NEW YORK, July 17, 2026, 1:07 p.m. EDT (U.S. markets open) — Southland Holdings (NYSEAMERICAN:SLND) shares rise after securing a Winnipeg project that increases the company’s Civil backlog.
- Shares climbed 67.3% to $1.14, with trading volume exceeding 173 million shares.
- Southland’s portion of the Winnipeg contract amounts to C$272 million. Additional contracts are valued at $25 million.
- Winnipeg represents approximately 28% of Southland’s Civil backlog for March.
Shares of Southland Holdings Inc. (NYSEAMERICAN:SLND) jumped on Friday following the release of two contract awards. The combined disclosed value attributed to Southland totaled about $219 million, based on Thursday’s exchange rate.
The main takeaway related to mix. Southland’s C$272 million Winnipeg portion is set to be included in the Civil backlog in the third quarter.
The stake is equivalent to around US$194 million, representing 27.5% of March Civil backlog. Civil division recorded a 14.1% gross margin in the first quarter, while Transportation reported a negative 28.3% margin.
From the investor perspective, Southland increased the size of its profitable segment rather than the division that has been causing quarterly losses.
A three-party joint venture has secured the Winnipeg contract, valued at C$815 million. Construction is set to start immediately. Enhanced operations are targeted for 2030, with overall project completion planned for the second quarter of 2031.
Southland reported $25 million in projects in the Caribbean and Southwest regions. The projects include emergency water infrastructure, marine facilities, and port systems. The company did not specify how the sum was divided by segment.
| Scale comparison | Existing measure | Fresh announced value | Relative size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Civil backlog at March 31 | $703.7 million | Winnipeg portion: about $193.6 million | 27.5% |
| Total backlog at March 31 | $1.878 billion | Winnipeg portion: about $193.6 million | 10.3% |
| Total backlog at March 31 | $1.878 billion | Combined announcements: about $218.6 million | 11.6% |
| Midday market value | $61.7 million | Combined announcements: about $218.6 million | 3.5 times |
The figures are based on an exchange rate of C$1.4050 to the U.S. dollar. The Winnipeg share was the only one specifically slated for the third-quarter backlog.
The extended schedule is significant. The contract’s value is distinct from profit. A large portion of the associated revenue will be distributed across multiple years.
Southland posted a 28% decline in first-quarter revenue, reaching $172.4 million. The company reported a gross loss of $4.8 million and its attributable net loss increased to $28.4 million. Backlog was $1.88 billion.
Chief Executive Frank Renda said in May that Southland was “maintaining strict bidding discipline and prioritizing the high-margin opportunities in our core end markets.” The company’s Winnipeg contract is consistent with this approach. Business Wire
Friday saw exceptionally high trading volume, totaling 173.4 million shares—roughly 3.2 times the amount disclosed in May.
The action was isolated to the company. Granite Construction Inc. (NYSE:GVA) saw minimal change. Tutor Perini Corp. (NYSE:TPC) slipped 0.4%. Sterling Infrastructure Inc. NASDAQ:STRL declined by around 1%.
Execution remains a concern. Southland reported $20.5 million in cash and $230.8 million in debt as of the end of March. The company burned through $133.9 million in operating cash during the quarter, while sureties provided $125.1 million in advances. Management stated the liquidity strategy secures a minimum 12-month runway.
The next demonstration is not another award. It is converting Civil backlog into revenue.