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Cadre Holdings, Inc. (CDRE)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Record quarter: Revenue $176.0M, gross margin 43.9%, Adjusted EBITDA $38.5M, and diluted EPS $0.32; strong YoY growth driven by acquisitions and robust Armor/Duty Gear shipments, with Q4 described as Cadre’s best quarter as a public company .
- FY2025 guidance initiated: Net sales $572–$601M, Adjusted EBITDA $105–$115M, capex $7–$9M; excludes impacts from newly announced U.S. tariffs; management expects ~20% of annual revenue in Q1 with EBITDA margin ~12–14% before returning to high teens thereafter .
- Tariffs risk and mitigation: Tariffs could have an annualized headwind of ~$18–$22M; management plans pricing actions, productivity gains, and potential production shifts to offset (offsets expected to lag ~3 months) .
- M&A catalyst: Agreement to acquire Carr’s Engineering Division (£75M EV) expands nuclear safety vertical into robotics, nuclear medicine, and adds international scale; expected close in Q2 2025 pending approvals .
- Capital structure and dividend: YE 2024 cash $124.9M, net debt $98.3M; quarterly dividend raised to $0.095/share (annualized $0.38, +~9%) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record Q4 across key metrics (revenue, gross margin, Adjusted EBITDA, margin) with positive mix driven by Duty Gear volume; CEO: “Cadre’s best quarter of financial results as a public company” .
- Strategic momentum: Agreement to acquire Carr’s Engineering Division deepens nuclear exposure (remote handling/robotics) and broadens international reach; brands highly complementary to nuclear safety .
- New product innovation: Launch of thinnest/lightest Level 3A ballistic panel and the Ballast holster with improved safety/adaptability; early feedback positive .
What Went Wrong
- Q3 headwinds from cybersecurity incidents reduced revenue and margins (gross margin 36.6% vs 42.8% YoY; Adjusted EBITDA $13.5M vs $23.7M), causing revenue shift into Q4/Q1 and wider FY2025 ranges .
- FY2024 net income modestly lower YoY ($36.1M vs $38.6M) amid higher SG&A from acquisitions, acquisition costs, higher interest expense, and lower productivity (partly cyber-related, inventory step-up) .
- Macro/tariff uncertainty and potential federal procurement “rhythm” delays widened FY2025 ranges; offsets to tariffs expected to lag about three months .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (quarterly):
KPIs and balance sheet highlights:
Notes:
- Non-GAAP adjustments include restructuring/transaction costs, FX other expense/income, stock-based comp, inventory step-up amortization; Adjusted EBITDA reconciled in filings .
Guidance Changes
Additional notes: Management expects stronger 2H 2025 driven by EOD, Duty Gear, and Armor project timing; quarterly ranges widened due to macro procurement rhythm/tariffs uncertainty .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Q4…represented Cadre’s best quarter of financial results as a public company.” – Warren Kanders .
- “We expect net sales to be between $572M and $601M…Adjusted EBITDA between $105M and $115M…ranges reflect the uncertain environment…guidance does not include any impact from the recently announced or implemented U.S. tariffs.” – Blaine Browers .
- “Tariffs…would have an impact in the range of $18M to $22M…offsets…will lag about 3 months…we’re prepared with a long list of actions.” – Blaine Browers .
- “We introduced…Safariland armor SX HP Level 3A ballistic panel…20% reduction in weight and 20% increase in ballistic performance…[and] Ballast…our most advanced duty-rated holster.” – Brad Williams .
- “Agreement to acquire the Engineering Division…leading brands…remote handling and robotics…expected to close during the second quarter.” – Blaine Browers .
Q&A Highlights
- Guidance cadence: Organic growth at midpoint ~2–5% for FY2025; stronger 2H profile; Q1 ~20% of FY revenue, EBITDA margin ~12–14% due to volume leverage/mix; margins return to high teens later in year .
- Tariffs: Main exposure Mexico (~60%) and Canada (~40%); minimal China; offsets include targeted pricing, productivity acceleration, and production shifts; actions already underway .
- SG&A baseline: Q4 SG&A (ex transaction fees) is baseline; incremental ~$3M vs Q3’24 around IT; Carr’s Engineering not included in 2025 guidance .
- Federal procurement rhythm: Demand intact; potential timing delays in agency processes; viewed as “rhythm offset” vs structural demand change .
- Segment specifics: Q4 drivers were Armor, Duty Gear, and EOD suits; cyber-related backlog unwind supported Q4 strength .
Estimates Context
Wall Street consensus estimates from S&P Global were unavailable at the time of this analysis due to API limits; therefore, beat/miss vs consensus cannot be determined, and no estimate comparisons are shown. Management’s FY2025 guidance and qualitative cadence are provided above .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Momentum into 2025 with record Q4 execution and initiated FY2025 guide; H2 weighting and project timing indicate intra-year cadence for trading setups .
- Tariffs clarity is a near-term swing factor; management has defined offsets (pricing/productivity/production shifts), but expect a ~3-month lag—headline risk likely to move the stock .
- Nuclear vertical scale-up (Carr’s Engineering) adds differentiated robotics/remote handling capabilities and international mix; Q2 close would be a catalyst and could re-rate margin/visibility .
- Core law enforcement demand remains resilient across cycles; new ballistic panel and holster can support mix/gross margin improvements .
- Balance sheet flexibility (cash $124.9M; net debt $98.3M; pro forma leverage ~1.75x after Carr’s close per management) supports M&A and dividend growth .
- Watch Q1 margins (~12–14%) and revenue (~20% of FY) as a check on guidance cadence; expect margins to normalize back to high teens thereafter .
- Non-GAAP adjustments (inventory step-up, FX, transaction costs) impacted 2024; continued focus on automation/productivity suggests medium-term gross margin trajectory toward mid/high-40s potential per management commentary .