- Expect to achieve $10.0 - $11.0 million in annualized savings
and operating improvements with restructuring initiatives
- Expect a return to break even operating results at current
industry demand levels post restructuring
- Cash restructuring charges (estimated at $2.5 million) expected
to be funded with proceeds from equipment sales
- Anticipate receiving at least $10.0 to $12.0 million in cash
proceeds (net of all taxes and commissions) from sale of real
estate associated with restructuring plan
Culp, Inc. (NYSE: CULP) (together with its consolidated
subsidiaries, “CULP”) today announced a major restructuring plan
designed to reduce costs, improve asset utilization, and drive
performance and profitable growth. This plan, which is being
implemented primarily in the company’s mattress fabrics segment
and, to a lesser extent, in its upholstery fabrics segment,
includes the following strategic actions:
- Consolidating the company’s North American mattress fabrics
operations, including a phased wind-down and closure of the
company’s manufacturing plant in Quebec, Canada, and moving
knitting and finishing capacity from this plant to the company’s
facility in Stokesdale, North Carolina;
- Improving efficiency and through-put by optimizing volume and
equipment in the company’s mattress fabrics operation in
Stokesdale, North Carolina, to reduce costs and improve
quality;
- Transitioning the mattress fabrics segment’s weaving operation
to a strategic sourcing model through the company’s long standing
supply partners, enhancing competitiveness and value for
customers;
- Consolidating the company’s Haiti sewn mattress cover operation
(which is located on the Dominican Republic/Haiti border) into one
building and significantly reducing operating expenses at that
location;
- Restructuring the company’s upholstery fabrics finishing
operation in China to align with current demand and continuing to
leverage strategic supply relationships; and
- Reducing unallocated corporate and shared services expenses
with targeted annualized savings of $1.5 million.
The implementation of these restructuring actions will begin
immediately and is expected to be mostly completed by the end of
the calendar year.
Iv Culp, president and chief executive officer of Culp, Inc.,
said, “Our industry faces unprecedented challenges, including
macro-economic headwinds pressuring consumer discretionary spending
and housing markets, as well as changes in consumer spending
patterns. Through the third quarter of fiscal 2024, we were pleased
with the sequential improvement we were making in a tough demand
environment, especially the approximately 20.0 percent
year-over-year revenue growth in our mattress fabrics segment
during both the second and third quarter of the fiscal year.
However, the industry demand backdrop in both of our businesses
experienced significant deterioration during the fourth quarter of
fiscal 2024, with much of our customer base advising of sales
declines of at least 20 percent. These challenges have reduced
demand for our products, resulting in excess capacity and an
unsustainable cost structure at current volume levels within our
mattress fabrics business. With no ascertainable catalysts that
might be expected to drive industry recovery in the near term, we
now believe the operating environment will remain pressured for
some time. As a result, we are taking aggressive action to bring
our manufacturing costs and capacity in line with current and
expected demand trends. Importantly, the changes we are making to
remove redundancies and transition to a more agile model will not
hinder our ability to grow our business going forward, but they
will enable us to grow more efficiently and profitably with a lower
level of fixed assets.
“Overall, these restructuring actions will reduce the number of
associates in our mattress fabrics segment by approximately 240
people, representing around 35 percent of the segment’s total
workforce. By taking these steps, we believe we can substantially
reduce our fixed costs without materially impacting our top-line
sales and without sacrificing our ability to support our customers,
grow our business, and maintain our competitive advantage. We also
believe these steps will enable us to optimize resources, improve
quality, leverage our strong global strategic partnerships, bolster
our balance sheet, and ensure a solid foundation for accelerated
growth. We are diligently focused on returning our business to
profitability, while growing our innovative product portfolio to
enhance customer and shareholder value.
“Although these are very difficult decisions, they are necessary
steps for CULP to ensure a sustainable business model and return to
profitability in this lower demand environment. We sincerely regret
the impact on our affected employees, but we remain confident in
the company’s future,” added Culp.
Financial Impact
In total, the restructuring plan is expected to generate $10.0 -
$11.0 million in annualized cost savings and operating improvements
when fully implemented by the end of the calendar year, with most
of the resulting benefit realized during the second half of the
fiscal year.
The company expects to incur restructuring and
restructuring-related costs and charges of approximately $8.0
million, of which $2.6 million are anticipated to be incurred in
the first quarter of fiscal 2025, and the remainder are expected to
be incurred over the course of fiscal 2025. This includes
approximately $2.5 million in cash costs, the majority of which are
anticipated to be incurred in the first half of fiscal 2025. The
company expects to fund these cash costs with the sale of
manufacturing equipment. These restructuring and
restructuring-related costs and charges exclude any gain on the
sale of real estate, the amount and timing of which is currently
unknown but which will ultimately be recorded within restructuring
expense and will reduce the amount of the restructuring charges
incurred. The company currently anticipates receiving at least
$10.0 to $12.0 million in cash proceeds (net of all taxes and
commissions) from the sale of real estate under the restructuring
plan. Assuming the completion of all of these restructuring actions
and the sale of associated real estate by the end of fiscal 2025,
the company currently projects its cash and cash equivalents as of
the end of fiscal 2025 to be higher than its cash and cash
equivalents as of the end of fiscal 2024.
Updated Financial Outlook for the Fourth Quarter of Fiscal
2024
In addition, the company is updating its previously stated
financial outlook for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024. Due to
further weakness in industry demand, the company’s consolidated net
sales for the fourth quarter are now expected to be approximately
19.0 percent lower as compared to the fourth quarter of fiscal
2023. The company also now expects a consolidated operating loss
(loss from operations) for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024 in the
range of $(4.2) million to $(4.7) million. Additionally, the
company expects to end the fiscal year with approximately $10.0
million in cash and cash equivalents and no outstanding borrowings.
The financial results for the fourth quarter and full fiscal 2024
year will be released on or about June 26, 2024.
About the Company
Culp, Inc. is one of the world’s largest marketers of mattress
fabrics for bedding and upholstery fabrics for residential and
commercial furniture. The company markets a variety of fabrics to
its global customer base of leading bedding and furniture
companies, including fabrics produced at Culp’s manufacturing
facilities and fabrics sourced through other suppliers. Culp has
manufacturing and sourcing capabilities located in the United
States, Canada, China, Haiti, Turkey, and Vietnam.
Forward Looking Statements
This release contains “forward-looking statements” within the
meaning of the federal securities laws, including the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (Section 27A of the
Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities and
Exchange Act of 1934). Such statements are inherently subject to
risks and uncertainties that may cause actual events and results to
differ materially from such statements. Further, forward looking
statements are intended to speak only as of the date on which they
are made, and we disclaim any duty to update such statements to
reflect any changes in management’s expectations or any change in
the assumptions or circumstances on which such statements are
based, whether due to new information, future events, or otherwise.
Forward-looking statements are statements that include projections,
expectations, or beliefs about future events or results or
otherwise are not statements of historical fact. Such statements
are often but not always characterized by qualifying words such as
“expect,” “believe,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “intend,” “plan,”
“project,” and their derivatives, and include but are not limited
to statements about expectations, projections, or trends for our
future operations, strategic initiatives and plans, production
levels, new product launches, sales, profit margins, profitability,
operating income, capital expenditures, working capital levels,
cost savings, income taxes, SG&A or other expenses, pre-tax
income, earnings, cash flow, and other performance or liquidity
measures, as well as any statements regarding dividends, share
repurchases, liquidity, use of cash and cash requirements,
borrowing capacity, investments, potential acquisitions, future
economic or industry trends, public health epidemics, or future
developments. There can be no assurance that we will realize these
expectations or meet our guidance, or that these beliefs will prove
correct.
Factors that could influence the matters discussed in such
statements include the level of housing starts and sales of
existing homes, consumer confidence, trends in disposable income,
and general economic conditions. Decreases in these economic
indicators could have a negative effect on our business and
prospects. Likewise, increases in interest rates, particularly home
mortgage rates, and increases in consumer debt or the general rate
of inflation, could affect us adversely. The future performance of
our business depends in part on our success in conducting and
finalizing acquisition negotiations and integrating acquired
businesses into our existing operations. Changes in consumer tastes
or preferences toward products not produced by us could erode
demand for our products. Changes in tariffs or trade policy,
including changes in U.S. trade enforcement priorities, or changes
in the value of the U.S. dollar versus other currencies, could
affect our financial results because a significant portion of our
operations are located outside the United States. Strengthening of
the U.S. dollar against other currencies could make our products
less competitive on the basis of price in markets outside the
United States, and strengthening of currencies in Canada and China
can have a negative impact on our sales of products produced in
those places. In addition, because our foreign operations use the
U.S. dollar as their functional currency, changes in the exchange
rate between the local currency of those operations and the U.S
dollar can affect our reported profits from those foreign
operations. Also, economic or political instability in
international areas could affect our operations or sources of goods
in those areas, as well as demand for our products in international
markets. The impact of public health epidemics on employees,
customers, suppliers, and the global economy, such as the global
coronavirus pandemic currently affecting countries around the
world, could also adversely affect our operations and financial
performance. In addition, the impact of potential asset
impairments, including impairments of property, plant, and
equipment, inventory, or intangible assets, as well as the impact
of valuation allowances applied against our net deferred income tax
assets, could affect our financial results. Increases in freight
costs, labor costs, and raw material prices, including increases in
market prices for petrochemical products, can also significantly
affect the prices we pay for shipping, labor, and raw materials,
respectively, and in turn, increase our operating costs and
decrease our profitability. Finally, our success in diversifying
our supply chain with reliable partners to effectively service our
global platform could affect our operations and adversely affect
our financial results. Further information about these factors, as
well as other factors that could affect our future operations or
financial results and the matters discussed in forward-looking
statements, is included in Item 1A “Risk Factors” in our most
recent Form 10-K and Form 10-Q reports filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission. A forward-looking statement is neither a
prediction nor a guarantee of future events or circumstances, and
those future events or circumstances may not occur. Additional
risks and uncertainties that we do not presently know about or that
we currently consider to be immaterial may also affect our business
operations and financial results.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240501335295/en/
Investor Relations Contact Ken Bowling, Executive Vice
President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer: (336) 881-5630
krbowling@culp.com
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