Virco Reports Results for Fourth Quarter and Year-Ended January 31, 2021
Virco Mfg. Corporation (NASDAQ: VIRC) reported a 21% decline in revenue due to COVID-19, totaling $152.8 million for the year ended January 31, 2021. Despite this, the company achieved modest operating income of $735,000, a significant improvement from the previous year's loss. Key metrics such as order backlog reached a sixteen-year high as schools prepare for re-opening. Notably, management avoided layoffs and reduced debt while maintaining U.S. factories, positioning the company for recovery amid ongoing supply chain challenges.
- Operating income improved to $735,000 from a loss of $5,915,000 year-over-year.
- Order backlog at a sixteen-year high, indicating positive future business activity.
- No layoffs during the pandemic, showcasing employee retention and stability.
- Cost controls successfully offset revenue declines.
- Revenue declined 21% year-over-year, totaling $152.8 million.
- Net loss of $2.2 million compared to a net income of $2.4 million the previous year.
- Fourth-quarter net sales dropped 33% to $18.3 million.
- Company generates modest operating income despite
21% decline in revenue due to COVID-19; - Management avoided layoffs during pandemic and looks forward to recovery;
- YTD Fiscal 2022 Shipments + order backlog at sixteen-year high as schools move toward re-opening.
TORRANCE, Calif., April 28, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Virco Mfg. Corporation (NASDAQ: VIRC) today reported financial results for the fourth quarter and full year ended January 31, 2021, in the following press release to shareholders and customers:
A full year of pandemic-related school closures resulted in lower revenues for the fourth quarter and full year ended January 31, 2021. For the quarter, which includes the seasonally slow months of November, December and January, net sales totaled
Full year net sales declined
Key balance sheet metrics improved over the course of the year, reflecting diligent cost controls while exercising precise execution matching revenue opportunities within the downturn made possible by the Company’s U.S. factories and short supply chain. Inventories and related bank borrowings under the Company’s seasonal credit facility were both lower at year end compared to the prior year. Shareholder equity was almost unchanged at
Here are the numbers:
Three Months Ended | Twelve Months Ended | |||||||||||
1/31/2021 | 1/31/2020 | 1/31/2021 | 1/31/2020 | |||||||||
(In thousands, except per share data) | ||||||||||||
Net sales | $ | 18,301 | $ | 27,148 | $ | 152,795 | $ | 193,001 | ||||
Cost of sales | 13,759 | 20,141 | 97,870 | 121,326 | ||||||||
Gross profit | 4,542 | 7,007 | 54,925 | 71,675 | ||||||||
Selling, general administrative & other expense | 10,320 | 14,043 | 54,190 | 65,760 | ||||||||
Operating (loss) income | (5,778 | ) | (7,036 | ) | 735 | 5,915 | ||||||
Pension expense | 547 | 162 | 2,173 | 726 | ||||||||
Interest expense, net | 221 | 252 | 1,538 | 2,462 | ||||||||
(Loss) income before income taxes | (6,546 | ) | (7,450 | ) | (2,976 | ) | 2,727 | |||||
Income tax (benefit) expense | (979 | ) | (3,140 | ) | (744 | ) | 345 | |||||
Net (loss) income | $ | (5,567 | ) | $ | (4,310 | ) | $ | (2,232 | ) | $ | 2,382 | |
Net (loss) income per share - basic (a) | $ | (0.35 | ) | $ | (0.28 | ) | $ | (0.14 | ) | $ | 0.15 | |
Net (loss) income per share - diluted | $ | (0.35 | ) | $ | (0.28 | ) | $ | (0.14 | ) | $ | 0.15 | |
Weighted average shares outstanding - basic (a) | 15,824 | 15,654 | 15,759 | 15,590 | ||||||||
Weighted average shares outstanding - diluted | 15,824 | 15,654 | 15,759 | 15,694 | ||||||||
(a) Net loss per share was calculated based on basic shares outstanding due to the anti-dilutive effect on the inclusion of common stock equivalent shares. | ||||||||||||
1/31/2021 | 1/31/2020 | |||||||||||
Current assets | $ | 50,967 | $ | 58,342 | ||||||||
Non-current assets | 74,069 | 80,650 | ||||||||||
Current liabilities | 22,106 | 25,118 | ||||||||||
Non-current liabilities | 48,743 | 59,056 | ||||||||||
Stockholders' equity | 54,187 | 54,818 | ||||||||||
As described in prior press releases during the pandemic, school closures were an unprecedented policy response to COVID-19 with no guidelines for students, schools, families, or suppliers to follow. At no time in the country’s history—not for either of the World Wars, the Spanish Flu of 1918-1919, the Great Depression, the Hong Kong Flu of 1968, or the Great Recession—had public schools been closed en masse due to government order. Despite this, and reflecting the truly diverse nature of the pandemic in different regions at different timescales, deliveries of school furniture did continue throughout the year although at significantly reduced levels.
One of the clearest lessons from the pandemic was the crucial importance of in-person, on-campus education, especially for disadvantaged students or those with learning disabilities. School closures provided an unintended referendum on the vital role played by public and private schools in all aspects of social and economic health, perhaps in a way that only a shock of such magnitude can provide.
As a result, many state and local governments are now directing substantial additional funds towards re-opening and provisioning of public schools. Some of these funds are time-lagged and extend out to 2025; others are being spent or invested right now. Reflecting this new interest in funding education, the Company’s indicator of forward business activity (“actual YTD shipments + the unshipped backlog”) is at a sixteen-year high in fiscal 2022.
As always, management cautions against using this positive early-season metric as guidance. Especially coming out of the unprecedented and unpredictable circumstances of the pandemic, many things in the market for school furniture might change between now and year-end. Nonetheless, management is encouraged by the robustness of current trends. Management also believes that given the concurrent challenges of global supply chain interruptions, raw material shortages and cost increases, and ongoing tariff impacts, the Company’s vertical business model positions it to operate efficiently in such an environment.
Reflecting on the year’s results and the prospects for nationwide school re-opening, Virco Chairman and CEO Robert Virtue said: “In my many years at Virco serving the public school market, I’ve never experienced anything quite as challenging as what we’ve just been through. At times our stubborn insistence on maintaining our U.S. factories might have been seen as old-fashioned, but last year we believe it delivered better control of finances, inventories, and customer support than any other alternative. We appreciate the positive role we’ll be able to play in this crucial year of recovery, and we thank our shareholders for their loyalty, understanding, and support.”
Virco President Doug Virtue thanked the Company’s employees: “There was a great deal of uncertainty in March 2020, when lockdowns were first announced and schools emptied out. Nevertheless, our diverse portfolio of direct school customers located in all 50 states and in foreign countries has managed to buffer the impact on revenues, and our outstanding workforce came together—remotely in many instances—to control variable expenses and deliver an operating profit despite a
“I’m proud and humbled by the performance of our employees during the pandemic. Forty percent of our employees have more than 20 years of service with the company. The trust and support they’ve built together was severely tested last year but it proved equal to the challenge. It will be especially rewarding to turn that strength toward the positive aspects of re-opening.”
Contact:
Virco Mfg. Corporation (310) 533-0474
Robert A. Virtue, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Doug Virtue, President
Robert Dose, Chief Financial Officer
This news release contains “forward-looking statements” as defined by the Private Securities Reform Act of 1995. These statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding: the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business, customers, supply chain and workforce; business strategies; market demand and product development; order rates and trends in seasonality; product relevance; economic conditions and patterns; the educational furniture industry including the domestic market for classroom furniture; state and municipal bond and/or tax funding; the rate of completion of bond funded construction projects; cost control initiatives; absorption rates; the relative competitiveness of domestic vs. international supply chains; trends in shipping costs; use of temporary workers; marketing initiatives; and international or non K-12 markets. Forward-looking statements are based on current expectations and beliefs about future events or circumstances, and you should not place undue reliance on these statements. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors, many of which are out of our control and difficult to forecast. These factors may cause actual results to differ materially from those that are anticipated. Such factors include, but are not limited to: uncertainties surrounding the severity, duration and effects of the COVID-19 pandemic; changes in general economic conditions including raw material, energy and freight costs; state and municipal bond funding; state, local, and municipal tax receipts; order rates; the seasonality of our markets; the markets for school and office furniture generally, the specific markets and customers with which we conduct our principal business; the impact of cost-saving initiatives on our business; the competitive landscape, including responses of our competitors and customers to changes in our prices; demographics; and the terms and conditions of available funding sources. See our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended January 31, 2021 and other material filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a further description of these and other risks and uncertainties applicable to our business. We assume no, and hereby disclaim any, obligation to update any of our forward-looking statements. We nonetheless reserve the right to make such updates from time to time by press release, periodic reports, or other methods of public disclosure without the need for specific reference to this press release. No such update shall be deemed to indicate that other statements which are not addressed by such an update remain correct or create an obligation to provide any other updates.
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