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Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, greetings, and welcome to the inTEST Corporation first quarter 2024 financial conference call. (Operator Instructions) As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Sean Sutter, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Shawn Stoddard - Investor Relations
Good afternoon, everyone. We certainly appreciate your interest in inTEST Corporation, and thank you for sharing your time with us today. Joining me on our call are Nick Grant, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Duncan Gilmour, our Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. You should have the earnings released, which crossed the wires today after market. As well as the slides that will accompany our conversation today. If not, you can find these documents on the Investor Relations section of our website, intest.com.
Please turn to slide 2, and Iâll review the Safe Harbor statement. During this call, management may make some forward-looking statements about our current plans, beliefs, and expectations. These statements apply to future events that are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results that differ materially from what is stated here today. These risks, uncertainties, and other factors are provided in the earnings release as well as in other documents filed by the company with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These documents can be found on our website or at sec.gov.
Also, management will refer to some non-GAAP financial measures. We believe these will be useful in evaluating our performance. You should not consider the presentation of this additional information in isolation or as a substitute for results prepared in accordance with GAAP. You can find reconciliations of non-GAAP measures with comparable GAAP measures in the tables that accompany todayâs release and slides.
Now please turn to slide 3, and Iâll turn the call over to Nick. Nick?
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you, Shawn, and good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for joining us for our first quarter 2024 earnings call. The quarter came in about where we had expected, and Iâd like to thank the entire inTEST team for making it happen in a relatively tough environment.
Revenue of nearly $30 million was somewhat higher than expected, while gross margin of $43.8 was lower, primarily driven by the timing of the acquisition of Alfamation. With operating expenses coming in slightly lower than expected, EPS was $0.05, and was $0.10 on an adjusted basis. Alfamation, which we owned for about 2.5 weeks in the quarter, contributed $1.4 million of the $1.9 million revenue increase over the fourth quarter of last year.
However, given the timing of the acquisition and having revenue and costs misaligned in a short stub period, they were a drag on our gross margin. In a normalized quarter, we would expect their typical margins to be similar to ours. We continue to execute our five-point strategy, which focuses our growth efforts in diversified markets and drives our strategic thinking. These efforts are helping as we manage through the tough semiconductor cycle.
In fact, while they can be lumpy in their own rights, defense aero and industrial remain solid markets for us in the quarter. The addition of Alfamation, which provides us a meaningful position in the electronics and infotainment test space for the automotive industry, will provide further diversification. Importantly, we continue to generate cash from operations, and even after the Alfamation acquisition where we used about $19 million, we ended the quarter with $27 million in cash. We believe this is adequate financial flexibility to keep advancing our transformation strategy.
Turning to slide 4, Iâll review the orders and backlog. As we have been communicating since last November, the first half of 2024 was expected to be weaker than the second half of the year. However, we had a measurable change in order trends at the very end of the quarter, and that has now impacted our outlook for the year. Specifically, we had about 5 million orders we had anticipated that were either delayed or reduced in size from expected levels.
Encouragingly, back-end semi was up sequentially, showing signs of stabilization, which we had noted on our year-end call. This helped to partially offset a notable decline in front-end orders in the first quarter. One bright spot to note is our backlog is at a record $56 million at quarter end. The boost is directly the result of the acquisition with Alfamation contributing $22.8 million in backlog. You may recall that we had reported their backlog at about â¬13 million, when we acquired them.
However, their accounting for revenue was based on the percentage of completion methodology. After the acquisition, we have concluded that under US GAAP, point-in-time revenue recognition is more appropriate. As a result of this change, acquired backlog increased to $22.4 million.
Keep in mind that the accounting treatment is related to the timing of revenue recognition and does not impact our previous statements regarding Alfamationâs annual revenue. While itâs in its early days, the integration of Alfamation is progressing as planned. In fact, we have already jointly participated in trade shows and numerous customer interactions. We are really excited about Alfamation joining the inTEST team and all that we could do together to further our strategy.
With that, let me turn it over to Duncan to review the financials and outlook in more detail. Duncan, over to you.
Duncan Gilmour - Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Thank you, Nick. Starting on slide 5. Revenue for the first quarter was $29.8 million, including $1.4 million from our automation, which is applied with only 19 days or 2.5 weeks remaining in the quarter. The $2.1 million decline compared with Q1 2023 was driven by a $2.7 million decline in semi, partially offset by growth in the industrial and defense aerospace markets Sequentially, first quarter revenue increased $1.9 million with semi revenue up 39% off of the exceptionally low fourth quarter, while defense aerospace was up 34%.
Revenue from Alpha nation was primarily in auto EV, which help offset a decline in that market. Within the organic businesses moving to slide 6. Gross margin of 43.8% for the quarter contracted 80 basis points sequentially, driven by a 100 basis point negative impact from the stub period for automation. This is just a result of a timing mismatch on recognition of revenue and expenses given the short ownership timeframe in Q1 on a year-over-year comparison.
Gross margin contraction was a result of lower volume and product mix as well as the aforementioned impact from the acquisition. Our trailing 12 months gross profit of $55 million of 45.4% of sales is in line with our updated outlook for this year of gross margin between 44% and 46%.
As you can see on slide 7, our operating expenses were up $1.1 million versus the prior year, driven by higher corporate development expenses, incremental operating expenses inherited with the acquisition and higher professional fees as a percentage of sales, OpEx increased 610 basis points to 42.2%.
Turning to slide 8, you can see our bottom line and adjusted EBITDA results for the quarter, net earnings were 662,000 or $0.05 per diluted share. Adjusted net earnings were $1.2 million, or $0.1 per diluted share adjusted EPS reflects adding back tax-effected acquired intangible amortization. On an after-tax basis, our required intangible amortization amounted to approximately 500,000 or about $0.05 per diluted share in the first quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for Q1 was $1.8 million, representing a 6.1% adjusted EBITDA margin.
Slide 9 shows our capital structure and cash flow. We had a solid quarter of cash generation, adding $2.1 million from operations. Capital expenditures in the first quarter were 300,000, unchanged from the prior year period. Given our modest capital requirements to grow the organic business. Free cash flow was $1.8 million. Cash equivalents at the end of the first quarter were $27.3 million, down $18 million from the trailing quarter, reflecting the use of approximately $19 million for the acquisition of formation.
Borrowings increased in the quarter due to the $9 million in debt. We assumed from the acquisition. We ended the quarter with total debt of $20.4 million, which we believe is very manageable and reflects a total debt leverage ratio of 1.6 times. During the quarter, we repaid approximately $1 million of debt. We continue to have $30 million available with our delayed draw term loan and an incremental $10 million available under our revolver. As announced on Friday, we extended the maturity date on these facilities by four years to May 2031, and the drawdown period was extended two years to May 2026.
Turning to slide 10. As we review our outlook for 2024. For the second quarter, we are expecting revenue to be between $34 million and $36 million with gross margin of approximately 44% to 45%. Second quarter operating expenses, including amortization, are expected to be in the range of $14.5 million to $15 million. This range reflects the incremental operating costs gained from the acquisition of automation and higher total intangible assets amortization after tax. This is expected to be approximately $1.2 million or about $0.1 per share.
We are expecting EPS for the second quarter to be between breakeven to $0.06 per diluted share, while adjusted EPS should be approximately $0.1 to $0.16 per diluted share. As a reminder, we simply adjust for tax affected amortization expense for our two-year outlook with the addition of affirmation. In the recent order trends Nick discussed, we now expect 2024 revenue to range from $140 million to $150 million. Gross margin for 2024 is expected to be approximately 44% to 46%, with expected operating expenses of roughly $56 million to $58 million. This includes tax adjusted intangible asset amortization expense of approximately $4.1 million.
Our expected effective tax rate is now projected to be about 17% to 19% for capital expenditures in 2024, we expect to run between 1% to 2% of sales. As usual, our guidance does not include the potential impact from any non-operating expenses such as corporate development that may occur from time to time, nor does it include the potential impact from any additional acquisitions we may make.
With that, if you will turn to slide 11, I will now turn the call back over to Nick.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks, Duncan. In a tough macro environment, our team is keeping their heads down and executing our plan. We have been up against some heavy headwinds in the semi-market, which is about half of total sales, but less than it had been historically.
Our latest acquisition will help the further advance market diversification. Nonetheless, we like our position in the semi-market, which over the long run has exciting megatrends to drive growth as we leverage our know-how and innovative solutions. We continue to innovate by providing more automated technologies, and through responsive solutions-oriented service, we are gaining additional traction within our existing customers while also capturing new ones.
Our diversified markets are serving us well, but itâs the teamâs effort to expand our reach and leverage unique solutions across more channels and markets that are enabling inroads with new customers and channel partners. Underpinning our five-point strategy is the accountability and discipline required to execute well. Our teams are consistently evaluating market position, pricing, competition, opportunities, and the talent within as well as across our channel partners to drive growth. We are encouraged with our progress and excited about our future.
With that, operator, we can open the lines for questions. Thank you.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Jason Schmidt, Lake Street Capital.
Jaeson Schmidt - Analyst
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just want to start with the orders that shifted towards quarter end. Iâm curious if you expect to recognize those delayed orders later this year. And then regarding the orders that were reduced in size, is this a permanent reduction, or do you think thereâs potential to recoup that full order later?
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. Hi, Jason. The orders that were delayed really did just that shift to the right. We do see them moving more into Q3, Q4, later part of the year based on what our customers are telling us. As for the reduction in size, that is really then users demand-driven, and that is for the balance of the year. And in fact, weâve booked but they reduced size orders primarily in the second quarter here to get that particular customer through the balance of the year. So thatâs going to be reflected here in Q2 but was expected in Q1 and just did not materialize.
Jaeson Schmidt - Analyst
Got it. That's helpful. And then it sounds like the integration with Alfamation continues to progress the plan. But just curious if thereâs anything that has surprised you, whether good or bad, now that youâve had a little more time with the acquisition.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. No, all positive so far. I mentioned in the pre-remarks that we had a trade show, the Apex show. And they jointly showed with our Acculogic group up in Canada there, and really good activity, good interactions between the two businesses and the teams there. And customer calls have gone fantastic with them, being part of a larger US company gives some credibility to other pursuits and some projects. So all positive from that sense.
Duncan, anything from your side that you come across?
Duncan Gilmour - Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
No. I mean, I mean, all good so far. I mean, Nick alluded to revenue recognition, but that wasnât a complete surprise, just something that, as we get under the hood, gave us more visibility into final determination. So nothing surprising so far.
Jaeson Schmidt - Analyst
Okay. No, that's great to hear. And then just the last one from me, and Iâll hop back into queue. You noted some headwinds from Alfamation regarding gross margins. Just curious if you could quantify the impact here in Q1.
Duncan Gilmour - Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Yeah. I mean, it was 100 basis points of impact and literally just a case of relatively thin revenue versus the costs that had to be brought into the stub period based upon number of business days versus number of actual days and things like that. But 100 basis points of impact on the margin there.
Jaeson Schmidt - Analyst
Okay, great. Thanks a lot, guys.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks, Jason.
Operator
Ted Jackson, Northland Securities.
Ted Jackson - Analyst
Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. I wanted to start with the front-end semi-market. And just simply put, itâs real open-ended. Thereâs some discussion or color around. What does it mean with regards to silicon carbide? Whatâs driving it when you talk to your customers?
I mean, you mentioned in the press release a little bit about almost it sounded like a capacity overbuild. Am I reading that correctly? And the view you get from your customers to when that market normalizes out, just really at the macro level. The front-end semi is what Iâd love to hear more color about, and then Iâll follow-up with another.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. Hi, Ted. And on the front-end semi, as you know, we used to make our induction heating solutions are used in the crystal growth, silicon carbide, gallium nitride, as well as in epitaxy applications. And we had seen the crystal growing business or orders, I would say, saw for a number of quarters now as that capacity, as they digest the shipments that had happened out there and that.
And where we had been seeing relative strength and holding up well was the epitaxy side of things. But then in Q1, thatâs really where we saw the epitaxy slow. And itâs really more project driven for the end users there. Some of the larger projects they were expecting got either delayed, canceled, or rescoped on the number of units that they were going to need. So that really was the reduction in size that we saw. Talking with our customers there, both the integrators and the end users, we really think that really starts picking up in the second half as well as what they are telling us orders they are going to need to start placing for late in the year and really more so into 2025.
Ted Jackson - Analyst
That was great color. And then on a more positive discussion, the defense business has been doing well for quite a period of time. And I wondered if you could provide a little color within that market, what are the applications that are driving it and your outlook for it?
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. No, we serve that space quite across all three divisions, if you will. And some of the applications being robust testing of electronics used in missiles, missile defense systems where our flying probe testers are testing circuit boards used in various defense systems as well. And so it really is a wide variety of applications there.
We also do some, I would say, more on the defense aero side of components used in aircraft, some cameras used on planes as well. So it touches a wide variety of applications, nothing particular. But we do see those staying pretty robust for us here and new, I would say, designs on the missiles themselves or the components going into the missiles, driving higher testing needs, driving more upgrades to our products that we have served in the past. So yes, we see that will continue for quite some time.
Ted Jackson - Analyst
Good. I want to hear that. Then my last question on backlog, if we take Alfamation out, backlog was down substantially. And is that drop in backlog purely semi-driven?
Duncan Gilmour - Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Yeah. I mean, a huge portion of that is semi-driven. As you can see from the order activity in semi, relatively low or a low quarter, revenue is still somewhat holding up. You do the math on that, and you can see backlog dropping there.
So semi certainly the bigger driver, the front-end component, as Nick highlighted in commentary there as well as in Q&A, really being the driver of that sector with respect to that backlog reduction. I think the rest of the markets, you are relatively -- you are holding up relatively well, but thatâs where we see the biggest change.
Ted Jackson - Analyst
Okay. Thanks, Duncan, and thanks, Nick. I'll step out of line.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks, Ted.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Peter Wright, Intro-act.
Peter Wright - Analyst
Hy, guys, thank you for taking my questions. Nick, my first question is if you could share some color on customersâ activity around capacity expansion. Do you think some of the push-outs are more proactive or reactive, or can you tell at this point to what they are seeing there?
And separate from the capacity conversations on more of the innovation or tech-type purchases or new customers, has there been anything to highlight or note there, either accelerating or decelerating?
And then the second question I have is more from your guysâ perspective as we look at where we are in the cycle. You guys have made some acquisitions and maybe have some costs to cut there, but what is changing maybe in your investment philosophy in your own innovation, in your own development cycle? Is there any cost cuts or harder hurdles to get by, or are you guy's full steam ahead? Thank you.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Sure. Hi, Peter, and thanks for the questions there. So relative to capacity expansions and what we are seeing, I would say most of those really have been delayed out there. Customers still have these projects on their roadmaps, they're in our funnels. And itâs just a matter of timing before they pull the trigger, and they are going to need our equipment for those things. So nothing is being, I would say, mothballed or canceled. Itâs just purely just a delay on getting CapEx spending approvals there.
As we relate to new customers, this is something we have been driving across the businesses since I joined, aggressively going after new customers in the markets, going after existing customers and getting more share of their wallets. And that continues throughout. And in fact, we have got an aggressive push to elevate activities in those areas, obviously, in these slower times and going after competitive accounts in that.
So the teams are laser focused on finding the opportunities and getting them closed out there. But we will continue to add new customers every quarter. And excited about the new customers we brought in with Alphamation and their customer base and trying to explore the larger portfolio of our solutions across that as well. And then the last question you had, comment was on what are we doing relative to our investments in R&D.
So innovation remains one of our core strategies, and we arenât slowing down in that area. In fact, pushing the teams to do more and try to speed up development around the new products, linked with that in new customers is pretty excited about the number of customers that are qualifying the SCAiLX new vision camera that we did release last year. It takes time to design in the new cameras, and so we have got a pipeline of opportunities there that should start bearing fruit later in the year.
Likewise, the new Benchtop Thermostream that we launched at our ITS business, up in Mansfield, Massachusetts, good excitement there. It was launched at a trade show out in California. They had over, dozens of leads that came back specific around that product. So we are chasing those down. So yes, innovation is something we wonât throttle back. We believe itâs going to create demand going forward for us.
Peter Wright - Analyst
Thank you for that. If I could ask one detail question, maybe more of a survey-ish type question. Duncan, if you look at pricing and cost trends, looking at where we are in the ebbs and flows of the inflation cycle, is anything getting notably more difficult or notably easier out there in managing margin?
Duncan Gilmour - Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
I mean, itâs all relative if you compared to 1.5 years, 2 years ago when certainly things were a lot more volatile from a supply chain, inflationary perspective then, the amplitude of that is certainly less, but itâs a constant, I mean the teams are constantly looking at it. We are constantly looking at that price versus cost equation ensuring the teams are pricing appropriately and managing costs, managing supply chain costs, etcetera, etcetera. So the amplitude is more manageable, but itâs an ongoing battle and it should be.
Peter Wright - Analyst
Wonderful. Thank you very much.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks, Peter.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) As there are no further questions, I would now hand the conference over to Nick Grant for his closing comments.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you, Ryan. We appreciate you (multiple speakers)
Operator
Nick, sorry. I have a question from Peter Wright.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Okay.
Peter Wright - Analyst
I just re-polled. One last one. Any update on the Malaysia facility that is noteworthy there?
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. No, we are moving full steam ahead there. Have been a little delayed with getting the final permits into that site, but we have proceeded with some of the build-out, working with the architects and getting everything ordered. So we expect to have that final permit here any day, and then weâll pull the trigger out there.
We have started hiring. Weâve got a handful of really talented individuals that weâve hired on here. Theyâll be starting in the next couple weeks or a few weeks here. So excited about the progress here on that site and the teamâs commitment to embrace it and really help further our position in Southeast Asia.
Peter Wright - Analyst
Great. Thank you so much.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks, Peter.
Operator
Thank you. Nick, there are no further questions in the queue.
Richard Grant - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
All right. Thanks, Ryan. We appreciate you joining us today and welcome the opportunity to answer any further questions you may have. On slide 12, you can find the details regarding this call and a list of upcoming events that we will be participating in. I hope to have the chance to meet some of you at the conferences. Thank you for participating and have a great day.
Operator
Thank you. The conference of inTEST Corporation has now concluded. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.