B. John Lindeman
Analyst · Water Tower Research
Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. During the second quarter, we delivered our 12th consecutive quarter of year-over- year adjusted SG&A savings with a nearly 16% reduction in expenses compared to 2024. These substantial savings helped drive a small sequential improvement in adjusted EBITDA compared to the first quarter of this year despite the tariff environment. Our disciplined approach to working capital management and inventory optimization also allowed us to deliver positive free cash flow for the quarter. We also took a significant step in the quarter with the initiation of a new restructuring plan to enhance our focus on higher-margin brands and to further optimize our distribution and manufacturing network. We expect this initiative over the next several quarters to drive higher-quality revenue streams and improve our level of profitability. Second quarter sales and sales mix came in softer than anticipated as industry headwinds continue to impact our top line performance, in particular, on the durable side of our business. There continues to be oversupply of challenges in the market, consolidation across the retail customer base and minimal real progress made by the government on rescheduling and safer banking. These dynamics have led to inconsistent demand, most notably on the lighting and durables side of our business, which is heavily weighted towards proprietary brands. With that said, there are several positives to call out from our performance within the quarter. To start, we saw solid year-on-year performances on a relative basis from several of our proprietary consumable brands in the nutrients and grow media categories. And while the lighting and durables side of the business overall was very soft in Q2, we did see strong performance from our SunBlaster brand behind early results from our innovative and award-winning Nano and Halo plant lights. As part of this initiative to drive high- quality sales, we also have additional new branded products launching later this year. During the quarter, we also experienced positive performance in some of our newer distributed brands. Our team is excited to work with our distributed brand partners who are committed to aligning closely with us and investing behind their brands to support growth and deliver strong margin and cash flow characteristics. However, we are becoming increasingly selective and in our restructuring program announced today, we took the step to rationalize several distributed brands that do not fit those characteristics. We saw further progress in our noncannabis and non-U.S.-Canadian sales mix during the quarter. Our international sales, in particular, performed well, improving year-on-year with nice results in select European and Asian countries. We remain on pace to improve upon the full year metric we achieved last year and continue to seek ways to diversify our revenue streams. Under our fully integrated ERP system, we have begun to realize improved working capital management, which helped to deliver positive free cash flow. Managing our free cash flow and our overall financial position remains a key area of focus for us, and we remain on pace to deliver positive free cash flow for the last 9 months of 2025. We have made it clear that our top strategic priority is to drive diverse, high-quality revenue streams. After positive momentum in the first quarter of this year, which saw our proprietary brand sales mix improved to 55%, our mix softened in the second quarter due in large part to poor industry demand levels in the durables category. Behind our restructuring initiatives and select planned investments in the second half, we still expect to improve our proprietary mix and adjusted gross profit margin for the full year. Last quarter, we indicated that we would conduct a thorough review of our product portfolio and distribution network to better align with estimated sales demand in the current industry and tariff environment. In Q2, we completed that process and as a result, initiated our new 2025 restructuring plan. This plan further streamlines our product portfolio and our manufacturing and distribution footprint. These actions include a large reduction in the number of SKUs and distributed brands that we will carry going forward. By trimming these underperforming products, we reduced our purchasing and warehousing complexity, reduce our space and personnel requirements, limit our working capital investment and enable our sales team to focus their efforts on higher value brands. We estimate these actions collectively will result in annual cost savings in excess of $3 million plus incremental improvements in working capital. And importantly, we expect approximately 1/3 of the total benefit to start showing through in the second half of 2025. Our strong history of impactful restructuring and cost-saving measures gives us confidence that we will, over time, realize these benefits. In the second half of 2025, we also plan to invest more in marketing behind new innovations, improve our brand websites and further refine our internal CRM capabilities. All of these actions are oriented to drive higher-quality revenue streams. I would like to give an update on the ongoing uncertain tariff environment. As a reminder, our primary tariff exposure is in our durables business as we source certain lighting and equipment products from China. We typically maintain larger inventory positions in products sourced from overseas. And as such, we have not yet realized a dramatic impact from tariffs outside of approximately $300,000 of incremental costs year-to-date. We are managing our business to minimize the impacts from tariffs and are carefully purchasing from vendors abroad in situations where the incremental tariff costs can either be shared with our suppliers or passed on to customers in a limited manner. In addition, we have and will continue to enact pricing actions when necessary and where possible in an effort to preserve our margins. With all of that said, it's important to note that the largest part of our business is our consumables portfolio and this business is mainly sourced from within the U.S. and Canada, albeit there is a portion sourced from other countries. We are increasingly focused on our proprietary consumables business. And with tariffs primarily affecting durables, it is logical for us to maintain that focus. We are executing what is within our control. We believe that by concentrating our efforts on a more optimized product portfolio and manufacturing and distribution footprint, we are positioned much better to drive diverse, high-quality revenue streams, improve profit margins and strengthen our financial position. With that, I'll hand it over to Kevin to further discuss the details of our second quarter financial results and our new 2025 restructuring plan.
Kevin Patrick O’Brien: Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. Net sales for the second quarter were $39.2 million, down 28.4% year-over-year, driven primarily by a 27.9% decline in volume mix and a 0.4% decline in pricing. The declines were primarily related to industry oversupply. While we were successful at driving improvements in our higher-margin proprietary brands during the first quarter, continued industry headwinds and lower performance in our durable lighting and equipment products led to a decline in Q2. We are focused on improving our proprietary brand mix in the second half of 2025 and are planning increased investments behind our key brands, along with executing our restructuring plan, as John discussed earlier. Consumable products outperformed durable products on a relative basis. And as a result, our consumables mix ticked up to approximately 80% of sales in the second quarter. Gross profit in the second quarter was $2.8 million or 7.1% of net sales compared to $10.9 million or 19.8% of net sales in the year ago period. Second quarter 2025 gross profit was negatively impacted by $3.3 million of restructuring charges we incurred during the quarter related to noncash inventory write-downs. Adjusted gross profit was $7.5 million or 19.2% of net sales compared to $13.3 million or 24.4% of net sales last year. The decrease was due to lower net sales and a decline in proprietary brand sales mix. As John said, we continue to expect improvement in adjusted gross profit margins for the full year 2025 as we improve our mix and reduce costs. I'll now provide further detail on our new restructuring plan and cost-saving initiatives. In response to the prolonged industry headwinds as well as the evolving tariff situation, during the second quarter, we initiated a restructuring plan to narrow and optimize the size and scope of our product portfolio and related footprint. The restructuring plan entails rationalizing over 1/3 of SKUs and brands in our product portfolio across the U.S. and in Canada, where our portfolio is much larger given the nature of our Garden Center business. The restructuring is intended to simplify our offering and optimize how we manage our inventory as one operating segment. In connection with the product portfolio optimization, we are reducing our footprint, including in our distribution center and manufacturing facilities. We estimate annual cost savings in excess of $3 million and working capital benefits from the restructuring, primarily from a reduction in inventory. We also believe this restructuring will improve efficiency, tighten our focus on our key proprietary brands and help deliver improved profitability. Moving on to our selling, general and administrative expense. In the second quarter, our SG&A expense was $16.1 million compared to $18.7 million last year. Adjusted SG&A expenses were $9.8 million, a 16% reduction when compared to $11.6 million last year. This was our 12th consecutive quarter of meaningful year-over-year adjusted SG&A savings. We are now operating well below our pre-IPO quarterly adjusted SG&A levels from 2020, a testament to the effectiveness of our cost savings initiatives. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $2.3 million in the second quarter. The decline from the prior year was due to lower net sales and adjusted gross profit margin, partially offset by adjusted SG&A savings. While the year-over-year comparison was unfavorable, we did improve sequentially compared to the first quarter, while also covering incremental tariff costs. Moving on to the balance sheet and overall liquidity position. Our cash balance as of June 30, 2025, was $11 million. During the quarter, we made a $4.5 million prepayment on our term loan and ended the second quarter with $114.5 million of principal balance on the term loan and approximately $122.6 million of total debt, inclusive of financial lease liabilities. Our net debt at the end of the second quarter was approximately $111.6 million. As a reminder, our term loan facility has no financial maintenance covenant and does not mature until October 2028. We also continue to maintain a 0 balance on our revolving credit facility. As a reminder, in May, we entered into a seventh amendment to our revolving credit facility, which extended the maturity date to June 30, 2027, and reduced the maximum commitment amount to $22 million. With cash on hand and approximately $9 million of availability on our revolving line of credit, we had $20 million of total liquidity as of June 30, 2025. In the second quarter, cash from operating activities was $1.7 million and capital expenditures were $0.3 million, yielding free cash flow of $1.4 million. Working capital benefits helped to deliver sequential improvements in free cash flow. We believe that we will deliver positive free cash flow for the last 9 months of 2025. To close, during the second quarter of 2025, we took significant steps to better position our business for improved performance as we move forward. We are committed to executing our strategic priorities and remain optimistic for an eventual demand turnaround in the industry. Thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to providing another update in November on our third quarter call. We are now happy to answer your questions. Operator, please open the line.