Skincare company Beauty Health (NASDAQ:SKIN) missed analysts' expectations in Q3 FY2023, with revenue up 9.7% year on year to $97.4 million. Its full-year revenue guidance of $392.5 million at the midpoint also came in 14.9% below analysts' estimates. Turning to EPS, Beauty Health made a GAAP loss of $0.56 per share, down from its loss of $0.03 per share in the same quarter last year.
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Beauty Health (SKIN) Q3 FY2023 Highlights:
- Revenue: $97.4 million vs analyst estimates of $117.3 million (17% miss)
- EPS: -$0.56 vs analyst estimates of $0.04 (-$0.60 miss)
- The company dropped its revenue guidance for the full year from $470 million to $392.5 million at the midpoint, a 16.5% decrease
- Free Cash Flow of $17.9 million, down 13.4% from the previous quarter
- Gross Margin (GAAP): -12.9%, down from 69.3% in the same quarter last year
Operating in the emerging beauty health category, the appropriately named Beauty Health (NASDAQ:SKIN) is a skincare company best known for its Hydrafacial product that cleanses and hydrates skin.
Personal CarePersonal care products include lotions, fragrances, shampoos, cosmetics, and nutritional supplements, among others. While these products may seem more discretionary than food, consumers tend to maintain or even boost their spending on the category during tough times. This phenomenon is known as "the lipstick effect" by economists, which states that consumers still want some semblance of affordable luxuries like beauty and wellness when the economy is sputtering.
As with other consumer staples categories, personal care brands must exude quality and be priced optimally given the crowded competitive landscape. Consumer tastes are constantly changing, and personal care companies are currently responding to the public’s increased desire for ethically produced goods by featuring natural ingredients in their products.
Sales GrowthBeauty Health is a small consumer staples company, which sometimes brings disadvantages compared to larger competitors benefitting from better brand awareness and economies of scale. On the other hand, one advantage is that its growth rates can be higher because it's growing off a small base.
As you can see below, the company's annualized revenue growth rate of 44.9% over the last three years was incredible for a consumer staples business.
This quarter, Beauty Health's revenue grew 9.7% year on year to $97.4 million, missing Wall Street's estimates. Looking ahead, analysts expect sales to grow 32.3% over the next 12 months.
Operating MarginOperating margin is a key profitability metric for companies because it accounts for all expenses enabling a business to operate smoothly, including marketing and advertising, IT systems, wages, and other administrative costs.
This quarter, Beauty Health generated an operating profit margin of negative 84.3%, down 79.6 percentage points year on year. Because Beauty Health's gross margin decreased more than its operating margin, we can infer the company had weaker pricing power and higher raw materials/transportation costs.
There are few unprofitable publicly traded companies in the consumer staples sector, and over the last two years, Beauty Health has been one of them. Its high expenses have contributed to an average operating margin of negative 19.6%. On top of that, Beauty Health's margin has declined by 20.5 percentage points on average each year. This shows the company is heading in the wrong direction, and investors are likely hoping for better results in the future.Key Takeaways from Beauty Health's Q3 Results With a market capitalization of $478.4 million, Beauty Health is among smaller companies, but its more than $559.4 million in cash on hand and near break-even free cash flow margins puts it in a stable financial position.
We struggled to find many strong positives in these results. Its revenue, EBITDA, and EPS missed Wall Street's estimates and it lowered its full-year guidance for virtually every metric we track. Furthermore, the company observed a negative gross margin this quarter, driven by $63 million in restructuring charges related to device upgrades of its early generation Syndeo product - its versions 1 and 2 experienced quality issues and were marked as obsolete, resulting in a one-time impairment to its inventory/cost of goods sold. Overall, this was a bad quarter for Beauty Health. The company is down 34.8% on the results and currently trades at $2.55 per share.
The author has no position in any of the stocks mentioned in this report.