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Mattel Soars as Barbie Strength, Cost Cuts Fuel Wall Street Beat

Barbie hit billion-dollar mark with $1.09 billion in annual revenue, for the first time since 2014.

Mattel Soars as Barbie Strength, Cost Cuts Fuel Wall Street Beat
A child plays with a Barbie Saddle ‘N Ride Horse and Doll, manufactured by Mattel Inc., at the Toy Retailers Association DreamToys 2015 event in London, U.K. (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Mattel Inc. continued to shake off the liquidation of major customer Toys “R” Us Inc. and used aggressive cost cutting to blow past Wall Street estimates during the crucial holiday quarter. The shares rose sharply after the close of trading in New York.

  • Adjusted earnings of 4 cents a share were a welcome surprise for analysts who’d expected a loss of 14 cents.
Mattel Soars as Barbie Strength, Cost Cuts Fuel Wall Street Beat

Key Insights

  • Chief Executive Officer Ynon Kreiz set out a two-pronged strategy to turn around the ailing toymaker when he took the reins in April: first cut costs and boost profitability, then revive sales growth by creating more entertainment around properties such as Barbie and Hot Wheels. Step one is paying off, and step two is in the works.
  • Key to the profit beat was a big expansion in gross profit margin to 46.6 percent, a marked improvement from 30.7 percent a year ago. The company accelerated a cost-cutting program aimed at administrative expenses, which it slashed by double digits this quarter.
  • Barbie is once again a billion-dollar brand with $1.09 billion in annual revenue. That marks the first time it’s hit that threshold since 2014.
  • The impact of Toys “R” Us isn’t totally gone, with revenue posting a sixth-straight quarterly drop. But the drag should dissipate in the second half of 2019, Kreiz said in an interview on Thursday. “We aren’t claiming victory,” he said. “We have a long way to go, but we are tracking well.”
  • Investors interested in the state of the toy industry will get more color on Friday when rival Hasbro Inc. reports.

Market Reaction

  • Shares rose as much as 19 percent on Thursday in after-hours trading.
  • Through Thursday, the stock had fallen 27 percent in the past year, compared to a 0.9 percent gain for the S&P 500.
  • Read more here.

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

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anne Riley Moffat at ariley17@bloomberg.net

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