Acme United Corporation (AMEX:ACU) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Acme United Corporation (AMEX:ACU) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript April 17, 2025

Acme United Corporation misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.41 EPS, expectations were $0.59.

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Acme United Corporation’s First Quarter 2025 financial results conference call. At this time, I’d like to turn the call over to your host, Mr. Walter Johnsen, Chairman and CEO. Please go ahead, sir.

Walter Johnsen: Good morning. Welcome to the first quarter 2025 earnings conference call for Acme United Corporation. I’m Walter C. Johnsen, Chairman and CEO. With me is Paul Driscoll, our Chief Financial Officer, who will first read the Safe Harbor statement. Paul?

Paul Driscoll: Forward-looking statements in this conference call, including without limitation, statements related to the company’s plans, strategies, objectives, expectations, intentions, and adequacy of capital and other resources are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Investors are cautioned that such forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, including among others, those arising as a result of a challenging global macroeconomic environment characterized by continued high inflation, high interest rates, the imposition of new tariffs, or changes in existing tariff rates. In addition, we have experienced supply chain disruptions and we may experience these disruptions in the future. We are also subject to additional risks and uncertainties as described in our periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in our current earnings release.

Walter Johnsen: Thank you, Paul. Acme United Corporation had a solid quarter in 2025. Our net sales were $46 million compared to $45 million in the first quarter of 2024. Net income for the first quarter of 2025 was $1.7 million compared to $1.6 million last year. Earnings per share increased 5% from $0.39 to $0.41. Our first aid business in the first quarter of 2025 increased 14%, which drove our growth. The Westcott cutting tools had a very large initial order of craft products to a major mass market retailer in the first quarter of last year. Sales of these craft items were strong and the product family continues to grow. ODMT sharpeners continued to gain placement in major retailers in the kitchen segment and had strong growth in the quarter.

The European business decreased 7% in the first quarter due to a large promotion in 2024 that did not repeat this year. We have broadened the first aid and medical product line in Europe and begun new distribution in Switzerland and the Netherlands. We plan to strengthen the first aid sales team in Germany and are preparing for our first sales booth at the Medica Show in Dusseldorf in the fall. The Canadian office channel sales were soft, but the first aid business continued to grow. We have new first aid distribution in the mass and industrial markets, and we are also increasing the sales team in Canada. Last month, we installed our first robotic system in our Rocky Mountain, North Carolina plant. This system has four robots that process bulk antiseptic packets for our first aid product line, orient them for packaging, fold smart compliance boxes, and fill them.

This custom-designed machine cost about $650,000, replaces seven employees, and has less than a two-year payback. We have just ordered a second system for our Vancouver, Washington first aid plant. Our Spill Magic product line has increased substantially since we purchased the company about five years ago. Its items include bodily fluid and bloodborne pathogen cleanup kits, as well as general materials for removing fluids from spills. We have outgrown our current facility outside Nashville, Tennessee, and are evaluating a new facility to purchase. Our intention is to install automated powder transfer and filling equipment once we own an appropriate site. As you may know, tariffs are paid by the importer on the cost of products. We have focused relentlessly on reducing our internal overhead and work with some of our customers to ship domestically in full containers.

A close-up of a person wearing protective gloves using a pair of scissors in a workshop.

We have generated over $2 million in annual productivity savings from capital projects in our production operations. We are uncertain what the tariff levels will be in the coming months, but we are experienced in dealing with past tariffs and high inflation. Although the tariff uncertainty is uncomfortable, we also view it as an opportunity to gain market share. We have eight plants in the United States that we intend to use to build competitively priced products and a broad network of sources in India, Egypt, Thailand, and other locations. The current environment may create new opportunities for acquisitions. We believe that our strengths in sourcing and manufacturing, and strong financial resources could add significant value to potential acquisitions.

I’ll now turn the call to Paul.

Paul Driscoll: Acme’s net sales for the first quarter of 2025 were $46 million compared to $45 million in 2024, a 2% increase. Net sales in the US segment increased 3% in the quarter, mainly due to higher sales of first aid and medical products. Sales of school and office products declined due to a first-time craft sale in the first quarter of 2024. Net sales in Europe for the first quarter of 2025 declined 4% in local currency compared to the first quarter of 2024, due to timing. Net sales in Canada for the first quarter of 2025 increased 6% in local currency due to higher sales of first aid products. Gross margin was 39.0% in the first quarter of 2025 versus 38.7% in the first quarter of 2024. SG&A expenses for the first quarter of 2025 were $15.5 million or 34% of net sales compared with $14.8 million or 33% of net sales for the same period of 2024.

Net income for the first quarter of 2025 was $1.65 million or $0.41 per diluted share compared to net income of $1.63 million or $0.39 per diluted share for the same period of 2024, an increase of 1% in net income and 5% in earnings per share. The company’s bank debt less cash on March 31, 2025, was $27 million compared to $32 million on March 31, 2024. During a twelve-month period, we purchased the assets of Elite First Aid for $6.1 million, paid $2.2 million in dividends, and generated approximately $12 million in free cash flow. Thank you, Paul. I will now open the call to questions. Thank you.

Operator: At this time, we’ll be conducting a question and answer session.

Paul Driscoll: Queue.

Q&A Session

Follow Acme United Corp (NYSE:ACU)

Operator: You may press star two if you’d like to remove your question from the queue. Before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Jim Marrone with Singular Research. Please proceed with your question.

Jim Marrone: Yes. Thank you for taking my call this quarter. My first question is with regards to acquisition and the second will group will be with regards to tariffs. Within with regards to the acquisitions, you mentioned in your prepared comments that you’re looking at making an acquisition in the near future. I’m just curious whether it’ll be a geographic one or with regards to product line. And should it be product line, will it be focused on medical kits and cutting tools, or would it be expanding into other products related to what you currently have. And then I’ll also ask a question with regards to tariffs after your answered the acquisitions.

Paul Driscoll: Okay. Thank you for that question. Regarding the acquisition strategy, we have two major businesses. The cutting tool business and, of course, first aid. And either one of them are great places to add acquisitions. We have been working very hard in the space. And as you can imagine, there are ways to expand there both with our competitors horizontally, as well as companies that supply components that go into our first aid kits. Geographically, we’re looking at North America. In either of those product lines. Let me go on a little bit about why this is a special time for us. First, we have large market shares in both of our businesses. So we have not only the ability to have leverage on our suppliers, but also we have a good pulse of the market globally.

Secondly, if these tariffs hold, it will put substantial working capital pressure on our competitors as they buy inventory at a higher price, to replace what they sold. As well as as they replace in receivables, with a higher level of receivables, because you priced out a higher product. Some of our competitors don’t have balance sheets to sustain that. And we do. As we’re looking at the acquisition area, we can see our competitors having substantially harder margin pressure than perhaps we will. And they will have a more difficult time financing their ongoing businesses. So we’re looking aggressively in both areas. Jim, you wanna ask the second question on tariffs?

Jim Marrone: Yeah. I can. But before I do that, just with regards to the acquisition. So do you anticipate, like, attractive valuations on the offers that you have that as a result of these headwinds? And if if so, like, what kind of you know, EV to be that kind of multiples would you be looking at?

Paul Driscoll: Well, first, we pay fair prices. So I don’t expect us to be finding great bargains, but you never know. Relative to how we value a company, that really depends a lot on what value added we bring to the situation. As you know, some of our best deals have had no sales at all. For example, Camillus Knife Company. We bought out of bankruptcy. We sold it for a hundred times. So it’s not really a formula based on valuation. But, clearly, we’re fair. We pay fair prices. In the market, and that would continue.

Jim Marrone: Great. Thank you for that. With regards to the tariffs, so you said there’s a lot of tariff uncertainty. Are you looking at it from the supply side as far as what you’re buying product at or are you looking at it in terms of your sales and any potential headwind from that? And also, you know, aside from the tariffs, there may be some recessionary headwinds. And do you anticipate that impacting your business at all?

Paul Driscoll: Okay. Well, let me just address the tariffs in a broader sense. Right now, anything that we look at buying in China, has a hundred and forty-five percent tariff. A week ago, the tariff was less. Three weeks ago, was twenty percent. We don’t know what the tariffs will be three weeks from now. For China. And that’s the biggest manufacturer in the world. For everybody. So you can imagine many customers and including ourselves are postponing delivery of product until we get clarity on what duty we pay. If we, for example, import product from China today, we pay a hundred and forty-five percent tariff. If the tariff drops to thirty percent, we’re still stuck with a hundred and forty-five percent we paid right now. Companies, all the major mass market retailers, do a lot of direct importing.

From China. So they’re paying the duties. They’re doing the same thing we are. We’re operating on the inventory that we have today. By and large. And what we’re producing in the US. And Canada. And we’re being very cautious about how fast we ship that product because we don’t wanna get caught paying a high tariff, which perhaps drops. At some point, we’ll have to say pencils down. We’re paying the tariff and we bring product in. And that would be a more sizable price increase. So when I talk about uncertainty, what I’m talking about is the price you pay for the product and the ultimate price you pay that you charge the consumer. And we’re trying to be smart about that. To pass the best value we can to that consumer.

Jim Marrone: Great. And are you looking at alternative sources? To the sourcing from China? Like, you know, or is there any options with regards to US-based supply lines and that adjustment that way?

Paul Driscoll: Well, sure. Remember, that we have eight plants in the United States. We’re making a lot of products here, and we’re getting busier here. That’s why we’re expanding Spill Magic in Tennessee. That’s why we’re increasing our automation in the US both in Rocky Mountain and then Vancouver, Washington. So one major source for us at least is where domestic producer. The second is many of the factories in China are moving production to locations like Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia. And we’ve been participating with that for some time. Although there were tariffs now and we don’t know the certainty of where they’ll be, but in December, we began shipping some items out of Thailand, that, formally were made in China. We’ve shifted other products to India.

And we’ve got a robust sourcing, but you can’t move overnight. And the tariff regime that has gone in place in two weeks means although there’s room to expand over six months, there’s not much room to change in two days. I hope that helps a little bit.

Jim Marrone: It does, Walter. Thank you for that clarity. And, again, good to order. Thanks.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Jeffrey Matthews with Ram Partners. Please proceed with your question.

Jeffrey Matthews: Thanks very much. I have three questions, Walter. The first is on guidance. You haven’t talked about the year ahead financially. And at the LD Micro conference last week, you did talk, I think it was three million dollars of inventory that you wisely bought ahead when the current administration was elected. I assume you’re on LIFO. So does that mean if you have to start ordering stuff from China, you’re gonna take a big hit in the near term on your cost of goods sold? Or do you is there just no clarity at all right now to make any kind of comment on that?

Paul Driscoll: We’re on FIFO, first of all.

Jeffrey Matthews: Oh, okay.

Paul Driscoll: Yeah. And I don’t expect a big hit. But we do have when we start that inventory that we brought in, is a safety stock, and it’s one that was very good to have done. You know, you eventually run through your inventory. And you do eventually have to buy at a higher price. And you have to match your pricing to your costs. So we’ve been modeling that very, very carefully. And we’ve gone through the first two tariff increases that occurred and that’s the first twenty percent. And we’re now implementing those increases. But the big one to a hundred and forty-five percent for China we haven’t. And we’re trying to be smart with it. As far as guidance, I think even Walmart pulled off guidance because you have to have a stability of your cost base to be able to forecast what your sales gonna be.

And I think that will occur. But it hasn’t occurred yet. And remember, this is the seventeenth, and I think it was April second when liberation day was announced. So it’s been two weeks of chaos. And a lot of modeling. And what we’ve done was we haven’t pushed through a price increase. We’ve kept our head and we’ve watched as things have unfolded. But we will begin to be announcing the next round of price increases, which will probably come pretty much matching the increased costs.

Jeffrey Matthews: Got it. Okay. Thanks on that. And then a follow-up on the acquisition side. In the past, you’ve been very opportunistic and I can’t think of a company with a better track record frankly. Maybe Berkshire Hathaway, if you exclude precision cast parts, but you’ve had a just a terrific track record on acquisitions. Could there be a larger, more transformative deal in this environment for you than you’ve typically done, or do you think it’s going to look more like the opportunistic smaller tuck in or new product line acquisitions that you’ve done in the past?

Paul Driscoll: Well, that’s an interesting question because what we’ve been doing opportunistically is when something fits well and the pricing is good, we’ve acted. And if it was a larger company, we have the wherewithal to do that. And it’s scalable. The team certainly knows how to execute the due diligence and the implementation of these transactions. So I’m certainly got an open mind to a larger deal. And there’s a good flow of things. But what I’m finding is when we call today for this list of companies that we’ve had over fifteen years, we’re getting a pretty favorable response as far as let’s figure out what might make sense. So it’s this change here, but as I pointed out, the difficulty is you’ve got a price right, and you’ve got a buy right. In a quickly changing environment. And it’s I can tell you, none of us has slept well very well for the last two weeks.

Jeffrey Matthews: Yeah.

Paul Driscoll: Yep.

Jeffrey Matthews: I can appreciate that. And then my third and final question, sort of to follow-up on the whole tariffs thing and what you’ve been going through the last couple weeks. There’s an idea that The Wall Street Journal talked about, which is that the administration is trying big picture to isolate China and they are trying to get other consuming countries or well, anybody out there to work more with the US and less with China as a way of isolating China. But given how you’ve always talked in the past about how efficient their manufacturing base is, how easy it is to source products, how easy it is to develop products there. It seems to me that’s a very long proposition. And I just wonder what your take on that idea is that they could isolate China and sort of win this battle.

Paul Driscoll: Well, I really don’t wanna get into philosophy on that. What I can tell you is the Chinese are very efficient. They’re very hardworking. I happen to enjoy being in China. And I’ll be there in June meeting with many of our factories. And the things that are going on that we read about in the US press is only half the story. And I would just suggest that the administration maybe take a lighter hand and look at the value China brings to the world because it’s a lot.

Jeffrey Matthews: Interesting. Thanks, Walter, and thanks, Paul, and congratulations and good luck. And as shareholders, we appreciate the hard work.

Operator: Thank you. Thanks. Our next question comes from Jake Patterson with Atlanta Investment Group. Please proceed with your question.

Jake Patterson: Hey, guys. Really just curious on the cutting revenue being down a decent bit this quarter. I know you guys mentioned you had a big benefit from last year, but even if I look at last year’s number and adjust out the divestments, that business is only up, like, two and a half percent. So just trying to kinda compare that to your comments from the last two calls about being pretty excited for Westcott in 2025, a new distribution, a big year ahead, and kinda curious to see if that is still the case.

Paul Driscoll: Jake, it’s hard to call going into where we are right now. The consumer will be impacted by increased prices. Now, you know, scissors are as an example, that’s our biggest line in Westcott. Are not particularly expensive. And what might be an increase in our cost when it gets to retail is a couple of dollars you know. So it’s not huge, but the consumer will be impacted overall because some things will go up a lot. And I would suggest things like cars, refrigerators, you know, capital goods. And there’ll be stressed. So there’s also uncertainty because there will be some layoffs and there have been some layoffs with the strategy administration’s doing. When you back out and you say, well, Westcott grew two and a half percent last year, that’s about right.

You know, it grows at two to four percent and then the first aid grows at eight to twelve percent. This quarter was fourteen. Did have a large promotion last year with a mass market retailer. It was very successful. Products are still in the planograms. They’re adding to them. The craft area continues to be a growth segment for us. We had a bankruptcy at the end of the year with Joanne Fabric. And so those customers are shopping elsewhere and we’re trying to address them. But the mix going forward I would expect Westcott to get hit harder than first aid in our medical side. Just because the consumer is going to be more stressed with the tariffs. Especially if it’s a hundred and forty-five percent. If that holds for China, again, it’s the biggest manufacturer in the world.

You just don’t jump to Vietnam. Which doesn’t have that many people anyway. I mean, this is impossible. I hope that helps a little bit.

Jake Patterson: Yeah. No. It definitely does. It definitely does. I guess, two one more quick one, I guess. So pivoting to the first aid business, I know you guys said you had a lot of trials for the new automatic refill kit. And it’s not I’m assuming that might be impacted a little bit too, but just wondering if there’s anything you can share on the progress there, what your customers are saying.

Paul Driscoll: Well, our customers, we’re at a trade show this month that was very successful, and it was one of the items that we had a great deal of interest in. With some pretty big customers. But, you know, it takes time to get these to actually occur. And it’s not in any forecasts. We think what those listening, what Jake is talking about is our smart compliance latest version of first aid. An industrial first aid kit with a scanner that can tell when the components are either obsolete, missing, or about to need to be reordered. It’s automatic replenishment. And the latest generation can be hardwired into a customer’s system, and automatically tell the safety manager it’s time to reorder. They can go to the distributor or us whoever the customer wants, to actually get the replenishment orders.

And it saves about a third to a half what they would normally spend for refills in a year. And that’s a lot. So it’s a very exciting product. And we think it’s gonna have a lot of legs. But it’s not in any forecast. So we’ll see. And as we get things to actually happen, Jake, then I’d love to talk about it. But right now, just be aware, we’ve introduced it.

Jake Patterson: Cool. Alright. Well, that’s all for me. I appreciate it.

Paul Driscoll: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from Richard Dearnley with Longport Partners. Please proceed with your question.

Richard Dearnley: Good morning. Just to play off Jeff’s question about the China policy. You it it looks like the administration, you know, wants to you know, the art of the deal, make a deal, be in the press, bump your chest, etcetera. It it’s and there was just an announcement that they’re they’re close to a deal with the EU one. On the news, you know, very recently. It it would seem logical to, you know, set China up as the bad guy and then make a deal. You know? I I realized that’s just just a random observation, but you have any thoughts about that? I mean, as you say they supply the world and, you know, bring a lot of value to the world and are probably not gonna go away.

Paul Driscoll: China is really integral to the world. And I think we’re looking at this very lopsided. You know, one of the things that I know being in the business we’re in, when COVID happened, and the world needed gloves and masks and personal protection equipment, China met it all. And they supplied them flawlessly again and again and again. And they expanded in a way that it was inconceivable. And they do a lot of good things, and I really am not in a position to figure out the strategy of the administration. If I did, I’d probably figure out how to price the product. And we don’t know that either. But Yeah. I don’t know their strategy.

Richard Dearnley: Yep. Right. I understand. Then the uptick in first aid how much of that increase do you think is longer-term organic versus, you know, first aid was was pretty flattish through 2024. And so it has an easy compares. Now you know? So and fourteen percent looks good, but it’s, you know, against easy numbers. Any feeling on that?

Paul Driscoll: Well, I never found numbers to be easy, to be honest. And where we are right now honestly, Dick, where we are right now, to be talking about, is it up fourteen, thirteen, twelve, could be up twenty-five. And part of it is where we price. So much right now in this the remainder of the year. Is what we price off the tariffs. And then you have organic growth underneath that. And you know, we’ve been saying for many years, first aid grows eight to twelve percent. And that’s probably what I would stick to. But there’s gonna be this year, there will be maybe a tariffs hold. There will be price increases. And there will be growth because of that in addition to the underlying organic. And that’ll be with Westcott as well. But, again, you’ve got a trade-off on some demand slide and we’ve modeled that internally. But there’s a lot of assumptions.

Richard Dearnley: Good. Thank you. Yep.

Operator: Our next question comes from Peter Mark with Mark Capital Management. Please proceed with your question.

Peter Mark: Hey, Walter. Jake already got my question. I was gonna follow-up just on the smart compliance and it sounds like things are going well. Just it’d be it’ll be interesting to get just kind of that installed base. Any any color you guys could give as the year progresses? I think that’d be good. But maybe as a second question, just the DMT pull through sharpeners, how first off, we’ve got both models. We like them at our house. We’re those things really do work. Are you looking to expand more into the kitchen with DMT, or what’s what’s kind of your thoughts around that product?

Paul Driscoll: So for those that don’t know, what we did in the past year was take the DMT sharpening stones made in Marlborough, Massachusetts. They’re arguably the best in the world. With the dispersion of diamonds and the flatness of the stones. And we put them in a patented sharpener. When you run the knife through it, the cones automatically adjust to the angle of the cutting edge of the blade. And so it’s accurate, and it really works. The product is now being sold in Europe. It’s being sold at a number of major mass market retailers in the US and we’re expanding off of that. And relative to going further into the kitchen area, I don’t see us going into forks and spoons and plates. But we could easily be putting higher-end and more stylish products on the market to some of the higher-end retailers.

And also industrial grade. So I think within that arena, it’s a very fertile area and we’re growing nicely and gaining market share. So small, but it’s an exciting piece for us. And it really as you point out, Peter, it really does work.

Peter Mark: Yeah. Definitely does. So well, thank you both, and great quarter.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Steve Chick with Sebas Capital. Sebas Garden Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Steve Chick: Hey. Thanks. Walter, if anybody can navigate through this environment, I think you guys. So the I had a question on if on front loading and with some of the inventory that you bought in advance, I think it says three million. I’m wondering if you’re seeing any activity from your customers thinking along the same lines. As we’re coming into or as when we’re in April here. Are you seeing customers trying to buy kind of advances, maybe the cost increases now?

Paul Driscoll: Well, as you can imagine, the customers that have placed orders with us we’re going to fill first. And so there’s a schedule for that. These are placed well in advance, and we’re prepared to supply them. There have been examples where some customers have wanted to buy, for example, all of our items in one area. And we just can’t do that. Because if we do it we’re not supplying the customers who worked with us long term and given us advanced orders. So it’s a very careful balance. We wanna solve everybody’s problem, but we also have customers with standing orders that have got to have priority. So throttling back sales may sound like an unusual situation, but until we reprice the book, we have to. Does that make sense to you, Steve?

Steve Chick: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think so. Can you just remind us of your inventory? What roughly is what percentage is sourced from China?

Paul Driscoll: We import about forty percent from China.

Steve Chick: Okay. Alright. Okay. Thank you. Good luck. Thanks. Thank you.

Operator: Very much. If you’d like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. One moment please while we follow for questions. There are no further questions, and we’ve reached the end of the question and answer session. I would now like to turn the call back over to Walter Johnsen for closing comments.

Walter Johnsen: I’d like to thank all of you for joining us. This really is a complicated time. And we are gonna do well with it. I’m confident of that. But it’s rocky. And I wanna thank you for attending this call. And we look forward to updating you in the coming quarters. As it unravels as it moves forward. How does it unravels? Just joking. Have a good day. Goodbye.

Operator: This concludes today’s conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. And we thank you for your participation.

Follow Acme United Corp (NYSE:ACU)