Flexsteel Industries Second Quarter Fiscal 2026 Earnings Call - Sales Lifted by Tariff Surcharges, H2 Margin Risk from Higher-Tariff Inventory
Summary
Flexsteel reported a solid Q2 with net sales of $118.2 million, up 9% year-over-year and marking the ninth consecutive quarter of sales growth. Operating income improved to $9.0 million, or a 7.6% margin, driven by sales leverage, higher-margin new products, pricing tied to tariff surcharges, and productivity gains. The quarter’s results were achieved despite uneven end-market demand, a near 50% slump in the Homestyles ready-to-assemble channel, and softness in made-to-order seating.
Management is upbeat on product-led share gains and a strong balance sheet, with $36.8 million cash, $126 million working capital, and no bank debt. Still, they paused guidance and flagged clear near-term risk: the company built inventory ahead of tariff moves, Q2 inventory carried roughly a 20% tariff burden and management expects some dilution as higher-cost inventory subject to roughly 25% tariffs cycles through in H2. Tariff surcharges boosted reported sales by about $9.5 million in the quarter, but the company cautioned that margins will face pressure and that demand remains volatile, leaving execution and pricing finesse as the critical variables going forward.
Key Takeaways
- Net sales were $118.2 million in Q2 FY2026, up 9% year-over-year from $108.5 million, the ninth straight quarter of YoY sales growth.
- GAAP operating income was $9.0 million, a 7.6% operating margin. Versus adjusted prior-year results, operating income rose about 35%, or 150 basis points.
- Tariff surcharges materially boosted reported revenue, contributing roughly $9.0 to $10.0 million (management cited about $9.5 million) in the quarter.
- Order backlog ended the quarter at $82.4 million, and that backlog includes estimated tariff surcharges.
- Pricing actions and cost savings largely mitigated tariff impact in Q2, but management expects margin dilution in the second half as higher-cost inventory with elevated tariffs flows through.
- Inventory and working capital increased, driven by higher-cost inventory from tariffs and an intentional build of safety stock ahead of tariff moves; working capital was $126 million.
- The company finished the quarter with $36.8 million in cash and no bank debt, a cushion management says supports flexibility amid uncertainty.
- New products continue to be a growth engine, accounting for roughly 30% to 40% of sales over the past 6 to 8 quarters, and management expects a strong pipeline over the next 18 months.
- Channel performance was mixed: sourced soft seating showed unit volume gains, made-to-order soft seating was soft, and Homestyles branded ready-to-assemble sales plunged nearly 50%.
- Management has paused providing forward guidance due to limited visibility around demand and evolving tariff policy.
- Management is evaluating broader cost reductions and alternative supply chain options to offset tariff pressure and to strengthen margins over the medium term.
- Foreign exchange was not a material driver in Q2, aside from a modest benefit from revaluation of a VAT receivable; the tax rate was slightly higher in the quarter due to foreign tax provision adjustments.
- Management emphasized disciplined execution, strengthened cost controls, and closer retailer partnerships, targeting about 20 strategic independent retailers as a key growth vector and noting further penetration opportunities.
- Key downside variables to watch: the ultimate tariff level that burdens inventory (company cited ~20% on Q2 inventory and warned of up to ~25% in later inventory), consumer discretionary demand variability, and the elasticity of demand after recent price moves.
Full Transcript
Conference Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Flexsteel Industries Second Quarter Fiscal Year 2026 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press Star then One on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press Star then Two. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer for Flexsteel Industries. Please go ahead.
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Thank you, and welcome to today’s call to discuss Flexsteel Industries’ second quarter fiscal year 2026 financial results. Our earnings release, which we issued after market close yesterday, Monday, February 2nd, is available on the Investor Relations section of our website at www.flexsteel.com under News and Events. I’m here today with Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer. On today’s call, we will provide prepared remarks, and then we’ll open the call to your questions. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that the comments on today’s call will include forward-looking statements, which can be identified using words such as estimate, anticipate, expect, and similar phrases. Forward-looking statements, by their nature, involve estimates, projections, goals, forecasts, and assumptions, and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements.
Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, those that are described in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K, as updated by our subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and other SEC filings, as applicable. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this conference call and should not be relied upon as prediction of future events. Additionally, we may refer to non-GAAP measures, which are intended to supplement, but not substitute, for the most directly comparable GAAP measures. The press release available on the website contain the financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Derek Schmidt. Derek?
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. I’m pleased to share our second quarter results and to spend some time discussing how Flexsteel is performing in an environment that continues to be highly dynamic. Industry demand remains uneven, tariff policy is evolving quickly, and consumer behavior continues to shift. Against that backdrop, I’m encouraged not only by the financial results we delivered this quarter, but by how our organization is operating, with agility, discipline, and a clear focus on long-term value creation. During the quarter, we delivered strong year-over-year sales growth of 9% and meaningful profit improvement, extending the momentum we’ve built over the past 2 years. Importantly, this performance was achieved while navigating a very choppy external environment, underscoring the progress we’ve made building an organization that can adapt quickly to change without losing focus on execution.
What’s particularly encouraging is the quality and balance of our growth. We are performing well in our core business with new product introductions and share gains with strategic accounts. At the same time, we’re seeing steady progress in newer and expanded markets, including health and wellness and case goods. The diversity of these growth drivers gives us confidence that our momentum is becoming more resilient and less dependent on any single product category, customer, or market condition. What’s notable this quarter is that our growth drivers are reinforcing one another and scaling more effectively across the portfolio. Our investments in consumer insights, product development, and innovation are improving the effectiveness of new launches, while stronger partnerships with retailers are helping accelerate adoption of new products across multiple categories. This breadth of contribution gives us confidence that our growth is becoming more durable, even as industry demand remains uneven.
While we’re encouraged by our continued sales growth, I’m equally pleased with the progress we’re making on profitability. This quarter’s operating margin of 7.6% and the continued year-over-year profitability improvement reflects the disciplined way our teams are managing the business amid a complex and changing environment. Our margin performance continues to benefit from a combination of sales leverage, productivity improvements, and thoughtful product portfolio management. Importantly, these gains are increasingly structural in nature. Through consistent execution, we’ve strengthened our cost discipline, improved operational efficiency, and enhanced the margin profile of new and existing products. This operating discipline has been particularly important as we’ve navigated significant external volatility. The ability to manage costs, adjust pricing thoughtfully, and protect margins while continuing to invest in growth initiatives speaks to how the organization has evolved over the past several years.
As we look ahead, while the U.S. economy continues to show areas of resilience, housing activity, consumer confidence, and discretionary spending patterns remain inconsistent and continue to weigh on overall industry demand. Feedback from our retail partners suggests that consumer behavior remains highly variable, with periods of engagement followed by pullbacks driven by economic uncertainty and inflation concerns. In this environment, visibility remains limited and demand patterns can shift quickly. That said, our teams are staying close to our customers and adjusting as conditions evolve. This flexibility, combined with disciplined execution, allows us to respond quickly to changes in demand while remaining focused on our long-term growth objectives. Tariffs continue to represent a significant source of uncertainty for the furniture industry, and the policy environment remains fluid. As tariff structures evolve, the implications for sourcing, pricing, and demand can change quickly, requiring companies to adapt in real time.
Flexsteel has faced similar disruptions in the past, from prior tariff cycles to global supply chain disruptions and rapid demand swings, and those experiences have shaped how we operate today. Our organization is built to respond decisively to external change while remaining disciplined in execution and capital allocation. While the current tariff environment presents meaningful challenges, we believe it also underscores why we’ve invested in building a more agile and disciplined operating model, including the ability to adjust pricing thoughtfully, manage costs, evaluate sourcing alternatives, and maintain strong customer relationships, all which we believe will be critical in the periods ahead. We believe our agility, combined with disciplined execution and continued investment in our growth platforms, positions us to not only manage near-term volatility, but to continue gaining share over time.
Looking further ahead, we are actively evaluating broader cost reduction opportunities and alternative supply chain options that can strengthen our position over the long term. While we expect tariffs and pricing actions to create pressure on both demand and margins in the second half of our fiscal 2026, we are confident in our ability to identify and execute the right actions to support profitable growth over time. We enter this period with a strong balance sheet, solid profitability, and a clear strategic roadmap. Our focus remains on navigating near-term challenges while continuing to invest in the capabilities that drive long-term shareholder value. In summary, our second quarter results reflect an organization that is executing consistently today while positioning itself to compound growth and profitability over time, even in a volatile environment.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Mike, who will give you some additional details on the financial performance for the second quarter and our financial outlook.
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Thanks, Derek. For the second quarter, net sales were $118.2 million, or growth of 9% compared to net sales of $108.5 million in the prior year quarter. This marks our ninth consecutive quarter of year-over-year sales growth. The increase was primarily driven by higher unit volume in sourced soft seating products and pricing from tariff surcharges, partially offset by lower unit volume in our made-to-order soft seating products and Homestyles branded ready-to-assemble products. Sales order backlog at the end of the period was $82.4 million, which includes estimated tariff surcharges. From a profit perspective, the company delivered GAAP operating income of $9.0 million, or 7.6% of sales in the second quarter.
The prior year quarter GAAP operating income of $11.7 million included a $5 million gain from the sale of our former Dublin, Georgia, manufacturing facility. Current quarter operating income increased 35% or 150 basis points compared to adjusted operating income of $6.7 million or 6.1% of sales in the prior year quarter. The increase is driven by favorable sales mix of higher margin new products, partially offset by continued investments in growth initiatives. The impact of tariffs on operating margin in the quarter was largely mitigated through a combination of pricing actions and cost savings initiatives. Moving to the balance sheet and statement of cash flows. The company ended the quarter with a cash balance of $36.8 million and working capital of $126 million and no bank debt.
The increase in working capital was primarily driven by higher cost inventory due to tariffs and an intentional increase in safety stock of top-selling products ahead of tariffs that were previously scheduled to increase on January 1. In addition, accounts receivable increased due to timing of sales in the quarter. Given the level of uncertainty regarding both demand and the impact of tariffs on our business, we believe it is appropriate to continue our pause on providing any forward-looking guidance. However, as Derek alluded to earlier, we expect some margin dilution in the second half of the fiscal year relative to the second quarter, as we are now selling higher cost inventory burdened with 25% tariffs. As the impact of tariffs, pricing actions, consumer demand, and our cost savings efforts become clearer, we will continue to share more information.
With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Derek to share his closing perspectives.
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Thanks, Mike. As we look ahead, we recognize that the external environment is likely to remain unpredictable in the near term....Tariff policy continues to evolve, consumer demand patterns remain uneven, and macroeconomic visibility is limited. However, these conditions reinforce, rather than diminish, the importance of the progress we’ve made strengthening our organization. Flexsteel is agile, disciplined, and well-positioned to respond to change. Our teams are moving quickly and thoughtfully as conditions evolve, balancing near-term actions with a clear focus on long-term value creation. We are managing risk, protecting profitability, and continuing to invest in the growth platforms that support sustained share gains. Periods of disruption often create opportunity for companies that are prepared to act decisively while maintaining strategic focus.
We believe our combination of operating discipline, financial strength, and investment in innovation and consumer-led growth positions us well, not just to navigate the current environment, but to emerge stronger over time. With that, we’ll open the call to your questions. Operator?
Conference Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Anthony Lebiedzinski with Sidoti. Please go ahead.
Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Good morning, everyone, and thanks for taking the questions. You know, so first, it’s really great to see the sales and earnings increase in a still choppy demand environment. So you know, first, I guess, as we think about the revenue increase on a consolidated basis, can you talk about unit volumes and pricing as far as how that impacted the quarter?
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Yeah, Anthony, what I would tell you is, you’re correct in that the environment’s been very choppy. But in terms of the breakdown, tariff revenue in the quarter was roughly, give or take, $9-$10 million, about $9.5 million. So when you look at it kind of from a unit volume perspective, we are relatively flat versus the prior quarter, but certainly had categories within the business where unit volumes were up in other areas, kind of where we’ve seen unit volumes down, you know, in certain areas.
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Yeah, I think I’ll just add to Mike’s comment. I think what we’re pleased with is that we saw really nice unit volume gains in many areas of our soft seating business. So despite the fact that, you know, we took pricing, we’re still seeing good unit growth in that area. That was offset by, you know, I think, you know, unit volume declines in made order seating, which, you know, that category’s been soft. And then, as you know, we’ve got this Homestyles ready-to-assemble business, and that has been struggling. You know, sales were down almost 50% in that area. But the core of the portfolio is operating really well, despite the fact that, you know, we pushed through tariff pricing, which we find very encouraging.
Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Yes, absolutely. So, you know, as we think about new product introductions, can you share roughly, you know, what portion of your sales is now coming from new products? And as we think about the outlook going forward, can you talk about the pipeline for new products?
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Yeah, in terms of where our sales are being derived from, Anthony, I mean, over the last, I would say, you know, 6-8 quarters, we’ve been consistently 30%-40% of our overall sales is coming from new products. So it is a substantial driver, I think of, you know, our ability to continue to gain share. In terms of the new product pipeline, I’m reluctant to give too many details just because, you know, competitors can, in this environment, especially with AI, rapidly kind of clone, I think, what we’re doing. What I will convey, though, is that we have a really exciting and focused pipeline of new product coming here over the next 3 markets, so 18 months.
So I feel really good about the pipeline and our ability to continue to bring products that are relevant to consumers and ultimately will drive traffic to our retailers, which is, you know, one of the areas that I think that we’re differentiating ourselves from in this environment.
Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Thanks, Derek. And then, you know, so I, I guess, you know, looking at the strategic accounts, which you’ve spoken about in previous calls, so it’s not new, but, and you’ve done well with that. You know, so as we think about, you know, going forward, are there additional retailers that you think you may be underpenetrated in or have potential new wins? You know, how do we think about that? Just wanted to get a better understanding of, of what’s more to come as far as potential expanded distribution for you guys.
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Yeah, you know, I think we’ve shared, Anthony. What we deem strategic accounts represents about 20 large independent retailers that we believe are progressing their Omni-channel capabilities and are well positioned to continue to gain share in the overall market. And so we’ve really aligned our business model around serving those 20 accounts in a differentiated manner.
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: ... To address your question, the vast majority of those 20 customers, we already have very strong relationships. There are a handful that we’re, I’ll call emerging relationships, which we believe there’s pretty significant growth potential and that we’ve been, you know, working for the last year or so. I still believe that there is ample room for strategic accounts to drive exponential growth. And that’s, you know, obviously both share gains with existing accounts and the handful of other retailers that we’re probably under penetrated or under indexed with. So again, we are gonna continue to, I think, put investment, continue to refine our value proposition to those retailers because we believe that there’s substantial growth in the years ahead.
Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Got you. Yeah, thanks for that. And then, as we think about the tariffs, you said that they were largely mitigated with price actions and also just cost savings. So, as far as your confidence level, to be able to offset that going forward, how do we think about that? And then, just another question as far as the gross margin. I know a couple of the recent quarters were impacted by favorable currency impact. I didn’t see anything about that this quarter, so just wanted to make sure that there wasn’t anything there.
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Yeah. Yeah. Anthony, on the tariffs in the current quarter, we’ve talked about we’re very measured in our approach, right? We understand, wanna be very cognizant of, you know, the consumer and sensitivity to pricing. But through our pricing actions and all the cost savings initiatives, the team’s been aggressively working on, largely able to mitigate it in the quarter. With that said, the current quarter inventory, you know, is probably burdened with give or take, a 20% tariff level. So as we think about kind of the back half of the year, we would expect some dilution to margins as our cost of sales becomes, you know, fully burdened with the tariff. I’d say the biggest variable that’s really hard to predict is the impact on, you know, unit demand.
If we’re able to kind of hold, you know, unit demand and, you know, obviously that would certainly minimize, you know, the potential impact on the dilution in, in the back half. And in terms of FX, really not a material impacting gross margins in the quarter. We’ve a little bit of a benefit from the revaluation of our VAT receivable, but that was largely offset by, you know, the impact of our operating expenses.
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: The one thing I’ll add, Anthony, to Mike’s comment regarding kind of, tariff impact on margin. So as Mike alluded to, again, we would expect here in the next couple quarters, certainly for there to be some margin dilution as we roll through higher cost inventory. That said, we are working on other cost initiatives that we would expect would offset that tariff impact in the midterm.
Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Understood. And my last question is just, you know, the tax rate came in a little bit higher than we expected. Was there anything unusual here, and how do we think about the tax rate here on a go-forward basis for the balance of the fiscal year?
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Yeah, Anthony, there was a little bit of an impact in the quarter as it relates to kind of our return to provision throughout related to foreign taxes, but it would expect kinda, you know, the tax rate going forward to be closer to kind of what the year—you know, the full year tax rate’s reflecting.
Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Gotcha. All right, well, thank you very much, and best of luck.
Mike Ressler, Chief Financial Officer, Flexsteel Industries: All right. Thanks, Anthony.
Conference Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Derek Schmidt for any closing remarks.
Derek Schmidt, President and Chief Executive Officer, Flexsteel Industries: Thank you. In closing, I want to re-reiterate my confidence in the direction of our business and the strength of our organization. I’m proud of how our teams are performing, staying focused, adapting quickly, and executing at a high level despite external uncertainty. And it’s that combination of agility and discipline, which is a core strength of Flexsteel, and it gives me confidence in our ability to continue building value over the long term. I want to thank our employees for their continued hard work and commitment, and I appreciate our shareholders and partners for their ongoing support. Thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to updating you on our progress next quarter.
Conference Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.