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Sadot Group Inc. (SDOT)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered revenue of $114.3M, gross margin of 4.4%, net income of ~$0.4M, diluted EPS of $0.07, and EBITDA of ~$1.7M, marking the fifth consecutive quarter of positive net income and EBITDA .
- Results softened vs Q1 2025 and prior year: revenue fell to $114.3M vs $132.2M in Q1 and $173.3M in Q2 2024; diluted EPS declined to $0.07 vs $0.16 in Q1 and $0.45 in Q2 2024, as the company prioritized higher-margin, selective trades .
- Versus S&P Global consensus, Q2 revenue missed ($114.3M vs $189.9M*) and diluted EPS missed ($0.07 vs $2.00*); EBITDA consensus was not available for Q2, but reported EBITDA was ~$1.7M . Values with * are from S&P Global.
- Catalysts: management introduced a technology-forward strategy to digitize trading with AI, accelerated focus on restaurant divestiture, and announced a strategic carbon project investment expected to generate 1.1–1.2M credits in its first issuance cycle .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Fifth straight profitable quarter with positive net income and EBITDA; gross margin improved 100 bps YoY to 4.4% on mix shift to specialty commodities and Canadian subsidiary trades that historically carry higher margins .
- Strategic repositioning continues: new CEO (May 28) and new CFO (Aug 1) bring deep finance and technology backgrounds; management laid out a multi-pillar plan emphasizing AI, margin optimization, and expansion into higher-margin verticals .
- ESG/adjacent growth: acquired 37.5% of an Indonesian carbon project with anticipated 1.1–1.2M high-integrity credits in the first issuance, broadening offerings (potential offsets) for clients .
Quote: “By leveraging AI, we can enhance our decision making capabilities across the entire trading lifecycle… predictive analytics… logistics optimization and pricing strategy” — CEO Chagay Ravid .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line pressure: revenue decreased 34% YoY as the company selectively pursued trades with more favorable margins; EBITDA and EPS also declined vs Q2 2024 and Q1 2025 on lower volumes .
- Cash declined to $0.42M at quarter end from $1.94M in Q1, reflecting reinvestment in trading operations; accounts receivable remained high at $44.1M .
- Financing and divestiture timing: raised $2.5M in straight equity due to delays in receivable collections and restaurant sale; restaurant divestiture remains in process, with CEO reaffirming urgency to refocus resources .
Financial Results
Segment/type breakdown:
KPIs and balance sheet highlights:
Estimate comparison (S&P Global):
Values with * are from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy: “We have the chance of modernizing the tools used to manage the entire food supply chain… leveraging AI… to improve the accuracy of market forecasts… and reduce costly human error” — CEO Chagay Ravid .
- Margin and mix: “Gross profit was 4.4% in Q2 2025 versus 3.3% in Q2 2024… focusing on higher margin trades in specialty items and a larger percentage of trades from our Canadian subsidiary” — CFO Paul Sansom .
- SG&A framing: “Increase in SG&A was mostly attributable to reclassifying some expenses from cost of goods to SG&A… shifting wages for admin personnel, insurance and other items” — CFO Paul Sansom .
- Divestiture focus: “It is imperative… that we divest the restaurants to remove shareholder confusion, reduce costs, generate cash to pay off debt and focus all efforts… we are… in the final stages… with several potential buyers” — CEO Chagay Ravid .
- Carbon project: “Expected to generate between 1.1 and 1.2 million high-integrity carbon credits in its first issuance cycle” — Company press release .
Q&A Highlights
- Restaurant sale: Management emphasized urgency and progressing final negotiations to sell both chains in a combined transaction to reduce costs and sharpen focus on agri-foods .
- Capital raise: The $2.5M equity raise was driven by receivable collection delays and timing of restaurant sale; structured as non-toxic, no warrants .
- Tariffs: Exposure is limited; trades predominantly occur outside the US, and Sadot can reroute to avoid tariff impacts when necessary .
- Organizational changes: Board/management shifts align with the pivot from restaurants to global food supply chain and technology-led operations .
Estimates Context
- Revenue missed S&P Global consensus by ~$75.6M (actual $114.3M vs $189.9M*), reflecting the company’s strategic choice to execute fewer, higher-margin trades and focus on specialty commodities; EPS missed by ~$1.93 (actual $0.07 vs $2.00*) . Values with * are from S&P Global.
- EBITDA consensus was unavailable; reported EBITDA attributable to Sadot Group was ~$1.65M .
- Given the magnitude of the revenue/earnings miss vs consensus, near-term estimates likely need to adjust lower to incorporate the selective trading strategy, mix shift, and SG&A reclassification impact discussed by management .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Sadot is sustaining profitability while pivoting to a technology-enabled agribusiness; Q2 marks the fifth consecutive positive quarter, even as revenue moderates on margin-first execution .
- Margin trajectory is improving (+100 bps YoY to 4.4%) via specialty crop focus and Canada-originated trades, supporting the investment case for mix quality over volume .
- Liquidity requires monitoring: cash fell to $0.42M, A/R remains high, and the firm raised $2.5M equity to bridge timing gaps; working capital surplus improved to $24.2M .
- The restaurant divestiture is a key de-risking catalyst; successful sale would simplify the story, lower costs, and potentially free cash to reduce debt .
- The AI/digitization plan and the carbon project stake broaden strategic optionality and could differentiate Sadot’s trading platform and client offering (offsets) .
- Expect estimate revisions: consensus embedded higher volumes; the company’s emphasis on margin quality will likely recalibrate Street models for revenue/EPS . Values with * are from S&P Global.
- Near-term trading setup: focus on updates to restaurant sale, progress in AI initiatives, and execution within pulses/specialty crops; watch tariffs (management views non-material) and working capital dynamics .
Note: Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global.