KC
KIMBERLY CLARK CORP (KMB)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered organic sales growth of 2.3% on $4.928B net sales, with volume (+1.5%), price (+0.6%) and mix (+0.1%) gains; adjusted EPS was $1.50 and reported EPS was $1.34, reflecting transformation-related charges and lower equity income .
- Adjusted operating profit rose to $684M (+2.1% YoY) despite currency translation (-1.8 pts) and divestiture (-1.8 pts) headwinds; adjusted gross margin was 35.4% (+50 bps YoY) on strong productivity .
- 2025 outlook guides constant-currency mid-to-high single-digit adjusted EPS growth; reported EPS headwinds include FX (-350–400 bps), divestitures and US private label diaper exit (-320 bps) and below-OP items (-100 bps) .
- Dividend raised 3.3% to $1.26 per share (53rd consecutive annual increase), reinforcing capital return commitment .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Productivity and margin: Adjusted gross margin expanded to 35.4% (+50 bps YoY) on strong productivity gains; adjusted operating profit reached $684M (+2.1% YoY) even with FX and divestiture headwinds .
- Segment resilience: IPC operating profit +36.0% YoY on lower monetary losses in hyperinflationary economies and favorable pricing; IFP operating profit +30.9% YoY on productivity and volume .
- Strategic tone: “2024 was a breakthrough year… rewiring our organization into three powerhouse segments… we established a strong foundation to accelerate our strategy in 2025 and beyond” — Mike Hsu, CEO . “We’re bullish on our ability to continue powering investment and bottom line growth with industry-leading productivity and SG&A savings” — Hsu .
What Went Wrong
- Reported profitability: Operating profit fell to $548M (-18.2% YoY) and reported diluted EPS to $1.34 (-10.7% YoY), driven by transformation charges and lower equity income; net interest expense rose to $53M (+39.5% YoY) on lower interest income .
- North America margin pressure: NA Q4 operating profit declined 10.0% YoY on double-digit marketing increases, capability spend, temporary supply chain disruptions, and unfavorable pricing net of cost inflation timing .
- FX and divestitures: Currency translation reduced Q4 sales by ~1.7% and PPE divestiture reduced sales by ~1.4%; consolidated net sales -0.8% YoY despite positive organic growth .
Financial Results
Consolidated Financials (Q2–Q4 2024)
Segment Breakdown – Q4 2024
Key KPIs – Q4 2024
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategic posture: “We rewired our organization into 3 powerhouse segments… pivoted to volume plus mix driven growth… established a new phase of margin expansion in 2024” — Mike Hsu .
- Pricing outlook: “2025… pricing is… largely flat… growth is really going to be volume and mix-led” — Nelson Urdaneta .
- SG&A and investment: “Expect ~$200M of SG&A savings to kick in over 2025–2026… operating margins to grow ahead of gross margins” — Nelson Urdaneta .
- Cost/PNOC discipline: “Costs remain relatively muted and manageable… around a $200M level… teams to manage pricing net of cost neutral” — Urdaneta .
- Market expansion: “Huggies was up 200 bps in China… Andrex up 100 bps in UK… Kleenex up ~400 bps in UK and US… diapers in South Korea up ~400 bps” — Hsu .
Q&A Highlights
- 2025 growth drivers: Management emphasized minimal pricing contribution with volume/mix-led growth, aided by share gains and rewiring to scale the global playbook faster .
- Productivity cadence: 2024 delivered ~5.9% productivity; 2025 planned ~5% with enhanced cost visibility via strategic supplier relationships and risk management .
- PNOC and margins: PNOC targeted neutral over time; 2025 gross margin expansion expected at a slower pace vs 2023–2024 as productivity is partly reinvested in network optimization and automation; OP margin expansion ahead of gross margin on SG&A leverage .
- Phasing/inventories: 2024 trade destock impacted organic growth (~60 bps); 2025 should see <+40 bps tailwind assuming shipments align with consumption; 2025 profits expected to be more evenly distributed H1/H2 .
- Regional dynamics: IPC strength in China; discipline in selecting investment markets (e.g., Nigeria exit); Professional poised for improvement despite prior washroom softness in NA .
Estimates Context
- Consensus comparison: S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue were unavailable at time of retrieval due to API request limits; therefore, we cannot assess beats/misses versus Street for this quarter. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Actuals: Adjusted EPS $1.50; revenue $4.928B; adjusted operating profit $684M; organic sales growth 2.3% .
- Implications: Company’s 2025 constant-currency guide (mid-to-high single-digit adjusted EPS growth) suggests Street models may need to incorporate substantial FX drag (-350–400 bps), divestiture/exit impacts (-320 bps), and SG&A savings ramp (~$200M over two years) .
Actual vs Consensus (Q4 2024)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Mix/volume-led growth is replacing pricing as the primary top-line driver; expect muted pricing and neutral PNOC, with productivity and SG&A savings powering margin expansion in 2025 .
- FX and portfolio actions will materially reduce reported figures (EPS FX -350–400 bps; net sales FX -300 bps; divestiture/exit headwinds -240 to -320 bps), requiring careful translation from constant-currency guidance to reported outcomes .
- North America margin pressure in Q4 was transitory (supply chain disruptions, elevated marketing); rewiring and automation/network optimization projects should support improved utilization and margin trajectory .
- IPC momentum (China double-digit volume, pricing in hyperinflation) and IFP productivity gains diversify profit sources beyond NA; watch currency exposure in IPC .
- Capital returns remain robust: dividend increased to $1.26, buybacks totaled $1.0B in 2024, with total shareholder returns of $2.6B; balance sheet modestly delevered ($7.4B debt vs $8.0B in 2023) .
- Near-term trading: Stock narrative likely tied to visibility on SG&A savings ramp, sustained productivity delivery (~5%), and confirmation of volume/mix-led share gains; FX prints could overshadow constant-currency progress .
- Medium-term thesis: Powering Care transformation, segment rewiring, and integrated margin management offer structurally higher efficiency and reinvestment capacity, with innovation-led share gains across key markets (US/China/UK/South Korea) .