v3.26.1
Note 4 - Accounts Receivable, Transit Accounts Receivable and and Transit Accounts Payable
3 Months Ended
Apr. 04, 2026
Notes to Financial Statements  
Loans, Notes, Trade and Other Receivables Disclosure [Text Block]

4.

Accounts Receivable, Transit Accounts Receivable and Transit Accounts Payable

 

The Company’s accounts receivable and contract assets, net comprise the following:

 

  

April 4,

2026

  

January 3,

2026

 

Billed

 $56,887  $47,987 

Unbilled

  17,323   23,942 

Contract assets

  12,174   10,543 

Provision for credit losses

  (1,229)  (1,229)
         

Accounts receivable and contract assets, net

 $85,155  $81,243 

 

Unbilled receivables primarily represent revenue earned, whereby those services are ready to be billed as of the balance sheet ending date. Contract assets primarily represent revenue earned under contracts that the Company contractually invoices at future dates.

 

From time to time, the Company’s Engineering segment enters into agreements to provide, among other things, construction management and engineering services. Pursuant to these agreements, the Company a) may purchase equipment on behalf of the Company’s customer or engage subcontractors to provide construction or other services; b) typically earns a fixed percentage of the total project value; and c) assumes no ownership or risks of inventory. In such situations, the Company acts as an agent under the provisions of ASC 606 “Revenue from Contracts with Customers” and therefore recognizes revenue on a “net-basis.” The Company records revenue on a “net” basis on relevant engineering and construction management projects, which require subcontractor/procurement costs or transit costs. In those situations, the Company charges the client a negotiated fee, which is reported as net revenue when earned. 

 

Under the terms of the agreements, the Company is typically not required to pay the subcontractor until after the corresponding payment from the Company’s end-client is received. Upon invoicing the end-client on behalf of the subcontractor or staffing agency, the Company records this amount simultaneously as both a “transit account receivable” and “transit account payable,” as the amount when paid to the Company is due to and generally paid to the subcontractor within a few days. The Company typically does not pay a given transit account payable until the related transit account receivable is collected. The Company is typically obligated to pay the subcontractor or staffing agency whether or not the client pays the Company. The Company’s transit accounts payable generally exceeds the Company’s transit accounts receivable but absolute amounts and spreads fluctuate significantly from quarter to quarter in the normal course of business. The transit accounts receivable was $6.7 million and related transit accounts payable was $14.7 million, for a net payable of $8.0 million, as of April 4, 2026. The transit accounts receivable was $8.0 million and related transit accounts payable was $16.2 million, for a net payable of $8.2 million, as of January 3, 2026.