Hooker Furnishings Corporation (NASDAQ-GS: HOFT) (the “Company” or
“HFC”), a global leader in the design, production, and marketing of
home furnishings for 101 years, announced its decision to exit its
Savannah, Georgia distribution center (“DC”) and consolidate
operations in its existing facilities.
“Our decision to exit our Savannah, Georgia
distribution facility was not taken lightly,” said Jeremy R. Hoff,
Hooker’s Chief Executive Officer. “We deeply appreciate the
hospitality and support received from the state of Georgia, the
Georgia Ports Authority, and from the Liberty County Development
Authority, in particular.”
The Company commenced operations at the Savannah
facility in October 2021 for its Home Meridian segment’s (“HMI”)
Accentrics Home (“ACH”) brand. However, shortly after opening the
facility, ACH’s competitive position was severely eroded by a sharp
rise in post-COVID container freight rates from Asia, which jumped
from approximately $4,000 to over $25,000 per container in some
cases at the time. “The sharp rise in container freight rates made
ACH’s once-thriving line of high-volume, lower-priced, low-margin
accent items unsustainable,” Hoff continued. “Despite the temporary
elevation in freight rates, it became obvious ACH’s business model
would continue to be high-risk and low reward. In 2024, we
liquidated its inventory and closed ACH, part of a larger plan to
exit unprofitable businesses at HMI. We began reducing our
footprint in Savannah shortly after that through a series of
sub-leases and lease amendments with our landlord, continued to
utilize remaining space for other brands in our Home Meridian
segment and for the Sunset West division of our Domestic Upholstery
segment.”
“Despite the fact we’re leaving Liberty County,
it’s important to Hooker that DC continues to be successful for
Liberty County and other stakeholders. Consequently, we’re working
with current DC employees, our landlord, and the new tenants to
ensure a smooth transition,” Hoff said. “One of the most difficult
aspects of this decision is the impact on our dedicated employees
in Liberty County. We take immense pride in the team we’ve built,
and our priority is to support them during this transition. We are
collaborating with the incoming tenant and other potential
employers to help our employees secure positions, ideally within
the same facility. Additionally, we have provided exit benefits to
affected employees, with the goal of easing their transition,
regardless of the path they choose,” Hoff concluded.
The Company is finalizing estimates of the
potential financial impacts of the DC exit and expects to provide
additional information in its earnings release and subsequent
conference call on April 17, 2025, and in its Annual Report on Form
10-K, expected to be filed on April 18, 2025. Currently, the
Company preliminarily expects to record net charges of between $1.6
and $2.0 million in fiscal 2025 and between $3.0 million to $4.0
million in fiscal 2026, related to the Savannah exit. It further
expects preliminary savings of between $750,000-$1.0 million in net
operating expenses in fiscal 2026. Also preliminarily, the Company
expects to realize annualized savings of between $4.0 million to
$4.5 million beginning in fiscal 2027. These costs and benefits are
largely dependent on the timing of the completion of the exit and
could differ from these preliminary estimates.
Hooker Furnishings Corporation, in its 101st
year of business, is a designer, marketer and importer of casegoods
(wooden and metal furniture), leather furniture, fabric-upholstered
furniture, lighting, accessories, and home décor for the
residential, hospitality and contract markets. The Company also
domestically manufactures premium residential custom leather and
custom fabric-upholstered furniture and outdoor furniture. Major
casegoods product categories include home entertainment, home
office, accent, dining, and bedroom furniture in the upper-medium
price points sold under the Hooker Furniture brand. Hooker’s
residential upholstered seating product lines include
Bradington-Young, a specialist in upscale motion and stationary
leather furniture, HF Custom (formerly Sam Moore), a specialist in
fashion forward custom upholstery offering a selection of chairs,
sofas, sectionals, recliners and a variety of accent upholstery
pieces, Hooker Upholstery, imported upholstered furniture targeted
at the upper-medium price-range and Shenandoah Furniture, an
upscale upholstered furniture company specializing in private label
sectionals, modulars, sofas, chairs, ottomans, benches, beds and
dining chairs in the upper-medium price points for lifestyle
specialty retailers. The H Contract product line supplies
upholstered seating and casegoods to upscale senior living
facilities. The Home Meridian division addresses more moderate
price points and channels of distribution not currently served by
other Hooker Furnishings divisions or brands. Home Meridian’s
brands include Pulaski Furniture, casegoods covering the complete
design spectrum in a wide range of bedroom, dining room, accent and
display cabinets at medium price points, Samuel Lawrence Furniture,
value-conscious offerings in bedroom, dining room, home office and
youth furnishings, Prime Resources International, value-conscious
imported leather upholstered furniture, and Samuel Lawrence
Hospitality, a designer and supplier of hotel furnishings. The
Sunset West division is a designer and manufacturer of comfortable,
stylish and high-quality outdoor furniture. Hooker Furnishings
Corporation’s corporate offices and upholstery manufacturing
facilities are located in Virginia, North Carolina and California,
with showrooms in High Point, N.C., Las Vegas, N.V., Atlanta, G.A.
and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The company operates distribution
centers in Virginia, Georgia, and Vietnam. Please visit our
websites hookerfurnishings.com, hookerfurniture.com,
bradington-young.com, hfcustomfurniture.com,
hcontractfurniture.com, homemeridian.com, pulaskifurniture.com,
slh-co.com, and sunsetwestusa.com.
Certain statements made in this release, other
than those based on historical facts, may be forward-looking
statements. Forward-looking statements reflect our reasonable
judgment with respect to future events and typically can be
identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as
“believes,” “expects,” “projects,” “intends,” “plans,” “may,”
“will,” “should,” “would,” “could” or “anticipates,” or the
negative thereof, or other variations thereon, or comparable
terminology, or by discussions of strategy. Forward-looking
statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause
actual results to differ materially from those in the
forward-looking statements. Those risks and uncertainties include
but are not limited to: (1) general economic or business
conditions, both domestically and internationally, including the
current macro-economic uncertainties and challenges to the retail
environment for home furnishings along with instability in the
financial and credit markets, in part due to inflation and high
interest rates, including their potential impact on (i) our sales
and operating costs and access to financing, (ii) customers, and
(iii) suppliers and their ability to obtain financing or generate
the cash necessary to conduct their respective businesses; (2) the
cyclical nature of the furniture industry, which is particularly
sensitive to changes in consumer confidence, the amount of
consumers’ income available for discretionary purchases, and the
availability and terms of consumer credit; (3) risks associated
with the ultimate outcome of our planned cost reduction plans,
including the amounts and timing of savings realized and the
ability to scale the business appropriately as customer demand
increases or decreases based on the macroeconomic environment; (4)
risks associated with the outcome of the Home Meridian (HMI)
segment restructuring, including whether we can return the segment
to consistent profitability; (5) risks associated with the planned
exit of our Savannah, Georgia warehouse, including executing the
exit in a timely manner, the costs and availability of temporary
warehousing, moving and start-up costs, ERP and technology-related
risks, and possible disruption to shipments and revenue; (6) the
risks specifically related to the concentrations of a material part
of our sales and accounts receivable in only a few customers,
including the loss of several large customers through business
consolidations, failures or other reasons, or the loss of
significant sales programs with major customers; (7) risks
associated with our reliance on offshore sourcing and the cost of
imported goods, including fluctuation in the prices of purchased
finished goods, customs issues, freight costs, including the price
and availability of shipping containers, ocean vessels, domestic
trucking, and warehousing costs and the risk that a disruption in
our offshore suppliers or the transportation and handling
industries, including labor stoppages, strikes, or slowdowns, could
adversely affect our ability to timely fill customer orders; (8)
the impairment of our long-lived assets, which can result in
reduced earnings and net worth; (9) adverse political acts or
developments in, or affecting, the international markets from which
we import products and some components used in our Domestic
Upholstery segment, including duties or tariffs imposed on those
products by foreign governments or the U.S. government, such as the
newly imposed tariffs on imports from China, Mexico and Canada and
the threat of additional tariffs on other countries; (10)
difficulties in forecasting demand for our imported products and
raw materials used in our domestic operations; (11) our inability
to collect amounts owed to us or significant delays in collecting
such amounts; (12) interruption, inadequacy, security breaches or
integration failure of our information systems or information
technology infrastructure, related service providers or the
internet or other related issues including unauthorized disclosures
of confidential information, hacking or other cybersecurity threats
or inadequate levels of cyber-insurance or risks not covered by
cyber insurance; (13) risks associated with domestic manufacturing
operations, including fluctuations in capacity utilization and the
prices and availability of key raw materials, as well as changes in
transportation, warehousing and domestic labor costs, availability
of skilled labor, and environmental compliance and remediation
costs; (14) disruptions and damage (including those due to weather)
affecting our Virginia, North Carolina or Georgia warehouses, our
Virginia, North Carolina or California administrative facilities,
our High Point, Las Vegas, and Atlanta showrooms or our
representative offices or warehouses in Vietnam and China; (15)
changes in U.S. and foreign government regulations and in the
political, social and economic climates of the countries from which
we source our products; (16) risks associated with product defects,
including higher than expected costs associated with product
quality and safety, regulatory compliance costs related to the sale
of consumer products and costs related to defective or
non-compliant products, product liability claims and costs to
recall defective products and the adverse effects of negative media
coverage; (17) the direct and indirect costs and time spent by our
associates associated with the implementation of our Enterprise
Resource Planning system (“ERP”), including costs resulting from
unanticipated disruptions to our business; (18) achieving and
managing growth and change, and the risks associated with new
business lines, acquisitions, including the selection of suitable
acquisition targets, restructurings, strategic alliances and
international operations; (19) risks associated with distribution
through third-party retailers, such as non-binding dealership
arrangements; (20) the cost and difficulty of marketing and selling
our products in foreign markets, including the risks associated
with our new UK sales initiative; (21) changes in domestic and
international monetary policies and fluctuations in foreign
currency exchange rates affecting the price of our imported
products and raw materials; (22) price competition in the furniture
industry; (23) changes in consumer preferences, including increased
demand for lower-priced furniture; and (24) other risks and
uncertainties described under Part I, Item 1A. "Risk Factors" in
the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
January 28, 2024. Any forward-looking statement that we make speaks
only as of the date of that statement, and we undertake no
obligation, except as required by law, to update any
forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information,
future events or otherwise and you should not expect us to do
so.
For more information, contact: C. Earl Armstrong
III, Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Phone:
(276) 666-3969
Grafico Azioni Hooker Furnishings (NASDAQ:HOFT)
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