NEW YORK, June 1, 2026, 12:05 (EDT)
ICF International shares rose 3.3% to $71.09 in late-morning Nasdaq trading on Monday, putting the government-services consultant ahead of its virtual annual meeting scheduled for Tuesday. The stock opened at $68.84, touched $71.73 and had traded 101,433 shares at the latest available quote, valuing the company at about $1.30 billion.
Why now is simple enough: investors have one more trading session before the June 2 meeting, and online votes submitted before the meeting must be in by 11:59 p.m. ET on June 1. ICF says the meeting will be held online at 8:00 a.m. ET on Tuesday.
The vote is not just routine housekeeping. A filing shows shareholders are being asked to approve a 2026 omnibus incentive plan that would authorize 1,321,000 shares for awards and replace the 2018 plan; such equity plans matter because they can affect pay, retention and potential dilution, meaning the spread of ownership over more shares.
The stock’s rise also sat inside a broader rally in government-services names. SAIC jumped 16.9%, Booz Allen Hamilton gained 5.1% and CACI rose 2.8%, giving ICF some peer support rather than leaving the move as a company-only trade.
The essential backdrop is ICF’s May 7 first-quarter report. Revenue fell to $437.5 million from $487.6 million a year earlier, while net income dropped to $20.5 million from $26.9 million, a company release and quarterly filing showed.
Chief Executive John Wasson said federal government revenue had “increased considerably” on a sequential basis and called the quarter a “solid” one for contract awards. He also said ICF was still positioned for a “return to revenue and EPS growth” in 2026. ICF International Inc.
ICF reaffirmed full-year revenue guidance of $1.89 billion to $1.96 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $6.95 to $7.25. Non-GAAP EPS is an adjusted earnings measure that strips out some items required under standard U.S. accounting, so it is useful for comparison but not a substitute for reported profit.
Contract flow gave bulls something to point to. ICF reported $450 million in first-quarter awards, a quarterly book-to-bill ratio of 1.03 and a trailing 12-month ratio of 1.21; book-to-bill compares new awards with revenue, so a reading above 1 suggests new business exceeded work billed in the period.
Backlog, or contracted work not yet fully booked as revenue, stood at $3.4 billion at the end of the first quarter, including $1.7 billion funded. That helps explain why investors are watching the timing of conversion more than the headline revenue drop alone.
But the risk is timing. ICF said first-quarter revenue was $12 million below expectation because some commercial energy and international government work shifted later into 2026; if that work slips again, or if federal technology-modernization demand weakens, the recovery case behind Monday’s gain could thin out quickly.
There is also a near-term dividend marker. ICF’s investor page lists a $0.14 quarterly dividend declared May 7, with an ex-dividend and record date of June 5 and payment due July 10.