LV
LIVE VENTURES Inc (LIVE)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Fiscal Q4 2024 (quarter ended September 30) revenue was approximately $112.7M, with gross margin 31.9%, operating loss $(17.5)M, net loss $(19.9)M, and Adjusted EBITDA ~$5.2M, reflecting segment headwinds and a goodwill impairment at Retail-Flooring that drove full-year losses .
- Year-over-year, Q4 revenue rose 8.9% versus Q4 2023, but operating results deteriorated due to lower steel margins (PMW mix) and Retail-Flooring integration inefficiencies; Q4 2023 had near breakeven operating income but a net loss .
- No formal guidance was issued; liquidity stood at ~$33.3M in cash and credit availability at year-end, and the $10M share repurchase program was active, signaling capital allocation discipline amid macro headwinds .
- Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 EPS/Revenue were unavailable at this time; therefore, we cannot assess beats/misses relative to the Street. Estimates from S&P Global were unavailable due to data limitations.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
- What Went Well
- Revenue growth remained robust in FY24 (+33.1%), driven by acquisitions (Flooring Liquidators, PMW, Central Steel) and growth in Flooring Manufacturing; management emphasized the buy-build-hold strategy and confidence in long-term prospects .
- Flooring Manufacturing gross margin expanded (FY GM 25.9% vs 21.8%), supported by Harris Flooring Group brand acquisition and sales mix improvements .
- Retail-Entertainment gross margin increased to 57.6% for FY24 due to mix shift toward used products; CEO highlighted focus on sustainable value creation despite headwinds .
- What Went Wrong
- Retail-Flooring recorded a $18.1M goodwill impairment and higher SG&A, driving an FY operating loss of $(25.5)M; integration inefficiencies from CRO/Johnson weighed on Q2/Q3 performance .
- Steel Manufacturing margins compressed (FY GM 15.8% vs 22.5%) due to PMW’s structurally lower margins and reduced production efficiencies amid lower demand .
- PMW was in covenant default at June 30, requiring reclassification of debt to current; management is working with creditors to resolve, underscoring balance sheet/lender constraints in the current rate environment .
Financial Results
Quarterly trend (oldest → newest):
Year-over-year (Q4 2023 vs Q4 2024):
Segment breakdown (FY basis for context):
KPIs (liquidity and capital allocation):
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CFO: “Revenue increased 33.1%… primarily driven by the strategic acquisitions of Flooring Liquidators… PMW… Central Steel… and an increase in revenue in our Flooring Manufacturing segment.”
- CEO: “Challenging market conditions in our Retail-Flooring and Steel Manufacturing segments adversely affected… Despite these industry-specific headwinds, we remain confident… in our long-term 'buy-build-hold' strategy.”
- Q3 CFO: “PMW was in default of one of its financial covenants… we are… working through a quick and positive outcome…”
- Q3 CFO: “We repurchased 18,156 shares… around ~$18… summarized in the 10-Q.”
Q&A Highlights
- Integration costs and actions: Management cited headcount reductions and disposition of underperforming Johnson stores to improve efficiency; dollar impact not disclosed .
- PMW covenant default: Resulted from leverage covenant pressure amid market conditions; reclassification to current liabilities was GAAP-driven; creditor discussions positive .
- Capital allocation: Debate on debt reduction vs buybacks; management emphasized prudent allocation, favorable rates in some debt, and focus on leverage ratios .
- Macro sensitivity: Flooring retail most exposed to rates; Retail-Entertainment viewed as recession resilient due to used-product mix and value proposition .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 EPS and Revenue were unavailable at this time due to data limitations; consequently, we cannot provide a beat/miss assessment versus Street expectations. Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable due to data limits.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q4 showed revenue resiliency but significant operating pressure: mix-driven steel margin compression and Retail-Flooring integration issues led to a sharp operating loss despite healthy Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter .
- FY impairment at Retail-Flooring and higher interest expense anchor the annual loss; watch for 2025 actions to enhance efficiency and margin recovery in Retail-Flooring .
- Liquidity remains adequate with ~$33.3M cash/availability; continued discipline via active buyback program provides optionality but should be balanced with leverage and covenant considerations .
- Rate trajectory is the primary near-term catalyst for Retail-Flooring demand; easing rates could unlock builder and retail activity, improving segment performance .
- Steel margins likely hinge on PMW mix and demand normalization; monitor production efficiencies and order cadence to gauge margin recovery .
- Regulatory/supply chain risks (UFLPA, shipping disruptions) warrant attention for hard-surface imports; inventory planning and sourcing diversification are strategic mitigants .
- Near-term trading: sentiment sensitive to margin trajectory, covenant resolution, and any signs of rate relief; medium-term thesis rests on integrating acquisitions, margin normalization, and disciplined capital allocation .