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iRobot (NASDAQ: IRBT) released fourth-quarter 2018 results on Wednesday after the market closed, highlighting better-than-expected growth during the lucrative holiday season, an encouraging legal victory, and plans for diversifying its product base, manufacturing, and supply chain.
With shares up 12% in after-hours trading as of this writing, let's have a closer look at how iRobot ended 2018, and what investors can expect in the coming quarters.
Image source: iRobot.
iRobot results: The raw numbers
Metric | Q3 2018 | Q3 2017 | Year-Over-Year Growth |
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Revenue | $384.7 million | $326.9 million | 17.7% |
GAAP* net income | $25.2 million | $4.6 million | 447.8% |
GAAP earnings per share (diluted) | $0.88 | $0.16 | 450% |
Data source: iRobot quarterly filings. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles
What happened with iRobot this quarter?
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For comparison purposes, keep in mind last year's fourth quarter included a negative-$0.41-per-share impact from tax reform law, as well as a $0.03-per-share discrete tax benefit related to stock-based compensation. This quarter included a $0.04-per-share tax benefit related to stock-based compensation.
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This quarter's performance brought full-year 2018 revenue to $1.093 billion, operating income to $105.8 million, and net income to $88 million, or $3.18 per share. By comparison, iRobot's latest guidance, provided in October, called for lower 2018 revenue of $1.09 billion, operating income of $92 million to $96 million, and net income per share of $2.55 to $2.75.
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Quarterly adjusted EBITDA grew 8.9% year over year, to $46.5 million, and gross margin expanded 150 basis points to 48.5%.
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Domestic revenue climbed 18% year over year to $215.4 million, driven by "substantial demand" for iRobot's new Roomba i7 and i7+ models.
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International sales climbed 17.3% to $169.3 million, including 25% growth in Braava robot sales in Japan thanks to a new national television marketing campaign in the country.
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Last week, iRobot unveiled Terra, its first Robotic lawn mower.
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In December, iRobot received a final positive ruling from the U.S. International Trade Commission in its ongoing patent-infringement case against several competitors in the robotic-vacuum market.
What management had to say
iRobot Chairman and CEO Colin Angle called it a "phenomenal finish to 2018," noting that the company grew revenue 24% for the full year despite increasing competition, and generated operating margin of almost 10% even after absorbing the impact of tariffs on products imported to the U.S. from China in the fourth quarter.