Los Angeles Times

Hasbro posts a weak 3rd quarter

Company is facing the rise of smartphone­s as playthings and the demise of Toys R Us.

- Associated press

Hasbro Inc., wrestling with the demise of Toys R Us and elusive shoppers spending a lot more on high-tech gadgets, posted third-quarter results Monday that fell well short of expectatio­ns.

The Pawtucket, R.I., toy maker will absorb charges of as much as $60 million next quarter as it cuts jobs.

The job cuts are part of a restructur­ing of sorts for Hasbro as the company adjusts to new challenges, such as changes in the supply chain and toy distributi­on patterns, said Susan Anderson, senior research analyst at B. Riley FBR.

One of those changes is the volume of toys its trucks carry to retailers. Now that Hasbro is working with “a great variety” of retailers, trucks carry smaller quantities of toys to a number of locations, meaning some have less than full shipments, the company said during a Monday morning earnings call with analysts.

“While they had to make some tough decisions, it’s more about realigning it for the future,” Anderson said.

Mattel Inc., Hasbro’s rival, said in July that it would cut more than 2,200 jobs. Both toy makers have acknowledg­ed they’ve been hurt this year by the closure of Toys R Us, which was the largest independen­t toy seller in the world.

Hasbro shares closed at $95.01, down 3.1%, after recovering some of their losses from earlier in the day. Shares of El Segundo-based Mattel, which is slated to report earnings Thursday, closed at $14.10, down 0.8%.

Hasbro’s quarterly earnings don’t necessaril­y foreshadow similar results for Mattel, analysts said. Mattel is coming off of smaller margins than Hasbro and already has been trying to turn itself around, said Linda Bolton Weiser, senior research analyst at D.A. Davidson & Co.

“Mattel has already done so much restructur­ing,” Anderson said. “They were kind of further along there.”

It was the first full quarter that Hasbro lacked Toys R Us as a customer.

“We continue to believe this is a near-term retail disruption that will last for the next few quarters,” Chairman and Chief Executive Brian Goldner said during the conference call.

Brett Andress, equity research analyst at KeyBanc Capital Markets, said in a Monday note to clients that the Toys R Us “disruption” in Hasbro’s earnings was “worse than feared.”

Sales of games and toys at bricks-and-mortar stores fell in the quarter, but Goldner said that online sales climbed by the high single digits at the same time.

The lost Toys R Us revenue hurt Hasbro most notably in the United States, Europe, Australia and Asia, with Goldner adding that the company has recaptured about one-third of the U.S. and Canada Toys R Us revenue heading into the holiday shopping season.

“We are successful­ly managing retail inventory, and it is down significan­tly in the U.S. and in Europe, where we are aggressive­ly working to clear excess inventory by year end,” Goldner said.

He told analysts on a Monday earnings call that although Hasbro’s revenue from online retailers was growing, it had not yet offset the decline from Toys R Us and other retailers. But the goal this holiday sales season is not necessaril­y to sell as much as it did when Toys R Us was active, he said.

“What we’re working on with our retailers is to ensure we get to a new, higher level of commitment and capability,” Goldner said. “We are very committed to 2019 being a year of growth.”

Hasbro expects its fullyear operating profit margin to decline compared with last year, said Deborah Thomas, the company’s chief financial officer. However, she said, Hasbro believes it will return to “profitable growth” in 2019.

“This is a very proactive company,” Weiser said. “They’re always looking for opportunit­ies to become more streamline­d and efficient.”

In the most recent quarter, revenue dropped 12%, partly because of lost sales of its products at Toys R Us stores in the United States, Europe and the Asia Pacific region.

Hasbro’s third-quarter earnings slipped to $263.9 million, or $2.06 per share. Adjusted for pretax gains, per-share earnings were $1.93, far below Wall Street projection­s of $2.24, according to a survey by Zacks Investment Research.

Revenue of $1.57 billion also missed analyst expectatio­ns for $1.71 billion. Hasbro experience­d a 24% drop in internatio­nal revenue, with Europe sinking 29%, Latin America sliding 16% and the Asia Pacific region declining 14%.

Tablets and smartphone­s have become the most desired toys in many households, and that is taking a toll on the sale of more traditiona­l playthings.

Sales fell for Nerf, My Little Pony and Transforme­rs products in the quarter, but Hasbro did put up some very strong numbers in the same period last year thanks to new My Little Pony and Transforme­rs movies.

Times staff writer Samantha Masunaga contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? HASBRO’S SALES of toys and games, which include Mighty Muggs figures, fell at bricks-and-mortar stores during the third quarter, but online sales went up.
Richard Drew Associated Press HASBRO’S SALES of toys and games, which include Mighty Muggs figures, fell at bricks-and-mortar stores during the third quarter, but online sales went up.

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