TOOTSIE ROLL INDUSTRIES INC (TR)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered modest top-line growth with net sales of $153.19M (+3% YoY) and net earnings of $17.54M (+12% YoY); EPS rose to $0.24 (+14% YoY), supported by price realization and manufacturing efficiencies .
- Sequentially, sales improved (+4.6% QoQ vs Q1’s $146.52M), but EPS eased to $0.24 from $0.25 as the effective tax rate jumped to 33.1% (vs 21.6% in Q1) and input-cost inflation continued to pressure margins under LIFO accounting .
- Management flagged intensifying cocoa/chocolate cost headwinds into H2 2025 and 2026 as older supply contracts roll off; tariffs on certain non‑USMCA inputs also added to costs in Q2 .
- Net earnings benefited from higher investment income and insurance recoveries; average shares outstanding declined YoY due to buybacks, aiding EPS .
- Near-term stock catalysts include Halloween sell-through, cocoa price trajectory, and tariff clarity; ongoing capex aims to expand capacity and improve product quality/efficiencies .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Price realization and operations: “Second quarter and first half 2025 gross profit margins benefited from higher price realization, improvements in plant manufacturing operating efficiencies, and certain cost reductions.”
- Sales programs: “Successful marketing and sales programs contributed to higher sales in second quarter 2025 compared to the prior year second quarter.”
- Earnings drivers: Net earnings benefited from increased investment income and insurance recoveries; EPS also benefited from fewer shares outstanding following open-market repurchases .
What Went Wrong
- Consumer price resistance: Management noted “customers and consumers became more resistant to higher prices,” pressuring first-half sales (-$0.57M vs 1H24) .
- Input costs and LIFO: Cocoa/chocolate costs were “significantly elevated” and expected to rise further; LIFO accounting amplifies adverse earnings effects during inflationary periods .
- Taxes and tariffs: Effective tax rate rose to 33.1% in Q2 (vs 23.1% in Q2 2024) due to nondeductible deferred compensation; higher tariffs on some inputs outside USMCA increased costs .
Financial Results
Quarterly Results (USD)
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Q2 YoY Comparison (Q2 2025 vs Q2 2024)
Q2 vs Q1 2025 QoQ
Segment breakdown
KPIs
Note: Q4 2024 included a nonrecurring non-cash write-off of deferred tax assets ($11.01M) impacting reported tax expense and net earnings; adjusted net earnings would have been $33.52M (+14% YoY) absent the write-off .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
No Q2 2025 earnings call transcript was available; themes below reflect press release narratives across periods.
Management Commentary
- “Successful marketing and sales programs contributed to higher sales in second quarter 2025 compared to the prior year second quarter.” — Ellen R. Gordon
- “Certain ingredients and packaging materials unit costs, including cocoa and chocolate, have increased… we expect to incur even higher costs… during the balance of 2025 and into 2026 as many of our older supply contracts expire.”
- “Second quarter and first half 2025 gross profit margins benefited from higher price realization, improvements in plant manufacturing operating efficiencies, and certain cost reductions.”
- “The Company’s effective income tax rates were 33.1% and 23.1% in second quarter 2025 and 2024 respectively… reflecting the adverse effect of certain deferred compensation that will not be deductible.”
- “Certain ingredients… have foreign origins outside of USMCA and the related higher tariffs on these purchases added to our costs in second quarter and first half 2025.”
Q&A Highlights
No Q2 2025 earnings call or transcript was available; there were no public Q&A disclosures to highlight [List: earnings-call-transcript search returned none].
Estimates Context
Wall Street (S&P Global) consensus for TR’s Q2 2025 EPS and revenue was unavailable; as a result, formal “beat/miss” vs consensus cannot be determined (S&P Global data)*. Management’s narrative implies margin stabilization from price realization and efficiencies, but we expect sell-side models to factor higher H2 input costs and a structurally higher effective tax rate if nondeductible deferred comp persists .
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q2 showed resilient EPS growth (+14% YoY) on modest sales growth (+3% YoY), supported by pricing and operational efficiency; however, the QoQ EPS dip underscores tax-rate and input-cost headwinds .
- Cocoa/chocolate inflation is the central risk; with contracts resetting, gross margins likely face pressure in H2 2025–2026 under LIFO accounting despite ongoing efficiencies and price realization .
- Effective tax rate elevated to 33.1% in Q2 due to nondeductible deferred comp; absent change, this could be a recurring drag vs prior-year levels near ~21–23% .
- Tariffs on non‑USMCA inputs are adding to costs and remain an uncertainty until policy clarity improves; monitor for any tariff relief or supply re-sourcing .
- Investment income and insurance recoveries supported earnings in Q2; these items are helpful but not core-operating drivers—focus remains on margin trajectory vs input costs .
- Share count reduction aided EPS; continued buybacks could cushion EPS if margin pressure intensifies .
- Near-term trading setup hinges on Halloween sell-through and commodity headlines (cocoa); medium-term thesis depends on balancing price realization and manufacturing efficiency against persistent input inflation and tax-rate headwinds .