Crown Crafts, Inc. (CRWS) Q3 FY2026 Earnings Call Transcript & Summary

February 11, 2026

NasdaqCM US Consumer Discretionary Textiles, Apparel and Luxury Goods Earnings Calls 27 min

Earnings Call Speaker Segments

Operator

Operator
#1

Good day, and welcome to the Crown Crafts, Inc. Third Quarter Fiscal Year 2026 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to John McNamara with Three Part Advisors. Please go ahead.

John McNamara

Attendees
#2

Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thank you again for joining the Crown Crafts Fiscal Year 2026 Third Quarter Conference Call. With us on the call this morning are Crown Crafts' President and Chief Executive Officer, Olivia Elliott; and Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Claire Spencer. During today's call, the company may make certain forward-looking statements, and actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may be beyond Crown Crafts' control, and the company is under no obligation to update these statements. For more information about the company's risk factors and other uncertainties, please refer to the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its annual report on Form 10-K and the Form 10-Q for the quarter ended December 28, 2025. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to President and Chief Executive Officer, Olivia Elliott. Olivia?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#3

Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. As we noted in the press release issued earlier today, we believe our third quarter results demonstrate the resilience of our business model and the diligent efforts of our team as we work to overcome the challenging demand environment and the ongoing effects of higher tariffs. Net sales for the third quarter were $20.7 million compared with $23.4 million in the prior year quarter, while net income increased to $1.5 million from $900,000 a year ago. We are committed to driving profitability as we continue to execute on pricing and cost actions to offset the sales environment. While we are encouraged by the positive performance in our bibs, toys and disposable categories during the holiday season, the macro backdrop remains difficult for our category. Elevated U.S. tariff rates have raised product costs and contributed to uncertainty from certain China-based suppliers, while consumer spending remains uneven and price sensitive. Third quarter gross margin was 23.5% compared with 26.1% in the prior year quarter despite our ongoing mitigation efforts. Also impacting gross margin were certain onetime costs that Claire will speak to in a moment. Within this environment, we are staying focused on what we can control. For starters, we are very excited about our product pipeline. Earlier this week, we announced Manhattan Toy's relaunch of Groovy Girls, an iconic line of soft fashion dolls that will be available starting in May of 2026. This relaunch reflects the strength of Manhattan Toy portfolio and our commitment to internal product development. We believe Groovy Girl will create opportunities with specialty customers and in direct-to-consumer as we broaden our reach in the juvenile space. Operationally, our supply chain team continues to work closely with our sourcing partners in China and other regions to manage through tariffs, freight and capacity constraints. The majority of our products are produced by foreign contract manufacturers with the largest concentration in China, and we remain focused on quality, compliance and reliability while also continuing to evaluate alternative sources of supply where appropriate. Our inventory strategy has been deliberately conservative as we aim to minimize exposure to excess inventory in a volatile pricing and tariff environment. We also continue to execute on cost initiatives with further plans to consolidate certain internal operations. And during the quarter, we incurred $600,000 in severance expenses in connection with these consolidation efforts. These actions are designed to eliminate redundant activities, reduce payroll and administrative expenses over time and create a leaner operating structure that can better absorb external factors such as tariffs and raw material volatility. Shifting gears, we ended the third quarter with a solid balance sheet and liquidity position. We continue to view cash flow generation, debt reduction and disciplined capital allocation, including our regular quarterly dividend as key pillars of our shareholder value proposition. And we believe our brands, customer relationships and category positions have us well prepared to enhance long-term shareholder value as conditions normalize. With that, I will now turn the call over to Claire, who will walk you through the financial details for the quarter. Claire?

Claire Spencer

Executives
#4

Thank you, Olivia. For the third quarter of fiscal 2026, which ended December 28, 2025, net sales were $20.7 million compared with $23.4 million in the third quarter of the prior year. Gross profit was $4.9 million compared with $6.1 million and gross margins were 23.5% versus 26.1%. The change in gross margin was driven primarily by higher tariffs on products imported from China and onetime licensing expenses in connection with the insurance claim I will speak further on in just a moment. Marketing and administrative expenses increased by $600,000 to $5 million in the current year quarter due to severance expenses incurred in connection with operational consolidation efforts. As a percentage of net sales, marketing and administrative expenses were 24% in the third quarter compared with 18.8% in the same period last year. Other income and expense was a positive contributor in the third quarter. Other income benefited by a $2.5 million insurance proceeds received during the quarter related to certain claims made by the company under a representation and warranties insurance policy purchased in connection with the recent acquisition. The net impact of these insurance proceeds to income before tax expense, excluding certain legal and licensing-related expenses was $2.1 million in the current year quarter. Income before tax expense for the quarter was $2.1 million, up from $1.3 million in the prior year quarter. Income tax expense was $600,000, up from $400,000 a year ago. And net income for the quarter was $1.5 million, an increase from $900,000. Basic and diluted earnings per share were $0.14 in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, which was up from $0.09 in the third quarter of fiscal 2025. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with total assets of $76.1 million, and we had $10.6 million of additional availability under our revolving credit facility. Inventories were $31.2 million at quarter end compared with $27.8 million at fiscal 2025 year-end, reflecting our seasonal build ahead of Chinese New Year. Total debt at quarter end was $16.4 million, and we were in compliance with all financial covenants. Net cash provided by operating activities for the 9-month period was $7.1 million, up slightly from $7 million in the prior year period. In summary, third quarter results reflect ongoing tariff-driven margin pressure and a continued soft demand environment, offset by cost actions and nonrecurring items such as severance expense and insurance proceeds. We believe our balance sheet, liquidity and disciplined approach to expenses provide a solid foundation as we navigate the current environment and position the company for improvement as conditions normalize. With that, I will turn the call back to Olivia for some closing remarks before we open the line for questions. Olivia?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#5

Thank you, Claire. We entered this fiscal year fully aware that we would be operating against a difficult backdrop, including elevated tariffs, shifting retailer behavior and a cautious value-focused and uneven consumer environment. The third quarter did not change that reality, but it did reinforce our conviction that our strategy anchored in strong brands and licenses, disciplined cost management, conservative inventory management and sourcing decisions and a focus on cash generation is the right one for Crown Crafts. At the same time, our capital allocation strategies focus on growth-oriented investments in our business and the return of capital to our valued shareholders. We remain confident in the long-term fundamentals of the infant, toddler and juvenile category and in Crown Crafts' ability to be a trusted partner to our customers, licensors and consumers. I want to thank our employees for their hard work and dedication, our customers and licensors for their continued partnership and our shareholders for their ongoing support. With that, we'd now be happy to take your questions. Operator?

Operator

Operator
#6

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from John Deysher with Pinnacle.

John Deysher

Analysts
#7

Just curious, the sales decline, you had all your acquisitions for both quarters, I think, where was the softness on the revenue line?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#8

The softness is really in the bedding category. So from the toddler bedding perspective, it's a category of business that just isn't -- it's not required. I mean you need sheets for a crib, that type of thing, but you can skip the toddler bedding set altogether. And so in this environment, we're seeing where the consumer is maybe trading down and not buying the bedding set, but buying just a blanket instead. And so a bedding set can be maybe a $50 item where a blanket is more like a $12 item. So we're still seeing the category be popular. It's just what the consumer is buying right now.

John Deysher

Analysts
#9

Okay. So it was just about all bedding?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#10

It was all bedding.

John Deysher

Analysts
#11

Okay. Okay. And you mentioned China was a major source. What percentage of the product comes out of China roughly right now?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#12

Almost all of it. I mean it's in the high 90%.

John Deysher

Analysts
#13

Okay. Got you. And then in terms of the reimbursement -- not reimbursement, the benefit of $2.5 million from insurance claims. Could you provide some color there? That's a big number. Unfortunately, it went your way, but I'm just curious what the back story is there.

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#14

It relates to a product category that was dropped at retail not long after we did the acquisition. And so we made a claim under the reps and warranties insurance and it went our way, as you said. That also included a couple of onetime costs associated with that same category of business, which was a licensing shortfall and then some inventory that we closed out at a pretty deep discount.

John Deysher

Analysts
#15

Okay. So let me just make sure I understand it. So you made the acquisition and then a product was dropped and you submitted a claim because you thought you were going to have that product going forward. Is that right?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#16

That's correct.

John Deysher

Analysts
#17

Okay. That's interesting. Okay. All right. I'm glad your agreement specified that. Okay. And do you expect anything more like that going forward?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#18

Not that I'm aware of right now.

Operator

Operator
#19

Our next question comes from Anthony Lebiedzinski with Sidoti & Company.

Anthony Lebiedzinski

Analysts
#20

I just have a couple of things here. Can you just comment on the pricing? How much did that contribute to the quarterly revenue? Just wondering if you could comment on that.

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#21

You just me on retail price increases?

Anthony Lebiedzinski

Analysts
#22

That's correct.

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#23

So as of October, we have pretty much gotten all of the price increases through all of our retailers. And so I think we mentioned in the last quarter, the first quarter that the tariffs went through, which was in our June quarter, we had tariff increases, but not a lot of retail price increases. And so it takes a period of time to get all of those prices through. So as of October, the last of the major retailers took the price increases. So the third quarter was kind of a mix. We had half of the quarter where we didn't have them and then half of the quarter where we did.

Anthony Lebiedzinski

Analysts
#24

Got you. Okay. All right. And then in terms of the cost actions that you have taken, can you comment -- can you give any specifics as to what the annualized cost savings might be as we think about the business going forward?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#25

We're still working on that number. We're going through our budgeting process now for our next fiscal year, and we'll know a little bit more where we can make some of those cuts now. It will take a little bit of time. I think a lot of it's going to be in some of our IT contracts and other contracts where currently each of our subsidiaries has to have a separate agreement. But we can only do that when the current contracts roll out. So it's going to be something that you might see part of in this fiscal year, and then we won't really realize the full amount until the next fiscal year. So hopefully, by June, when we have our next call, we'll be able to give more color.

Operator

Operator
#26

The next question comes from Igor Novgorodtsev with Lares Capital.

Igor Novgorodtsev

Analysts
#27

I am a bit surprised that you still get 90% of all your products from China given the difficult trade relations between the United States and China. So what is your contingency plan if the tariffs will go up again to 100%? What would you do?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#28

We are actively looking at sources in other countries. We've been doing that for some period of time, and we have other contacts, et cetera. But right now, we've stuck with China for several reasons. One being the biggest is quality and safety. As you know, we deal with infant products. And so we have to take time to make any changes because we need to make sure that the product is very safe and that the proper quality control standards are in place. So while we are exploring those and we have been for the last year or so, we're taking it slowly. But we do have those contacts. We've been to Cambodia, Pakistan, India, any number of other countries that we're making those contacts. Toys would be the hardest because -- particularly the plastic toys because those are molded and you can't just pick up your mold out of the current factory and move it to some other factory. So we would have to rebuild those molds. So that would be the toughest category for us.

Igor Novgorodtsev

Analysts
#29

To follow up on this, I know it's -- there's a lot of moving parts and tariffs have been moved back and forth several times. What is your effective tariff rate right now on average versus pre-April last year? How much -- what would it be today?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#30

That would -- I do not have kind of an effective tariff rate. I mean, obviously, the current 20% rate is on all categories of business, but it varies widely. So for example, toys, the only duty and tariff on it is the 20%, whereas on diaper bags, the total of all of that is above 60%. So it just varies very widely. Everything else kind of falls out in the middle.

Igor Novgorodtsev

Analysts
#31

Do you have -- I see that you mentioned the price increases in October, the last price increases. Do you think you'll be able to raise prices further? Or you think unless something changes, you're done for now other than normal price?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#32

Unless something changes, we're done for now. I just don't think that the consumer can absorb any price increases right now and the price increases that have already gone into effect are impacting sales.

Operator

Operator
#33

The next question comes from Doug Ruth with Lenox Financial Services.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#34

Olivia, under difficult circumstances, I feel that you and the company have done a wonderful job, and I'm grateful for what you've done for the shareholders. I'll have some questions now. Where will the Groovy Girls be sold?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#35

So initially in specialty stores and on our own website, manhattantoy.com is the initial goal. I mean the hope is eventually that we'll roll it out to some larger retailers, but we would need to change the product a little bit so that we don't -- you can't take the same product to both channels or then you r in one channel.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#36

Yes, I understand. Would you be selling them overseas as well?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#37

Yes. So it will be sold internationally through our distributors.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#38

And then I noted that year-over-year, the inventory was down about 4%. Are you -- is the company happy with the present inventory level?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#39

I mean I'll use the word happy, yes. I mean I always think that we could have less inventory, but some of our planners disagree with me. So yes, I mean, I think overall, the inventory levels are good.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#40

Okay. And then you had previously talked some about the international sales. Could you tell us some about what's going on with the Disney license? Like I know you got the Disney license in Canada? And how has that been going?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#41

So the Disney license in Canada, our license to that started this calendar year, so just in January. And so we've already talk to some of the larger retailers, the product from the old licensor is kind of selling out, and we're in the process of putting the product in for our product.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#42

Okay. And then also, I think you were talking about having a different distributor in Canada for the Sassy toys and the Manhattan Toys. Is there any update on that?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#43

Yes. So we think that's going well. That transition just also started happening kind of in December, January. But I think that's going to be a very good partnership for us.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#44

And then I also heard you mention that you had 33 international distributors for like the Sassy toy and the Manhattan Toy. Can you give us some ideas of what's happening there?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#45

I don't know if that's the exact number. We have more than 30 distributors in probably more than 50 international countries. And so that's going well. We're continuing to try to sign up more distributors and expand the countries, but that's certainly been a focus for us, and I think it's going very well.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#46

And then how about the Q3 sales? Were the international sales higher? And is there any way you could maybe give us a percentage of how much they might be increased?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#47

We don't have that number sitting here with us. And I don't think we've disclosed that specifically. So I think I'll have to pass on answering that question.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#48

Okay. I noticed that you had increased the advertising budget, and then I had heard you talk previously that you were doing some things like with Facebook and Instagram. Could you maybe tell us a little bit more about what's going on with that?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#49

So we're continuously trying to increase our presence, both in the marketing and the advertising side. I mean it's just a part of doing business now. It's the way you get your consumer. And so we've increased it a little bit this year, and I think that you'll see us budget more and spend more in the next fiscal year. Otherwise, it's very hard to get the consumer now.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#50

Is the company thinking anything more about the warehouse? I believe that possibly one of the leases is coming up. Is there any talk about that at all?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#51

We still put that on hold right now. We are extending the lease in Minnesota to coincide with the termination of the lease in California, and we'll pick back up on that conversation probably toward the end of this calendar year. You kind of need about an 18-month lead time to get the -- to choose a location, do a lease and then do whatever kind of build-out needs to go into the new location. So probably, I'm going to say maybe November of this year, we'll start that conversation again.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#52

Okay. With this insurance policy, the representation and warranty insurance policy, how -- who figured out to buy that? How did that come about?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#53

You mean getting the policy itself?

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#54

Is that a normal -- is that something that the company maybe does when you make an acquisition? Or is this something that was unique?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#55

It was something specific to this acquisition. It was just part of the agreement.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#56

Well, whoever came up with that, I would like to give -- I would like the company to consider giving that person a bonus. And if it was you, I think you should get the bonus.

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#57

I don't think...

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#58

That was an outstanding idea to come up with that. I've never heard of that before, and it really worked out for the -- for everybody's -- for the company and the investors' favor. So that's really -- it was really a great idea.

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#59

I don't think I can take credit for that one. It was kind of a mutual agreement. So I appreciate the comments.

Douglas Ruth

Analysts
#60

Okay. Well, I want to thank everybody who is involved in it. And of course, the people who did it know who they are, but thank you for doing that. And thank you and thank you, Claire, for your contribution, and you really did a great job. Thank you for that.

Operator

Operator
#61

Our next question comes from [ Greg Venit with Retail ].

Unknown Analyst

Analysts
#62

I think in a previous conference call, there was some discussion about Target was going to get out of some of their, I guess, store categories and that they may be -- the impression I got is that they may be looking towards you or somebody else. Could you comment on that?

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#63

I think what you're talking about is just that Target has been taking a lot of their programs to private label and direct sourcing them. And so we've had a couple of categories in the past, one of them being our bib category and then one of them being the diaper bags that have been taken away from us and given -- they've gone private label and gone direct source.

Unknown Analyst

Analysts
#64

So they're not bringing yours back. They were going to [indiscernible]

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#65

Right now, we have not been able to get those back. We certainly are trying, and we hope to. But at this point in time, we've not gotten them back.

Operator

Operator
#66

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Olivia Elliott for any closing remarks.

Olivia Elliott

Executives
#67

Thank you all for your support and interest in Crown Crafts. We look forward to updating you on our next call in mid-June. Thank you.

Operator

Operator
#68

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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