
Bird Construction has reported a net income of C$9.98m ($7.32m) for the first quarter (Q1) of 2024, marking an increase of approximately 94% compared to C$5.14m in the same period of 2023. Â
The company’s construction revenue for the quarter ending 31 March 2024 also rose by 28.3% to C$688.20m from C$536.45m in the previous year’s corresponding quarter.
This increase is attributed to acquisitions, including NorCan on 18 January, and a full quarter of contributions from Trinity, acquired in February 2023.Â
Basic and diluted earnings per share for the quarter reached C$0.19, up from C$0.10 in Q1 2023. Â
Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (EBITDA) for the reported quarter also climbed to C$24.18m from C$16.08m in Q1 2023.Â
The adjusted EBITDA margin for Q1 2024 was impacted by an additional C$3.9m in share-based compensation costs.Â

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By GlobalDataThis is said to be driven by the appreciation of Bird’s common share price and total shareholder return during the quarter.
Bird added C$697.7m in securements to its backlog in the first quarter, maintaining record backlog levels of C$3.5bn as of 31 March 2024. Â
The pending backlog of work awarded but not yet contracted remains at C$3.4bn at quarter-end, which includes almost C$1.0bn of MSA and other recurring revenue to be earned over the next six years.Â
Bird president and CEO Teri McKibbon said: “Bird continues to deliver strong results, with 28% year-over-year revenue growth and margin accretion setting the stage for significant further improvements in earnings and cash flow for full-year 2024 over 2023. Â
“The company’s combined backlog of contracted and awarded work continues to grow with favourable embedded margins, and the accretive acquisition of NorCan Electric in January added new specialised self-perform capabilities and recurring revenue to Bird’s already extensive resume.â€
Looking ahead, Bird anticipates retaining in excess of 66% of net income on a full-year basis to support organic growth and strategic mergers and acquisitions.Â