David M. Maura
Thanks, Joanne. Good morning, everybody. Welcome to our third quarter earnings update. I want to thank everyone for joining us today. I'll start the call as usual with an update on kind of the global economic markets and their impact on our company. We'll then talk about Spectrum's operating performance and then our strategic initiatives. Jeremy, as usual, will then provide a more detailed financial and operational update, including a discussion on the more specific results of each business unit. If I could get you guys to turn to Slide 6 now. When we spoke last quarter, the company had been hit with what I'm now calling the tariff torpedo. That really disrupted practically every aspect of how we do business around here, operating when the cost of your products can more than double overnight, is something we never really thought we'd experience. Frankly, about 20% of our global cost of goods sold at the time was sourced from China for the U.S. market and the cost of importing that product for sales to the U.S. consumer was suddenly so high, we had to take very swift and quite frankly, draconian actions to protect the company. I told you last quarter that we would control, we would be nimble and we would protect the house. We were resolute in our conviction that we would not sacrifice the long-term health of our business for any sort of short-term gain I was confident that we would get through the near- term volatility and emerge a stronger and more focused competitor in our space. We knew that there would be short-term consequences to these decisions but we also believe that doing the right thing for the long term would outweigh any sort of short-term gain. As I sit here today, 90 days later, I'm confident that we've made the right decisions. We took the challenges head on. We felt the impacts on our results this quarter, but we're now already starting to see the benefits of making these difficult but correct decisions. Doing the difficult but right thing meant we had material supply issues in the third quarter. You'll recall that when you have tariff -- U.S. tariff rates on Chinese-sourced products went to 145% and in some cases, up to 170%. Earlier this year, we paused virtually all finished good purchases from China until such time the tariff levels declined to a place where we believe we could maintain profitability and margins. In mid-May, when the U.S. tariff rate on Chinese imports dropped to 30%, only then did our businesses begin to strategically place orders again, and we only bought product where we knew we could price them for tariffs. Turning to the supply chain took time because we completely shut it off. We were negotiating supplier pricing concessions, we were prioritizing production runs, and we were making arrangement with ocean freight carriers. We genuinely have 1 of the best supply chain teams in the industry today. But even with them at the helm, we went up to 8 weeks without any importation of product, and that left us out of stock on some of our main SKUs. Regular supply is now back on. But in this case, doing the right thing, we had orders we simply couldn't fill in our Global Pet Care and Home & Personal Care businesses during the third quarter. Some of that will continue into Q4 as well. Doing the difficult but right thing meant that we stop shipping to some customers. When we faced material inflationary headwinds, our playbook is to cover our margin structure through a combination of supplier concessions, internal cost reductions and yes, unfortunately, pricing. So with each round of tariffs, we had to notify our customers that we will be increasing prices. No pricing negotiation with a retail customer is easy. But generally, we seek to be in a mutually agreeable place to arrive at a logical point given the inflationary headwinds. But when these negotiations stall, we simply have no choice but to stop shipping to the customer and allow the negotiation to play out. We know that our products matter not only to our retailers but to our ultimate consumers. And we need to protect our bottom line in part through pricing. With all the tariff headwinds this year, and even with that the lower Chinese tariff levels, it simply wasn't practical for us to absorb all the cost of tariffs without increasing some prices. Unfortunately, some of our negotiations lasted much longer than others, which meant we had to stop shipping to certain customers while those negotiations were ongoing. In fact, in some of these cases, the customers were quite large, and they were our key customers and the stop shipment lasted weeks. The good news is that we have now -- we now have tariff-related pricing in place with practically all of our customers and our sales levels are already improving. Again, doing the right thing to avoid massive long-term P&L hits, we had to lose a significant amount of revenue in the third quarter. Doing the difficult but right thing also meant we had to look internally, unfortunately, and we had to reduce our own costs. During the quarter, we executed a number of reduction in force activities that spanned across all the businesses and our corporate functions. We have either eliminated open positions or delayed their backfill. We had to adjust our investment spend to reflect the state of the business and the consumer environment. We've had to prioritize investments that would be the most impactful to both this year and into the future given softer consumer demand in some of our categories. We also reduced discretionary and external spend and we've been shrinking the real estate footprint of our company by rightsizing office spaces, warehouses and distribution centers. I'm very pleased that despite these tough decisions, these cost reduction activities that we engaged in and then we've implemented literally in the last 90 days, we now expect to reduce our costs by over $50 million in the fiscal year, fiscal '25. That's a lot of work in a 90-day period of time. We also have been working hard to diversify the supplier base across the board. The teams are continuing to create diversified sourcing footprints for our global products developing and activating non-Chinese sourcing alternatives. Our goal is to have the lowest all-in cost of supply for each of our markets. We expect that China will likely be the low-cost supply base for our international markets because of its cost advantages and its manufacturing efficiencies. Now for the U.S. market, sourcing outside of China even there may not always be the lowest cost option due to tariffs on other Asian countries. However, with the recently announced reciprocal tariffs and the trade agreement between the U.S. and China not finalized, it is possible that Chinese sourcing can still be a low-cost option. We have to be nimble. We're doing the work that provides us the highest level of flexibility to react to whatever the volatility there may be in the marketplace going forward. We are still working toward the targets we discussed during our last call, with GPC or our Global Pet Care company, having non- Chinese sourcing alternatives for the predominance of its purchases by this calendar year-end, and HPC continuing to build out its non-Chinese sourcing footprint throughout the remainder of fiscal '25 and growing it in '26. However, the drop in Chinese tariff levels has provided some relief to these diversification efforts, and they're giving us a slightly longer time frame in which to address it. If the relative tariff rates change, we will return to an accelerated path to exit China, ensuring we have quality product finding the right long-term solution for the company is the priority. With our initial rounds of pricing and supplier concessions, we have essentially eliminated our tariff exposure at the end of Q3. I'm very proud to make that statement. Based on the current known trade agreements between the U.S., the European Union and other relevant countries that we source from, we are now targeting an incremental $20 million to $25 million worth of pricing and supplier concessions across the 3 businesses to fully cover what we believe will be the incremental exposure heading into fiscal 2026. Our ability to do the difficult but right thing is enabled by our balance sheet, which is exceptionally strong. Our strong free cash flow generation, the low leverage of the business and our ample liquidity and extended debt maturities. These things are all enabling us to be not only sustain ourselves, but to enable us to strengthen our position in a volatile environment with quarterly sales that quite frankly were materially disrupted given the tariff activities in the last 90 days. But these things -- we continually do the right thing for this company to set us up to enter '26 on strong footing. It's really made us the partner of choice too for suppliers that are trying to build out new Southeast Asian factories. They know we're going to be here. They know they're going to give them orders, they know they can count on us to pay them in time, on time, every time. We're going to continue to strive to do the right thing when it comes to protecting our balance sheets and our cash flows always. If I can now everyone turn your attention to Slide 7. I'll take you through the Q3 numbers. And again, these numbers are materially distorted because of shutting off inputs from suppliers and then quite frankly, shutting off sales to customers during pricing negotiations. But our net sales in Q3 did decline 10.2%. If we exclude some foreign currency benefit, organic sales decreased 11.1%. The U.S. and European customers have been feeling macroeconomic pressure, quite frankly, from the global trade and stability around the world. Customers have been stressed and that's led to kind of overall category decline in both pet and the appliance businesses. Quarterly sales were also negatively impacted by the temporary but difficult decisions we made to stop shipments to major retailers when tariff-related pricing negotiations stalled as well as some inventory shortages from the period when we paused all imports from China. In our Home & Garden business, we actually had a cold and wet start to the season, and that did negatively impact POS and retail reorder patterns during Q3. The adjusted EBITDA generated by the business was $76.6 million. That's a decline of $17 million compared to last year's results, which excludes the investment income we had from the large cash balance at the time. Our gross margins did suffer a contraction of 110 basis points during the third quarter, and that's mainly driven by negative mix, tariffs and inflation. We reacted, as I've described very quickly to offset these tariff headwinds and consumer softness by taking out our fixed costs and limiting external spend. It's imperative every dollar of our spend has to be purposed and to be focused on driving the top line of our companies. Our teams have and will continue to step up to the challenge of doing things better, leaner and more efficiently. The third quarter was all about making the tough but right decisions to protect our house to protect our balance sheet and to protect the long-term success of this company. We have now put Q3 in the rearview mirror. We are excited to be focusing on the future, and we are already seeing the results with a very strong start to the fourth quarter from a big rebound in sales in July. We have had a strong start to Q4. In July, both our Global Pet Care company and our Home & Garden division delivered growth over the prior year. For Home & Garden, the weather started to improve in the final weeks of Q3 and that momentum is carried through into July when we had very strong POS and retailer reorder rates. The new products we introduced this year, including Spectracide Wasp, Hornet & Yellowjacket Trap and the Hotshot Flying Insect Trap are driving category growth. And in spite of a lot of new competition entering the category, Spectracide is taking share. GPC and HPC's results continue to be impacted by supply constraints from our pause in Chinese imports but each business is now shipping to all customers. In Global Pet Care, we gained new points of distribution and regained premium shelf placement for some of our chews at a large retailer who had moved them to prioritize their private label product in the past. Our new GPC President has quickly elevated the level of engagement of our business and is bringing excitement to the team rallying around new innovations in health and wellness, niche treats and food and cat. HPC performed well during Amazon's Prime days and is now shipping new innovation to retailers that have been impacted by our pause on Chinese purchases. We are continuing to make top line brand-building investments to support our new innovation and to drive category growth. If I could have everyone now go to Slide 8, and I'll give you guys an update of the strategic priorities for the remainder of fiscal '25. After updating our priorities last quarter to reflect the tariff -- the new tariff landscape and softening consumer demand environment, our strategic priorities remain unchanged this quarter to reflect our continued focus on making the right long-term decisions for the business and maintaining a nimble stance during these times of volatility. We are focused on protecting the balance sheet, and we remain on track to deliver approximately $160 million in free cash flow this fiscal year, which is nearly $7 per share in free cash flow. On our last call, I told you we were running the business for cash flow generation for the rest of the year due to the high tariff environment and the volatile situation we found ourselves in. The reduction in Chinese tariff rates has shifted our focus back to a more normalized approach while we remain laser-focused on cash flow, liquidity and net leverage, we continue to identify working capital improvements throughout our operations. We are leaning into our supply chain strength to diversify our supplier footprint and our supply chain team is uniquely situated to strategically anticipate and to quickly and proactively respond to macroeconomic developments. In the third quarter, they handled not only turning off Chinese imports to the U.S. literally overnight, but also turning that back on in a way that ensured we would maintain our profitability. Our quarterly average global fill rates were over 95% in spite of having tariff-related shortages. I'm very proud of the team for that accomplishment. Thank you all. Having high fill rates and service levels are critical when you're negotiating terms and trying to get pricing with your retail partners, thanks everyone and supply team for making that a reality for us. We are reducing our cost profile to adapt to consumer demand and, quite frankly, the tariff headwinds, and we'll continue to adapt to these new macroeconomic conditions swiftly and decisively, just like we did this past quarter. The teams are focused on fewer, bigger and better initiatives to maximize the impact of our investments. We are preparing to take advantage of the opportunities that the times of economic uncertainty bring and emerge as a growing stronger company that will be the partner of choice for M&A activity. Our businesses and our advisers are actively looking for acquisition targets for both our Pet and Home & Garden businesses. We believe that when we make the right acquisitions, both our businesses and the target accelerate sales growth and profitability, which makes our strong capital structure to fund M&A the right move. We will remain disciplined, however, and we will not overpay. We will make sure we have the right assets. Our strategic transaction for our Home & Personal Care business continued to be delayed given the current tariff landscape and geopolitical factors that are frankly out of our control. While we are disappointed in the delay of the transaction, Spectrum Brands and spectrum becoming a pure-play platform and Garden Company, we believe in the HPC business, and we're going to continue to be great stewards of it. We have not called off a transaction permanently. And as always, we will seek ways and opportunities to maximize its value. If I can now turn your attention to Slide 9, and give you an update on share repurchases. During the third quarter, we repurchased just under 1 million shares. We, in fact, bought back 900,000 shares, and we continue to buy during our pre-earnings quiet period through a $50 million 10b5-1 plan put in place in June. Year-to-date through today, we have repurchased approximately 4 million shares for roughly $300 million and in total, since we closed the HHI transaction, we have returned approximately $1.32 billion of capital to shareholders through various share repurchase programs, and we've repurchased 42% of our share count since the closing of that deal. We have been more conservative lately in share repurchases to preserve the strong balance sheet and liquidity to manage through the volatility of Q3 and we'll monitor and be opportunistic in share repurchases going forward. Turning to Slide 10. Given the continued unpredictable nature of global tariffs and global trade negotiations, particularly between the U.S. and China and some softening in the U.S. and Europe of consumer demand, at this time, we don't have sufficient visibility to give you an earnings framework for '25. However, we are reiterating our expectation to deliver the $160 million of free cash flow, and as I noted earlier, that is approaching $7 per share in free cash flow in fiscal '25. Now before I turn the call over to Jeremy, I want to sincerely thank each and every one of the members of the Spectrum Brands team. The last 90 days was no fun for any of us. You guys all worked hard and tirelessly. I'm proud of how you faced into the turmoil that was delivered to us through tariffs. And I'm really proud of how we've handled that. I think we took our medicine and better days are already happening. So I hope we never get hit with this tariff torpedo again, but I'm confident this team will do the right thing, make the tough decisions, work together to ensure the long-term success of this company. I'm going to turn the call now over to Jeremy, and he's going to give you some updates, more specifics on the financials, a lot more business unit insights, and then I'll come back to you guys for closing remarks. Turning it over to you now, Jeremy.