Crocs Rocks Wall Street's Socks Off

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An investment in Crocs (NASDAQ: CROX) is starting to feel like a pair of its signature shoes: There may still be holes in the business model, but comfort is winning over polarizing fashion aesthetics. Shares of the resin-footwear maker jumped at the open on Thursday after the company posted better-than-expected results.

The numbers may not seem great at first glance. Consolidated revenue rose a mere 3% -- or 4% on a currency-adjusted basis -- for the holiday quarter. Adjusted net income took a 2% step back. However, earlier guidance and analyst expectations were far worse. Wall Street pros were bracing for a 12% slide in adjusted earnings on flat top-line results.

It's not exactly victory-lap material, but it's a sound beat on both ends of the income statement. Crocs' outlook for the year ahead is also promising for a rare shoe stock trading at a single-digit earnings multiple.

Let's walk and talk.

Made to move

Crocs can be volatile during earnings season. The shares tumbled 19% in its previous financial update. The company may have delivered another bottom-line beat in October's third quarter, but its forecast was problematic. However, Crocs was able to nail the look back and look ahead this time around.

Here's a fun stat about Crocs. Before the shares opened more than 20% higher on Thursday morning, the stock was down 19% over the past year. This matches the stock's single-day drop after its last report -- but that's not the fun stat I'm referring to.

Crocs has now posted double-digit percentage earnings beats in each of the last four quarters. It wasn't enough to move the stock higher in an otherwise buoyant market over the past 365 days.

That's not fair. Adjusted earnings for all of 2024 wound up rising 9% to $13.17 a share, but as of Wednesday's close, the stock was trading for just 6.8 times last year's adjusted profit. Even after Thursday's initial heave skyward, Crocs is still trading at a single-digit price-to-earnings ratio (P/E).

There are plenty of reasons why a consumer-facing company with a well-known brand would be trading at such a low multiple, but Crocs doesn't check many of those boxes. It did have to upend its once cash-heavy balance sheet to finance the $2.5 billion acquisition of Heydude three years ago, but it's closing out 2024 with less than $1.4 billion in borrowings after paying back another $323 million of debt. Its debt-to-EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) multiple is a reasonable 1.4, lower than what larger footwear makers Nike and Skechers are sporting.