MB
MALIBU BOATS, INC. (MBUU)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered revenue growth and margin expansion: net sales rose 12.4% year over year to $228.7M, gross margin increased 20 bps to 20.0%, and adjusted EBITDA grew 16.0% to $28.3M .
- Versus consensus, revenue modestly beat (+1.1%), adjusted EBITDA beat (+7.7%), while primary EPS (non‑GAAP) was slightly below consensus ($0.72 vs $0.74*, −2.5%)—a mixed headline print likely driven by margin discipline offset by conservative unit planning .
- Guidance was lowered again: FY25 net sales now down 3–5% YoY (from flat to down low single digits in Q2; and up low single digits in Q1) and FY25 adjusted EBITDA margin to 9–10% (from ~10% in Q2; and 10–12% in Q1), reflecting softer retail trends and prioritization of dealer health .
- Management cited catalysts: strong uptake of new models (Malibu M230; Cobia 265/285), healthy dealer inventories, tariff mitigation, and tightened CapEx ($25–$30M) with moderated buybacks ahead—potential supports if macro stabilizes .
Values with asterisks are from S&P Global.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Mix and new product momentum: “Nearly 40% of our Malibu boat show unit sales were driven by 2 premium models introduced this year, the M230 and the 25 LSV… A similar percentage of Cobia boat show unit sales were driven by the all-new Cobia 265 and 285” .
- Margin discipline despite a mixed retail backdrop: gross margin rose to 20.0% (+20 bps YoY) on fixed cost leverage and operational execution .
- Cash generation and balance sheet strength: Q3 cash from operations >$15M; CapEx $6.7M; $39M cash on hand; >$300M untapped liquidity—enabling flexible capital allocation .
What Went Wrong
- Guidance reset lower for FY25 (net sales −3–5%, adj. EBITDA margin 9–10%) as retail softness persisted and management reduced units to protect dealer health .
- Segment headwinds in Saltwater and Cobalt: Saltwater net sales fell 11.5% YoY ($71.9M; −55 units) and Cobalt fell 12.0% YoY ($54.6M; −75 units) on lower wholesale shipments amid dealers’ desire to hold less inventory .
- EPS slightly below consensus, reflecting mix/unit decisions and a competitive promotional environment that, while moderating, remains a factor* .
Values with asterisks are from S&P Global.
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (Q3 2025 vs Q3 2024):
KPIs (Q3 2025):
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy: Balance dealer health, operational excellence, and innovation; agile model with strong balance sheet to navigate macro uncertainty .
- Product/brand: “Our premium brands and feature‑rich offerings continue to resonate… ASP increases in all segments… returned to growth in the third quarter” .
- Tariffs: “We do not expect tariffs to have a meaningful impact on our fiscal ’25 cost structure… will remain proactive in mitigating impacts” .
- Cost structure: “Our cost structure is 80% to 90% variable above the gross margin line” .
- Segment share: Gained 380 bps share in Cobalt models produced at Rowan facility; pockets of strength at Pursuit .
Q&A Highlights
- Customer mix: Repeat cash buyers leading demand; first‑time buyer mix steady versus post‑COVID concerns .
- Promotional stance: Competitive but moderating; Malibu’s new products require less promo; promotional levels expected materially lower in Q4 vs last year .
- Dealer network health: Broadly healthy; ongoing checks with floorplan providers; inventories “pretty good across the board” .
- Tariff exposure: 18–20% of cost of sales sourced internationally, diversified across categories (engines, hardware, electronics) .
- Saltwater/Florida: Sequential improvement versus Q2; still below growth trajectory .
- Capital: Q3 cash from ops >$15M; CapEx $6.7M; buybacks $10M; plan to modestly reduce buyback pace; tighten FY25 CapEx to $25–$30M .
Estimates Context
Q3 2025 actuals vs Wall Street consensus (S&P Global):
- Prior quarters: Q2 EPS beat ($0.31 vs $0.18*), Q1 EPS beat ($0.08 vs −$0.08*); FY25 primary EPS tracking slightly below consensus ($1.58 actual vs $1.63*)*.
- Implication: Estimates may need mild downward revision to EPS/full‑year margins given lowered FY25 guide, while revenue/EBITDA resilience supports medium‑term recovery as units normalize* .
Values with asterisks are from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Mix-led margin resilience and operational discipline are intact; Malibu segment strength offset Saltwater/Cobalt unit cuts—supportive for medium‑term normalization .
- Guidance reset signals continued retail caution; unit planning prioritizes dealer health over short‑term volume, tempering EPS despite EBITDA beat* .
- New models are tangible demand drivers; sustained innovation (M230, 25 LSV; Cobia 265/285) reduces promo needs and can gain share into a recovery .
- Balance sheet flexibility (cash/liquidity) and highly variable cost structure provide downside protection; tactical moderation of CapEx/buybacks adds prudence .
- Tariff risk appears contained for FY25; vertical integration and supply chain actions mitigate cost volatility .
- Near‑term trading: Expect estimate tweaks (EPS down modestly, EBITDA more stable); catalysts include boat show/order flow, Saltwater stabilization in FL, and Q4 promo moderation* .
- Medium‑term thesis: When payment buyers return (rates ease), unit normalization plus innovation/mix should expand margins and EPS—monitor dealer inventory health and segment mix .
Values with asterisks are from S&P Global.