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Mission Produce, Inc. (AVO)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered strong top and bottom-line performance: revenue $354.4M (+37% YoY), diluted EPS $0.24, adjusted EBITDA $36.9M (+113% YoY), driven by elevated avocado pricing and outsized Marketing & Distribution margins; Blueberries contributed materially on higher volumes .
- Results exceeded the November prerelease “floor” (revenue >$320M, adj. EBITDA >$28M) as actuals benefited from stronger-than-expected blueberry sell-through and pricing resilience into quarter-end; management confirmed the delta vs prerelease in Q&A .
- FY24 cash generation was a highlight: operating cash flow $93.4M, with ~$60M free cash flow; capital spending tapered ($32.2M) vs prior outlook due to timing shifts into FY25, further strengthening the balance sheet (cash $58.0M) .
- FY25 Q1 outlook: industry volumes consistent YoY; avocado pricing ~20% higher vs $1.40/lb in Q1 FY24; per-unit margins on purchased avocados expected to normalize from elevated levels; Peru blueberries pricing ~30% lower on higher industry supply, pressuring Blueberries EBITDA sequentially .
- Strategic updates as potential catalysts: USDA approval for Guatemalan avocado imports and winding down Toronto/Calgary facilities to eliminate redundant costs; management emphasized network flexibility and efficiency uplift .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Marketing & Distribution per-unit margins exceeded targeted range amid sustained higher pricing, showcasing Mission’s differentiated global sourcing and ability to prioritize North American demand at high price points .
- Blueberries strength: net sales up 62% to $31.6M; adjusted EBITDA up 59% to $8.6M, driven by new plantings and yield improvements post El Niño weather normalization in Peru .
- Cash generation and capital discipline: FY24 operating cash flow up $64.2M to $93.4M; ~$60M free cash flow; debt paydown remains near-term priority, positioning for ongoing FCF and balance sheet strengthening .
What Went Wrong
- International Farming segment sales fell to $30.3M from $40.3M YoY due to materially lower owned Peruvian volumes from El Niño; though pricing and cost actions supported positive EBITDA, volume-driven fixed-cost absorption was a headwind .
- SG&A rose 32% to $27.2M on incentive compensation, stock-based comp and statutory profit sharing—reflecting performance but a cost headwind that partially offset gross profit gains .
- Near-term normalization: avocado per-unit margins expected to revert to historical ranges as Mexico volumes ramp; Peru blueberries pricing ~30% lower YoY in Q1 FY25 likely to compress segment adjusted EBITDA vs last year’s abnormally high prices .
Financial Results
Consolidated and KPI comparison (YoY / sequential)
Segment breakdown
Q4 2024 vs Estimates (S&P Global)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO on performance and strategy: “Mission delivered a strong fourth quarter that rounded out an exceptional full year fiscal 2024… our Marketing & Distribution segment drove the strong fourth quarter performance… per-unit margins exceeding our targeted range… drove a $64.2 million increase in operating cash flow” .
- CFO on Q4 drivers: Revenue +37% to $354.4M primarily from 36% higher avocado prices; North America volumes +9%; gross profit $55.8M and margin 15.7%, +490 bps; SG&A +32% on incentive and stock-based comp .
- CFO on Q1 FY25 outlook: Mexico-centric model; pricing ~20% higher YoY vs $1.40/lb; per-unit margins to revert to historical range; Peru blueberries pricing ~30% lower on higher industry volumes .
- CEO on Guatemala: USDA approved Guatemalan avocado imports; expansion designed to fill calendar gaps to ensure year-round supply .
- CEO/CFO on footprint: Winding down Toronto/Calgary facilities to maintain service while eliminating redundant costs; limited exit costs expected, longer-term savings anticipated .
Q&A Highlights
- Actuals vs prerelease: Better-than-floor outcomes driven by stronger blueberry sell-through and pricing that held up longer than anticipated into October; M&D margins were bullish even as prerelease was set conservatively .
- Canada facility wind-down: Facilities underutilized as customers shifted to direct-from-border; minimal severance; limited remaining lease/asset tails; expected meaningful cost savings over time .
- International Farming trajectory: With El Niño dissipating, management targets a return toward 2021–2022 EBITDA levels ($23M–$30M) as volumes recover and markets re-open .
- Tariffs/macro: Team is experienced operating through disruptions; sees consumer resilience despite higher price points; management not overly concerned but remains prepared .
- Blueberries acreage expansion: Rolling out ~100 hectares this year (with double density plantings), planning ~200 hectares entering production into 2025/2026; targeting premium varieties to support pricing .
- Capital allocation: Priority remains debt paydown near term; with balance sheet strengthened, future options include potential shareholder returns post deleveraging .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus EPS, revenue, and EBITDA for Q4 2024 were unavailable at time of writing; management’s prerelease indicated Street numbers were “well below” internal expectations, and actual results exceeded those prerelease floors . Where estimates are unavailable, we default to S&P Global and note unavailability.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Elevated Q4 pricing and superior M&D execution drove outsized margins and earnings; however, expect margin normalization in Q1 FY25 as Mexico volumes ramp and per-unit returns revert to targeted ranges .
- Near-term headwind: Peru blueberries pricing ~30% lower YoY in Q1 FY25 should pressure Blueberries EBITDA despite owned volume increases—watch segment mix and pricing elasticity .
- Farming recovery setup: With El Niño impacts receding, management targets an EBITDA recovery path toward 2021–2022 levels as volumes and market breadth normalize—monitor yield and quality trends in Peru .
- Structural efficiency: Canadian facility consolidation and USDA Guatemala approval enhance network flexibility and reduce redundant costs—supportive to mid-term margin resilience .
- Cash generation and deleveraging: FY24 operating cash $93.4M and ~$60M FCF underpin debt reduction; FY25 CapEx ($50–$55M) is weighted to targeted projects, with overall CapEx trajectory moderating through FY26 .
- Demand resilience: Retail/consumer acceptance at higher price points expands the pricing contour (e.g., $1.15–$1.49 per piece) without pull-through degradation—supports higher structural pricing vs prior years .
- Trading implications: Near term, expect rotation from price-driven margin tailwinds to volume-driven normalization; catalysts include U.S. Guatemala import ramp, footprint savings realization, and visibility on Farming segment EBITDA recovery. Longer term, diversified sourcing and premium berries strategy augment multi-product growth optionality .