The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company (NYSE: SMG) said consumer purchases of its core lawn and garden brands surged in May with unit volume now trending towards the company’s original assumptions for the season. However, a variety of factors are causing Scotts to lower its outlook for both sales and adjusted earnings for fiscal 2022. the stock was sliding over 13% in early trading to $88.50. The 52-week high for the stock was $204.
Adjusted earnings per share are now expected in a range of $4.50 to $5.00. U.S. Consumer sales are expected to decline by 4 to 6%. The hydroponic subsidiary Hawthorne says its sales are now expected to decline 40 to 45% for the year ending September 30, 2022. Entering May, Hawthorne sales had begun to show signs of strengthening but momentum in the business slowed again during the month as expected improvement in outdoor cultivation has been slow to materialize.
“The recent improvement in consumer engagement has POS units trending toward our initial expectations and we expect further gains as the year continues,” said Jim Hagedorn, chairman and chief executive officer. “POS dollars, however, will likely fall short of our initial assumption of flat from 2021 levels due primarily to above average declines in lawn fertilizer and grass seed, which command higher prices and margins but also tend to be more susceptible to poor spring weather. While there remains enough time in the year to see continued improvement in our controls and gardening categories, that is not likely to be the case with most of the products in our lawn care portfolio.
Consumer purchases at the company’s largest retail partners were at near-record levels in May, resulting in year-to-date POS that is approximately 6 percent lower in dollars and 9 percent lower in units than a year ago. The year-over-year decline at the end of May was half of what it had been entering the month due to strong results in all major markets in the Midwest and Northeast.“Also, while it is encouraging that consumers have demonstrated lawn and garden activity remains an important part of their lifestyle, we did not see the replenishment orders we expected from our retailer partners since mid-May. In fact, retailer orders were more than $300 million below our plans for the month in the U.S. Consumer segment alone. This surprising trend has put significantly greater pressure on our fixed cost structure that, when coupled with the commodity cost increases we have experienced since the start of the war in Ukraine, will cause us to fall well short of the revised financial targets we established in March.”
“The changes we have seen since our last public comments in early May are clearly not what we would have expected,” Hagedorn said. “The revised guidance we are providing is our best estimate of where things currently stand in a fluid and rapidly evolving market. While we are striving to deliver the best outcome for fiscal 2022, our focus is shifting toward the future. We are committed to taking decisive steps to improve our margins and cash flow in fiscal 2023 and get the business back to a level of performance that our shareholders rightfully expect.”
The company also said it is engaged in highly productive discussions with its lenders to obtain a temporary increase in the leverage ratio allowed under a revised credit facility.
“We have stated for years that our comfort zone for leverage is 3.5 times debt-to-EBITDA and current facility allows for leverage up to 4.5 times,” said Cory Miller, executive vice president, and chief financial officer. “Given the external factors currently impacting the business, we are seeking to adjust our debt covenants to allow for up to two additional turns of leverage in the near term to maintain the appropriate level of flexibility in navigating the current market conditions. Obviously, we are focused on implementing aggressive plans to improve cash flow, reduce debt, and return leverage to our target levels as quickly as possible.”
Over the past month, the company also said it has moved aggressively to reduce full-year SG&A through a series of organizational changes that created operational and management-level efficiencies.
“The decisive steps we have taken to reduce expenses will result in a year-over-year decline of 12 to 13 percent in SG&A for fiscal 2022,” Miller said. “We would expect to incur restructuring charges in both the third and fourth fiscal quarters as a result of these actions which we would remove from our adjusted earnings for the year, consistent with our long-held practices related to these non-recurring costs.”