AI
Allbirds, Inc. (BIRD)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $32.1M, down 18.3% year over year but within guidance; EPS was -$2.73, beating S&P Global consensus of -$3.90*, and revenue exceeded consensus $30.0M* .
- Gross margin was 44.8% (down 210 bps YoY), supported by ~$2M gift card breakage (~400 bps benefit) and strict cost control; adjusted EBITDA loss of $18.6M was above guidance .
- Management reiterated full-year 2025 guidance (net revenue $175–$195M; adj. EBITDA loss $65–$55M) and introduced Q2 guidance (revenue $36–$41M; adj. EBITDA loss $19–$16M) .
- Stock catalysts: back-half product launch (large wave of new products, waterproof collection, Elevated and Relaxed categories) and ongoing brand campaign “Cards on the Table” (25M Instagram views) to drive a planned return to top-line growth in Q4 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Beat/inline vs consensus: EPS (-$2.73 vs -$3.90*) and revenue ($32.1M vs $30.0M*) were better than S&P Global expectations; adjusted EBITDA outperformed company guidance .
“We’re pleased to report another quarter of progress... delivering financial results within or above our expectations.” — CEO Joe Vernachio . - SG&A down >$14M YoY as cost actions took hold; Q1 SG&A $25.2M vs $39.7M in Q1 2024 .
- Marketing traction: “Cards on the Table” campaign generated 25M Instagram views and lowered CAC; conversion improved, supporting top-of-funnel momentum .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line contraction persists: revenue declined 18.3% YoY, driven by planned retail closures and international distributor transitions .
- Gross margin down YoY (44.8% vs 46.9%), pressured by distributor mix, promotions, and higher per-unit freight (partially offset by ~$2M gift card breakage) .
- Macro/tariff headwinds and choppy traffic/conversion since early April; management expects minor tariff impact in Q2, rising in Q3/Q4 (mitigation via pricing, conservative buys) .
Financial Results
P&L and Margins: Actuals vs Prior Periods
Notes:
- Q1 gross margin benefited by ~400 bps from ~$2M gift card breakage .
- Management frames “restated” Q1 GM for comparability at ~41% excluding breakage, expecting sequential improvement through FY25 .
Consensus vs Actuals (S&P Global)
Values with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Revenue Breakdown
KPIs and Balance Sheet
Guidance Changes
Notes:
- FY25 guidance includes ~$18–$23M negative revenue impact from distributor transitions and U.S. store closures .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our first quarter results were in line with our expectations on the top line and exceeded guidance on the bottom line.” — CEO Joe Vernachio .
- “Gross margin was also impacted by higher per unit freight costs... offset by approximately $2 million of gift card breakage (~400 bps).” — CFO Annie Mitchell .
- “Assuming no material shift in the macro... we are positioned to return to top line growth in the fourth quarter.” — CEO Joe Vernachio .
- “We continue to expect that marketing expense... will increase on a full year basis compared to 2024.” — CFO Annie Mitchell .
- “We’ve trimmed the very back half of Q4 purchase orders... but the full expression of the product offering is intact.” — CEO Joe Vernachio .
Q&A Highlights
- Gross margin trajectory: management guided sequential GM improvement from a ~41% “restated” Q1 (excluding breakage) to mid-40s for FY25; tariff impact minor in Q2, larger in Q3/Q4, mitigated by modest price increases and conservative buys .
- Inventory strategy: conservative buys for Fall ’25 and Spring ’26 while maintaining flexibility to chase into demand to support Q4 growth .
- Back-half conviction: >50% of H2 assortment new; product and marketing alignment set to drive planned Q4 top-line growth despite macro uncertainty .
- Retail prototype: low-cost store enhancements (more touchpoints; interactive footwear displays) lifting daily sales; rollout to SoHo and Stanford underway .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 beat: EPS -$2.73 vs -$3.90*; revenue $32.1M vs $30.0M*; EBITDA -$20.9M* vs -$26.5M* (note: S&P EBITDA is not company “adjusted EBITDA”) .
- Prior quarters: Q3 2024 revenue $43.0M vs $41.7M*; EPS -$2.68 vs -$3.04*; Q4 2024 revenue in line ($55.9M vs $55.9M*), EPS beat (-$3.23 vs -$3.51*). Values with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q1 was a “setup” quarter: within top-line guidance and above bottom-line guidance, while investing heavily in marketing; consensus beats on EPS and revenue support estimate stability or modest upward revisions for Q2 .
- Sequential margin path looks constructive: excluding breakage, GM ~41% with management targeting mid-40s for FY25 despite tariffs; pricing and inventory discipline are key levers .
- Back-half growth thesis hinges on product: large-scale new assortment (>50% new SKUs), waterproof line, Elevated/Relaxed categories, and improved retail experience; watch execution milestones in late summer .
- Distribution strategy de-risks international and extends reach (Iberia, LatAm); expect continued regional mix shifts and lower direct exposure to U.S. tariff impacts .
- Liquidity and cost control provide runway: $39.1M cash, no revolver borrowings, SG&A down significantly YoY; operating cash use elevated seasonally in Q1 .
- Near-term risks: tariff implementation timing/size, choppy consumer demand, freight cost per unit; monitor Q2 trends and marketing ROI cadence .
- Actionable: position for H2 catalysts—product drops and marketing scale—while tracking sequential GM, tariff impacts, and Q2 guidance execution.
Values with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Citations:
Press release and 8-K:
Q1 2025 call transcript:
Q4 2024 press release:
Q3 2024 press release:
Other Q1-related press: