GP
GENUINE PARTS CO (GPC)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 sales rose 3.3% to $5.77B; GAAP diluted EPS fell to $0.96, primarily due to $62M inventory write‑down and $59.7M restructuring costs; adjusted diluted EPS was $1.61 .
- Automotive grew 6.1% to $3.7B with segment EBITDA margin 7.8% (-100 bps YoY); Industrial declined 1.2% to $2.1B with segment EBITDA margin 12.9% (-40 bps YoY) .
- 2025 outlook: total revenue +2% to +4%; adjusted EPS $7.75–$8.25; GAAP EPS $6.95–$7.45; tax ~24%; CFO $1.2–$1.4B; FCF $0.8–$1.0B; dividend increased 3% to $1.03/qtr ($4.12 annual) .
- Management signaled additional $100–$125M cost savings in 2025 (cumulative
$200M annualized by 2026), but noted H1 2025 earnings down 15–20% before H2 recovery; FX and lower pension income are headwinds ($0.43 EPS impact) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Automotive topline grew (+6.1%), aided by acquisitions and a modest comp (+0.2%); adjusted gross margin expanded 50 bps to 36.9% on pricing and sourcing initiatives .
- Asia Pacific delivered strong Q4 local‑currency growth (+14%) and ~+6% comps; commercial and retail both grew with notable retail strength .
- Execution progress: DC service levels improved ~800 bps in 2024; technology investments (Google Cloud catalog/search) made search 4x faster, 2x more accurate at half the cost; Poland Tech Center scaled to ~300 engineers .
- “We’re targeting an additional $100 to $125 million of savings in 2025…position us for approximately $200 million in annualized cost savings beginning in 2026.” — Will Stengel .
What Went Wrong
- GAAP EPS compressed to $0.96 vs $2.26 prior year on non‑recurring charges and inflationary pressure; adjusted EPS down to $1.61 vs $2.26 prior year .
- Industrial demand remained soft (avg daily sales down in Oct/Nov low single digits, December mid‑single digits), and Europe comps were -1% in Q4 LC; SG&A deleveraged ~210 bps YoY on inflation, acquired business mix, and product liability reserve .
- U.S. DIY remained weak (down low single digits for 2024), discretionary categories down mid‑single digits; management acknowledged underperformance versus some peers and ongoing work to lift store performance .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (note: segment profit measure changed to EBITDA in Q4 2024):
KPIs:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Adjusted gross margin was 36.9% in the fourth quarter, an increase of 50 basis points from last year…driven by acquisitions, primarily at U.S. Automotive.” — CFO .
- “We’re targeting an additional $100 million to $125 million of savings in 2025…approximately $200 million in annualized cost savings beginning in 2026.” — CEO .
- “Our search results are now 4x faster, 2x more accurate all at half the cost.” — CEO on Google Cloud investments .
- “Our tariff exposure as a percent of purchases is about 7% in China and less than 5% in Mexico and Canada…we’re prepared to react accordingly.” — CEO .
- “First half earnings to be down 15%–20% and second half earnings to be up 15%–20%.” — CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Comps cadence: Management expects sequential improvement through 2025 with H1 down, H2 up; recovery hinges on PMI/IP trends and industrial/Europe demand .
- Tariffs: Vendor/customer discussions ongoing; diversified supply chain analysis across ~800k SKUs; ability to pass through price while balancing gross margin dollars vs rate .
- Market share debate: U.S. auto underperformance acknowledged; focus on inventory, supply chain, talent and store execution; Motion North America seen as competitive with improved margin over 5 years .
- Tools & equipment relaunch: Streamlined two‑tier brand strategy targeting professional technicians; $10B+ industry opportunity; inventory write‑down tied to rebranding initiative .
- SG&A and cost actions: 2025 SG&A deleverage (20–40 bps) expected amid inflation and acquisition mix; restructuring savings partly offset .
Estimates Context
- We attempted to retrieve S&P Global consensus estimates (EPS, revenue, EBITDA) for Q4 2024 and prior periods, but the data was unavailable at the time of analysis due to provider request limits; therefore, beat/miss vs consensus cannot be assessed here [functions.GetEstimates error].
- Near‑term sell‑side models may need to reflect management’s guidance for H1 2025 earnings down 15–20% and FX/pension headwinds totaling ~$(0.43) per share, as well as expected gross margin expansion of 40–60 bps for FY 2025 .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q4 headline: solid revenue growth (+3.3%) but earnings compression from non‑recurring charges and inflation; adjusted EPS at $1.61 with adjusted gross margin up 50 bps .
- Automotive unit performing better than Industrial near‑term; APAC strong while Europe remains soft; U.S. DIY weak, nondiscretionary categories resilient .
- 2025 setup: modest topline growth (+2%–+4%), margin work continues, but H1 EPS down 15–20% before H2 improvement; FX and lower pension income are key drags; restructuring savings ramp offsets part of headwinds .
- Capital allocation remains balanced: dividend increased for 69th consecutive year; capex moderated to $400–$450M; M&A deployment expected at $300–$350M in 2025 .
- Watch catalysts: execution on NAPA store integrations (55% integrated), tool/equipment relaunch, Industrial demand recovery as PMI/IP sustain >50, and tariff developments .
- Segment margin guidance points to stability/improvement: Auto EBITDA margin flat to +10 bps; Industrial +20–40 bps, supported by restructuring and pricing/sourcing .
- Risk monitor: FX (EUR/CAD/AUD), wage/rent/freight inflation, product liability reserve changes, tariff policy shifts; pension plan settlement timing (late 2025/early 2026) excluded from adjusted EPS .
Citations:
Primary sources include GPC’s Q4 2024 8‑K (Item 2.02) and press release , Q4 earnings call transcript –, and prior‑quarter press releases – –.