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CACI International Inc (CACI) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

CACI International Inc (NYSE: CACI) Q1 2026 Earnings Call dated Oct. 23, 2025

Corporate Participants:

George PriceSenior Vice President of Investor Relations

John MengucciPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Jeffrey MacLauchlanChief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Colin CanfieldAnalyst

Scott MikusAnalyst

Gavin ParsonsAnalyst

Seth SeifmanAnalyst

Henry RobertsAnalyst

Jonathan SiegmannAnalyst

John KernanAnalyst

Conor WaltersAnalyst

Louie DiPalmaAnalyst

Jan-Frans Engelbrecht.Analyst

Noah PoponakAnalyst

Presentation:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the CACI International First Quarter Fiscal Year 2026 Earnings Conference Call. Today’s call is being recorded. At this time, all lines are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will announce the opportunity for questions, and instructions will be given at that time. [Operator Instructions]

At this time, I would like to turn the conference call over to George Price, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations for CACI International. Please go ahead, sir.

George PriceSenior Vice President of Investor Relations

Thanks, Tina, and good morning, everyone. I’m George Price, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations for CACI International. Thank you for joining us this morning. We are providing presentation slides, so let’s move to Slide 2.

There will be statements in this call that do not address historical facts and, as such, constitute forward-looking statements under current law. These statements reflect our views as of today and are subject to important factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from anticipated. Those factors are listed at the bottom of last night’s press release and are described in the company’s SEC filings. Our Safe Harbor statement is included on this exhibit and should be incorporated as part of any transcript of this call. I would also like to point out that our presentation will include a discussion of non-GAAP financial measures. These should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for performance measures prepared in accordance with GAAP.

Let’s turn to Slide 3, please. To open our discussion this morning, here’s John Mengucci, President and Chief Executive Officer of CACI International. John?

John MengucciPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, George, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us to discuss our first quarter fiscal year 2026 results. With me this morning is Jeff MacLauchlan, our Chief Financial Officer. Slide 4, please.

CACI’s strong first-quarter results are a great start to our fiscal year 2026. We delivered free cash flow of $143 million, driven by revenue growth of 11%, and an EBITDA margin of 11.7%. We also won $5 billion of contract awards, which represents a book-to-bill of 2.2 times for the quarter and 1.3 times on a trailing 12-month basis. Over half of our awards were for new business to CACI. We also continued our excellent track record of winning recompetes and securing sole-source extensions. Our first quarter performance gives us increased confidence in achieving both our full-year guidance, which we are reaffirming, and our three-year financial targets. Jeff will provide additional details shortly.

Slide 5, please. Turning to the macro environment, the federal government continues limited operations under a shutdown. However, our business remains resilient given our national security focus, with most of our work funded and deemed essential. Looking beyond the shutdown, we continue to see enduring needs, good demand signals from our customers, and prospects for a healthy funding environment for national security priorities.

In addition, we are starting to see early indications of how reconciliation funds available to DOD and DHS may be used. For DHS, the focus is likely to include modernization and border security, which we expect will benefit programs like BEAGLE and drive demand for our counter-UAS technology. For DOD, in addition to areas we have previously discussed, we also expect reconciliation funds, including those for Golden Dome, will benefit some of our intelligence programs as we focus on left-of-launch situational awareness. Our ability to reaffirm our guidance and deliver on our commitments, even in the face of a government shutdown, demonstrates the resilience of our business and is a result of deliberate choices and investments we have made over many years. Our actions have positioned CACI for success in any environment, including this one.

Slide 6, please. Let me discuss some examples of awards, program performance, and investments that highlight our competitive differentiation in several areas. First, in counter-UAS, escalating drone threats and increasing incursions globally are driving strong demand for our capabilities, including from our international partners. In fact, during the first quarter, we received a follow-on order from the Canadian government for additional man-packed software-defined counter-UAS systems. This follows the initial order we received in fiscal ’24, as well as an order for vehicle-mounted counter-UAS systems we received from Canada last quarter. The threat is no longer just abroad. It is here at home as well. And the administration has made it clear that the defense of the homeland is the top national security priority. That’s why CACI has been investing ahead of need to develop Merlin, our latest counter-UAS detector defeat system.

Merlin’s counter-UAS capabilities are extremely differentiated and particularly well-suited for defending the homeland for many reasons. It is based on technology that has been operationally proven across the globe for years, focused on real missions, real threats, and delivering real kills with non-kinetic capabilities that include low to no collateral damage defeat modes with a detection range of up to 75 kilometers and providing industry-leading wireless capabilities that address counter-UAS threats utilizing cellular networks.

Our Merlin system has outperformed competitors at several government-sponsored demonstrations against a wide range of UAS systems utilizing our software-defined technology, tipping and queuing the third-party kinetic system to defeat a drone, and also integrating with Andros Labs platform, which was recently selected as the Army’s counter-UAS fire control system. These results are what is driving strong customer interest both in the United States and abroad.

A second area is counter-space. Modernizing our nation’s capabilities is crucial to address peer threats in the increasingly contested space domain. We are seeing increasing customer interest and demand for CACI’s capabilities. This includes a $240 million award in the first quarter to sustain and modernize the Tactical Integrated Ground Suite, or TIGS, counter-space program for the Army. Additionally, a few days after quarter-end, we received an initial production order from the U.S. Space Force for a Remote Modular Terminal, or RMT. RMT is a broadband counter-satellite electronic warfare system that leverages our existing counter-UAS software to provide our customers with enhanced counter-space capabilities. Both TIGS and RMT are great examples of how we can leverage our differentiated software-defined technology and our strong past performance to help war fighters execute critical missions across the entire electromagnetic spectrum.

Slide 7, please. Third is network modernization, a foundational dependency for many critical national security priorities. Without modernized networks, DOD priorities like NGC2 and JADC2 either won’t be as effective or just won’t be possible. Given this reality and the administration’s focus on modernization across the government, we continue to see good demand and a strong pipeline of network modernization opportunities. For example, the Air Force recently awarded CACI task orders number two and number three on the Base Infrastructure Modernization program, previously known as IPAS Wave Two. CACI will modernize networks for the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command and the U.S. Space Force, ensuring more efficient and more secure network operations. Together, these task orders represent approximately $400 million of awards this quarter.

Additionally, we continue to execute on our existing network modernization programs. On our SuperMod program, we received NSA authorization for use of our software-defined CSFC technology, allowing for the processing of classified data through our framework. This accelerates our ability to test in-field devices on the network and positions us to make the network operational in 2026.

The final area is digital application modernization. Our customers are seeking greater efficiency, effectiveness, and speed of delivery as they modernize software applications. CACI continues to lead the industry with our use of commercial agile software development processes and DevSecOps. For example, our BEAGLE program for Customs and Border Protection is one of the largest agile software development programs in the federal government. Our exceptional performance on this program recently yielded us our second one-year contract extension, a strong indication of the value we delivered to CBP and a further indication of how well-positioned CACI is with our customer base.

The combination of our leading agile development capabilities and strong past performance has enabled us to win the $1.6 billion JTMS award this quarter. The Joint Training Management System is Transcom’s enterprise modernization initiative to unify end-to-end transportation and financial processes across the DOD on a commercial software platform. CACI will leverage our agile software development and AI capabilities, combined with SAP’s S/4HANA off-the-shelf commercial platform, to significantly improve visibility, collaboration, and auditability for the command. It’s yet another example of the federal government selecting CACI to modernize at scale to enable mission success while generating long-term value for the government and taxpayers.

It is also important to note that as we continue to win in the marketplace, we also continue to invest ahead of customer need and our industry-leading agile capabilities to ensure that CACI remains well-positioned to win and execute these critical modernization initiatives. We are now expanding our use of AI tools to increase the speed, efficiency, and scalability of our agile software development processes and continuing to innovate to stay at the forefront of utilizing commercial software development tools and processes to address critical national security priorities faster and more efficiently. These are just a few examples of the many successes we are seeing at CACI, thanks to our focus on critical national security priorities, software-defined technology, commitment to investing ahead of customer need, and unwavering focus on superior execution.

With that, I’ll turn the call over to Jeff.

Jeffrey MacLauchlanChief Financial Officer

Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone. Please turn to Slide 8. As John mentioned, we’re very pleased with our first quarter performance. The continued strong performance once again underscores the deliberate positioning of the portfolio and the differentiation of our business. In the first quarter, we generated revenue of nearly $2.3 billion, representing 11.2% year-over-year growth, of which 5.5% was organic. I’d also like to call your attention to the revenue by customer disclosure in our earnings release, where we’re now breaking out revenue from intelligence community customers. This additional transparency aligns our revenue disclosure with the national security focus that is a foundational element of our strategy. EBITDA margin of 11.7% in the quarter represents a year-over-year increase of 120 basis points, driven primarily by strong program execution, timing of some higher margin software-defined technology deliveries, and overall mix.

First quarter adjusted diluted earnings per share of $6.85 were 16% higher than a year ago. Greater operating income, along with a lower share count, more than offset higher interest expense and a higher income tax provision. Finally, free cash flow was $143 million for the quarter, driven by our strong profitability and increasing cash generation from working capital management. Day sales outstanding, or DSO, were 56 days.

Slide 9, please. The healthy long-term cash flow characteristics of our business are modest leverage of 2.6x net debt to trailing 12-month EBITDA, and our demonstrated access to capital continue to provide us with significant optionality. We remain well-positioned to continue deploying capital in a flexible and opportunistic manner to drive long-term growth and free cash flow per share and shareholder value.

Slide 10, please. We’re reaffirming our fiscal 2026 guidance. We continue to expect revenue between $9.2 million and $9.4 billion, EBITDA margin in the mid 11% range, adjusted net income between $605 million and $625 million, and finally, free cash flow of at least $710 million. One item I’ll note is that our strong Q1 performance has helped us de-risk the EBITDA margin step up from the first half to the second half that we discussed last quarter. To help with modeling, we expect EBITDA margin in the second quarter to be about 11%.

Slide 11, please. Turning to forward indicators, all metrics provide good long-term visibility into the strength of our business. Our first quarter book-to-bill of 2.2x and our trailing 12 months book-to-bill of 1.3x reflect strong performance in the marketplace. The weighted average duration of our awards in Q1 was over six years. Our record backlog of $34 billion increased 4% from a year ago and represents nearly four years of annual revenue. And finally, our funded backlog grew nearly 26% year-over-year, some of which was likely driven by our customers preparing essential programs for the government shutdown.

For fiscal year 2026, we now expect more than 92% of our revenue to come from existing programs, with less than 4% coming from recompetes and 4% from new business. Progress on these metrics, specifically on recompete revenue, which was 11% just last quarter, reflects our successful business development and operational performance and yields increased confidence in our expectations for the year. In fact, I’d like to point out that in the past 10 years, this is the second-highest amount of revenue from existing programs that we’ve had at this point in the year.

In terms of our pipeline, we have $6 billion of bids under evaluation, around 80% of which are for new business to CACI. We expect to submit another $13 billion in bids over the next two quarters, with about 75% of that being for new business. In summary, we delivered outstanding first-quarter results, de-risked fiscal year 2026, and continue to demonstrate our differentiated position in the marketplace. We are winning and executing high-value, enduring work that supports long-term growth, increased free cash flow per share, and additional shareholder value.

And with that, I’ll turn the call back over to John.

John MengucciPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Jeff. Let’s go to Slide 12, please. CACI delivers distinctive and differentiated expertise and technology to address our nation’s critical national security priorities. We help customers address their biggest challenges and their most important priorities. We help them succeed in their missions, and because of that, our customers increasingly rely on us. We are the company that consistently gets things — gets the hardest things done when our customers need it most. Because of this, our business continues to perform well, and we continue to meet our financial commitments even in this dynamic and somewhat uncertain near-term environment. The strength of our strategy, our differentiation, and our execution is borne out by our consistent performance.

Our outstanding first quarter results represent a great start to fiscal year 2026. We’re successfully executing our strategy, winning and ramping significant new work, capturing our recompetes, and driving additional on-contract growth from our large contract portfolio. As a result, we are pleased to reaffirm our fiscal ’26 guidance, and we remain confident in achieving our three-year financial targets. We are well-positioned in the right markets with the right capabilities, we are confident in our ability to drive long-term growth and free cash flow per share and shareholder value.

As is always the case, our success is driven by our 25,000 employees who are ever vigilant in expanding the limits of national security. To everyone on the CACI team, I am proud of what you do each and every day for our company and our nation. And to our shareholders, I want to thank you for your continued support of CACI.

With that, Tina, let’s open the call for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Colin Canfield with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead.

Colin Canfield

Hey, thank you for the question. Good morning.

John Mengucci

Good morning, Colin.

Colin Canfield

Perhaps you could shed some light on early expectations for the FY’27 request. I think we have kind of two camps forming up in terms of supply-side sentiment, one being that the step-down from kind of reconciliation plus base implies — or it implies a step-down year-on-year? And then another camp is that it’s pretty insane to think that Congress would kind of employ a cut defense budgets into a rising national security environment. So, if you can shed some light on kind of where you expect kind of high-level budgets to go?

John Mengucci

Yeah, Colin, thanks. It’s a meaty first question. Look, we’re very, very focused strategically on critical national security priorities. And we’ve always talked about those priorities have deepened enduring funding streams, and we have great bipartisan support. That bipartisan support is why we revectored this portfolio over the last decade to be 90% focused on national security.

We’ve also said before that we’re really focused on the top-line budget growing, but at the end of the day, we’re a $9.3 billion company and a $280 billion total addressable market. So we look at that, telling us we have plenty of room to grow. And then where’s the money going? So if you look across the areas like electromagnetic spectrum, software-defined tech, space, counter-UAS, border security, that’s where current budget dollars and reconciliation dollars go. I think we’re in the right spot. We continue to have a great book-to-bill greater than one, and our software-defined tech continues to deliver growth for us. So there’s a lot of what-ifs as we get into 2026 and into 2027. But the fact is, we’re winning a lot of long-term business that really draws across a number of year budgets. So with the level of backlog we have — with the duration of contracts we just put into backlog of right around six years, it does allow our company to endure and allows us to continue to grow regardless of what some of those top-line numbers are.

Colin Canfield

Got it. Thank you for the color. And then in terms of like counter-UAS, cyber, electronic warfare contracts, I think investors have traditionally been conditioned to large multi-year vehicles, but it seems like contracting offices are taking a more agile approach. So maybe if you can talk about how you expect those contracts to be awarded, as well as the level of agility that is rewarding within folks like yourselves, Applied Insight, AeroVironment, folks that have commercially developed solutions in that domain. Thanks.

John Mengucci

Yeah, thanks. I think it’s safe to say that the US government has been buying capabilities in very different ways as of late. It was about three years back we started to hear about OTAs. That’s within the last year, we heard about how advantageous it is to be a commercial company. And look, we’ve doubled the amount of OTA work that we’ve done in the last two years from the last five. We’re a company that is both CAS compliant, which means we have a rates-based business like traditional government vendors, but we also have a portion of our business that’s truly commercial, as commercial accounting and commercial practices. That sort of lays that groundwork that should tell everybody CACI is a unique company within our space and that we’re very well positioned to address how the government buys.

Most of our software-defined technology work has actually been purchased over the last few years in a very different manner. So it is true that some of our technology is funded by large multi-year programs, but it’s also more the norm that we receive our awards on purchase orders in a very commercial-like manner. You can now buy from CACI just about anything across the electromagnetic spectrum, whether it’s SIGINT or it’s EW. It allows us to provide an item number, a part number, and a price. So we’re very used to supporting those types of ordering vehicles. At the end of the day, it’s also what moves our financials around, right? I mean, if we’re sitting here getting purchase orders that come in in quarter one and we turn that around in the first quarter, that’s going to move our financials around. So true that the government’s buying different. Love the fact that the government’s buying different. Love the fact that we saw that coming seven years to eight years back. We’ve positioned this company very well. And then I’ll sort of end, Colin, with TLS Manpack is a perfect example. That went from an OTA to a program of record where that customer continues to buy 250, 300, 500 units. So better for us to put a program in place and then allow our customer to buy in a manner that supports their budgets.

Colin Canfield

Got it. Appreciate the color. Thank you.

John Mengucci

Thanks, Colin.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Scott Mikus with Melius Research. Please go ahead.

Scott Mikus

Good morning, John and Jeff. Very nice result.

John Mengucci

Good morning.

Scott Mikus

John, CACI was ahead of the game when it came to investing in counter-UAS solutions, but we’ve seen in Ukraine, both sides are now using fiber optic cables to prevent their drones from being jammed. How are you thinking about that challenge when it comes to developing more counter-UAS offerings? Is it an opportunity for you? Just wanted to get your thoughts on that.

John Mengucci

Yeah, thanks a lot, Scott. Look, I’m going to sort of step back on this whole counter-UAS story. I guess, first of all, we’ve been doing it for a really long time, a couple of decades. And I’ve covered a lot of the basis of some of my prepared remarks with the creation of Merlin, that frankly allows us to quickly bring different phenomenology in, so we can better find drones. The drone threat is really unique in some ways, but very much the same in other ways. Time is going to be the differentiator for this threat. Most other solutions that are out there look at simple drones within a one- to three-kilometer range. Merlin and other of our systems detect out to 75 kilometers away. What that does is it gives the operator time.

So in some instances, up to 15 minutes of time versus about eight seconds of time by those who are looking at Group 1 or maybe Group 2 drones within a one to three-kilometer space. We’re already in the US government inventory. We’re already pushing at scale, already battle-hardened with hundreds of confirmed kills. It’s true that there are drones that are trailing fiber. There are drones that are operating in the cellular infrastructure. So if you look at what the homeland fight is going to be, we may have drones from people who are not our friends flying their drones on our networks. So at the end of the day, I think we have an outstanding solution. I know we have an outstanding solution. I’m also going to end with — to most companies, counter-UAS is like the new AI, right? Everybody does it now that it’s popular. And the difference between the AI stockpile hype and the counter-UAS stockpile hype is if you have a counter-UAS solution, you say it does and it does so much, and it doesn’t, at the end of the day, somebody dies.

If you’ve only deployed your kit at demos around the AUSA floor, it’s very telling. We’ve been on this market for a couple of decades with a great installed base, hundreds of systems, thousands of sensors. I would expect this threat to continually change. That’s why our solutions are software-based. That’s why our Merlin system brings different phenomenology in. So we’re able to more than adequately not only defend this nation, but other nations out there. Thanks.

Scott Mikus

Okay. And then I had one for Jeff. I mean, Jeff, what really surprised me was your Fed civilian agency sales were up 17% year-over-year. Just wondering if you could maybe parse that out between organic versus inorganic, and then perhaps what was DHS up versus non-DHS?

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah. So about 10% of that percentage basis of content is DHS. The growth there, Scott, is in DHS, and it’s in the ramping on NASA NCAPS, which is ramping up nicely and moving with our plan. It’s really all organic. I don’t think there’s any inorganic in there. Because I think about Azure and Applied Insight, none of those are going to be in Fed soon [Phonetic].

Scott Mikus

All right. Thank you.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Great.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Gavin Parsons with UBS. Please go ahead.

Gavin Parsons

Thank you. Good morning.

John Mengucci

Good morning, Gavin.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Hi, Gavin.

Gavin Parsons

John, I know you always remind us bookings are super lumpy, but obviously a pretty strong booking quarter here. So that gets to the two-part question. The submitted pipeline is down, but obviously, we’re back with those strong bookings. So first part of the question, does the simple math imply a very strong win rate on that conversion? And then second question, should we expect bookings to maybe take a breather over the next few quarters, given that the submitted pipeline is down a bit?

John Mengucci

Yes, and potentially. Look, I’m actually quite happy that the transparent information that we share is exactly what should lead to questions like this. Look, we really pride ourselves in giving you all the information we have as we run this company. We do our best to talk about bids that are going to be awarded at some time. We look at what our pipeline of submittals are and we talk about what we end up winning. Yeah, there’s going to be different movement of numbers out there. Very proud of our first quarter end rate. Of course, I look at where we are at the end of the year, but winning $5 billion in the first quarter, which is half of the total we won last year. It really does position us well.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

I think you also have to look, Gavin, at the whole dataset because we obviously had a really good awards quarter. You would expect that to probably result in a dip in the awaiting decisions number, but you also have to look at the expected to submit piece, which is up. So the adequacy of the pipeline is really a little bit like a balloon. I mean, at any one time, one piece of it may dip down and another piece dips up. I mean, that’s inherent in the lumpiness, right?

John Mengucci

I think your second question was around, with everything going on, how could it potentially impact the second quarter? Look, I think it’s unrealistic to believe that the pace of awards, given we’re in a shutdown mode, is going to continue to the level that we have. What that number ends up being is whatever that number ends up being. I’m sure we’ll talk about what the book-to-bill was at the end of the second quarter. I’m more excited about what the book-to-bill is at the end of the year and even more excited by having a trailing 12-month book-to-bill of 1.3 times. So we put a lot of awards in our $34 billion backlog. Funded backlog is up 26%. I think it really bodes well regardless of what gets thrown at us.

Gavin Parsons

Great. Thank you. Definitely appreciate the transparency.

John Mengucci

Thanks, Gavin.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Seth Seifman with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Seth Seifman

Regarding to the government shutdown, it appears some awards, especially funded, were accelerated ahead of the shutdown. So, should that mitigate some of the near-term impact? And is there some sort of length of the shutdown that presents a risk to guidance?

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah. Certainly. Certainly, it leaves us better positioned. I think it’s important in the sense that it leaves us better positioned in terms of programs being funded, obviously. But I think it also is sort of an expression of confidence and support by customers to position us to have minimal disruption from this. So that — certainly, that’s true. One of the reasons that we affirmed our guidance, despite the fact that you can kind of see some growing momentum in the business, is our approach to the guidance, which we’ve talked about with you before, and this left goalpost, right goalpost approach really encompasses sort of a range of outcomes. And we really, at this point, don’t see a reasonable outcome that isn’t encompassed in the guidance range we’ve given you. Not only is there minimal disruption, the nature of much of the work is that we would expect to make it up within the year. And we really don’t see it as being a disruptive factor. I don’t know, John, I’m sure.

John Mengucci

Yeah, Seth, I’d also just add to Jeff’s comments. Given our significant intentional exposure to national security work, and as Jeff said, the level of technology work and the large level of funded backlog, and the fact that a lot of our work is essential, and that which is not there, Seth that we’re able to make that work up. You may not see any Q2 impact in quarter two, but you’ll definitely see that any short-term impact over the full year, because we have the full year to make those times up. So I think we’re in a really good position. Clearly, if it continues to linger for months and months, I think Jeff already covered that. It’s well covered within our guidance that we have out there today.

Seth Seifman

Great. And then, how does the hiring environment look over the last few months? Do shutdowns tend to impact the pool of applicants, whether there’s more people coming from, say, a federal agency that are applying, or people are kind of scared off from the industry?

John Mengucci

Yeah, Rocco, look, we’re actually seeing applicant value or volume, sorry, at an all-time high. Believe it or not, we had half a million applicants in fiscal year 2025, and we have quite a large number of folks applying for jobs today. It does help that we’re more of a technology company. If we were purely a pure-play government services company, when you see shutdowns that go on for 15, 20, 25, 30 days, that gives folks pause if they want to go do national security work on the expertise side. We’ve got — we’re still running 40% of our hires are coming from referrals. We’ve got about — we’ve well over a 300-person intern program that will be kicking off here shortly. So we haven’t seen any slowdown in the number of applicants, and we sure haven’t stopped hiring, given the level of wins we had in the first quarter.

Seth Seifman

Great. Thanks, guys.

John Mengucci

Yeah.

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Tobey Sommer with Truist Securities.

Henry Roberts

Hi, Henry on for Tobey here. Thanks for taking the question.

John Mengucci

Hi, Henry.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Hi, Henry.

Henry Roberts

Maybe just to start, I’ll go back to counter-UAS for a second. But I’m just curious if you could roughly quantify the full opportunity set for that space over the next 12 months, let’s say. How much of that could be related to Golden Dome on the non-competitive counter-UAS side? Thanks.

John Mengucci

Yeah, Henry, thanks. Look, I think that the government, given the different funding buckets, is still sorting through that. I’m not going to give you a direct answer on the amount of counter-UAS sales we expect in the next 12 months. But I will share that our portfolio of EW technologies includes counter-UAS. It includes a number of systems. If you remember, the hardware form factor is different for us, but the software baseline is the same, okay? So as we build systems, whether they’re manpacked, whether they’re handheld, whether they’re mobile, whether they’re fixed, the beauty, not by accident, of our solution is that software base allows us to continually modify these with a common software baseline. Our portfolio of EW technology generates about $2 billion of revenue each and every year. We expect with newer requirements on counter-UAS that we’ll experience continued growth. Some of that growth you all see on a quarterly basis when we talk about where our technology portfolio is growing in relationship to our expertise. But the administration priorities are very much focused on defense of the homeland, border security, world events, use of drones in modern warfare. European and allies are all up. And we’re going to have additional funding through reconciliation. Some of that growth is planned in our current FY26 plan. We gave you a low and a high end to our guidance range. We are very well positioned for other upcoming counter-UAS opportunities, which do include Golden Dome.

Henry Roberts

Thanks. I appreciate the color there. Maybe just to follow up, the contracts awarded in this past quarter. How much, if any, of those were due to reconciliation bill funding at this point? And I’ll throw out a question, looking ahead, is reconciliation bill funding kind of one of the key difference makers that you’re seeing in terms of funding priorities, as a shutdown moves along, that differentiates you all from competitors? Thank you.

John Mengucci

Yeah. I’ll try to take the last comment first, and I’m sure Jeff will have some comments here as well. The Golden Dome funding and the reconciliation funding, we haven’t seen that begin to be spent. So that’s sort of gives us a backstop to what we’re going through and we’re experiencing now, perhaps.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah. That’s right. We’re seeing it in a planning sense. We’re starting to see opportunities, meetings about developing alternatives, things like that. So we’re starting to be able to see a little bit of where it’s going to land, we believe. Of course, the heavy DHS content, along with the portions of the DOD reconciliation funding that are focused on the areas that are in our sweet spot, give us some confidence about that. None of the performance in the first quarter or the funded backlog that we talked about, we’d identify directly to reconciliation funding.

John Mengucci

Thanks, Henry.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jonathan Siegmann with Stifel. Please go ahead.

Jonathan Siegmann

The margins were really impressive, especially in the context of your earlier outlook of lower margins to start the year. The incremental sales year-over-year were all technology, which implies the incremental margin year-over-year was over 20%. Can you comment a bit about the mix or any one-time benefits this quarter? It suggests the margins and technology maybe are trending higher than at least we were modeling. Thank you.

John Mengucci

Yeah. Thank you, Jon. Yeah, I’m not going to quibble with your math. The technology margins were strong in the quarter. I would remind you that the segment is not monolithic. There are pieces of the technology portfolio that have margins north of what you mentioned, and there obviously are some that are less. So when we talk about mix, it’s both a mix of technology and expertise, but it’s also a mix within the Technology segment sector. So I would also note that it did not change our view of the year. So I would encourage you to think about that as sort of de-risking what you’ve seen historically as our customary first half, second half margin step up. We now see that increase in the second half as being a little smaller than it has been in some recent years. But you’ve done the math the right way.

Jonathan Siegmann

That’s great. Maybe just to follow up on what John said about loving the fact that the government is buying differently, is it more the impact of these changes, being more customers are embracing some of these more progressive ways to buy software and agile software, or is it the same customers just buying more? Thank you very much.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

It’s a little bit of both. John will want to add to this, but — if — certainly, there’s been a tremendous increase in OTAs, both in their use by people that have been using them, but also customers that haven’t used them before. I think also, I would go back and underscore the answer to one of the first or second questions where John talked about the fact that we really are positioned deliberately by design to be able to sell commercially, to be able to sell in a traditional FAR CAS disclosed environment. Literally, there is no way that customers buy that we don’t sell. So I think that can’t be overemphasized.

John Mengucci

Yeah, Jon, I’ll also add. Look, what customers want is FAR Part 12, FAR Part 15. They want to be able to use those when they believe that one of those supports their needs over the other. The days of large development programs where you write your requirements in 2025 and you get your first taste of the system in 2035 are not going to support how fast the threats are moving. As Jeff mentioned, about a decade ago, we positioned this company to be very agile in both, right? So and it’s why when we invest ahead of customer need, what the government’s asking everybody to do is, hey, how about invest ahead of need more on your dollar than on ours? Okay. Explain to us how that fits into part of our solve, and then allow us to buy that, as I answered earlier, from a commercial price sheet that says if you want a mobile counter-UAS system or a handheld EW gadget, then give me the part number and let me start buying that.

Our software wrapper around these things is that when you buy that, you’re going to find different uses for it. So there should be a quick upgrade path, either from a licensing yearly fee that gets that customer additional upgrades and updates to it. Again, at the end of the day, I’ve been saying this for a decade. This is not the old way, where if you want a new capability, buy the new device. So you’re continuously throwing devices away. So they’re looking for agility, and what they’re saying is they want to be able to buy the way commercial companies buy and not be locked to long-term development contracts. As Jeff said, we can support either in both and any other ways.

Jonathan Siegmann

Thanks, John.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of John Kernan with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

John Kernan

Great results, guys.

John Mengucci

Thank you.

John Kernan

I wanted to ask two questions to follow up on some earlier ones. First, has there been any impact to the business from the shutdown with respect to either revenue, cash, or unusually soft awards in the first month of the quarter? And then I have a follow-up.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah, I can start with some of that. John will want to add to this, I’m certain. But there’s been a slight amount of cash collections disruption that’s primarily related to staff that’s available for invoice approval and things like that. So we’re feeling a little bit of administrative sluggishness, I’ll call it, related to that. It’s not tremendous. Collections may be 10% or 15% off. But — it’s small but noticeable.

Similarly, I would say in terms of revenue, we have pockets of places where we have attenuated levels of activity. It’s really de minimis. I’m going to say it’s kind of single-digit millions revenue. It’s activities that we expect to recover during the year. It doesn’t really affect our view of the year. It’s detectable but small and manageable.

John Kernan

Okay. And just wanted to ask, given the environment may be tougher for some of the peers in the space relative to CACI, have you seen any intensifying price competition? Maybe talk about the bits that you didn’t prevail on. Is that typically a price shootout or anything you’ve changed that you’ve seen in terms of competitor behavior, if any?

John Mengucci

Yeah, I’m glad I’m thinking, John. I can’t answer for everybody else out there. I can tell you that if we’ve ever lost on price, it’s not because we’re in a price shootout, because we gave up that part of the ecosystem about seven to eight years back. I would imagine people are going to do whatever they need to do to continue to win business. I mean, we’ve seen a little uptick in the number of protests which are out there. That, to me, being in this marketplace for a few decades, is usually that early sign. If you win, you win. If you don’t, you protest. I think we’ll continue to watch the level of protests which are out there. For us, I haven’t seen pricing be an issue. We believe that we are fairly priced, and where we invest ahead of customer need, where we’ve gone out on risk to spend the company’s money to help defend this nation in a better, better manner, we would expect to see higher margins. And thus far, that plan and that mode of running this business has served us very, very well. Thanks.

John Kernan

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Conor Walters with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Conor Walters

Good morning, guys. Congrats on a great start to the year. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe just to start, it seems like the unchanged top-line growth of 7% to 9%, but stronger organic, and perhaps $40 million in lower acquired revenue. Curious first if I’m reading that correctly, but also if you could provide an update on the acquisition integration process.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah, the acquisitions of Azure and AI are largely complete. And in fact, we’re finding what we’ve always found, which is when it’s done well, it’s increasingly difficult to tell them apart. There is some Azure timing. John may want to comment some more on this related to some of the activities between the Azure legacy programs and Spectral. But, no, they’re very definitely meeting expectations, and we remain convinced of their strategic and financial value. They’re terrific fits, both of them.

John Mengucci

I don’t have anything else to add. That’s good, Jeff. Thanks.

Conor Walters

Perfect. That’s helpful. And then maybe just one follow-up. You guys discussed the upside you’re seeing from reconciliation funding for Golden Dome. You mentioned the EW potential there. Curious if there’s any other areas you would call out as considerable opportunities in your portfolio tied to that, and then how you’re thinking about the bid process and timeline now that you’re starting to see that money actually being spent.

John Mengucci

Yeah. I’ll talk a little bit about Golden Dome. Out in the public domain, you’re going to hear a lot about sensors and effectors and command and control. It’s not just a ballistic threat. It’s also threats from unmanned systems as well. So we’re making it very clear that the Golden Dome concept is going to be completely reliant on early indications and warnings, meaning, as I mentioned earlier, knowing far in advance when a threat is imminent and then giving folks who have to defend against those minutes and hours of time. We’ve actually coined that as left of launch. It’s sort of our contribution to the entire Golden Dome effort. There has not been money spent on this yet. General Gutlein is taking our FEV responses. We’ve submitted our credentials on a few related proposals, but we’re really looking at taking all of our sensitive activities work and all of our worldwide set of embedded sensors, which are in the thousands, to give a common operating picture. From there, let’s go work on that non-kinetic low collateral defeat of those threats. Clearly, taking a hypersonic missile and using that to knock down a drone or other missiles over the continental United States has a high collateral issue. We’re looking at non-kinetic low ones.

So we would expect funding to begin to ramp up. I think we’ll know better as we get to the end of the second quarter, early third. And we’re very excited to be looking at that $150 billion initial spend, purely focused on defending this country.

Conor Walters

That’s perfect. Thanks so much, guys.

George Price

Yeah. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Louie DiPalma with William Blair. Please go ahead.

John Mengucci

Louie, are you there?

Louie DiPalma

Yes. Can you hear me?

John Mengucci

Yes, we hear you now. Good morning.

Louie DiPalma

Good morning. Following the positive TLS Manpack developments, is CACI also well-positioned for the US Army’s modular mission payload plan for small drones with your Spectral Sieve and KickFlip? And related to this, how does the modular mission payload differ from how the Army is currently using Spectral Sieve on Puma or C100 drones? Thanks.

John Mengucci

Yeah. Louie, thanks. Look, our entire — I should say, our entire — a large portion of our EW portfolio really is modular mission payloads, right? And for the rest of the audience, that’s really taking common software capabilities and putting that on different form factors. It could be looking for wireless signals. It could be looking for land-based signals. It could be looking at missile signals. There’s a plethora of RF out there around the globe.

The program that Louie mentions is we already deliver a number of modular mission payloads to counter-UAS vendors, folks who build drones, and they’re looking for an overall package. They have a drone that’s size X that can carry weight Y. What kind of features do we have? What type of devices can we put into those unmanned systems? So we have delivered those. We have delivered to the Puma and a number of other ones, either directly to the United States Army and other DOD agencies, or we’ve gone directly to a drone builder. So I believe that market will only continue to grow. It’s the reason why we got into this market a number of years back. It’s the reason why we positioned this company to be able to deliver either under a FAR Part 12 or FAR Part 15. It allows not only the US government, but OEMs of drones and the like to easily be able to buy our systems and have them ready and also allow us to modify those as the threat changes. So that’s what we’ve been up to.

Louie DiPalma

That makes sense. How has the Navy Spectral program been progressing?

John Mengucci

Navy Spectral program is going very well. Jeff talked about Azure. Azure has the precursor program. We worked very, very closely with the Navy to make certain that we could time some of the Azure deliveries in a manner that then support the Spectral delivery. So on the Azure front, there were some deliveries that have been pushed out so that can be more closely integrated with the Spectral ones. The next phase for Spectral is a January-February timeframe, where that program will get through its milestone C, and that will freeze the design. We’ll be able to begin deliveries, as we’ve always mentioned, during calendar year 2026. Thanks, Louie.

Louie DiPalma

Thanks, everyone.

Operator

Okay. Our next question comes from the line of Jan Engelbrecht with Baird. Please go ahead.

Jan-Frans Engelbrecht.

Morning, John, Jeff, and George. Congrats on a strong set of results. I wanted to talk a little bit about just the international opportunity. I think it’s not something that you maybe highlight a lot, but just given where the NATO budgets are going, we know about the 3.5% of GDP, and then there’s an additional 1.5% bonus on top of that. There’s sort of — there’s clearly capability gaps in the EU and in Europe and NATO as a whole. And is there anything you can highlight where maybe areas you guys are targeting in the next couple of years?

John Mengucci

Yeah, Jon, thanks. Look, I’ve said many times that the world is a dangerous, dangerous place, and I think that Ukraine was a real wake-up call. It definitely raised the urgency level around defense and national security globally, and I would say mostly in the electronic warfare area. It won that market not by accident, but by very, very, very solid planning. So as you mentioned, there are many allies that are going to be expanding their defense budgets. We deliver technology to a number of five countries today. And I’ve been on this slow reveal of what we’re doing on the international front solely because we want to be very cautious and very, very careful, because you can spend a lot of money on the international front very, very quickly. Since we last talked, we’ve expanded our sales to 15 NATO countries, and we continue to assess demand signal in seven other countries. Eastern Europe allies are increasingly interested in our SIG, our EW, and our counter-UAS tech.

I will tell you that our initial focus was on technologies with existing US government and DOD sales following the FMS path. A number of countries that we have added have now gone to direct commercial sales. And I’m only tempering that on — I should say, I’m tempering that only by the fact that it’s true a lot of European nations are going to be spending far more money, but those same European nations are going to look to spend that money within their borders. So our next step is to understand what relationships we need, so we either license or we co-produce some of our tech here and then add the applicable software baseline to those products. So still a long way to go there, but it’s a market that over the last 90 days since we’ve last spoken, it has truly opened up to us.

Jan-Frans Engelbrecht.

Yeah. Thanks, John. Just a quick follow-up, if you could comment on the slide deck talks about the M&A pipeline expanding, just any areas that you think would sort of be a niche capability that you could fill. Just any comments on M&A, just in the environment part.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah. Jan-Frans, as you know, we’ve talked many times before, and there’s no departure from this. Our process and approach is very much gap-driven. The opportunities that we see in the pipeline are generally a little bit more technology than they are expertise, a little bit more focused on sensors, as well as, not surprisingly, software applications that go around those sensors and things that kind of fit nicely into our sweet spot. So we are seeing a little bit of life in the pipeline, and we look forward to developing a few of these ideas. Very early stage at this point, but it’s an active area of interest for us.

Jan-Frans Engelbrecht.

Great. Thanks for taking the question.

John Mengucci

Operator, we have time for one more question.

Operator

Yes. Our final question comes from the line of Noah Poponak with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Noah, are you there?

Operator

Noah, your line is open.

Noah Poponak

Hey, can you hear me now?

John Mengucci

Yes. We can, Noah. Thanks.

Noah Poponak

Got to check the headset. John, you spoke about, or you alluded to kind of everyone at AUSA having counter-UAS, and it was like if you did 15 meetings, 12 had it, and 10 led with it, which is pretty unusual. Is the funding coming down the pipeline that significant? Can it move the needle for companies much larger than yours? And I know that you didn’t want to quantify the forward on that, but can you give us the baseline of how much of the current revenue base is counter-drone?

John Mengucci

Yeah. I’m going to stick with about $2 billion of our entire portfolio is in the EW Place, which does include counter and counterdrome and we deliver it to both DoD and the intelligence community. And as I shared, a large number of NATO countries. On — back to the first part, yes, I think it’s a burgeoning market. I think you have to look at two different streams of funding, Noah, right? One is the $150 billion on Golden Dome, some portion of that. And I would tell you it’s multiples of billions that will be spent on a layered defense that’s going to have to defend against unmanned systems. And frankly, uncrued systems are a very different beast. Traditional radar is not going to find that. It’s going to look like a bird, okay? So it takes new technology and then on top of that, we’re not in a wartime in somebody else’s zone where the US is assisting, we’ll be defending this nation, right? We’re also going to have events like the World Cup. We’re going to have the Olympics. We’re going to have so many more things. And that threat vector, Noah, is up materially. And you can look at common news sources that the threat vector for other countries, potentially drug cartels, and others using drugs.

So I think there’s a market growth that we’re all watching. It will be billions of dollars worth of worth of Golden Dome funding. And then if you look at the DHS additional funding, that’s going to work on the border security side. And today, there’s one-kilometer systems that find Group 1 drones. Tomorrow’s threats are going to be, we need 75 or 100 km to give us minutes of time to go defeat against that. That’s going to be Class 1 through Class 5 drones. Yes, I think that the rest of the industry is waking up to this market. My only earlier comment around this hype is, we went through a year and a half period of AI hype, and I feel as though we’re going to go through another year and a half of counter-UAS hype.

So at the end of the day, the government’s going to go with systems that have been deployed, where combatant commanders swear by the fact that they want one of what we have. And it’s just really allowing funding to catch up to that. Of course, you do well know, Noah, government shutdown is going to sort of slow that down as well.

So I think it’s a burgeoning market. We’ve been in it for a couple of decades. I think we understand it very, very well. We have the right partnerships. We’re always looking for additional capabilities that we can add to our system. I’ll end with, and we built our latest system on our own nickel, right? We’re not dependent on US government IRAD dollars to advance what we have because I do think that the threat is that real. The government’s asking us to look at this as harder. Very hard to do. So very large answer.

Noah Poponak

I appreciate the detail there. If I could just ask one more question, just hoping to better understand a little bit shutdown impact and shape of the year. Can you shed a little more light on how the government goes through deeming what is essential? The comments you made there at the beginning of the call are interesting. I thought it would have been more missed work in your 2Q that’s just made up before the end of the year, but it sounds like that’s not the case. And I think, historically, you’ve had a Q2 that’s pretty often flat sequentially versus Q1, and then a back half that’s up mid to high single-digits versus the first half. Is that still the shape of your 2026?

Jeffrey MacLauchlan

Yeah, broadly — this is Jeff. Broadly, it is, with the caveat that I mentioned earlier about that step up will be between first half and second half. We expect to be less pronounced this year than it has been in prior years, given the strong first quarter, which largely was comprised of items that did not change our view of the year. So that’s kind of a qualitative way to say quantitatively the first half, second half step up will not be as pronounced as it has been in the past.

John Mengucci

Yeah, no, I’ll also throw in there, if you look at the last shutdown, right, it was ’18-’19. If I remember right, some of that was December to January, right? You had a lower level of folks because you were around Christmas time. What’s different for our company between the 18-’19 shutdown and where we are now is we’ve got far more long-term tech programs that are being developed. We have far more programs that we’re investing ahead of customer need, and we’re putting enhancements into that software baseline. We’re selling them on a purchase order, so that has a very different buying schedule to it. It doesn’t take folks to sit around and do a down select. They can buy these things off of a GSA-approved price list. So there are a lot of differences that lead to this sort of de minimis impact.

And then you also closed up with that we can make a lot of these hours up. If we’re at a help desk and nobody needs help now, they’re not going to need more help later. Clearly, that doesn’t get made up. That’s your traditional government services work, but the vast amount of this is work that will have to be done. And every agency — back to your initial comment, every agency is going through their own process. I wish I had that rubric that told us what was mission essential and not. Quite frankly, if I’m sitting in the government side, that sort of changes too, right, whether we have a defense of the homeland different than other things that are out there going, but all in all, really good book of business right now with Jeff. Jeff and I look at the impacts and how we can get those covered. We believe we’re right at the 0.25 point to having an outstanding year.

Operator

At this time, I will turn the call back over to John for closing remarks.

John Mengucci

Well, thanks, Tina, and thank you for your help on today’s call. I’d like to thank everyone who dialed in or listened to the webcast for their participation. We know that many of you will have follow-up questions. So Jeff McLaughlin, George Price, and Jim Sullivan are available after today’s call. Please stay healthy, and my best to you and your families. This concludes our call. Thank you, and have a great day.

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