La-Z-Boy reported a solid fourth quarter (Q4 2024) in a challenging furniture environment, with revenue of $553.5 million and non-GAAP operating margin of 9.4%, supported by a favorable product mix and ongoing margin discipline. On a year-over-year basis, consolidated revenue declined 1.4% as pandemic-related backlog deliveries in the prior year tapered, while the quarter benefited from above-normal backlog deliveries that helped sequentially (QoQ) revenue rise about 10.6%. Net income of $39.3 million and GAAP/EPS of $0.92/$0.91 per share, alongside a robust free cash flow generation profile, underscore the companyβs ability to translate brand strength and an integrated wholesale/retail model into profitability despite macro headwinds. Importantly, La-Z-Boy ended the year with $341 million of cash and no external debt, signaling a resilient balance sheet and liquidity to fund growth investments and shareholder returns.
Management reiterated its Century Vision framework focused on growing top line faster than the market and delivering double-digit operating margins over the long term. Highlights for the year included six company-owned store openings and 11 independently owned La-Z-Boy Furniture Galleries acquisitions, positioning the store network for greater self-contained brand control and end-to-end consumer experience. Management also signaled a continued investment in store growth (12β15 new company-owned galleries planned for FY2025, excluding potential acquisitions) and a disciplined approach to capital allocation (roughly 50% reinvested in the business and 50% returned to shareholders over the long run).
Looking ahead, management provided first-quarter 2025 guidance (delivered sales of $475β$495 million; non-GAAP operating margin of 6%β7%), and expects industry softness to persist with potential late-cycle benefits as rates ease. The company projects a meaningful margin improvement from its Mexico-based cut-and-sew optimization and upholstery realignment beginning in Q2 FY2025, which supports the thesis of mid-term margin expansion as volume normalizes and mix improves. Investors should monitor progress on store openings, margin leverage from the wholesale/retail integration, ongoing supply-chain optimization, and the pace of consumer demand recovery as macro tailwinds re-emerge.