The News
Friday 29 of March 2024

Mattel, Hasbro results show diverging post-Toys R Us paths


FILE - This April 26, 2018, file photo, shows the Hasbro logo at the TTPM 2018 Spring Showcase, in New York.  Hasbro returned to a profit in its fourth quarter, but the toy company's performance still fell short of Wall Street's expectations as it continues to deal with the demise of Toys R Us. Shares tumbled more than 8 percent in Friday, Feb. 8, 2019 premarket trading.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File),FILE - This April 26, 2018, file photo, shows the Hasbro logo at the TTPM 2018 Spring Showcase, in New York.  Hasbro returned to a profit in its fourth quarter, but the toy company's performance still fell short of Wall Street's expectations as it continues to deal with the demise of Toys R Us. Shares tumbled more than 8 percent in Friday, Feb. 8, 2019 premarket trading.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)
FILE - This April 26, 2018, file photo, shows the Hasbro logo at the TTPM 2018 Spring Showcase, in New York. Hasbro returned to a profit in its fourth quarter, but the toy company's performance still fell short of Wall Street's expectations as it continues to deal with the demise of Toys R Us. Shares tumbled more than 8 percent in Friday, Feb. 8, 2019 premarket trading. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File),FILE - This April 26, 2018, file photo, shows the Hasbro logo at the TTPM 2018 Spring Showcase, in New York. Hasbro returned to a profit in its fourth quarter, but the toy company's performance still fell short of Wall Street's expectations as it continues to deal with the demise of Toys R Us. Shares tumbled more than 8 percent in Friday, Feb. 8, 2019 premarket trading. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Quarterly reports from Mattel and Hasbro show that while the demise of Toys R Us has shaken up the industry, the two dominant toymakers’ paths are diverging less than a year later.

Late Thursday, Mattel posted better-than-expected earnings per share and revenue for the key holiday quarter, sending its shares up sharply. The maker of Barbies and Hot Wheels named a new CEO last April and has launched a restructuring that is starting to take hold, analysts said.

For the three months ended in December, Mattel swung to a profit of $14.9 million, or 4 cents per share, after posting a loss a year earlier. Revenue of $1.52 billion was down 5 percent year over year, but topped estimates. The loss of Toys R Us — which liquidated its stores in the spring — lead to an 8 percent drop in sales, while a slowdown in China contributed to a 2 percent headwind.

Still, El Segundo, California-based Mattel Inc. reported that it achieved $521 million in savings during the fourth quarter and expects to exceed its savings target of at least $650 million this year. Under its restructuring program it’s cutting 2,200 jobs worldwide, mainly office workers.

“While it’s still early days of the turnaround and there are areas to improve (Fisher Price, American Girl, etc.), we’re encouraged by the early signs of progress and think delivering above-plan cost savings should help as we enter 2019,” Citi analyst Gregory Badishkanian wrote in a note to investors.

Its stock rallied 21 percent in afternoon trading Friday, to $15. That puts it up 50 percent in the year to date.

While Hasbro Inc. also returned to a profit in the fourth quarter, the Pawtucket, Rhode Island-based maker of Nerf and Power Rangers again missed Wall Street expectations for both sales and net income, following a shortfall in the third quarter.

The company earned $8.8 million, or 7 cents per share, for the period ended Dec. 30. A year earlier it lost $5.3 million, or 4 cents per share. Stripping out one-time gains and costs, earnings were $1.33 per share. That’s sharply below the $1.68 per share that analysts polled by Zacks Investment Research expected.

Revenue dropped 13 percent to $1.39 billion, short of the $1.52 billion Wall Street predicted.

Chairman and CEO Brian Goldner said in a statement that Hasbro wasn’t able to recapture as much of the Toys R Us business during the holidays as it expected. The company was also contending with changing consumer behaviors in Europe — sales there declined 22 percent — and reduced retail inventory, he added.

Its shares slid 4.5 percent to $86.22.

Stifel analyst Drew E. Crum, who has a “Hold” rating on the stock, called the report “disappointing.”

“While we continue to expect growth this year, we believe downward revisions to numbers are forthcoming,” he wrote in a note.