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UNIFI INC (UFI)·Q3 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY2024 showed sequential improvement: revenue $0.149B (+8.8% q/q), gross margin 3.2% (+200 bps q/q), adjusted EBITDA $(0.8)M vs $(5.5)M in Q2, and diluted EPS $(0.57) vs $(1.10) in Q2 as apparel destocking bottomed and cost actions took hold .
- Management raised sequential guidance for Q4 FY2024: net sales $0.160–$0.165B and adjusted EBITDA $4–$6M, supported by market share gains and a Profitability Improvement Plan (PIP) targeting $2.5M per quarter expense reductions by FY2025 and ~$6M annual gross profit uplift from sales process transformation .
- REPREVE® revenue was $46.8M (31% of net sales), up q/q despite seasonal headwinds in Asia; mix impact from Chinese New Year and Easter reduced volumes by “a couple of million dollars” per segment in Q3 .
- The narrative pivot: industry inventories normalized; competitor exits in North America and Brazil drive share gains; beyond-apparel momentum in automotive and home; sales transformation in “third inning” improving mix and inventory turns (targeting ~5 turns in the Americas) .
- Consensus estimate data from S&P Global was unavailable at time of analysis; comparative estimate context is limited (see Estimates Context).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Sequential revenue and margin improvement: net sales +8.8% q/q to $0.149B; gross margin expanded 200 bps to 3.2% on cost savings and productivity gains .
- Share gains and PIP traction: management cites “market share gains” in Americas and Brazil due to competitor exits and improved sales process; on track for $2.5M/quarter expense reduction by FY2025, plus ~$6M annual gross profit uplift from sales transformation .
- REPREVE® momentum: REPREVE® sales $46.8M (31% of net sales), up q/q; sustainability initiatives (Snapshot, 1.5B T-shirt recycle target by FY2030) enhance brand positioning .
Quotes:
- “I believe that we've hit bottom in quarter 1 and quarter 2 and will go up from here.” – Executive Chairman Al Carey .
- “We remain on track to reduce our expenses by $2.5 million per quarter by the start of fiscal 2025.” – CEO Eddie Ingle .
- “We... see a $6 million annual improvement in our gross profit as a result of our sales transformation.” – CEO Eddie Ingle .
What Went Wrong
- Year-over-year pressure persists: revenue down 4.9% y/y; gross margin down 300 bps y/y to 3.2%; operating loss widened y/y .
- Americas segment loss: gross loss $(3.5)M; margin (3.9%), despite sequential improvement; pricing/mix remained pressured .
- Asia seasonal and Brazil import pressures: Asia volumes negatively impacted by Chinese New Year; Brazil faced ongoing pricing pressure from competitive imports .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown:
Balance sheet / liquidity KPIs:
Note: “—” denotes data not disclosed for that period in the cited documents.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We expect the results will continue to improve... best way to describe the business right now is that our industry sales are coming back, but still very slow, but definitely improving.” – Al Carey, Executive Chairman .
- “We remain on track to reduce our expenses by $2.5 million per quarter by the start of fiscal 2025... see a $6 million annual improvement in our gross profit as a result of our sales transformation.” – Eddie Ingle, CEO .
- “In our Brazil segment, performance has continued to improve, and our market share... increased from 12% to 18%... despite pricing dynamics from competitive imports.” – Eddie Ingle, CEO .
- “We are seeing conservative ordering... but... inventories are no longer the issue.” – Al Carey .
- “Q4... net sales between $160 million and $165 million; adjusted EBITDA between $4 million and $6 million.” – Eddie Ingle .
Q&A Highlights
- Seasonal headwinds quantified: combined CNY and Easter timing reduced Q3 revenue by “a couple of million dollars” per segment in Americas, Brazil, and Asia .
- Pricing and volumes: targeted, slightly upward pricing strategy; volumes increasing across all regions underpin Q4 guidance .
- Sales transformation status: “third inning”; inventory management benefits and slow-SKU rationalization improving mix .
- Beyond-apparel traction: growth in automotive and home (mattress); Central America apparel uptick in recent 4–5 weeks .
- Capex and inventory turns: maintenance-level Capex expected near term; Americas inventory turns targeted toward ~5 per year (from 3–4%) with aged inventory down materially .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus data for UFI’s quarterly EPS, revenue, and EBITDA was unavailable at time of analysis due to data access limits. As a result, explicit beat/miss vs consensus could not be determined from S&P Global data. Attempted retrieval failed (Daily Request Limit exceeded).
- Given the in-range Q3 outcome vs company guidance and raised Q4 guidance, sell-side models may need to reflect improved sequential volumes, margin expansion from cost reset, and share capture in Americas/Brazil .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Sequential inflection: Q3 delivered tangible improvements across revenue, margin, and adjusted EBITDA; Q4 guide implies further acceleration with adjusted EBITDA turning positive $4–$6M .
- Share capture catalyst: competitor exits in North America and Brazil plus sales process transformation should continue to boost volumes and mix through FY2025 .
- Margin trajectory: $2.5M/quarter cost reductions (run-rate FY2025) and ~$6M annual gross profit uplift from sales transformation support operating leverage as demand normalizes .
- REPREVE brand strength: sustained 31–33% of sales and new sustainability goals enhance strategic moat; marketing collaborations elevate visibility .
- Asia/Brazil watchpoints: expect seasonal and import pricing pressures to abate later in CY2024; recovery in China should alleviate Brazil pricing pressure .
- Liquidity discipline continues: Capex contained; working capital focus; however net debt rose q/q—monitor cash generation as EBITDA recovers .
- Near-term trading lens: confirmation of Q4 delivery vs raised guide and evidence of Americas volume/mix improvements could be stock catalysts; any signs of sustained REPREVE growth and beyond-apparel wins would add to the momentum .