UH
USANA HEALTH SCIENCES INC (USNA)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 net sales were $214 million (+7% YoY) but profitability deteriorated sharply as GAAP diluted EPS fell to -$0.36 and adjusted diluted EPS to -$0.15, driven by softer-than-expected Brand Partner productivity, higher SG&A tied to the Global Convention and compensation plan rollout, and an extraordinary effective tax rate reset; adjusted EBITDA declined to $13.8 million .
- FY 2025 guidance was cut: consolidated net sales reduced to an “updated estimate” of $920 million (from $920M–$1.0B), GAAP EPS to $0.78 (from $1.50–$2.20), adjusted EPS to $1.73 (from $2.35–$3.00), and adjusted EBITDA to $98 million (from $107–$123 million) .
- Direct selling Asia Pacific remained weak (Greater China sales down 9% YoY; SAP down 22% YoY), while Americas & Europe grew +8% YoY; Hiya DTC delivered $31 million revenue but experienced sequential softness in customer acquisition and subscribers; management expects Q4 Hiya sales similar to Q3 .
- Near-term catalysts: Q4 incentives to support adoption of the enhanced compensation plan, a $4.7 million one-time rightsizing charge in Q4, and ongoing in-house manufacturing/integration for Hiya expected to improve margins into late Q2/back-half 2026 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Hiya delivered 26% year-to-date sales growth and progressed operational integration (ERP, logistics transition), with USANA preparing to bring Hiya manufacturing in-house to drive efficiencies: “We continue to expect Hiya to generate double-digit sales growth for 2025” .
- Americas & Europe posted +8% YoY sales growth and +12% sequential growth (a relative bright spot within direct selling) .
- Global Convention launched several new/upgraded products and an enhanced compensation plan; management is “encouraged by the pickup in sales activity and leader productivity in recent weeks” .
What Went Wrong
- Profitability collapsed: operating margin fell to 0.6%, adjusted EBITDA dropped 44% YoY; extraordinary tax rate reset (annual ETR increased to 65%; Q3 tax rate 471%) converted modest pretax profit ($1.8M) into a GAAP net loss .
- Asia Pacific softness: Greater China (-9% YoY), Southeast Asia Pacific (-22% YoY), North Asia (-14% YoY); consolidated active customers fell to 388,000 (-14% YoY) .
- Hiya DTC sequential softness: net sales and active subscribers declined 7% and 3% respectively; management highlighted lower-than-anticipated customer acquisition in a seasonally strong quarter .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance vs prior periods and estimates
Notes: Coverage thin; Primary EPS - # of Estimates = 1 each quarter; Revenue - # of Estimates = 1 each quarter (Q1/Q2/Q3) (values retrieved from S&P Global).
Results vs S&P Global consensus (beats/misses)
- Revenue: Q1 beat by ~$6.5M; Q2 beat by ~$10.7M; Q3 slight miss by ~$0.2M .
- Adjusted EPS: Q1 beat by $0.03; Q2 beat by $0.20; Q3 matched at -$0.15 .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Q3 2025 Segment/Geography Breakdown
KPIs and Customer Metrics
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We rolled out our enhanced Brand Partner compensation plan during the third quarter… We are encouraged by the pickup in sales activity and leader productivity in recent weeks.” — Jim Brown, President & CEO .
- “Short-term profitability was burdened… and a change in the estimated annual effective income tax rate… increased… from 45% to 65%.” — Doug Hekking, CFO .
- “Hiya… delivered 26% year-to-date sales growth… transition to a new logistics partner… will begin bringing their products in-house over the next several months.” — Management Commentary .
- “Inventories increased… driven… by new product introductions… bring manufacturing in-house for… Hiya and Rise Bar… and activities to mitigate tariff exposure.” — Management Commentary .
Q&A Highlights
- Compensation plan adoption: Field engagement improving post-convention; early signs of re-engagement in mature markets like the U.S.; Q4 incentives will continue and spill into Q1 2026 to sustain momentum .
- Hiya DTC softness drivers: Lower-than-expected customer acquisition in Q3; Meta algorithm changes noted; management expects bounce-back as DTC, retail, and international expansion progress .
- Cost savings outlook: Rightsizing underway; savings quantification expected in February; plan extends beyond staffing into broader efficiencies .
- Operational efficiencies for Hiya: In-house manufacturing of vitamins; 3PL transition cut costs and improved efficiency; margin benefits expected starting late Q2 2026 .
- Strategy and diversification: Commitment to direct selling plus growth in DTC and healthy foods (RiseBar); open to additional DTC acquisitions to broaden omnichannel footprint .
Estimates Context
- Across Q1–Q3 2025, USANA beat revenue and adjusted EPS consensus in Q1 and Q2, and in Q3 slightly missed revenue (~$0.2M) while matching adjusted EPS at -$0.15. Coverage was thin with one estimate per quarter for both metrics (Primary EPS - # of Estimates = 1; Revenue - # of Estimates = 1) .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term setup is challenging: guidance cut materially and Q4 includes a $4.7M one-time charge; monitor Q4 incentives’ effect on field productivity and sequential trends .
- Asia Pacific remains the core swing factor; watch Greater China/SAP stabilization and whether compensation plan changes translate into improved active customer/Brand Partner metrics .
- Hiya integration is the medium-term margin lever: ERP/logistics completed, in-house manufacturing to begin; expect incremental margin improvement late Q2/back-half 2026; monitor subscriber growth recovery after Q3 softness .
- Cost alignment should support margin repair in 2026; management to quantify savings in February—an important catalyst for estimate revisions .
- Inventory build supports new products and tariff mitigation—beneficial strategically but a working capital headwind; watch conversion as new products roll out globally .
- Americas & Europe momentum and RiseBar growth indicate diversification benefits; further DTC opportunities may enhance omnichannel profile and reduce reliance on Asia .
- Valuation and estimate risk skew negative near term given EPS guidance cut and extraordinary tax rate; upside depends on compensation plan adoption, Hiya margin synergy, and cost takeout execution .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.