SG
SPAR Group, Inc. (SGRP)·Q1 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2024 revenue was $68.7M, up 6.7% year-over-year, while diluted EPS of $0.28 was boosted by a $7.2M gain on sale; adjusted diluted EPS was $0.06, roughly flat year-over-year .
- Gross margin compressed to 18.3% (vs. 22.0% a year ago and 22.9% in Q4), driven by mix shift to remodeling and South Africa wage-driven cost pressure; SG&A improved to 14.0% of revenue (vs. 16.2% a year ago) .
- Americas revenue rose 12.5% with U.S. remodel growth +98% YoY and Canada +79%; management won >$35M of new business including a >$12M/year multiyear deal with a leading U.S. home improvement retailer .
- Strategic simplification continued post-quarter: LOI to go private at $2.50/share and Brazil JV sale closed (~$12M proceeds), both key stock catalysts; resource plus JV consolidated and 1M shares repurchased from a founder .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- U.S. remodel recovery and new logos: “Recovery of our U.S. remodel business accelerated… grew by 98%… 3 of our top 10 clients… are new… U.S. and Canada teams won more than $35 million in new business… including a multiyear deal valued at more than $12 million per year with one of the U.S.’ largest home improvement retailers.”
- Operating expense discipline: SG&A fell to $9.6M (14.0% of revenue) from $10.5M (16.2%) YoY, reflecting efficiency gains amid restructuring .
- Liquidity strengthened and portfolio focus: Total liquidity $21.0M; management acquired the remaining minority interest in the U.S. JV (Resource Plus) and repurchased 1M shares from a founder, supporting control and capital deployment flexibility .
What Went Wrong
- Gross margin compression: GP margin fell to 18.3% from 22.0% YoY and 22.9% in Q4, driven by higher labor and travel in remodel mix and South Africa wage mandates, contract renegotiations, and added variable costs .
- EMEA/APAC softness: EMEA revenue declined 14.7% and APAC fell 5.5% YoY, reflecting regional demand and cost pressures (South Africa notably weak) .
- Adjusted EBITDA down YoY: Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $3.4M vs. $4.2M prior year; adjusted EBITDA attributable to SGRP was $2.5M vs. $2.9M, signaling margin headwinds despite top-line growth .
Financial Results
Segment revenue and operating income:
Key KPIs and balance sheet:
Estimate comparison:
Note: Wall Street consensus from S&P Global was unavailable at the time of request.
Guidance Changes
Management reiterated they do not give forward-looking quarterly guidance; qualitative commentary pointed to continued remodel demand and margin recovery expectations later in the year .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our U.S. business… grew by 17%… and Canada grew by 79%… Recovery of our U.S. remodel business accelerated… grew by 98%… our U.S. and Canada teams won more than $35 million in new business… including a multiyear deal valued at more than $12 million per year…” — Michael Matacunas, CEO .
- “The margin compression was due to a mix shift to the remodeling business… and lower gross margin in South Africa due to… variable expenses… [and] government imposed wage increases ahead of inflation… forcing margin reduction…” — Antonio Calisto Pato, CFO .
- “We have a clear path to simplifying the business’ operating financial structure… I’m bullish about our future.” — Michael Matacunas .
- “We captured the financial benefit of the South Africa sale of $7.2 million… resulting EBITDA is $10.1 million… net income… $6.6 million or $0.28…” — Michael Matacunas .
Q&A Highlights
- Sequential revenue and divestiture impact: Despite divestitures, core U.S./Canada growth (+22% combined) drove sequential revenue up; South Africa and China exit in Q2, Brazil exit timing guided to be in Q2’s reported mix at that time .
- Remodel demand drivers: Pent-up projects resumed, with major clients accelerating store transformations; new client wins expanding scope; management sees no sign of slowing for 2024 .
- Brazil margin profile: Brazil is lower-margin than U.S./Canada; exit expected to benefit consolidated margin profile after close .
- Capital allocation: Management prioritizes organic acceleration, accretive acquisitions (incl. larger deals), and returns (buybacks/dividends) concurrently; buyback already executed from a founder .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q1 2024 were unavailable at the time of request; therefore, we cannot assess beats/misses versus Wall Street expectations. Actual results provided above anchor analysis [Unavailable].
- Implications: Without consensus, traders should focus on underlying drivers (remodel acceleration, margin compression causes, portfolio exits) and corporate actions (LOI to go private at $2.50/share; Brazil proceeds) for positioning .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Core growth is robust: Americas strength (U.S. remodel +98% YoY; Canada +79%) and >$35M new business wins underpin revenue trajectory despite exits; this supports near-term top-line resilience .
- Margin recovery likely after portfolio clean-up: Gross margin pressure tied to remodel mix and South Africa should ease as Brazil/South Africa exits remove lower-margin drag; SG&A leverage already visible (14.0% vs. 16.2% YoY) .
- Cash and control improved: Liquidity at $21M; Resource Plus JV consolidation and buyback enhance strategic flexibility for larger, accretive acquisitions and potential shareholder returns .
- Transaction optionality: The $2.50/share LOI to go private provides a valuation anchor and potential de-risking path from listing volatility; monitor definitive agreement progress and fairness opinion .
- Watch Q2 composition: With SA/China exits and Brazil closing in early June, Q2 mix will reflect fewer low-margin regions; look for margin stabilization and adjusted EBITDA improvement .
- KPIs improving: Working capital grew to $38.2M; AR rose alongside revenue; lines of credit declined sequentially, signaling improving balance sheet posture .
- Risks: Near-term margin volatility from remodel mix; regional demand softness (EMEA/APAC); execution on acquisition pipeline and integration; uncertainty until LOI becomes definitive .