ADVERTISEMENT

Mattel Drops After Slump Deepens, Leaving New CEO Scrambling

Mattel to Slash Costs, Suspend Dividend as Revenue Plummets

(Bloomberg) -- Mattel Inc.’s stock tumbled to levels not seen since the financial crisis after a surprisingly sharp sales decline, leaving new Chief Executive Officer Margo Georgiadis racing to overhaul the maker of Barbie and Fisher-Price.

In the wake of the dismal results, which included a deeper net loss, Georgiadis vowed to increase the company’s cost-cutting plan threefold and suspend Mattel’s dividend. The payout to shareholders had already been slashed by about 60 percent earlier this year.

The bankruptcy of Toys “R” Us Inc. torpedoed sales, especially in North America. And the company is still reeling from the loss of its Disney Princess franchise to Hasbro Inc. in recent years. Barbie, Mattel’s biggest product, also has been attempting a comeback -- with uneven results.

“We’re completely reinventing Mattel and making the tough decisions necessary to jump-start growth and profitability,” Georgiadis said in an interview. “2017, in my view, is a reset year for Mattel. We will start to see the benefits of the transformation into 2018.”

Georgiadis, who joined the company in February, plans to reduce expenses by $650 million over the next two years -- up from a $200 million projection in June. Not paying a dividend in the fourth quarter will also free up $50 million.

The extra cash will come in handy after sales declined 13 percent to $1.56 billion last quarter. Analysts projected revenue of $1.8 billion. North America was especially hard hit, with sales there falling 22 percent. Half of that decline came from the disruption caused by Toys “R” Us’s Chapter 11 filing in September, Georgiadis said. Hasbro said the bankruptcy also weighed on its quarterly results even though sales and profit topped analysts’ projections.

Mattel Drops After Slump Deepens, Leaving New CEO Scrambling

Mattel is also talking to its banking partners about alternative forms of financing, including an asset-backed loan, said Chief Financial Officer Joe Euteneuer, who joined from Sprint Communications Inc. last month. The company has $250 million in bonds maturing in March.

The shares fell as much as 17 percent to $12.71 on Friday. That’s the biggest intraday drop since January and the lowest price since April 2009. The stock had already declined 44 percent this year through Thursday.

Profit was 9 cents, excluding some items, trailing a forecast of 57 cents by analysts. The company had a net loss of $1.75 a share, including a charge of $561.9 million from a valuation allowance on deferred tax assets. Meanwhile, revenue overseas rose 1.4 percent to $675.2 million.

“We definitely had a tough quarter and we are working our way through it,” Georgiadis said.

The revenue declines were widespread, with Barbie falling 6 percent and Hot Wheels 4 percent. Fisher-Price dropped 15 percent, and American Girl tumbled 30 percent.

Management Changes

The company’s woes have stretched out over three years, as the loss of the main Disney Princess and Frozen licenses -- coupled with the decline of once strong brands like Monster High -- have bludgeoned the stock’s value. The world’s largest toymaker brought in Georgiadis, a former Google executive, to accelerate the company’s plans. She has so far revamped the management team, including CFO Euteneuer.

Georgiadis has said Mattel’s products need to adapt to the way kids are now being raised, citing toddlers on iPads and education-obsessed parents. This will lead to a big push in digital content, internet-connected toys and products that promote learning, she said. She also wants to expand into gaming, live experiences and other categories of products.

“We have seen multiple head fakes before with this turnaround and are wary of the latest and greatest ideas,” said Eric Handler, an analyst for MKM Partners LLC.

Fewer Products

The cost-cutting is focused on simplifying the company -- Mattel will reduce the number of products it makes by 40 percent, Georgiadis said. When Mattel lost Disney, it tried to fill the revenue hole of about $500 million by launching new brands. Many of them didn’t pan out, and will be discontinued. That will allow it to spend more on building its core brands like Barbie, Hot Wheels, American Girl and Fisher-Price, she said.

Georgiadis reiterated that the long-term goal is to still reach mid- to high-single-digit sales growth and an operating profit margin of 15 percent.

“Now we’ll have the resources we need to free up to invest,” Georgiadis said. “I’m excited about the progress we’re making, despite some of the challenges in the quarter.”

--With assistance from Jonathan Roeder

To contact the reporter on this story: Matt Townsend in New York at mtownsend9@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nick Turner at nturner7@bloomberg.net, Lisa Wolfson

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.