XI
XPEL, Inc. (XPEL)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 revenue was $125.4M, up 11.1% YoY and above both company Q3 guidance ($117–$119M) and Wall Street consensus ($119.3M); EPS was $0.47, down YoY and below consensus ($0.52), as gross margin faced ~170 bps pressure from out-of-market supplier price increases and temporary margin dynamics from the China distributor acquisition .*
- Management announced a $75–$150M investment plan in manufacturing/supply chain to lift gross margin to 52–54% and operating margin to mid–high-20% by end-2028—an explicit margin expansion path and potential medium-term re-rating catalyst .
- Record operating cash flow ($33.2M) and strong US/EU performance offset weakness in Canada; window film revenue grew 22.2% YoY and installation revenue grew 21.3% YoY .
- Q4 2025 revenue guidance is $123–$125M; management expects gross margin to recover beginning in Q4 and reach record levels in Q1–Q2 2026 as China inventory turns and mitigations fully take hold .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record revenue with broad-based strength: US up 11.1% to $71.7M; EU/UK/Africa up 28.8% to $16.5M; Asia Pacific up 21.0% .
- Window film and installations drove growth: window film +22.2% YoY; installation revenue +21.3% YoY; services +15.7% YoY .
- Strong cash generation: operating cash flow $33.2M—highest quarter in company history .
- Quote: “We have mitigated [supplier price increases] and expect gross margin to return to its normal trajectory beginning in the fourth quarter… We believe we are well positioned to drive leverage in our cost structure in the coming quarters” — Barry Wood, CFO .
- Quote: “We have a goal of increasing gross margin… to around 52%–54% by the end of 2028… and operating margins in the mid to high twenties” — Ryan Pape, CEO .
What Went Wrong
- Margin compression: gross margin fell to 41.8% (–70 bps YoY) as supplier price increases (non-tariff) reduced GM by ~170 bps and the China distributor acquisition created temporary margin recognition constraints until inventory turns .
- Profitability down YoY: EBITDA $19.9M (–8.1% YoY), net income $13.1M (–11.8% YoY), diluted EPS $0.47 vs $0.54 last year .
- SG&A elevated: +20.8% YoY to $35.7M (28.4% of revenue), including ~$1.3M acquisition-related SG&A and ~$0.8M bad debt/other costs; Canada continued to be soft; Latin America flat due to Brazil model transition .
Financial Results
Quarterly snapshot and sequential/YoY
YoY comparison (Q3 2025 vs Q3 2024)
Actuals vs S&P Global consensus
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Segment breakdown
Geographic revenue (sequential view)
KPIs (YoY growth rates by quarter)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We had unfavorable price increases that were out of line with the market, which cost us about 170 basis points of gross margin in Q3… we expect to see that reverse starting in Q4 and into Q1.” — Ryan Pape, CEO .
- “We have a goal of increasing gross margin by approximately 10 percentage points to around 52%–54% by the end of 2028… realizing operating margins in the mid to high twenties.” — Ryan Pape, CEO .
- “We did have approximately $1.3M in added acquisition related SG&A and approximately $0.8M in bad debt and some other costs that are not expected to reoccur.” — Barry Wood, CFO .
- “The Company delivered record revenue performance… We have mitigated [price increases] and expect gross margin to return to its normal trajectory beginning in the fourth quarter.” — Barry Wood, CFO .
- “Share repurchases look particularly attractive at the moment given our view of the valuation.” — Ryan Pape, CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- Supplier price increases and mitigation: management quantified ~170 bps GM impact; mitigation actions in place; GM recovery expected from Q4 onward .
- COLOR PPF rollout: best product rollout in company history; potential to not only take share but expand market demand via dealer/OEM channel engagement .
- Margin trajectory: near-term China inventory dynamics create partial margin recognition; record GM anticipated in Q1–Q2 2026 as full margin is recognized and mitigations complete .
- Growth/assumptions: mid-teens organic revenue view sustained; dealership services acquisitions continue where available; cash returns considered given valuation .
- Dealer sentiment: mixed globally; tougher retail auto environment pushes dealers to seek profit add-ons, which benefits XPEL’s offerings .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025: Revenue beat consensus by ~$6.2M; EPS missed by ~$0.05 due to GM compression and SG&A items (acquisition, bad debt). Coverage depth is limited (3 estimates for revenue/EPS) .*
- Q1–Q2 2025: Both revenue and EPS beat; Q2 had one-time charges ($1.6M) affecting reported EBITDA/EPS; normalized metrics showed stronger underlying performance .
- Forward: Company guides Q4 revenue $123–$125M vs consensus $125.0M; with GM recovery, models likely need to reflect higher near-term cash conversion and a medium-term margin uplift path (2026–2028) .*
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Revenue momentum and cash generation are robust; Q3 delivered a clean top-line beat and record CFO despite margin headwinds .
- Near-term EPS miss is transitory: supplier pricing and China inventory accounting dynamics should unwind, with GM recovery starting in Q4 and potentially record GM in Q1–Q2 2026—positioning for estimate revisions on margins .
- Strategic investments ($75–$150M) and direct distribution in key markets (China) support explicit margin expansion targets (GM 52–54%, OM mid–high-20% by 2028)—a medium-term re-rating thesis .
- Product innovation (COLOR PPF) and personalization platform expand TAM and channel monetization, offering incremental growth drivers beyond core PPF .
- Watch regional mix and SG&A leverage: Canada softness and SG&A investment should improve as new markets/services scale; expect better operating leverage in 2026 .
- Capital returns: $50M buyback in place and repurchases “attractive” at current valuation—potential share count tailwind if executed .
- Near-term trading setup: favorable into Q4 on GM recovery and strong cash flow; medium-term thesis hinges on successful manufacturing/supply chain investments and full margin recognition from China acquisition .