RH
Ranpak Holdings Corp. (PACK)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 delivered the best quarter of 2024 and the second-highest quarterly revenue in company history, with net revenue up 16% to $105.0M and adjusted EBITDA up 8% to $25.3M, driven by North American e‑commerce and record Automation sales .
- Reported gross margin improved 170 bps year over year to 39.4% as COGS depreciation fell and EMEA/APAC profitability improved; adjusted EBITDA margin implied ~24.1% for Q4 .
- Product mix shifted further toward void‑fill (up 36% YoY) while cushioning declined 14%; installed base rose to ~142.7k machines (+1%) .
- 2025 outlook: net revenue $387–$409M and AEBITDA $88–$97M (cc, at €/$1.0822); Automation revenue expected to grow ~50%; capex $36–$38M; ~$20M cash generation targeted; net leverage goal 2.5–3.0x, with ~$50M debt reduction planned; GAAP revenue/AEBITDA to reflect a non‑cash $3–$5M Amazon warrant drag .
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) could not be retrieved at this time due to API limits; vs‑estimate comparisons are therefore unavailable.*
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- North America strength and holiday demand: “best quarter of the year and second best quarterly revenue in the history of Ranpak,” with Q4 NA sales up 36% and volumes up ~39–40% YoY, fueled by e‑commerce and strategic accounts .
- Automation momentum: largest revenue quarter ever in Q4; Automation grew >40% in 2024 and is guided to grow ~50% in 2025 as the company targets $100M+ medium‑term .
- Deleveraging and liquidity: cash of $76.1M, no revolver draws, LTM net leverage ~4x; term loan refinanced in Dec-2024 into a 7‑year USD TLB, with cross‑currency swaps reducing interest cost by ~130 bps on hedged portion .
What Went Wrong
- Mix and ramp inefficiencies compressed flow‑through: strong Q4 volume exceeded internal plans, driving near‑term inefficiencies (freight/logistics) and lower margins in North America enterprise ramp; management expects normalization through 2025 .
- Automation profitability still a drag: despite growth, Automation contributed a negative ~$7M to 2024 AEBITDA; the business is expected to trend toward breakeven by YE25 as it scales .
- Europe remains muted: EMEA/APAC combined grew just ~1% cc in Q4, with cushioning pressured and macro uncertainty (energy volatility, tariff risk) weighing on activity .
Financial Results
Headline metrics vs prior quarters (USD, fiscal Q2–Q4 2024)
Q4 2024 product-line revenue mix (vs prior year)
KPIs and Installed Base
Notes:
- Q4 gross margin improvement reflects lower COGS depreciation and improved EMEA/APAC profitability, offset by lower‑margin enterprise mix in NA .
- Q4 AEBITDA reconciliation includes unusual items (e.g., loss on debt extinguishment, SOX remediation) per non‑GAAP bridge .
Estimates comparison:
- S&P Global consensus for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue was unavailable at the time of retrieval due to API limitations; vs‑estimate comparisons are not included.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We finished 2024 on a really positive note… our best quarter of the year and second best quarterly revenue in the history of Ranpak.” – Omar Asali, CEO .
- “North America had its highest net revenue quarter ever, driven by 39% volume growth… Adjusted EBITDA… implies a 24.1% adjusted EBITDA margin.” – Bill Drew, CFO .
- “We are excited to deepen our relationship with the largest buyer of packaging and automation solutions globally [Amazon]… this transaction aligns our interests for further growth and expansion.” – CEO .
- “There will be some noise related to the revenue associated with Amazon as the value of the warrants are recognized… a noncash decrease to reported revenue… We recommend looking at our income statement on a pro forma basis adding those revenue offsets back.” – CFO .
- “We expect Automation revenue to be up more than 50% in 2025… As that business scales… we expect… high‑teens to 20% AEBITDA margin.” – CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Amazon ramp and scope: Expect double‑digit volume growth with Amazon across geographies; evolving to a more asset‑light paper model over time; opportunities in PPS and Automation .
- Installed base impact: Expect both new placements and refurbished machines as footprint expands with Amazon and other large enterprise accounts .
- Europe outlook: Guidance range includes conservatism for Europe; German fiscal stimulus could be a tailwind if realized, but not embedded in the outlook .
- EBITDA→FCF bridge (FY25, midpoint ~$93–$94M AEBITDA): Capex ~$36–$37M; cash interest ~$34M; cash taxes ~$4–$5M; slight WC benefit → ~$20M FCF targeted .
- Warrant expense mechanics: $3–$5M non‑cash warrant expense embedded in 2025 GAAP revenue/AEBITDA; varies with Amazon sales contribution .
- Seasonality: Typical step‑down Q4→Q1 (high single to low double‑digit %); 1H:2H mix ~47%:53% in 2025, heavier in 2H on holiday seasonality .
Estimates Context
- We attempted to retrieve S&P Global consensus for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue but hit API rate limits; thus we cannot provide a vs‑consensus comparison for this quarter.*
- Implications: Given the magnitude of the top‑line beat vs sequential run‑rate (Q4 $105.0M vs Q3 $92.2M) and margin expansion to 39.4% gross margin, Street models may raise 2025 revenue and AEBITDA for North America and Automation, while adjusting GAAP optics for the warrant drag .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- North America is the growth engine; double‑digit volume growth and enterprise wins (incl. Amazon) drove Q4 outperformance and should support 2025 growth despite tougher 2H comps .
- Automation is scaling from ~$(30)M revenue in 2024 toward ~$45M+ in 2025 and breakeven by YE25; longer‑term, management targets $60–$100M revenue with high‑teens/20% margins, a structural mix and margin tailwind .
- Near‑term GAAP optics will be noisy due to the non‑cash Amazon warrant; focus on underlying volumes, cash flow, and AEBITDA to assess core trajectory .
- Europe remains the swing factor; guidance embeds caution; any macro upside (e.g., German fiscal stimulus) could provide unmodeled tailwinds .
- Balance sheet flexibility improved post‑refi; with ~$20M FCF targeted and ~$50M planned debt paydown in 2025, leverage could trend toward 2.5–3.0x over 18–24 months, supporting optionality in capital allocation .
- Mix shift toward void‑fill and enterprise accounts temporarily pressured margins, but internal optimization and supply normalization are expected to enhance margins through 2025 .
- Stock catalysts: confirmation of Amazon and other enterprise scale‑ups, Automation bookings converting to revenue, EMEA stabilization, and clearer disclosure around warrant accounting effects .
* S&P Global consensus estimates were unavailable at time of retrieval due to API limits; vs‑consensus comparisons are therefore not included. Values above are from company filings and transcripts as cited.