Earnings Call
Crown Crafts Inc (CRWS)
Earnings Call Transcript - CRWS Q4 2024
Operator, Operator
Good day and welcome to the Crown Crafts, Inc. Fourth Quarter Fiscal Year 2024 Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. After today's presentation there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to John Beisler, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
John Beisler, Investor Relations
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for the Crown Crafts' fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 conference call. Joining me on the call today are Crown Crafts' President and CEO, Olivia Elliott, and the company's CFO, Craig Demarest. Earlier this morning, Crown Crafts filed its 10-K and issued a press release regarding the fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 financial results. A copy of this release is available on the company's website. During today's call, the company will make certain forward-looking statements, and actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may be beyond Crown Crafts control, and the company is under no obligation to update these statements. For more information about the company's risk factors and other uncertainties, please refer to the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Finally, I would like to remind you today's call is being recorded and a replay will be available through the company's Investor Relations page. Now I would like to turn the call over to the President and CEO, Olivia Elliott.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. Fiscal 2024 was a transitional year for the company. We started the year on the heels of acquiring and integrating Manhattan Toy as well as exploring the cross-selling opportunities made possible by the acquisition. We remain enthusiastic about the addition of Manhattan Toy as our offerings across the toy category continue to grow. Additionally, we plan to leverage our long-standing relationships with major retailers and specialty stores to gain shelf space and position our brands for future growth. We also continued to proactively manage the impact of the economic headwinds facing our operations and our customers. Inflationary pressures continue to linger, raising costs for materials and labor and reducing the discretionary income of consumers, which has a more meaningful impact on lower-income households. We will continue to strategically manage our cost structure and sales process. We remain well-positioned with our balance sheet and expect to see some of the macro pressure lessen throughout the remainder of the year. Despite these current challenges, we were able to minimize the impact on gross margin by proactively managing costs across the business. As a result, we reported another year of profitability and we reduced our debt by $4.6 million from the end of fiscal 2023. With that, I would like to turn it over to Craig to cover the financials in more detail.
Craig Demarest, CFO
Thank you, Olivia, and good morning, everyone. Net sales for the fourth quarter of 2024 were $22.6 million compared to $21.6 million in the prior year quarter. The increase reflects a full quarter's contribution from Manhattan Toy this year compared to two weeks in the fourth quarter of fiscal '23. This more than offset reduced orders from our customers, including a prior year feature from a major customer that was not repeated in the current year and the impact of consumers' response to the current macroeconomic conditions and adjusted inventory levels. Gross profit for the quarter was 23.2% compared to 21.9% in the fourth quarter of fiscal '23. The margin increase is primarily related to the effect of reserves recorded in the prior year associated with the customer who declared bankruptcy. Marketing and administrative expenses were $3.9 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal '24, relatively unchanged to the prior year quarter despite the addition of Manhattan Toy's marketing and administrative costs for a full quarter. We worked throughout fiscal '24 to reduce the historical cost of both Manhattan Toy and our Legacy businesses. Net income for the quarter was $1 million or $0.10 per diluted share compared to net income of $828,000 or $0.08 per diluted share in the prior year. Turning now to our results for the full year. Net sales for fiscal '24 were $87.6 million compared to $75.1 million in the prior year. The increase was primarily driven by the addition of Manhattan Toy, which generated $18.5 million of net sales during fiscal '24, partially offset by a decline in our bedding blankets and accessories business. Gross profit for the year was 26.2% compared to 26.4% in fiscal '23, reflecting the rent increase at our California warehouse last February, partially offset by the impact of product mix. Marketing and administrative expenses were $16.1 million versus $12.7 million in the prior year. The increase primarily reflects the addition of Manhattan Toy at the end of fiscal '23. Net income for the year was $4.9 million, or $0.48 per diluted share, compared to net income of $5.7 million or $0.56 per diluted share in fiscal '23. Turning now to our balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents as of the end of fiscal '24 totaled $830,000 compared to $1.7 million at the end of the prior year. Inventories at the end of fiscal '24 were $29.7 million compared to $34.2 million at the end of fiscal '23. Our long-term debt at the end of fiscal '24 was $8.1 million compared to $12.7 million at the end of 2023. And finally, we paid $0.32 per share in cash dividends to shareholders in fiscal 2024, with a yield of 6.4% based on yesterday's close. We continue to believe our dividend is a key component towards offering long-term returns to our shareholders. Now I will turn the call back over to Olivia for additional comments.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Thank you, Craig. We recently passed the one-year mark since our acquisition of Manhattan Toy. In that time, we have successfully completed the brand's integration into Sassy, and the IT conversion is nearly finished. On the operations side, we adjusted the brand's advertising spending and worked through the excess inventory to substantially improve the profitability of the brand compared to pre-acquisition periods. We are very encouraged by the strides Manhattan Toy has made on the product development front. Customers have given positive feedback on the items viewed at recent events, and they look forward to having these products on their shelves. As stated earlier, these new designs expand our offerings across the toy category, which now represents the largest portion of sales across our portfolio. Looking ahead to fiscal 2025, we will continue to manage the macroeconomic challenges facing our business and consumers and expand the product offerings across our brands. We believe we are well positioned for when the economy improves, and our strong balance sheet will allow us to consider favorable acquisition opportunities that can strengthen our existing categories. We would like to thank our team for their efforts over the past year and our customers and licensors for their continuing support. We look forward to updating you on our progress throughout the year, and thank you, our shareholders, for your continued support. With that, I'd like to open up the line for questions.
Operator, Operator
We will now begin the question-and-answer session. The first question today comes from Doug Ruth with Lenox Financial Services. Please go ahead.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Olivia and Craig, congratulations. It was a very solid report. It checks all the boxes: revenue growth, margin expansion, strong cash flow, debt reduction, and, of course, the dividend. So thank you for what you did for the shareholders.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Thank you very much. We appreciate your support.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Could you provide more details about your sales of $18.5 million for the Manhattan Toy? Can you project what the goal might be for Manhattan Toy in fiscal 2025?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
We really don't give projections. We kind of stay away from forecasting. I think the best thing to do is probably go back to what we said when we acquired Manhattan Toy, and that's the goal in the long term. It won't happen in fiscal '25. I think we said it was going to be $24 million. It's going to take three or four years to get there, but the projections are that we will grow steadily over those few years.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Is it possible to get some placement for Manhattan Toy in Walmart, perhaps in fiscal 2025, or would that take a longer period of time?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
No, we had some placement in Walmart already, and that will be shipping sometime between the first and second quarter of fiscal '25. Just a handful of items, and it's in a limited number of stores, but it's a start.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Very good. Congratulations. And then you also had talked about possibly combining the two warehouses, the Compton warehouse and then the Manhattan Toy warehouse. Is there any progress on that?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
We're still exploring that opportunity. We have engaged a third party to help us kind of figure out where the best place to locate those warehouses is that minimizes the impact to our customers as well as to anybody that's working in those warehouses.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Would you expect maybe something to happen in fiscal 2025? Or would we be looking beyond that?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
I think you'll be looking beyond that. By the end of fiscal 2025, I think we will have a plan, but I think any changes will happen in fiscal '26.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Okay. And what about the sales and product development office in Minneapolis, you had previously stated that possibly we're hoping to do something with the lease. Is there any progress on that?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
That one is going to be a more long-term process. I think that lease ends in the beginning of 2027. Unfortunately, Downtown Minneapolis has way too much open office space to be able to sublease it. So that's going to be a longer-term issue.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Okay. What about the direct-to-consumer efforts? Do you feel like you're making any progress with that?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
We have not gotten anybody except for Manhattan Toy up and running on the direct-to-consumer for our own website, but we have NoJo's website is now complete and able to sell direct-to-consumer. And we are working through right now getting Sassy's website up and running. I do believe by the end of fiscal 2025, we will have all of these subsidiaries selling direct-to-consumer.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Okay. How are things going for the company with Buy Buy Baby? You mentioned that Buy Buy Baby had reopened some stores. Is there any progress with that initiative?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
They did reopen, I believe, 11 stores and we are shipping to all 11 of those stores, but I believe any expansion by them is slower, I think, than we had hoped it would be, and they haven't opened up any new stores since the initial grand openings.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Okay. And then I guess a couple more. There was recently an article about the expansion of Legoland. And I know that was one of the things that came with the Manhattan Toy acquisition. How is that business going for the company?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
That business is actually going very well. We believe there will be three new parks, two of which will be in China, and those will be opened in, I believe, this summer of 2025. We're continuing to grow that business, and we look forward to them opening the new parks. One of the ones in China will be the largest one in the world.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Wow. So that would potentially really expand the international sales?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Correct.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
And then the last question I have was you did a tremendous job reducing the inventory. Are you happy with the inventory level where it's at, or is there an objective for that?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
I always feel like we have excess inventory. However, I believe we've made significant progress. There is still some close-out inventory to address, but it's not a large amount. Nonetheless, we always have items that we need to sell off.
Douglas Ruth, Analyst
Okay. Thank you for answering my questions. Congratulations to the team there. You've just done a really good job integrating the Manhattan Toy business into your core operation?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Thank you.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from John Deysher with Pinnacle. Please go ahead.
John Deysher, Analyst
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Good morning.
John Deysher, Analyst
Manhattan Toy, you said, I think it was $18.5 million in this fiscal year. I think you indicated last fiscal year, it was about 25.8% on a pro forma basis. If that's the case, that seems like a pretty significant drop, and I know you're going to let some accounts go. But how should we think about that decline in Manhattan Toy year-over-year?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Some of the decline was planned. There were some sales in the Legacy business to the original Buy Buy Baby that went bankrupt. So that was a little bit of the decline. We had some customers that we stopped shipping to because they didn't have good credit. So that was planned as well. Once we got into it a little bit, it was a bigger drop, I guess, than we had planned initially because we realized that, for example, in the direct-to-consumer business, they were spending as much on advertising as the top-line sales. Obviously, when you're looking at something like that, the sales were at a 30% loss. So we sacrificed some top-line sales to improve the bottom line. But we have been working throughout the year to get better pricing to move our products to new factories where we can get better prices out of China. I think that as time goes by, you'll see those sales pick back up.
John Deysher, Analyst
Okay. So do you think the $18.5 million this fiscal year was the trough?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
I do think that.
John Deysher, Analyst
Okay. All right. So that should go up. And on the flip side, if we back out Manhattan Toy from the Legacy business, it looks like the Legacy year sales were about $69 million versus $49 million, obviously a big jump. So what do you attribute that?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
That was last year versus this year? Are you looking further back?
John Deysher, Analyst
No, I'm just trying to calculate if we take $18.5 million from $87.6 million, it leaves us with about $69 million. And if we deduct $25.8 million, I apologize for the confusion. You're correct. Please disregard that last question. It was my mistake.
Craig Demarest, CFO
There'd be a slight decline, yes.
John Deysher, Analyst
Yes, slight decline. Legacy, okay. Okay. That's it for me. Thank you.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from Dennis Scannell with Rutabaga Capital. Please go ahead.
Dennis Scannell, Analyst
Yes. Good morning, Olivia and Craig. Just a couple of quick things for me. A quick question on gross margins in the fourth quarter. So gross margins were up year-over-year nicely, but down sequentially. Kind of what we were doing in the first three quarters, it looks like we're kind of around 27%. Is that just a seasonal issue or mix? Or just any commentary on the decline relative to the previous three quarters?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
That's more of a timing issue. You see a little bit of a pullback when I hate to talk about burden variances, et cetera. But I mean, you see a little bit of a negative burden variance when you get into Q4 because of Chinese New Year, so we're bringing less inventory in during that time of year. So it's more of a seasonal or a timing thing.
Dennis Scannell, Analyst
Got it. Okay. Great. Thank you. So and then looking at for the full year around, sorry, where my notes went, around 26%. In past years, certainly before inflation really took off, when we saw the softness on the consumer side, we had seen kind of gross margins 29%, maybe even 30%. It looks like fiscal '21 is recognizing that the mix of business has changed somewhat, particularly with the acquisition of Manhattan Toys. Is 29%, 30% gross margins a potential for the business going forward? Or is that not realistic?
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
I think it's a potential in the longer-term future. The biggest thing that's impacting us right now is the increase in the rent at the warehouse in California. So that's had a big impact on us. Until we get that long-term solution, it's not going to be at 30%, I don't think.
Dennis Scannell, Analyst
Yes, okay. Okay. And when you say just out of curiosity on the rents in California. It's not that you're looking to exit that? Or are you looking for another maybe a lower-cost facility? Is there a solution to that rent, I guess, is my question.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
We are working on that solution. We've engaged a third-party to help us with that move because if you're going to move a warehouse that you've been in for 25 or 30 years, we need to have the plan to be there for 10 to 20 years at least moving forward. We want to make sure that we do it right. So it is something that's going to take us 18 months to two years to get the long-term solution.
Dennis Scannell, Analyst
Got it. Interesting. Okay. And so an opportunity there. Great. Thank you very much.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
Thank you.
Operator, Operator
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Olivia Elliott for any closing remarks.
Olivia Elliott, President and CEO
We'd just like to thank you for your support over the years, and we look forward to updating you on our Q1 earnings, which will be in mid-August. Thank you very much.
Craig Demarest, CFO
Thank you.
Operator, Operator
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.