SI
STEELCASE INC (SCS)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY25 revenue was $0.795B and diluted EPS was $0.16; adjusted EPS was $0.30, which finished above management’s guidance range and reflected strong Americas performance and gross margin expansion to 33.4% (+100 bps YoY).
- Americas delivered 7% organic revenue growth and 8.1% adjusted operating margin, while International declined and posted an operating loss, driven by demand softness and competitive discounting.
- Management guided Q4 FY25 revenue to $0.770–$0.795B and adjusted EPS to $0.20–$0.24; fourth-quarter gross margin is expected at ~33.5%, OpEx $230–$235M, and tax rate ~27%.
- Early Q4 orders (first three weeks of December) grew 15% YoY (vs +7% a year ago), with several large projects scheduled beyond quarter-end; management flagged a laminate supplier disruption post-Hurricane Helene as a risk to Q4 shipments.
- Street consensus data from S&P Global was unavailable due to access limits; thus, beats/misses vs Street cannot be assessed. Management reiterated FY25 adjusted EPS expected to finish above the $0.85–$1.00 target.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Americas strength: 7% organic revenue growth; adjusted operating margin 8.1% with revenue driven by government, large corporate, healthcare, and education customers. “Our Americas business posted 7% organic revenue growth … and we delivered higher than expected adjusted earnings per share.” — CEO Sara Armbruster.
- Gross margin expansion: Q3 GM of 33.4% (+100 bps YoY) from revenue growth in the Americas and cost reduction initiatives, marking the tenth consecutive quarter of YoY GM expansion.
- Liquidity and capital returns: Total liquidity rose to $576.6M (exceeded total debt), quarterly dividend of $0.10 declared; ~400K shares repurchased in Q3, >$60M returned YTD.
What Went Wrong
- International underperformance: Revenue down 6% YoY; operating loss of $(5.5)M; order decline of 8% YoY, with competitive discounting pressure, particularly in Western Europe.
- Other expense headwind: Non-cash pension plan annuitization charge of $15.2M drove other expense, net to $(12.6)M.
- ERP timing/costs: ERP go-live shifted to Q2 FY26; FY26 operating costs to increase by >$20M due to expensing implementation, with expected inefficiencies around cutover.
Financial Results
Quarterly Trend (Q1–Q3 FY25)
Q3 FY25 vs Q3 FY24
Segment Breakdown (Revenue and Operating Margin)
KPIs
Notes:
- Q3 adjusted EPS ($0.30) exceeded prior guidance ($0.21–$0.25).
- International adjusted operating income swung to a loss; Americas adjusted operating income expanded.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our Americas business posted 7% organic revenue growth this quarter … and we delivered higher than expected adjusted earnings per share.” — Sara Armbruster, CEO.
- “Our International results in the third quarter were below our expectations … we implemented additional restructuring actions … projected to drive approximately $5 million of annualized cost savings by the start of fiscal 2026.” — Dave Sylvester, CFO.
- “We are now targeting to go live [ERP] in the second quarter of fiscal 2026 … the fiscal year-over-year annual impact to operating costs is expected to be more than $20 million.” — Dave Sylvester, CFO.
- “Orders in the first three weeks of December were strong, growing 15% … [but] included a number of large projects scheduled to ship beyond the end of the quarter.” — Dave Sylvester, CFO.
Q&A Highlights
- ERP cost cadence and cutover: FY26 operating costs to rise >$20M as implementation costs are expensed; inefficiencies expected around go-live due to production ramp-down/up.
- Orders momentum: First three weeks of December +15% YoY vs +7% a year ago; large corporate pipeline converting; some shipments beyond quarter-end.
- International competitive dynamics: Broad-based competitive discounting in Western Europe amid challenged volumes; strategic discounting used to disrupt incumbents.
- Tariff exposure: Evaluating contingencies across supply chain buckets (industry suppliers, China/Taiwan, Mexico maquiladoras); inventory build ahead of potential changes.
- Government back-to-office: Very low occupancy cited; potential demand improvement as agencies return, offset by possible workforce reductions.
- Supply chain disruption: Laminate supplier impacted by Hurricane Helene; recovery underway but catch-up may extend beyond Q4.
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q3 and Q4 could not be retrieved due to access limitations; as a result, we cannot quantify beats/misses vs Street at this time. Values from S&P Global are unavailable due to daily request limits.
- Relative to company guidance: Q3 adjusted EPS of $0.30 exceeded guidance ($0.21–$0.25), and management projects FY25 adjusted EPS to finish above the $0.85–$1.00 target.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Americas momentum and share gains are intact; adjusted margin strength and backlog shipment timing supported Q3 upside on adjusted EPS.
- Watch International trajectory: restructuring actions (~$5M annualized savings) and signs of stabilization (Germany, Middle East, China) vs competitive pricing pressure in Western Europe.
- Near-term risks: Laminate supply disruption could affect Q4 shipments; early Q4 orders are strong, but timing pushes some revenue beyond quarter-end.
- ERP is a 2026 inflection: Expect FY26 opex headwind (> $20M) and cutover inefficiencies; benefits from streamlined processes and capability should begin post go-live.
- Macro/cycle catalysts: Large corporate and technology sectors showing improving in-office expectations; Business Roundtable confidence uptick supports capex/hiring outlook.
- Policy watch: Potential new tariffs could affect supply chains (China/Taiwan/Mexico); management is building inventory and planning contingencies.
- Capital allocation steady: Liquidity exceeds debt; dividend maintained; ongoing buybacks; provides cushion amid transformation and macro uncertainty.