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Turning Point Brands, Inc. (TPB)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered a broad-based beat: net sales $116.6M (+25.1% YoY), Adjusted EBITDA $30.5M (+14.8% YoY), Adjusted Diluted EPS $0.98; Modern Oral net sales surged to $30.1M (+651% YoY, +35% QoQ), now 26% of total sales .
- Company raised FY25 guidance: Adjusted EBITDA to $110.0–$114.0M (from $108.0–$113.0M) and Modern Oral sales to $100.0–$110.0M (from $80.0–$95.0M), reflecting accelerating momentum and investment in go-to-market .
- Consensus comparison: Revenue $116.6M vs $105.4M estimate*, EPS $0.98 vs $0.73 estimate*, EBITDA $30.1M vs $26.5M estimate*; significant beats driven by Modern Oral growth and mix, offset partially by higher SG&A and freight costs .
- Strategic narrative: management is prioritizing white nicotine pouches (FREE, ALP), scaling retail distribution, and mitigating tariff risks while building U.S. manufacturing capacity; guidance embeds increased sales/marketing investments .
- Potential stock reaction catalysts: guidance raise, rapid Modern Oral share gains, margin resilience despite tariff headwinds and higher opex, and a recurring $0.075/share quarterly dividend announced alongside results .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Modern Oral inflection: net sales reached $30.1M (+651% YoY; +35% QoQ), now 26% of sales; CEO: “results were better than expected… Modern Oral sales… increasing by 35% versus prior quarter and up 651% against the prior year” .
- Stoker’s strength and margins: Stoker’s segment net sales rose to $69.6M (+62.9% YoY); gross margin expanded 750 bps YoY to 62.5% and +500 bps QoQ; gross profit +85% YoY to $43.5M .
- Guidance raised: FY25 Adjusted EBITDA lifted to $110–$114M and Modern Oral to $100–$110M; CFO reiterated the plan with tax rate and capex parameters supporting investment pace .
What Went Wrong
- Zig-Zag softness: net sales fell 6.9% YoY to $47.0M; gross margin contracted 410 bps to 49.1% on product mix and Clipper exit; segment gross profit down 14% YoY .
- SG&A stepped up: consolidated SG&A rose to $40.3M (vs $29.2M prior year), reflecting white pouch-related SG&A, non-recurring freight, legal costs, and higher sales/marketing investments .
- Tariff headwinds: management flagged a dynamic tariff environment and is mitigating via inventory build, supplier negotiations, selective pricing, and U.S. manufacturing investments; capex $3.9M in Q2 supports this transition .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results vs Prior Periods and Estimates
Note: Asterisked estimate values retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Breakdown
KPIs and Balance Sheet
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “Our consolidated second quarter results were better than expected. Modern Oral sales were $30.1 million, increasing by 35% versus prior quarter and up 651% against the prior year. Stoker’s MST and looseleaf showed modest gains with Zig-Zag flat sequentially.”
- CRO: “We expanded our distribution and product assortment with notable chain partners… announced a long-term partnership with Professional Bull Riders (PBR)… integrating this partnership into 360 marketing campaigns.”
- CFO: “Gross margin was 57.1%… Adjusted EBITDA was up 15%… increasing our full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance to $110–$114M and Modern Oral sales to $100–$110M; effective income tax range 23%–26% going forward.”
- CFO on tariffs/manufacturing: “We built an inventory position… negotiating reductions in cost of goods… taking some price increases… continue to invest in U.S. manufacturing; CapEx was around $3.9M for the quarter.”
Q&A Highlights
- ALP retail rollout: Early innings but ahead of expectations; overlap with FREE will grow as distribution scales; national chain conversations progressing .
- Tariff mitigation & capacity: Inventory build, supplier cost reductions, selective pricing; sufficient India capacity; U.S. manufacturing investment underway .
- Slotting fees: Competitive category requires fees; the spend is embedded in Modern Oral guidance .
- Stoker’s MST & margin profile: Heritage MST/chew margins healthy and expanding; early Modern Oral margins encouraging with potential lumpiness due to brand investment .
- Promotional environment: Management positioning FREE/ALP as premium; selective promotions; sees large-brand spend as category awareness tailwind .
Estimates Context
- Revenue: $116.6M vs $105.4M consensus mean*; beat by ~$11.2M (~10.6%)* .
- Primary EPS (Adjusted/Normalized): $0.98 vs $0.73 consensus mean*; beat by $0.25 (~34%)* .
- EBITDA: $30.5M vs $26.5M consensus mean*; beat by ~$4.0M (~15%)* .
Note: Asterisked estimate values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Modern Oral is scaling faster than expected, now 26% of sales, with guidance raised materially; this is the central driver of estimate revisions and multiple expansion narrative .
- Mix and margin resilience are intact: consolidated gross margin improved to 57.1% despite higher SG&A and freight; Stoker’s gross margin at 62.5% highlights profitability support for investment spend .
- Zig-Zag faces mix headwinds and tough second-half comps (Clipper exit, cigar de-emphasis); model lower Zig-Zag margins and flat-to-down revenue near-term .
- Tariffs a manageable headwind: inventory, supplier negotiations, pricing, and U.S. manufacturing capex de-risk supply chain; watch capex cadence and PMTA expense line .
- FY25 guide uplift implies sustained momentum; track execution on chain wins, sales force build, and ALP’s brick-and-mortar transition for confirmation of share gains .
- Dividend continuity ($0.075/share) adds income support; balance sheet liquidity improved ($176.4M) with net debt down to $190.1M .
- Near-term trading: expect positive revisions and sentiment on guidance raise/Modern Oral beats; watch tariff headlines and Zig-Zag mix as potential volatility drivers .