Outdoor Holding (NASDAQ:POWW) released fourth-quarter financial results and hosted an earnings call on Monday. Read the complete transcript below.

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Summary

Outdoor Holding Company reported a 10.1% increase in Q4 net sales to $13.9 million, driven by strong performance in the firearms category.

The company achieved a significant reduction in operating expenses, contributing to a dramatic decrease in net loss from continuing operations to $2.7 million from $27 million in the prior year.

Adjusted EBITDA more than doubled in Q4 to $7.7 million compared to $2.9 million in the previous year, marking consistent sequential improvement throughout fiscal 2026.

The company resolved a major litigation issue with a $4.4 million settlement, and aims to continue reducing legal expenses.

Strategic initiatives include the integration of AI to enhance customer service and marketplace operations, and the introduction of a new revenue stream from FFL services beginning in fiscal 2027.

Outdoor Holding concluded fiscal 2026 with a significant improvement in cash generation, ending the year with a cash balance of $68.1 million.

Management expressed confidence in continued market share growth and outperformance of industry trends, citing strong demand and operational efficiencies.

The company plans to continue its stock repurchase program and invest in high-return platform enhancements to drive future growth.

Full Transcript

OPERATOR

Good morning and welcome to the Outdoor Holding Company’s fourth quarter FY2026 earnings call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s remarks, we will conduct a question and answer session. To ask a question at this time, you’ll need to press STAR followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to the Company’s Investor Relations Representative, Michael Bakkel.

Michael Bakkel, Investor Relations

Thank you. Please go ahead. Good morning and thank you for participating in today’s conference call. Joining me from Outdoor Holding Company’s leadership team are Steve Urban, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Paul Kozowski, Chief Financial Officer; and Jordan Christiansen, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary. During this call, management will be making forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Federal securities laws, including statements that address Outdoor Holding Company’s expectations, strategy, future performance, operational results, margins, cost structure, legal matters, capital allocation, and other matters.

Forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. For more information about these risks and uncertainties, please refer to the risk factors and other cautionary statements described in Outdoor Holding Company’s most recently filed annual report on Form 10K and periodic reports on Form 10Q and the company’s earnings press release issued in advance of this call.

Today’s conference call includes non-GAAP financial measures that Outdoor Holding Company believes can be useful in evaluating its performance. These measures should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for results prepared in accordance with GAAP. For a reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures, please see the reconciliation table located in the Company’s earnings press release.

The information discussed on this call is current as of today, June 22, 2026. Except as required by law, Outdoor Holding Company disclaims any obligation to publicly update or revise any information to reflect events or circumstances that occur after this call. Before we begin, please note that certain non-GAAP financial measures discussed on today’s call, including adjusted EBITDA, are reconciled in the most directly comparable GAAP measures in the Company’s earnings materials.

Reconciliations for the first, second, and third quarters of the fiscal year are available in the applicable quarterly earnings releases posted on the Investor Relations section of the Company’s website. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Outdoor Holding Company’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Steve Urban.

Steve Urban, CEO

Good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us for our fiscal fourth quarter and full year 2026 earnings call. After just over a year as CEO, I’m excited to report that annual results reflect remarkable improvement for the company. I’m extremely proud of the tremendous progress we have made. Fiscal 2026 was a year of meaningful improvement across the business and the fourth quarter gave us a strong finish with continued operating momentum, stronger cash generation, growing profitability, and clear progress exceeding the profitability goals I laid out last August 1st. I will review our quarterly results, then Paul will review our financial performance in greater detail before I recap our accomplishments in fiscal 2026 and our priorities for fiscal 2027. In the fourth quarter, net sales were $13.9 million, an increase of over 10%, or almost $1.3 million compared with the prior year period. Despite the cautious consumer spending environment, gross margin remained strong for the quarter at 87.6%. Gross merchandise value for GMV increased to $229 million from approximately $205 million in last year’s period.

Due to sales mix of increasing firearms GMV versus Non-Firearms GMV, we experienced a modest decline in our take rate to 6.06% from 6.15% in last year’s period. We continue to execute our strategy of operating as a streamlined, pure-play e-commerce marketplace. In the fourth quarter, we made further progress reducing operating expenses. Total operating expenses declined significantly year over year to the tune of $23 million. During the quarter, the company resolved an open litigation item with a $4.4 million payment to fully and finally settle the DCP matter.

We inherited numerous litigation matters and have been working hard to resolve these matters as evident by many successful resolutions in the fiscal 2026 year. We continue to demonstrate that Gunbroker.com can be operated effectively as a smaller, more streamlined organization by reducing redundancies and right-sizing our personnel to match the scope of our operations. Even after absorbing the one-time $4.4 million settlement expense in the DCP matter, we dramatically reduced our net loss from continuing operations in the quarter to $2.7 million compared to a loss of $27 million in the same period last year.

This translated to a loss from continuing operations per share of $0.02 for the quarter versus a loss from continuing operations of $0.23 for the prior year period. Importantly, the significant cost improvements once again drove strong cash generation for the quarter. Despite restructuring costs, share repurchases, legal expenses, and other costs offsetting these cash gains for the quarter, which Paul will discuss in more detail, we view this continued recurring contribution of cash flow from operations as one of the clearest indicators of the underlying health of the business.

The fourth quarter results reflect the continuation of trends we’ve seen in the last few quarters. For fiscal 2026, net sales and gross margins grew from fiscal 2025 levels. More importantly, we have been executing on our cost reduction efforts and curtailment of legal expenses, resulting in significantly lower year-over-year operating expenses. The net result was a dramatic reduction in operating losses from continuing operations and positive cash flow from operations for the year.

That positive cash generation is a milestone worth underscoring as it’s a direct result of the concerted efforts our team has put in place to increase operational efficiency. Before I turn things over to Paul, I would like to touch on a key metric we use to evaluate real-world performance: Adjusted EBITDA. We believe this non-GAAP metric provides helpful insight into the underlying performance of the business given the level of non-recurring items impacting reporting results.

To help clarify our performance results and identify adjustments, we include a table detailing adjusted EBITDA in both our earnings release and Form 10K. This quarter’s adjusted EBITDA demonstrates our progress as we delivered more than double the adjusted EBITDA in the quarter of $7.7 million compared to $2.9 million in the fiscal 2025 fourth quarter. Just as encouraging is the trajectory for the year. Quarterly adjusted EBITDA grew from $3.1 million to $4.9 million to $6.6 million to $7.7 million from the first to fourth quarters respectively.

For the full year, adjusted EBITDA improved to $22.3 million from $15.3 million in fiscal 2025. We are outperforming the run rate of $25 million adjusted EBITDA that I set as a goal just 10 months ago. I’m especially proud of the tremendous work our team undertook during fiscal 2026 to overhaul and strengthen our financial reporting infrastructure, culminating in the successful remediation of all previously identified material weaknesses in our internal control over financial reporting by year-end.

I will now turn it over to Paul Kozowski, our Chief Financial Officer, to discuss the quarter and year’s performance in greater detail.

Paul Kozowski, Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Steve. I’m pleased to share some highlights from our fourth quarter. Outdoor Holding Company’s fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA was $7.7 million, a robust 55% of net sales. Q4 net revenue was $13.9 million, 10.1% higher than the fiscal 2025 fourth quarter. This marks the third consecutive quarter of sequential and year-over-year revenue growth. GMV was $229 million, 6.2% higher than Q3 and up 11.8% from Q4 of fiscal 2025. Firearm unit sales were up over 8.7% from last year’s quarter, while adjusted NICs increased 1.6%, resulting in an increased share of adjusted NICs by 40 basis points.

The significant increase in GMV was driven by firearms, while the non-firearms category showed a slight increase versus the prior year period. In Q4, we saw sales growth in both pistols and rifles, with sales of new units slightly outpacing sales and used. The overall change in sales mix resulted in a modest decrease in take rate for the quarter. The company completed its integration with a compliant FFL transfer platform to improve the transfer process for items subject to FFL regulations.

This integration has reinforced our commitment to reducing transaction friction and improving the user experience while generating incremental revenue. Our overall strong adjusted EBITDA was driven by our continued improvements in operating efficiency, reduced expenses, and increased GMV compared to last year’s fourth quarter. The company’s strong operating model and continued positive cash flow from operations helped the decline in our quarterly cash position for $1.8 million even after spending $4.4 million to resolve the DCP matter, incurring continuing legal indemnification expenses, repurchasing $1 million in stock, and resolving other legal disputes. After including a half million dollars of interest income, we ended the fiscal year with a cash balance of $68.1 million, a substantial increase from our closing fiscal 25 cash balance of $30.2 million. Regarding cash deployment, the company will continue returning cash to investors through the share repurchase program. Looking at full-year results for fiscal 26, net sales increased 3.5% to $51.5 million as compared to $49.4 million of fiscal year 25.

Fiscal 26 gross margins improved to 87.2% versus 86.9% in fiscal 2025. We expect our gross margins will continue to remain strong. A new revenue stream beginning of fiscal 27 for FFL services will be accretive to sales, but not at the same 87% profitability rate. Full-year GMV was $823.5 million, up 3.2% from fiscal 2025 GMV of $798 million. As a percentage of adjusted mix, Gunbroker increased share of firearms sales by 41 basis points per year. The take rate for the year improved modestly to 6.21% from 6.19% in fiscal 25.

Reducing operating expenses and improving the user experience will continue to remain a focus. For fiscal 26, our adjusted EBITDA was $22.3 million or 19 cents per share, compared to $15.3 million or 13 cents per share in fiscal 25. Executing on this strategy and maintaining our focus on financial discipline has increased adjusted EBITDA by $7 million. This is a 46% improvement compared to fiscal year 25 and includes over $5 million in reductions across SG&A following the corporate restructuring, less legal expenses, and lower bad debt expense.

The net loss from continuing operations was $4.9 million for fiscal 26, or a loss of $0.04 per share, a significant improvement over the $65.2 million net loss or 55% per share in fiscal 25. Just as important as our positive financial results, the Company also remediated all material weaknesses. This was a key priority for management and we completed it well before our anticipated deadline. Management continues to emphasize the importance of executing on these controls effectively going forward.

Now I’d like to turn it over to Steve for some final remarks before we address your questions.

Steve Urvan, CEO

Thanks, Paul. This was our third consecutive quarter of improved reported financial performance since I became Chairman and CEO of the company approximately 13 months ago. As this concludes our 2026 fiscal year, now is a good time to look back and reflect on our progress in achieving the objectives I discussed in my shareholder letter last August. My biggest goals for the year were to substantially reduce the Company’s SGA overhead cost structure and to increase adjusted EBITDA.

I’m thrilled to report that we delivered on both fronts. We have reduced corporate expenses, reduced our physical footprint, and cut recurring ordinary course operating expenses by $5.4 million. Those actions translated directly into improved profitability with fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA more than double what we achieved in the first quarter of fiscal 2026. Importantly, the fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA also demonstrated that we passed the $25 million adjusted EBITDA annualized run rate that I identified as a goal last August.

We are proud to achieve that milestone ahead of schedule, but we are not done. We still see opportunities to simplify the organization, improve efficiency and build on this momentum in fiscal 2027. Paul also highlighted a major part of the story. Our operating model continued to generate positive cash from operations even while we worked through legacy matters and other one-time costs. That positive cash generation gave us capital allocation options.

In the fourth quarter, we began to execute on our stock repurchase program, purchasing a little over 500,000 shares for over $1 million. And we expect to continue buying stock in a disciplined manner in the quarters ahead as trading permits. We have been disciplined in our capital allocation to support long-term shareholder value, selectively investing in new features like streamlining FFL compliance to improve the user experience. On Gunbroker.com we will continue to target similar select high return enhancements to the platform with the goal of increasing traffic, transaction volume conversion and ultimately revenue.

We will continue to leverage AI to improve the experience for both buyers and sellers on the site. In March, we deployed an AI powered listing tool to produce standardized and marketplace optimized product descriptions that we expect will reduce listing creation time, promote consistency and increase conversion rates. Within the next month or so, we expect to release AI driven virtual customer service to improve our customer support by providing faster and more accurate resolutions to customer issues.

To further take advantage of AI, we recently announced the hiring of Eric Berger as Director of AI Strategy and Implementation. Eric will lead the development, coordination and execution of AI initiatives across the company. Finally, as we look ahead in fiscal 2027, I am optimistic. With our strong margins, more efficient operations, positive cash generation from operations and platform improvements, each incremental dollar of revenue has the potential to create meaningful profitability and shareholder value.

This concludes our prepared remarks. I will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Thank you.

OPERATOR

Thank you. As a reminder to ask a question, please press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw any questions, press star one again. Our first question comes from Matt Karanda from Roth Capital. Please go ahead.

Matt Karanda, Roth Capital

Hey guys, thanks. Wondered if you could talk a little bit about sort of the shape of demand during the fourth quarter in terms of overall GMB and firearms units. The unit data that you shared was helpful. And then I guess since the quarter closed, since we’re kind of a couple months now into the first quarter, any trends to call out on demand and sort of the April May timeframe and maybe even month to date in June in terms of what you’re seeing on firearms demand?

Steve Urvan, CEO

Sure. Hey Matt, thanks for the question. So, you know, we’ve continued to outperform the market. I think, you know, NICS was up a little bit in the quarter. We were up, you know, substantially more. So, you know, that tells me that we’re continuing to gain market share and you know, we’re continuing to execute on our plan to, you know, basically make our sellers happy, make our buyers happy, and then and you know, make Gunbroker a very seamless experience, you know, for both sides of the transaction.

And you know, that’s leading to increases in market share. You know, obviously we don’t, you know, we’re not going to preview kind of financial results for the time past the end of the quarter. But demand in the marketplace seems better this year. I think that it can be hard to predict exactly why, but you’ve got midterms coming up, you’ve got the elimination of the tax on silencers. And I think that’s just the whole suppressor. There’s a lot of built up demand for suppressors.

And I think that’s just kind of had a, you know, generally positive impact on the firearms market in general. And so, you know, demand seem, you know, seems to be continuing to be, to be good. You know, it’s not 2020, 2021 good, but it’s, you know, better than it’s been in the last couple years.

Matt Karanda, Roth Capital

Okay, that makes sense. Thanks for the commentary there, Steve. And then I wanted to hear a bit more about the, the AI strategy, about the hiring of a director of AI strategy and implementation. Sounds interesting and sounds like you see it as a large opportunity for the marketplace. So I wanted to hear a little bit, I guess, about where he’s going to be focused around. Is it first around seller initiatives like the listing tool that you mentioned?

Is it more around experience and buyer initiatives like the customer service initiative that you also talked about? Maybe just what the primary first areas of focus are going to be and where you see the sort of the biggest areas of opportunity?

Steve Urvan, CEO

You know, it’s a great question. So obviously he’s been on the job just since the first of June. So, you know, step one is kind of get your feet wet, meet with everybody and, you know, start understanding the organization and understanding, you know, behind the scenes, how we conduct business. You know, to me, the, there’s so much that AI can do. There’s a lot of, you know, repetitive tasks that it can perform. There’s a lot of things that, you know, it can do 24 hours a day, whereas, you know, people aren’t working 24 hours a day.

And so, you know, we’re focused on not, we’re not really focused on anything. We’re kind of focused on figuring out where we should be focused. And you know, some of the opportunities we’ve already seen obviously are, you know, we have vast amounts of data. The site’s been around since 1999. We have pricing data, we have descriptive data. We have all kinds of information about firearms and using AI. We’ve, in the past, we’ve used, you know, traditional data mining tools to kind of help us figure out, you know, pricing and certain other things.

AI can do it so much more efficiently, because, you know, it’s capable of kind of, you know, interpreting things a little, a little more loosely. And so, you know, figuring out what we can do with that data, how we can better use that data, help our sellers sell things, to help our buyers find things. You know, marketing. AI is great at content generation. It’s great at, you know, there’s a lot of tasks that you can perform with AI. And so, you know, Eric’s job is to really jump in and help us identify where we should be focused.

And then, you know, the next step would be specific, you know, putting specific implementations to solve specific problems. The one that we’ve already, we were pretty far down the road. Well, actually very far down the road, even before he joined, you know, is customer service. We’re probably about a month away from launching that. And, you know, that one for me I think is huge because questions come in 24 hours a day and, you know, we don’t have people working customer service 24 hours a day.

And so being able to get you kind of immediate answers and really good answers I think is going to be game changing for the organization.

Matt Karanda, Roth Capital

Great. Appreciate all that detail, Steve. Thanks for that. And maybe just the last one, there’s still a little bit of residual noise, I guess, from some of the litigation matters. And so just trying to get my arms around how to think about core operating expenses now that you got the DCP litigation out of the way and the SEC matter is settled. Maybe. I don’t know if Jordan is on and wants to talk about that or if, but Paul wants to take a crack at just how to think about core OPEX and the run rate going forward now that those matters are sort of mostly behind us.

Steve Urvan, CEO

I’ll tell you, you know, we have, the only open litigation issues are the, you know, the class action and shareholder derivative lawsuit, you know, that were filed in Arizona. To the best of my knowledge, you know, everything else has been resolved. And so we don’t foresee, you know, we don’t know what the end result of that will be. But aside from that, you know, we don’t have any visibility or knowledge of kind of any, you know, like $4.4 million settlements that we’re going to have to make.

Like everything else has been cleaned up. So, you know, the one really, that one issue looked at, you know, the shareholder derivative matter and the class action, if you kind of look at it as kind of one interrelated issue, aside from that, we believe everything else has been settled now. We still are paying indemnification to ex officers, you know, for the SEC. You know, the SEC charged them in Arizona and you know that’s ongoing and that’s going to kind of come and go in waves.

You know, you’ve got like when you go to trial there’s a, you know, there’s a lot more expense. In other times there’s a lot less expense. It’s definitely kind of chunky. But you know that ongoing cost is, you know that and the class action really the last two buckets of kind of, you know, one time expenses or legacy litigation expenses that we foresee.

Matt Karanda, Roth Capital

Okay. And the indemnification sort of expenses as they come will be called out, I guess instead of sort of one time items, I would assume.

Steve Urvan, CEO

Yeah, we, it ends up in our adjusted EBITDA bridge.

Matt Karanda, Roth Capital

Got it. Okay, super helpful. Appreciate it, Steve. I’ll leave it there.

OPERATOR

Our next question comes from Dave Canaan from Kanin Wealth Management. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Dave Canaan, Kanin Wealth Management

Hi, good morning guys. Congratulations, Great job. First question is actually was posed by Matt, but I’m going to take a stab at it in a slightly different way and it’s in regards to any momentum. Did the momentum continue in fiscal Q1 and what you called out was the NICS data was slightly positive and how you outperformed it and grew share. So what is your confidence level? The question is going forward, what is your confidence level of continued outperformance of the NICS data and continued share gains?

Steve Urvan, CEO

So thank you, David. I feel very positive about, you know, the way we’re trending right now.

Dave Canaan, Kanin Wealth Management

Okay. And then in terms of the cost for indemnification of the former officers, is that just remind me, is that being pulled out and does the adjusted EBITDA number exclude it or we’re throwing that in there?

Steve Urvan, CEO

That is, that is a cost that is pulled out for the purposes for adjusted EBITDA.

Dave Canaan, Kanin Wealth Management

Okay. And then the last question is what are some of the opportunities that you see incrementally in order to grow the business organically?

Steve Urvan, CEO

Absolutely. So, you know, first of all, we continue to, as you see from the outperformance relative to NICs, capture market share. That’s one thing that we’ve been doing and I believe we’ll continue going forward. We brought the master FFL system online that has now become a revenue source. In prior quarters, we were implementing it, so there was cost but no associated revenue. Now it’s generating revenue as we go forward. Advertising—I think I’ve spoken about advertising in the past.

Our ad business, when I owned the company, it was private, was substantially larger than it is at present. We’re working on that. We want to drive more advertising sales. That’s something that wouldn’t affect the take rate. It’s kind of a completely separate but complementary business line. But it’s something that we feel could generate substantial revenue growth and substantial profitability as well. And then we’re continuing to make progress on universal payments.

Again, some of our sellers don’t accept credit cards, don’t have the ability to accept credit cards. We believe that is both a substantial revenue opportunity and a very substantial potential driver of GMV. Just eliminating the friction of having to go to the bank, then the post office, get a money order, mail it off, and what have you, as opposed to just throwing down your credit card to make a purchase. We think that will drive substantial incremental GMV as well.

Dave Canaan, Kanin Wealth Management

One more question I thought of as you were speaking. Things have been quite calm in the country, relatively speaking, in terms of civil unrest or catalysts that spur people to go out and buy guns and firearms. Could you give us a reference point in the past, for example, during the George Floyd riots and other events like that, in terms of run rate historically, what you’ve seen in the business in EBITDA in case something like that happens? So we can get a sense as to what the earnings power and EBITDA potential is.

Steve Urvan, CEO

I mean, in early 2021, through 2020, you had kind of a triple whammy. You had COVID, then you had the defund the police movement, protests, some rioting and looting, and then you had an election. Going into the first calendar quarter of 2021, we were on a run rate that was in excess of $100 million in EBITDA. At that time, we were private, under a different accounting standard, so I don’t want to get us in trouble or what have you. But we were in excess of $100 million in EBITDA as a run rate.

When you have political events, like for example, in 2008, two days before Barack Obama got elected, our sales literally doubled and then doubled again. During COVID, our sales ended up on a run rate of in excess of $100 million. The size of the spikes can be massive. From a GMV standpoint, it can be double, triple, and quadruple the GMV that you’re currently doing in a calmer period. So any kind of political changes, social unrest, these things could really drive massive increases in revenue and GMV.

Paul Kozowski, Chief Financial Officer

All right, well, to add on to that, Steve, the big point is it’s very scalable. Our operating costs are pretty fixed, and when the top line grows, we don’t need to invest a lot more in the business to support it. It’s pretty scalable. We were at 55% adjusted EBITDA as a percent of sales, and I think it would expand as that grows.

Dave Canaan, Kanin Wealth Management

Thank you. I appreciate the color and good luck. I wish you a successful year.

Steve Urvan, CEO

Thanks, sir.

OPERATOR

And we have no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Steve Irvin for any closing remarks.

Steve Urvan, CEO

I want to thank you for participating in today’s call and for your interest in Outdoor Holding. We look forward to sharing our ongoing progress when we report our fiscal first quarter results in August. Thank you all and have a great day.

OPERATOR

This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company’s SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants’ and analysts’ statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.