Paul Toms
Analyst · Todd Lechtenberger with Amalfi Fund. Your line is now open
Thank you, Paul, and good afternoon everyone. Our disappointing earnings performance in the first quarter was driven primarily by several cost-related issues in our Home Meridian HMI Segment. Reduced demand and soft retail conditions across the home furnishings industry drove the consolidated 5% sales dip, which also weighed on our earnings for the quarter. Given the sales decline and the impact of a 10% tariff on furniture and furniture component parts imported from China, our Hooker Branded Segment and All Other performed reasonably well for the quarter. So, we have strategies for improvement in all of our businesses. The cost-related issues at Home Meridian included a large quality chargeback, higher freight, and demurrage costs as well as costs associated with our inventories. In addition, Home Meridian's margins were more affected by the 10% tariff on imports from China and our other business units due to the nature of HMI's customer base as many of its customers had large orders already in the pipeline at lower pre-tariff prices. However, increased pricing and resourcing strategies are in place. Our planned shift of production out of China to non-tariff countries is mostly on schedule. In fact, the shift is accelerating during the current quarter, and is expected to be mostly complete by the end of the fiscal third quarter. As we reported in our fourth quarter earnings release in mid-April, orders and backlogs were down in February and March, and continue to be down throughout April. Reduced demand negatively impacted sales across all our business units and was experienced consistently across the industry according to the reporting of most public furniture companies and what we've heard from conversations with our retail customers. We've been encouraged however by the mid single-digit uptick in orders during the fiscal May period in our Hooker Branded Segment. We believe Home Meridian's order rates remain below prior year due to many of their larger customers still delaying receipt of shipments and placement of reorders in response to the softer retail environment faced in the early part of the year. We expect to see Home Meridian orders start to improve during the fiscal 2020 second quarter, and for our second-half performance to be much better for this segment. Due primarily to loss of margin in the HMI Segment, gross profit and operating income both decreased approximately $6.5 million in the quarter. The decreased operating profit in the Hooker Branded Segment was mainly attributable to lower net sales. We're addressing all these challenges with strategies to improve profitability in each of our businesses. While we do expect the challenges to persist throughout the summer, we're more optimistic about the fall selling season. We believe that many of these issues negatively impacting profitability at Home Meridian are unlikely to recur. These includes the large quality-related chargeback, which was confined to a single customer and limited product, demurrage costs, excess freight costs at year-end, delayed implementation of tariff-prompted price increases, and postponed shipments to a few large retailers. While the lion share of our operating units are in the residential furniture industry, it's noteworthy that both of our non-residential business units, Samuel Lawrence Hospitality and H Contract reported significant sales increases during the quarter. SLH sales more than doubled, and ended the quarter with a backlog nearly 70% higher than during the same period last year, H Contract had an approximate 40% sales increase along with improved gross margins and operating profits. Other business units that performed well in the quarter included Hooker Upholstery, which had a 3% sales increase and incoming orders 5% higher than a year ago. In the Home Meridian Segment, Accentrics Home, which is dedicated to emerging channels such as e-commerce grew sales by nearly 20%. Turning now to the economy as a whole, the most significant macroeconomic development so far this year has been the increased tariff imposed on furniture and furniture components imported from China. Finished furniture and component parts shipped from China after May 10, 2019 became subject to an additional 15% tariff. The additional amount brings the total tariff on furniture imports from China to 25%. As of February 2019, Hooker Furniture Corporation imported over 40% of our product line from China. By segment, our strategies to address the increased tariffs include at Home Meridian the company's PRI value priced upholstery division is resourcing production away from China projecting that 90% of production will be in non-tariff countries by the fall. Other divisions are moving production in non-tariff countries to a lesser degree. Home Meridian is also receiving vendor price concessions from many Chinese producers and raising prices to customers where possible. Hooker Casegoods and Hooker Upholstery are passing on most of the increased tariff costs beyond the amount offset by vendor concessions in the form of a surcharge that can be reversed if and when tariffs are dropped or reduced. Hooker Upholstery is moving a significant portion of their production outside of China during the coming six months. At Hooker Casegoods, our long-term relationship and the specialized craftsmanship of the company's main Chinese vendor makes moving entirely away from China a less desirable action. However, tariffs will be priced into all new items, and the vendor is opening a factory in Vietnam, where some production can be shifted. The company is continuing to develop production in alternative countries, and is receiving vendor price concessions from Chinese producers. Domestically-produced upholstery divisions included in all other are enacting selected price increases and receiving vendor concessions to help mitigate the impact of tariffs on component parts imported from China. Taking a closer look at each of our segments, I'll begin with the Hooker Branded Segment. As mentioned, given the sales decline and the business disruptions from the initial 10% tariff, this segment performed well. Our net sales in this segment were down $3.2 million or 7.4%. This segment was still highly profitable with 13% operating margin during the quarter, and upper single-digit sales increase in Hooker Casegoods was partially offset by Hooker Upholstery's 3% sales increase. All Other, which includes domestically-produced upholstery divisions, Bradington-Young, Shenandoah, and Sam Moore, along with H Contract, reported a net sales decrease of $1.2 million, or 4.2%, from $29.5 million in last year's first quarter to $28.3 million in the current first quarter. Lower sales were driven by reduced shipments in our domestic upholstery manufacturing divisions, partially offset by continued growth at H Contract, which specializes in furnishings for senior living and retirement communities. Profitability performance in the segment was solid with the segment reporting and operating income margin of approximately 10%. A new Sam Moore Division President joined the company shortly after the end of the quarter, and will focus on growing the top line through helping Sam Moore transition into a more robust full line upholstery resource with a broader selection and better selling programs. At this point, I'd like to turn the call over to Lee Boone to give more detail on the HMI segment this quarter.