SWAG November 13, 2025

Stran & Company Q3 2025 Earnings Call - Strong Revenue Growth While Navigating Tariff Pressures and Margin Compression

Summary

Stran & Company posted a robust 29% year-over-year sales increase in Q3 2025, reaching $26 million, fueled by growth in both its core Stran segment and the recently acquired Gander Group business under its Stran Loyalty Solutions (SLS) segment. The company reported a 56.7% sales jump year-to-date and improved EBITDA by $2.8 million compared to 2024. However, elevated tariffs led to increased product costs, compressing margins despite partial cost pass-through to customers. Notwithstanding these headwinds and ongoing investments in growth and technology, Stran showed operational discipline with slower operating expense growth and enhanced operating leverage. The company is focused on driving consistent profitability, scaling through strategic acquisitions, deepening client relationships, and leveraging its strong balance sheet to navigate economic uncertainty and competitive pressures.

Key Takeaways

  • Stran & Company achieved 29% year-over-year sales growth in Q3 2025, reaching $26 million.
  • Year-to-date sales soared 56.7% to $87.3 million, bolstered by the acquisition of Gander Group.
  • EBITDA improved by $2.8 million compared to 2024, narrowing net losses year-over-year.
  • Operating expenses grew 30.3% year-over-year, but as a percentage of sales they declined from 37.7% to 31.3%.
  • Gross profit margin compressed due to tariffs and the lower-margin Gander acquisition, dropping from 30.6% to 29.1%.
  • Tariffs caused over $1 million in unrecoverable direct costs and introduced buyer hesitation in key loyalty and casino segments.
  • Stran continued its share repurchase program, buying back 267,000 shares for $408,000 in Q3 2025.
  • The company holds no debt and maintains $11.8 million in cash and investments, supporting growth and M&A activity.
  • Stran’s acquisition strategy targets fragmentation in the industry, focusing on both smaller roll-ups and transformative deals.
  • Management expressed confidence in Q4 performance, historically the strongest quarter, aiming for sustained profitability and margin expansion.
  • The company operates across diversified verticals, including casino, gaming, and beverage, mitigating macroeconomic risks.
  • Stran was recognized by PPAI as one of the best companies to work for in 2025, highlighting employee engagement as a strategic asset.
  • Leadership emphasizes execution discipline, operational leverage via technology and automation, and balancing growth with financial discipline.
  • CEO Andy Shape holds significant personal stake, underscoring commitment to shareholder value creation and long-term growth.
  • The company is cautiously optimistic about navigating potential economic contractions, leveraging flexibility in human capital and overhead costs.

Full Transcript

Conference Call Operator: Welcome to the Stran & Company Third Quarter 2025 earnings call. At this time, all participants have been placed on a listen-only mode, and the floor will be open for questions and comments after the presentation. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to your host, Alexandra Shilt. The floor is yours.

Alexandra Shilt, Investor Relations, Stran & Company: Good morning, and thank you for joining Stran & Company’s 2025 Third Quarter Financial Results and Business Update Conference Call. With us today are Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, and David Browner, Chief Financial Officer. Yesterday, we issued a press release detailing our results, which is available on our website at irstran.com. Before we begin, please note that today’s remarks may include forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties, as described in our SEC filings. With that, I will turn the call over to Andy Shape. Please go ahead, Andy.

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Thank you, Ali, and good morning, everyone. Taking a step back for a minute, those who may be new to the Stran story, it began over 30 years ago when we went door-to-door helping local businesses promote their brands through creative, high-quality merchandise. What started as a small two-person operation has grown into a national platform serving many of America’s most recognizable brands, all built on the same foundation: customer service, innovation, and trust. We’ve grown from that small startup into a publicly traded leader in the promotional marketing industry. I’m proud that the same leadership team that built Stran continues to guide us today with that entrepreneurial spirit, and I’m excited for the future of Stran. Our client base includes over 30 Fortune 500 companies and some of the largest brands in the world.

These companies chose Stran because we deliver creative, high-impact marketing solutions that drive engagement, loyalty, and measurable results. We’re not just a distributor; we’re a strategic marketing partner, helping these brands connect with people in powerful, authentic ways. Our corporate motto is driving brand awareness and affecting behavior through visual, creative, and technology solutions, and we continue to work tirelessly to deliver the best products and experiences to our customers. Now, moving on to our financial results, the third quarter was another strong and productive period for Stran, one that underscores the power of our platform, the resilience of our operating model, and the disciplined execution of our team. Sales increased 29% year over year to $26 million in Q3 compared to the prior year, and sales reached $87.3 million for the first nine months of 2025, a 56.7% increase from the same period last year.

Importantly, we achieved this growth while driving continued improvement and profitability. Year to date, our EBITDA improved by approximately $2.8 million compared to the same period last year, a clear indicator that our strategy to scale responsibly while managing expenses is delivering results. We have had many non-recurring expenses over the past 18 months and are happy that we are now able to concentrate on our business, both top-line and bottom-line growth, especially as we are now in Q4, which is historically our strongest quarter of the year. Both of our business segments contributed meaningfully to our results. The Stran segment achieved nine-month revenue of $60.3 million, up from $52.2 million last year, driven by deeper client relationships and new enterprise wins. The Stran Loyalty Solutions (SLS) segment, which includes Gander Group Business, acquired in August 2024, delivered $26.9 million in revenue compared with $3.5 million last year.

The Gander business has become an important contributor to our results, with momentum and tremendous opportunity ahead. The integration of Gander has gone well as we continue to identify synergies and cross-selling opportunities while we deliver end-to-end loyalty and incentive programs that strengthen Stran’s position across casino, gaming, and the hospitality markets. At the same time, our core Stran business continues to experience strong growth. This segment remains the cornerstone of our brand, representing decades of trusted relationships with leading organizations that rely on us for creative designs, efficient fulfillment, and continuous marketing support. We’ve deepened client partnerships, expanded digital ordering capabilities, and delivered measurable results for our customers. We are continuing to execute on initiatives to streamline operational efficiencies. Operating expenses grew only 30.3% year over year for the first nine months of 2025, while sales grew 56.7% during that same period in 2024.

As a result, operating expenses as a percentage of sales declined to 31.3% during the first nine months of 2025 from 37.7% during that same period in 2024. This contributed to the $2.8 million improvement in EBITDA from negative $3.2 million for the first nine months in 2024 to negative $384,000 for the first nine months of 2025. As we grow, we continue to benefit from efficiencies that come with scale, improving our purchasing leverage, streamlining logistics, and enhancing fulfillment capabilities. These advantages not only strengthen our margin but also create a competitive edge that smaller regional players cannot easily replicate. During the third quarter, elevated tariffs led to a meaningful increase in product costs for direct import orders, especially with our SLS segment. While we were able to pass on some of those costs to our customers, not all could be offset, which compressed our margins.

Just as importantly, the uncertainty surrounding tariffs created buyer hesitation, particularly in the loyalty and casino segments, impacting both top-line activity and profitability for the quarter. Despite these temporary headwinds earlier this year, demand remained strong, and our client base continues to show confidence in our capabilities. We also continued our share repurchase program during the third quarter, buying back approximately 267,000 shares of common stock at prices between $1.45 and $1.81 per share, totaling about $408,000. With no debt, $11 million in cash and investments, we remain well-balanced to fund growth initiatives, pursue acquisitions, and continue opportunistic buybacks. Stran & Company continues to actively evaluate acquisition opportunities, as strategic M&A remains a key pillar of our growth plan. We’re executing a disciplined roll-up strategy in a fragmented industry, identifying smaller distributors that complement our business and integrating them efficiently into our shared infrastructure.

This model provides low-risk, high-synergy growth, and gives us powerful margin expansion potential through economies of scale. Our focus is now also on transformative acquisitions, the kind that can meaningfully move the needle and accelerate our long-term growth trajectory. Finally, we are proud of our progress that has been recognized externally. This past quarter, Stran & Company was named by PPAI as one of the greatest companies to work for in 2025. It’s an acknowledgment of our environment we’ve built, one that empowers employees, fosters collaboration, and drives creativity across every aspect of our business. Our people are the foundation of our success, and this distinction is a direct reflection of their talent, dedication, and shared commitment to Stran’s mission. After several years investing in our growth, technology, and infrastructure, we are now entering a new phase, one focused on driving consistent profitability and margin expansion.

With our systems, talent, and scale in place, we’re well-positioned to translate our operational foundation into sustainable earnings growth. Overall, I’m very encouraged with how we are executing against our strategy, balancing growth, profitability, and shareholder value creation. With that, I’ll turn the call over to David Browner, our CFO, to review the financial results in greater detail. David, please go ahead.

David Browner, Chief Financial Officer, Stran & Company: Thank you, Andy, and good morning, everyone. I’m pleased to provide a detailed overview of our financial performance for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025. For the financial results of the three months ended September 30, 2025, sales increased 29% to approximately $26 million for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $20.1 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024. Sales by our Stran segment increased approximately $17.6 million for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $16.7 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024. Sales by our SLS segment, which consists of former Gander Group business, increased approximately $8.3 million for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from $3.5 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024.

For the Stran segment, the increase in sales was primarily driven due to higher spending from existing clients as well as business from new customers. The SLS segment, the increase in sales was due to the acquisition of the Gander Group assets in August of 2024. Gross profit increased 18.8% to approximately $7.1 million, or 27.2% of sales for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $6 million, or 29.5% of sales for the three months ended September 30, 2024. Gross profit margin decreased to 27.2% for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from 29.5% for the three months ended September 30, 2024, primarily due to the acquisition of the Gander Group business in August of 2024, which operates at a lower gross margin than the Stran segment.

Operating expenses increased 8.8% to approximately $8.9 million for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $8.1 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024. As a percentage of sales, operating expenses decreased to 34.1% for the three months ended September 30, 2025, from 40.4% for the three months ended September 30, 2024. Net loss for the three months ended September 30, 2025, was approximately $1.2 million compared to a net loss of approximately $2 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024. The financial results for nine months ended September 30, 2025: sales increased 56.7% to approximately $87.3 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $55.7 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024.

Sales by our Stran segment increased to approximately $60.3 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $52.2 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024. Sales by our SLS segment, which consists of the former Gander Group business, increased to approximately $26.9 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from $3.5 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024. For the Stran segment, the increase in sales was primarily due to higher spending from existing clients as well as business from new customers. For the SLS segment, the increase in sales was due to the acquisition of the Gander Group assets in August of 2024. Gross profit increased 49.3% to approximately $25.4 million, or 29.1% of sales for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $17 million, or 30.6% of sales for the nine months ended September 30, 2024.

Gross profit margin decreased to 29.1% for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from 30.6% for the nine months ended September 30, 2024, which was primarily due to the acquisition of the Gander Group business in August of 2024, which operates at a lower gross margin than the Stran segment. Operating expenses increased 30.3% to $27.3 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from approximately $21 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024. As a percentage of sales, operating expenses decreased to 31.3% for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, from 37.7% for the nine months ended September 30, 2024. Net loss for the nine months ended September 30, 2025, was approximately $1 million compared to a net loss of approximately $3.6 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2024.

As of September 30, 2025, we had approximately $11.8 million in cash, cash equivalents, and investments. I’ll now turn the call back to Andy for closing remarks.

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Thank you, David. As we close out the third quarter, I’d like to take a moment to reflect on where we stand. Over the past year, we’ve made steady progress across every part of the business, improving execution, strengthening operations, and positioning Stran & Company for consistent, sustainable performance. Our focus has remained the same: serving our clients well, managing growth responsibly, and ensuring that every initiative we take on creates measurable value. Looking forward, we believe Stran & Company is entering its next phase of maturity, scaling our operations while delivering steady profitability. We see a clear path to long-term margin improvement driven by continued operational leverage, technology investments, and disciplined execution. We built a strong foundation designed not just for growth but for lasting value creation. Looking ahead, our priorities are clear: one, deepen and expand client relationships.

We’re working to drive measurable results for our clients and build long-term partnerships rooted in transparency, service, and reliability. Two, increase operational efficiency. We’ll continue to simplify processes, invest in automation, and apply data to improve margins and execution speed. Three, maintain financial discipline. We aim to keep a balanced approach, investing where it strengthens our business while preserving a solid balance sheet and allocating capital where appropriate. We thank you for joining us today and for your continued support of Stran. With that, I will open the call to questions. Operator?

Conference Call Operator: Certainly. The floor is now open for questions. If you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone at this time. We ask that while posing your question, you please pick up your handset if listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. Please hold for a few moments while we pull for questions. Your first question is coming from Greg Womack. Please pose your question. Your line is live.

Greg Womack, Analyst: Hi. First question: how are tariffs counted from an accounting perspective? Does that pass on to adding more revenue?

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Yeah. Hi, Greg. Thank you for your question. Yeah. Tariffs, in terms of the tariffs, increases. When the tariffs happened, it was unprecedented, as we all knew, and it did affect us for some of our orders that were in production that were essentially out of factories or on the water in production. When we were charged those tariffs, we had the opportunity to try to go to some of our customers and ask them if they could pay more. Some of them were agreeable to it. Some were not. As a result, if we were able to pass on the tariffs, it increased revenue slightly. More importantly, our cost increased at a greater pace, and we were able to charge more.

The analysis that we’ve done showing direct impact is a seven-figure amount, just over $1 million for direct costs that we weren’t able to pass on to our customers. It also doesn’t include some of the buyer hesitation that I mentioned in the call in April and May that now we’re seeing in Q3, that buyers weren’t uncertain. Typically, when there’s tariffs involved, we have time to go increase prices because it’s over time. When we’re in the middle of production of merchandise and with time-based events that we need to give them out, we didn’t really have a choice. It was a very short window, and hopefully, that answers your question.

Greg Womack, Analyst: Yeah. I’ve got one other question too, I guess.

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Sure.

Greg Womack, Analyst: Do you guys feel like you’re still going to be positive net income for Q4? Or how are you feeling about year-round cash flow positivity? Are you feeling confident about that?

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Yeah. I mean, historically, Q4 has always been our strongest quarter for the Stran segment, Stran promotional segment, just because of end-of-year holidays. We are also very excited about Q4, as it has always been heavy sales. Yeah, I mean, obviously, we do not give guidance, but we feel good about where we stand. Again, like I said in the earnings script, we are concentrating on continued growth while keeping an eye on managing expenses. Yeah, that is our plan. Our plan is to have sustained profitability moving forward, which includes Q4.

Greg Womack, Analyst: I appreciate it.

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Yep.

Conference Call Operator: Once again, if you do have remaining questions or comments, please press star one at this time. Please hold one moment while we poll for any additional questions. You have a question coming from Vlad Kat with Freedom Call. Please pose your question. Your line is live.

Vlad Kat, Analyst, Freedom Call: Thank you, guys. Congrats on a great quarter. Looking forward to Q4 results in a few months. How should we think about potential contraction in the economy? How does the business typically perform during contractions?

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Yeah. Great question. First, yeah, we’re satisfied as a business with the growth that we’ve seen. We do want to increase our profitability. We know that. We want investors to know that although we accomplished a lot in the third quarter, we need to be more profitable. We know that, and we’re making efforts to do that. We plan every intention on doing that moving forward. I appreciate the positivity, and we like that, but we have some work to do, and we know it, and we will. In terms of your question surrounding the macroeconomic trends, one thing with our business is there’s not a lot of capital expenditure. The majority of our costs are human capital and overhead. If our business shrinks or if the economy shrinks, first and foremost, we can pivot fairly easily to that.

Secondarily, a lot of the business that we have is not necessarily discretionary. It may seem like it is, but it is not. A lot of the programs that we have or customers that we have have this integrated into their marketing initiatives, whether it is for new employees, whether it is for new customer acquisition, whether it is creating loyalty, as well as we are spread around multiple verticals, whether it is the casino and gaming. If the economy goes down, that goes well. Beverage and alcohol spend goes up as well. We try to intentionally be diversified in our client base so that we can address any macroeconomic trends. Finally, we think that the strength of our balance sheet provides us also with a competitive edge over our competition.

If the economy does falter, it gives us the opportunity to look at additional potential for acquisitions as well as compete against people who may not be able to have the resources and capabilities that we do. Although obviously we’re conscious and aware of the potential recession in the economy, it doesn’t scare us because we’ve been in business for 30 years, and we’ve seen it go up and down, and we know how to react to it pretty well.

Vlad Kat, Analyst, Freedom Call: Clear. Thank you for that insight. One follow-up question, if I may?

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Yeah. Sure.

Vlad Kat, Analyst, Freedom Call: What is the methodology that you use to find acquisition targets?

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Sure. The industry, as some of you may know, is about 25,000-30,000 distributors within our industry. Stran is ranked number 12, so we’re already a leader. We’re well known within the industry as being one of the only few public companies out there, the only one that’s the only publicly traded company on a major exchange in the U.S., that that’s the core business that we do, and that’s all that we concentrate on. We’re well known within the industry. We get a lot of first, we get a lot of inbound inquiries, I would say dozens a month, if not more. Secondarily, I attend quite a bit of industry events as somewhat of an expert in adding value to your business, how to do that, as well as how to establish exit plans.

As a result, I’m introduced to quite a bit of people who want advice and then say, "Would you be interested in acquiring our company?" There are a lot of people now within our industry that do not necessarily have a succession plan for their business. That is where we come in and can help them plan for that with Stran as their exit and their succession that makes financial sense both for us and for them to make a win-win going forward. We really look at that, but we are being a little bit more scrutinizing of our acquisitions moving forward than we have in the past, potentially, because we just wanted to make a little bit bigger of a difference. Also, we want to put those resources to work as soon as possible.

Vlad Kat, Analyst, Freedom Call: Clear. Thank you. Appreciate your focus on creating shareholder value. Happy holidays.

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Thank you. Likewise.

Conference Call Operator: Thank you. There are no additional questions in queue at this time. I would now like to turn the floor back over to Andy Shape for closing remarks.

Andy Shape, Chief Executive Officer, Stran & Company: Great. Thank you, everyone, for joining and your continued support of Stran. As mentioned, I think we’re entering a new phase of Stran where we’ve built scale. I continue to say to everyone that I speak to, investors and anyone else interested in the business, that if you go back and you read our initial S1 when we filed to go public, we’ve delivered on what we said, which was to continue to create scale through growth, invest in our infrastructure, and really create a leader in the industry. We’ve done that since we’ve gone from about $35 million in revenue to almost $120 million in trailing 12 months’ revenue. We’re excited about what we’ve done. We recognize that now that we’ve hit that scale, we can start turning some dials to really drive that profitability and create even greater shareholder value.

In all honesty, as the second-largest shareholder, the value means just as much, if not more, to me than anybody else in the world. I have very specific motivations to see the company really progress and do very well. I am determined to do it. Thank you, everyone who believes in Stran and who is committed to us. We look forward to finishing up the year strong and reporting our results in the beginning of next year. Thank you, everyone, and happy holidays.

Conference Call Operator: Thank you. This does conclude today’s conference call. You may disconnect your phone lines at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.