Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dixie Group sales drop 50% in April, but carpet rebounding

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfree press.com or at 423-7576340.

Sales of carpets, rugs and floor tiles made by the Dixie Group, Inc. fell 50% last month and are expected to be down 35% in May.

But company CEO Dan Frierson said Tuesday he expects floor covering sales to be more normal by the end of the year as the economy reopens and improves in the second half of 2020. By cutting costs and improving efficiency, Dixie Group also cut its operating losses in the first quarter compared with a year ago despite a 9.1% drop in sales during the three-month period.

The Dalton, Georgiabas­ed carpet manufactur­er reported Tuesday an operating loss of $2.6 million, or 17 cents per share, in the first quarter of 2020 on sales of $80.6 million. A year earlier, Dixie reported a loss of $6.6 million, or 42 cents per share, on sales of $88.6 million.

“We had a slow start to our sales in January, but improved in February before finally seeing the slide in sales due to the COVID-19 crisis impact on us the last three weeks of the quarter,” Frierson said.

The sales slump worsened during the start of the second quarter with the lowest sales in the second week of April, but Frierson said sales have since gotten better over the past month.

“Our low point in orders occurred around the Easter holiday and have improved each week since that time.,” he said.

In response to the coronaviru­s, Dixie implemente­d safety measures for employees and cut travel, costs and staff, Frierson said.

” We have had several cases of COVID-19 exposure in our operations for which we took appropriat­e cleaning and safety measures, including large scale

COVID-19 testing, mandatory temperatur­e checks prior to starting work, and deep cleaning and sanitation,” he said.

“We have reduced our running schedules for most facilities to one shift, just beneath our shipping levels, so we could maintain order flow to those customers for which we still had requiremen­ts, while simultaneo­usly reducing inventorie­s to align them with our lower customer demand.”

Frierson said Dixie has reduced anticipate­d spending in the current year by about $14 million by reducing capital expenditur­es, cutting some jobs and making temporary salary reductions. Dixie also has deferred new product introducti­ons and reduced sample and marketing expenses for 2020.

“Many of our customers are reopening and beginning to generate business,” Frierson said. “We would expect business to continue improving and be at more normal levels later this year.”

In the meantime, Dixie is taking advantage of deferral of payrollrel­ated taxes under the CARE act as well as deferring payments into the company’s defined contributi­on retirement plan.

“We have modified our senior credit facility to provide additional flexibilit­y with regard to loan availabili­ty during this uncertain period,” Frierson said. “This bank amendment to our senior credit facility has increased our borrowing costs slightly while reducing the size of the lending facility to better fit our reduced borrowing base as we continue to reduce our inventorie­s to improve liquidity. The company’s availabili­ty under its long term credit agreement is currently $10.7 million. As part of the modificati­on to the senior debt facility, the company has agreed to pursue additional fixed asset loans. However, if the economic crisis is more severe than anticipate­d it will seek additional sources of funding and/ or other actions as deemed necessary.”

After the earnings results were announced Tuesday, Dixie Group shares dropped by nearly 5.3%. Dixie shares are down 36.8% so far in 2020, but over the past year, Dixie shares are up 14.2%.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Spools of thread spin in the creeling area of the Dixie Group plant in Eton, Ga.
STAFF FILE PHOTO Spools of thread spin in the creeling area of the Dixie Group plant in Eton, Ga.

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