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SANFILIPPO JOHN B & SON INC (JBSS)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Net sales rose 18.0% to $276.2M on 24.5% volume growth to 91.2M pounds, largely from the Lakeville snack bar acquisition; however, gross margin compressed to 16.9% and diluted EPS fell 33.8% to $1.00 as pricing pressure and higher nut costs weighed on profitability .
- Management cited a one-time concession to a snack bar customer and Lakeville capacity constraints as primary profit headwinds, noting these constraints have been resolved and efficiencies are being implemented to restore margins .
- Consumer channel volume was the strongest in eight quarters ex-Lakeville; Southern Style Nuts rebounded at club, OVH grew double-digits, and private label bars continued to ramp, reinforcing the bar-led diversification strategy .
- No formal financial guidance was provided; management highlighted planned pricing actions to offset rising chocolate, cashew, almond and walnut costs, and operational initiatives including a new 446k sq ft Huntley, IL distribution center to support growth .
- Wall Street consensus estimates from S&P Global were unavailable at query time; as such, beats/misses vs estimates cannot be determined (S&P Global data unavailable).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Broad-based volume growth: Sales volume +24.5% to 91.2M pounds; consumer channel volume +30.8% (+3.4% ex-Lakeville) with private brand +36.1% driven by new peanut butter/nutrition bar distribution and improved mixed nuts/snack/trail mix at a mass merchandiser .
- Branded recovery pockets: Southern Style Nuts volume +5.4% on normalized club inventory; OVH shipments +14.3% in pounds across channels with new product launches planned for Q2 FY25 .
- Strategic capacity and logistics: Lease of a 446,000 sq ft Huntley, IL distribution center; already shipping largest customers, enabling added bar and nut/trail mix packaging capacity .
Quote: “We remain optimistic that the strategic pricing actions we initiated last quarter will continue to drive positive momentum in our consumer distribution channel.” – CEO Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo .
What Went Wrong
- Margin compression: Gross profit down 18.4% to $46.5M; gross margin down to 16.9% from 24.4% YoY due to competitive pricing, strategic price actions, higher commodity costs (peanuts/tree nuts), one-time concession, and Lakeville capacity-related manufacturing spend .
- Profitability impact: Diluted EPS decreased 33.8% to $1.00, net income fell to $11.7M vs $17.6M YoY; interest expense rose to ~$0.5M on higher average debt levels .
- Mixed channel dynamics ex-Lakeville: Contract manufacturing volume fell 19.8% ex-Lakeville on reduced peanut distribution and lack of prior-year club rotation; commercial ingredients down slightly ex-Lakeville .
Financial Results
Sequential Quarterly Comparison (oldest → newest)
Year-over-Year Comparison
Distribution Channel and Brand Volume Trends
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We remain optimistic that the strategic pricing actions we initiated last quarter will continue to drive positive momentum… However, the category may be challenged by increasing commodity costs and corresponding selling price increases in the next few quarters.” – CEO Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo .
- “Our profitability in the quarter was impacted by a one-time concession to a snack bar customer due to capacity constraints at our Lakeville facility. We believe these capacity constraints have been resolved.” – CEO Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo .
- “AI technology is already having an extraordinary impact… we have developed an internal team to assess how JBSS can use AI… Several use cases have been identified, and we will be executing projects in the coming fiscal quarters.” – CEO Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo .
- “Gross profit decreased… due to lower selling prices… higher commodity acquisition costs… a one-time price concession… and increased manufacturing spending due to capacity constraints at our Lakeville facility.” – CFO Frank S. Pellegrino .
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing and cost inflation: Management emphasized the need for price adjustments with customers to offset significant cost increases in chocolate, cashews, almonds, and rising walnut markets; conversations are ongoing to preserve quality and service levels .
- Capacity and operations: Lakeville constraints that necessitated a one-time concession have been resolved; ongoing projects aim at cost savings and operational efficiencies across the organization, supported by the new Huntley distribution center .
- Category trends and retail mix: Shift toward value-focused retailers and club channel rotations; branded Fisher snack/trail mix underperformed category due to distribution loss/non-repeating promotions, while Southern Style Nuts and OVH showed strength .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for revenue and EPS for Q1 FY25 and forward periods were unavailable at the time of query due to data access limits; therefore, we cannot assess beats/misses vs Wall Street consensus (S&P Global data unavailable).
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Bar-led diversification continues to scale, driving volume and net sales; expect margins to normalize as Lakeville constraints are resolved and efficiency projects progress .
- Near-term profitability hinges on pricing power versus commodity inflation; watch customer acceptance of price actions in chocolate, cashews, almonds and walnuts and any demand elasticity impacts .
- Consumer channel momentum ex-Lakeville is encouraging amid value-channel shifts; branded recovery is uneven, but club and OVH show traction, supporting a mixed brand/private label strategy .
- Operational capacity expansion (Huntley DC) should support throughput and logistics, enabling added bar and nut/trail mix packaging capacity and potentially lowering unit costs over time .
- Inventory values and nut input costs are rising; monitor working capital and revolver utilization as commodity cost cycles progress .
- With no formal guidance, focus on cadence of gross margin recovery and EPS trajectory across FY25, including seasonal Q2 holiday period and mix effects in bars/granola .
- Structural drivers (private label bars, operational efficiencies, AI-enabled process improvements) underpin medium-term margin resiliency and potential re-rating if execution offsets input inflation .
Additional Data Reference (Prior Two Quarters)
- Q4 FY2024: Net sales $269.6M; gross margin 18.5%; diluted EPS $0.86; consumer channel +31.0% (+1.8% ex-Lakeville); branded +4.3%; commercial −5.0%; contract +16.9% (−20.7% ex-Lakeville) .
- Q3 FY2024: Net sales $271.9M; gross margin 18.1%; diluted EPS $1.15; consumer channel +33.1% (+0.3% ex-Lakeville); branded −5.8%; commercial −2.4% (−3.0% ex-Lakeville); contract −11.3% .
Conference call scheduling press release for Q1 FY25 confirms the call timing following the earnings release .