentage of contract 
revenues to increase 25 to 75 bps as compared to Q2 of last year, $6.0 million 
of amortization expense, $14.9 million of net interest expense, a 26.5% 
effective income tax rate, and 29.4 million diluted shares.

Now, I will turn the call back to Steve.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.

Thanks Drew, moving to slide 12. This quarter we experienced solid activity 
and capitalized on our significant strengths. First and foremost, we 
maintained significant customer presence throughout our markets. We are 
encouraged by the breadth in our business. Our extensive market presence has 
allowed us to be at the forefront of evolving industry opportunities.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Telephone companies are deploying fiber-to-the-home to enable gigabit high 
speed connections. Rural electric utilities are doing the same. Dramatically 
increased speeds for consumers are being provisioned and consumer data usage 
is growing, particularly upstream.

Wireless construction activity in support of newly available spectrum bands 
continues this year.

Federal and state support for rural deployments of communications networks is 
dramatically increasing in scale and duration.

Cable operators are increasing fiber deployments in rural America. Capacity 
expansion projects are underway.

Customers are consolidating supply chains creating opportunities for market 
share growth and increasing the long-term value of our maintenance and 
operations business.

We are pleased that many of our customers are committed to multi-year capital 
spending initiatives as our nation and industry experience stable economic 
conditions. We are confident in our strategies, the prospects for our company, 
the capabilities of our dedicated employees, and the experience of our 
management team.

Now, Operator, we will open the call for questions.

QUESTION AND ANSWER SECTION

Operator
: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Please stand by while we compile the Q&A 
roster. And our first question will come from Alex Rygiel from B. Riley 
Securities. Your line is open.

Alex Rygiel
Analyst, B Riley Securities, Inc.
Good morning, Steve and Drew. Very nice quarter. Couple of quick questions 
here. Lots of development talk about AI and data center demand and the 
electric grid, but can you talk about how this megatrend has or may impact 
your telecom business? And how would you frame AI relative to other 
communication infrastructure megatrends over the past few decades?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
I think, Alex, the way I would start is there's a direct opportunity that, as 
they create more data center capacity, and I'm not an expert in this, but we 
do monitor the trends, sufficient grid power is hard to find. And so, we are 
seeing more data centers located in parts of the country that historically 
have not had the backbone fiber access that the more traditional geographies 
for data center. So, certainly there's an opportunity there.

I think, more broadly and to the second half of your question, if we think 
about any application that learns from and requires ever-increasing amounts of 
data, you've got to collect it and then you've got to process it and then 
you've got to send it somewhere to be used. And so, anything that increases 
demands on the network has historically been good for our business. A little 
early to tell what the magnitude of that may be, but certainly something to 
pay attention to.

Alex Rygiel
Analyst, B Riley Securities, Inc.
And then, second question, your Adjusted EBITDA margin showed some nice 
improvement and your guidance continues to reflect expansion. Can you remind 
us where your long-term target is and then talk about some of the things you 
are doing that are a tailwind to this margin improvement?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, Alex, as we've said before, we have seen in periods of time where we 
have had broad geographic and customer diversification, that we get good 
operating leverage. And so, as we have better distribution across customers 
and geographies, we think that's an opportunity. I mean, we continue to roll 
out a number of technologies to simplify the field administration of the 
business to focus on increased productivity. And as I always say, we had good 
performance this quarter, but half the business was less than the average. And 
so, we could always have things to work on.

Alex Rygiel
Analyst, B Riley Securities, Inc.
Thank you very much.

Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Adam Thalhimer from Thompson 
Davis. Your line is open.

Adam Thalhimer
Analyst, Thompson, Davis & Company, Inc.
Hey, good morning, guys. Nice quarter. Hey, Steve. In the prepared remarks, 
you referenced cable capacity expansion projects. Can you unpack that for us a 
little bit, and could that impact your largest cable customer?

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Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Look, I think, more broadly, that was talking about the cable industry 
focusing on moving to DOCSIS 4.0, either through a mid-split or a high-split 
approach, as well as through full duplex. And I think, as that technology 
becomes more settled and becomes more available throughout this year, there'll 
certainly be opportunities there for growth. The cable industry, broadly, is 
also building out, edging out of their existing footprint, and that's also 
certainly a good opportunity for us to grow also.

Adam Thalhimer
Analyst, Thompson, Davis & Company, Inc.
All right. And then, on the share repurchase activity, $59 million over the 
past two quarters, how would you characterize that? Is this just in line with 
your normal capital allocation or do you see the shares as undervalued?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
I think we can first say that we're in the money. But beyond that, I think 
we've always focused on a balanced approach that says, first and foremost, 
we're going to make sure that we have sufficient capacity to support the 
growth of our customers and of the industry. I mean, we're a substantial 
portion or a good portion of the industry, and we want to make sure we can 
always support industry and customer growth. And then, we're going to look at 
acquisitions versus share repurchases.

I think we've been encouraged on the acquisitions side. We've always had an 
opportunistic approach to acquisitions, and we're seeing more opportunities. I 
think a little bit counterintuitively, with the normalizing of interest rates, 
we see value that we didn't see a couple of years ago. And so, we're going to 
take advantage of those opportunities when we can. And, of course, the last 
thing which supports all of it, is if you look at our EBITDA over the last 
couple of years, it's doubled. Leverage has come in, and so, we have more 
financial capacity to explore all the options across organic growth, M&A, and 
share repurchase.

Adam Thalhimer
Analyst, Thompson, Davis & Company, Inc.
Great. Thanks, Steve.

Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Sangita Jain from KeyBanc Capital 
Markets. Your line is now open.

Sangita Jain
Analyst,
KeyBanc Capital Markets, Inc.
Yes, thank you. Hi, Steve. Good morning. I had a couple of questions. One on 
the backlog, I understand it's a seasonally slow quarter, but just trying to 
get a sense of the backlog versus the dynamics of the strong revenue growth 
forecast that you gave us, if you could help us there?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Sure. So, it was a quiet quarter with customers. That's not unusual for that 
part of the year. I think the other thing to keep in mind, Sangita, is if you 
look at the next 12 months, basically in line with the January quarter, even 
though we do have some contracts that are annual and renew at the end of each 
calendar year. And so, I guess, what I would say is, right now, we're focused 
on the next 12 months and the organic revenue guide; and duration and total 
backlog is always important, but in this current environment, something we pay 
attention to, but we're much more focused on next 12 months.

Sangita Jain
Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets, Inc.
Got it. That's helpful. And also, on the Alaska acquisition that you 
announced, is that in any way you looking out at the BEAD opportunity because 
it looks like Alaska put a decent amount of funding on BEAD? Or are there any 
other drivers for that acquisition?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Well, first and foremost, Sangita, we like the folks that we bought the 
business from, one of the - they're two partners, one of the partners actually 
worked for us a little less than 20 years ago. The other partner was a 
customer a little less than 20 years ago. So, we're pleased with the 
opportunity to get together with folks that we've known for a long time and 
have great, established reputations and track records.

And then, as you point out, Alaska received a little over $1 billion of the 
BEAD money. They've also received some USDA money. And it's just that we think 
it's an opportunity to grow where that funding is going to become available 
with people that we know and respect.

Sangita Jain
Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets, Inc.
All right, that's very helpful. Thank you, Steve.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Alex Waters from BofA. Your line 
is open.

Alexander Waters
Analyst, Bank of America
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe first, Steve, can you 
maybe talk about any impact you see from the Uniti and Windstream merger? I 
know Windstream is a Top 10 customer for you guys. And then, secondly, pretty 
strong performance from the electric utilities this quarter. Could you just 
maybe give a little bit more color on that and what the runway associated is? 
Thanks.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Sure. Thanks. Good morning, Alex. So, yes, we have worked for Windstream for 
decades, and so we are certainly encouraged that when they - when Uniti 
announced the merger, that they identified that, in part, the merger was 
motivated by the desire to do more fiber-to-the-home, up to 1 million 
additional passings. And so, yes, we think that Uniti, Windstream, as well as 
EQT, T-Mobile, Lumos and other strategic activity in the industry is all 
around how do they raise more capital, how do they become more financially 
flexible so that people can deploy more CapEx on the things that we do, build 
fiber-to-the-home. So, yeah, we are encouraged by Windstream and Uniti. And I 
think with respect to electric utilities, it's a nice segment; it's grown 
substantially for us over the last six, seven, eight years; and it just shows 
how strong the trend is in rural America and how many participants see value 
in deploying fiber. And we think that's going to continue.

Alexander Waters
Analyst, Bank of America
Thank you.

Operator
Thank you. And our next question will come from Steven Fisher from UBS. Your 
line is open.

Steven Fisher Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Thanks. Good morning. Just wanted to ask you about some growth and 
availability of resources. Obviously, strong quarter. I'm curious how you're 
thinking about the stars are lining up on timing in a lot of these funding 
programs and customer demand. I'm wondering if you think your fiscal 2026 is 
going to require a much broader level of contractor resources? And are the 
resources available to handle strong double-digit growth if that's how it 
lines up, and should we think about that we'll start to see it more in your 
hiring ahead of that or will you turn to more subcontracting and just, 
essentially, I guess, are we on the edge of much faster growth here? And is 
the industry ready to handle it?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, Steve, I guess, what I would say is that labor supply has been 
improving. We've identified that, I think, for the last two or three quarters. 
So, as we get bigger and as the industry gets bigger, its ability to add 
resources on the margin increases. And so, I think that that's encouraging. As 
we've talked about before, over the last three years, we've added in excess of 
$1 billion of organic growth. And as you get bigger, your ability to do that 
gets better. So, it won't be easy, never is.

But we feel confident that with the right customers, applying ourselves to the 
right opportunities where we can be most helpful, that we can continue to 
grow. There'll always be a mixture of in-house hires, depending on the line of 
business and geography and what's available through subcontractors. But I 
think we're also perceived as to be a good partner to our subcontractors, and 
I think as opportunities develop, we'll be able to get our fair share.

Steven Fisher Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Okay. And then, it looks like you're starting to have some consistency in this 
25 to 75 basis points of year-over-year margin improvement. How should we 
think about what's really driving that? Is that really just general operating 
leverage as your revenues grow, you get just a little bit more absorption or 
is there better pricing going into backlog relative to what you're reporting 
on a trailing basis versus some of the initiatives you talk about, 
productivity things and some of the sort of the back office? So, how do we 
think about what's really within that 25 to 75 basis points of margin 
improvement? And is there anything that would take it up or down from here in 
sort of the next handful of quarters?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah. And Steve, I think you touched on the way we think about the business. I 
mean, clearly, when you get good organic growth and you get broad, fully 
distributed growth across customers and geographies, that's your best recipe 
for operating leverage. And so, clearly, that's probably first and foremost.

Second, I think, given the scale of the enterprise now and it's our geographic 
coverage, we work hard to make sure that we're committing resources to 
customers in areas where we can perform for them and for ourselves. So, we 
want to make sure that where we commit, that we'll do a really great job for 
the customer. And usually, when we do a really great job for the customer, 
we're able to perform better for ourselves.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


And then, I think we're always going to continue to work hard on taking cost 
out of the business. We're using lots of tools that we connect with crews now 
wirelessly. We try to move data electronically rather than in then the old 
way. And again, based on our scale, we're making investments there that, 
frankly, I don't see other people making at the same level. So, I think, a 
combination of good operating leverage, the ability to make sure we only 
commit in places where we can do a good job for the customer, and then 
investing at scale and things that you have to have our scale to be good at.


Steven Fisher Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Very helpful. Thank you.

Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Frank Louthan from Raymond James. 
Your line is open.

Rob Palmisano Senior
Equity Research Associate, Raymond James
Hey, guys.
Good morning. This is Rob on for Frank. Congratulations on the quarter. So, 
from our recent contact with the states, it doesn't appear there will be any 
BEAD-related construction being done this year. Is that your expectation as 
well? And then, as a follow up, based on what you're seeing in the locate 
business, what's your outlook on how the US economy is faring so far this year 
relative to how it looked coming into January? Are you seeing more activity, 
less overall? Any color you can provide us with would be appreciated. Thank 
you.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, on BEAD, Rob, I think what I would tell you is that there has been a 
pickup in the number of states that have gotten first step approval or 
actually second step approval. So, there are actually eight states that are 
ready to start the subgrantee process, including four that have over $1 
billion. So, I think, incrementally, we feel more positive than we did three 
months ago. Obviously, lots to do.

It's interesting, Rob, those eight states have about $6 billion of funding. Of 
course, there's a required 25% match or, call it, $7 billion or $8 billion. 
That's bigger than the 2009 stimulus that kept us quite busy for a couple, 
three years. So, it's amazing just the scale of it.

I think next year, I think you're right, I guess the first half of next year, 
first quarter. But there are some states here that are moving rapidly and 
we're having some conversations with. So, hopefully, it'll be a little bit 
sooner, but I think it will be worth the wait based on everything that we know 
today. And then, I would tell you that just kind of our own internal 
indicators turned positive in that business fall of last year and they've 
continued to improve, and we'll hope that continues.

Rob Palmisano Senior Equity Research Associate, Raymond James
Okay. Great. Thank you.


Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Brent Thielman from D.A. Davidson. 
Your line is open.

Brent Thielman Analyst, D.A. Davidson & Co.
Great. Thanks. A couple, just on the quarter. The other income item below the 
operating line seemed to be a larger than usual benefit, and then, similarly, 
a much lower tax rate this quarter. Can you just clarify what those items are 
related to?

H. Andrew DeFerrari Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, Brent, this is Drew. So, in the other income, you'll see the gain on 
sale was a little bit higher this quarter. So, from - that's from disposal 
proceeds on assets as we're buying new and selling existing. And then, on the 
tax rate, we did call out in the comments, and you'll see it on the slides as 
well, we did have a benefit of about $0.20 per share, which was related to the 
vesting and exercise of share-based awards. And so, that comes through as a 
benefit on the tax line. So, I think if you strip that out, the rate, the 
effective tax rate for the quarter was a little over 26.5%, and that's where 
I've guided in the outlook as well.

Brent Thielman Analyst, D.A. Davidson & Co.
Okay, appreciate that, Drew. And then, Steve, I guess, just a follow up on the 
overall data center opportunity for Dycom. I mean, a lot of these projects 
seem to be well underway, obviously, more potentially to come in terms of 
planning. Could you just help us understand what's been the benefit to the 
business directly or indirectly to date? Understand that you'll need more 
backhaul in the future, but presumably you'll need that sooner than later. So, 
I just want to get my head wrapped around how you're looking at this and 
what's actually been the impact to your business so far?




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, Brent, I know it's the topic of the day on the Street, but I would say 
the impact's been modest on the business, so it's all upside depending on how 
it develops. But it's - it is not an area where we've seen a material impact 
on the business as of yet.

Brent Thielman Analyst, D.A. Davidson & Co.
Okay. All right. Fair enough. Thanks.

Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Eric Luebchow from Wells Fargo. 
Your line is now open.

Eric Luebchow
Analyst, Wells Fargo Securities LLC
Thanks for taking the question. So, Steve, you talked about two of your top 
customers starting to increase the pace of deployments versus a bit more of a 
pull-forward into the first quarter last year. So, is your expectation with 
those two customers they'll kind of grow sequentially from here and we'll see 
the growth path be a little bit steadier versus what was a little bit more of 
a volatile quarterly pace last year?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, think we're pleased with how both of those customers developed in - from 
the January quarter, into the April quarter. And we feel good about the year, 
and we think they're growing as we lap the easier comps in the back half of 
last year. And I think they both have large programs and we're pleased that 
we're able to participate.


Eric Luebchow
Analyst, Wells Fargo Securities LLC
And then, you had a comment in your prepared remarks about wireless CapEx to 
support new spectrum deployments. Just curious if you're seeing any green 
shoots or inflection points? I know wireless spending broadly has been - has 
slowed quite a bit the last couple years. I don't know if you're seeing any 
opportunities to deploy new spectrum or densify existing sites that could 
improve the trajectory of that business for you?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, I guess, what I would say, Eric, is it's less than 4% of revenue now. 
And right now, we don't anticipate any return to growth anytime soon. The 
carriers continue to do a great job of deploying spectrum pretty efficiently. 
And so, we have not seen any significant change since last quarter.

Eric Luebchow
Analyst, Wells Fargo Securities LLC
Great. And I'll sneak one more in, Steve. Just as you look at some of these - 
the BEAD and the rural fiber programs that are coming up, do you think 
there'll be any real kind of margin differential on building fiber in those 
more rural areas versus more urban? And does it depend on whether the 
incumbents are planning to build within or adjacent to their ILEC footprints 
versus out-of-footprint, which I know can be a lot more challenging for them?


Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, Eric, there's nothing inherent in any build, whether it's rural, urban 
or suburban, as to what the margins are. It's always a function of the capital 
that's required on the program and the complexity of managing it with the 
customer. We do lots of rural work today and we're pleased with the results. 
And so, we're not thinking that the shift will have a material impact one way 
or another on our overall sense of the margin trajectory of the company.

Clearly, as you identified, to the extent that incumbents are able to utilize 
their existing pole attachment agreements, central offices or headends or 
other facilities that they already have sited there, that will be helpful. And 
then, I would say, and we've talked about this before, we serve on a - for 
maintenance master service agreements, we serve broad sections of rural 
America right now, and it'll be great to have more to do through those 
footprints.

Eric Luebchow
Analyst, Wells Fargo Securities LLC
Fair. Thank you, Steve.

Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Christian Schwab from Craig-Hallum 
Capital Group. Your line is now open.

Christian David Schwab
Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hey, Steve, just a follow up on BEAD. I know that the Commerce Secretary has 
been telling Congress that they want all the states to be approved and the 
money to start being disbursed as soon as this fall. So, I want to go back to 
you're feeling better about that market than, say, you did 90 days ago. Do you 
think we'll be in a really strong, broader position? I know you talked about 
$9 billion of just a handful of states, plus or minus. But do you think as we 
go into 2025 - I'm just wondering if you could just add a little bit more 
color on your enthusiasm for "worth the wait"?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah, Christian, I think we've always taken an appropriately conservative view 
as to how quickly any government program will start up. But I think this is a 
classic example, Christian, of sometimes we over anticipate but then really 
underappreciate. I mean, this is a big program. If it starts in the fourth 
quarter of 2024, the first quarter in 2025, in 2026, I don't think anybody's 
going to remember because of the magnitude of the program.

As I said earlier, if you think about this relative to the most comparable 
program 15 years ago, the money that's awarded now for eight states is larger 
than the amount of money that was dedicated to the entire country. And just to 
remind everybody, on that earlier program, that was about $6.5 billion when it 
was all said and done through our own efforts, and then with the companies 
that we had acquired in 2012 on a pro forma basis, we did about 8% or 9% of 
that entire program. So, this is a big opportunity.

Christian David Schwab
Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC
And that is a great segue to my next question, Steve, is given the tremendous 
amount of infrastructure dollars not only in fiber but elsewhere, do you feel 
like there's less competition or the potential for less new entrants to come 
into the marketplace to chase after those dollars that are kind of used to 
getting dirty and dealing with heavy equipment that you might have expected 
previously?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
I think, Christian, my view on competition is, we're in a highly competitive 
industry. As we do well, we're going to attract competition. That is true 
today as it was 20, 25 years ago. So, just something that we're going to deal 
with. What I do - what I think we can say is, as the programs become larger 
and more complex, we think there's a real return to the singular focus on this 
industry that we have, and that helps us to perform better and win our fair 
share against those who might be more diversified.

Christian David Schwab
Analyst, Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC
Great. No other questions. Thank you.

Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Alan Mitrani from Sylvan Lake Asset 
Management. Your line is now open.

Alan Mitrani
Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC
Hi. Thank you. A couple of questions if I can. You said, on CapEx, can you 
give us - and maybe I missed it - can you give us an updated guide for the 
year? And also, why is it that your CapEx missed what you thought it would be 
this quarter?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Go ahead, Drew.

H. Andrew DeFerrari Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah. Alan, we haven't updated the CapEx from where we were. We still 
anticipate the $220 million to $230 million. If you look at the net number for 
the quarter, and to add on to Brent's earlier question, we did have higher 
disposals in the quarter that's net into that number.

Steven E. Nielsen
President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom Industries, Inc.
And on a gross basis, Alan, it was in line with our expectations and...


Alan Mitrani
Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC
Okay.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
...as quick as we add it, we're putting it to work.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Alan Mitrani
Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC
No problem. Maybe I just missed my expectations for this quarter. That's fine. 
Question for you, the two acquisitions, can you give us the revenue run rate 
for each of those acquisitions, either trailing 12 months or past calendar 
year?
Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
I mean, Alan, we provided in Drew's comments the purchase price. We're not 
going to drill down into the revenue on something that's a bolt-on, other than 
to say that we're pleased with both of those acquisitions, as well as the one 
that we did last year. And to the extent that there are more available, we'll 
continue to look at them.

Alan Mitrani
Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC
Okay. And then, on SG&A, the numbers seem - the absolute dollar numbers seem 
pretty high relative to the increase in revenues year-over-year, $10 million 
increase, I realized a little bit million in change of it was, let's say, 
non-stock comp. But is there something else? The percentage of revenue was 
fairly high versus the past. Is there something else there, like a meaningful 
- like some non-recurring besides some of the professional fees that were in 
there that made that so much higher?

H. Andrew DeFerrari Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
So, Alan, well, obviously, we had better-than-expected organic revenue growth 
this quarter. And then, we expect that as - if you look at the outlook, the 
increase in the next quarter as well, and then when our results increase, both 
the performance-based stock comp as well as regular performance compensation 
increases, and that impacts G&A. As you highlighted, there was some M&A type 
costs that hit the number as well.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah. And I think the other thing that I would add, Alan, is as we look at our 
growth outlook, we're going to make sure that we invest in the right program 
controls and the right G&A processes to make sure that when we get them, that 
we achieve the margins that we anticipate.

Alan Mitrani
Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC
Okay. Thank you. And then, one final question. Relative to the stock - to the 
repurchase of shares, I saw in your annual letter, you highlighted over the 
last - since you've been CEO, way back, how you guys have bought stock back at 
pretty good prices, clearly, and it's been a good investment. But I still look 
at your stock, even though it's hitting all-time highs here and doubled since 
October, you still trade, whether everybody's overvalued or not, you still 
traded anywhere from a 30% to 100% discount to most of - most other comps that 
that I would look at, either specialty contractors or other contractors, and 
yet your margins are higher than most of them and your leverage is lower. Do 
you have a thought process on that relative to what you're seeing in the 
market or what the valuations are?



Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Alan, it's like that old statement, right? In the short term, the market is a 
- is it a weighing machine? I forget what the saying is. But look, we're going 
to run the business fundamentally in the way that has been successful over a 
long period of time to the extent that the market gives us opportunities to 
allocate capital, to reduce ownership claims on the future. And we think the 
future is bright, and we're going to do that. And I've been doing it a long 
time. Everything rotates around, but at the end of the day you run the 
business as best you can, and the market will take care of itself.

Alan Mitrani
Managing Partner, Sylvan Lake Asset Management LLC
Thank you.

Operator
Thank you. And our next question will come from Steven Fisher from UBS. Your 
line is open.

Steven Fisher
Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Thanks. Just a couple of quick follow ups. Not sure if I missed it, but the 
$55 million of revolving facility that you added in the quarter, what was that 
for? Was that related to the buybacks and acquisitions you already did or was 
that something more - for more of what's to come?




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

H. Andrew DeFerrari Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
No, I think - and Steve, this is Drew. So, seasonally, we consume some working 
capital. So, if you look, we did use some operating cash flows in the quarter 
and that just funded the business. We also did close the acquisition that we - 
or one of the acquisitions in the quarter as well, which was the one with the 
$13 million purchase price.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Yeah. And Steve, I guess, what I would add is that we have had a long practice 
here to renew credit facilities a couple of years before the maturity dates. 
And so, we had a maturity date in April of 2026. And so, we've now extended 
that to April of 2029.

H. Andrew DeFerrari Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
January 2029.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
January...

H. Andrew DeFerrari Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
2029.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Drew corrects me, January of 2029. And that's just ordinary course. And so, 
that's why we did what we did on the credit facility.


Steven Fisher
Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Okay. Yeah, I thought it might be working capital, but last year's Q1, you did 
not have a draw on it. So, but anyway, and just to follow up on Alan's 
question on the acquired revenues, is there any puts and takes to the 
expectation for Q2? Because it seems roughly steady at about $70 million with 
Q1, but presumably you'll have more acquisitions in this quarter than you had 
last quarter. So, just curious if there's some puts and takes that are keeping 
that from being higher?

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc
Steve, I think all of the businesses are performing well. When they're smaller 
businesses, they tend to have a little more volatility quarter-to-quarter, and 
we don't want to get ahead of ourselves in giving you that kind of non-organic 
expectation. The Alaska acquisition, believe it or not, hasn't really gone to 
work yet. That's kind of a June thing. And so, they're not going to be a 
significant contributor this quarter until we get deeper into June and July.


Steven Fisher
Analyst, UBS Securities LLC
Okay. Makes sense. Thank you.

Operator
Thank you. And I am showing no further questions from our phone lines. I'd now 
like to turn the conference back over to Steven Nielsen for any closing 
remarks.

Steven E. Nielsen President, Chief Executive Officer & Director, Dycom 
Industries, Inc.
Well, we thank everybody for your time and attendance and interest, and we 
look forward to speaking to you again on our next quarter, which will be the 
third week of August. Thank you.

Operator
Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your 
participation. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a wonderful day.


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