After Dominating the Holidays, iRobot Looks Forward to Non-Roomba Growth

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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.

Man setting up an iRobot Terra robotic lawn mower
Man setting up an iRobot Terra robotic lawn mower

Image source: iRobot.

iRobot results: The raw numbers

Metric

Q3 2018

Q3 2017

Year-Over-Year Growth

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?

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Quarterly adjusted EBITDA grew 8.9% year over year, to $46.5 million, and gross margin expanded 150 basis points to 48.5%.

  • Domestic revenue climbed 18% year over year to $215.4 million, driven by "substantial demand" for iRobot's new Roomba i7 and i7+ models.

  • 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.

  • Last week, iRobot unveiled Terra, its first Robotic lawn mower.

  • 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.