--- title: "Spar Group Earnings Call Highlights Strategic Turn" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/286177497.md" description: "Spar Group's Q1 earnings call highlighted a strategic shift towards higher-margin merchandising services, despite a 10.3% revenue decline to $30.5 million and a net loss of $0.553 million. Management reported improved gross margins at 22.3% and a return to positive adjusted EBITDA of $0.737 million. U.S. merchandising revenue grew 5%, and Canadian operations saw a 3% increase. Cost reductions and a new partnership with ReposiTrak were noted, although Nasdaq compliance issues were raised. The company aims for a gross margin target of 25% over the next 18-24 months, despite short-term challenges from its strategic pivot." datetime: "2026-05-13T00:45:38.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/286177497.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286177497.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/286177497.md) --- # Spar Group Earnings Call Highlights Strategic Turn Spar Group ((SGRP)) has held its Q1 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 55% Off TipRanks - Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions - Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks Spar Group’s latest earnings call painted a mixed but cautiously optimistic picture, as management framed the quarter as a deliberate transition toward higher-margin, recurring merchandising services. While revenue and earnings declined and cash flow turned negative, executives stressed margin improvements, cost cuts, and new commercial wins as evidence that the strategic pivot is beginning to take hold. ## Return to Positive Adjusted EBITDA Spar Group reported consolidated adjusted EBITDA of $0.737 million for Q1 FY26, marking a return to positive territory even though it was about half the $1.5 million posted a year earlier. Management argued this result, delivered amid a major mix shift away from lower-margin work, signals early progress on rebuilding profitability under the new strategy. ## Gross Margin Improvement Gross margin improved to 22.3% of revenue from 21.4% a year ago, a 0.9 percentage point gain that management tied directly to the shift toward higher-margin recurring merchandising services. The company reiterated a target of roughly 25% gross margin over the next 18–24 months, suggesting additional upside as the mix continues to migrate. ## U.S. Merchandising Growth In the core U.S. market, merchandising revenue grew 5% year over year, demonstrating that the company’s focus on recurring, higher-margin work is gaining traction with domestic customers. Management highlighted this growth as a proof point that the pivot is not just theoretical but already reshaping the revenue base toward better-quality business. ## Canada Returns to Growth Canadian operations also moved back into positive territory, with revenue rising 3% year over year in the quarter. Executives framed this as a sign of renewed momentum in a market that had previously been under pressure, helping diversify the company’s growth beyond the U.S.. ## SG&A Reductions Versus 2025 Average Selling, general, and administrative expense came in at $6.2 million, and on a normalized basis it was $1.9 million lower than the 2025 quarterly average. Management linked this decline to restructuring actions taken in 2025, underscoring that cost savings are now flowing through the income statement and supporting the margin-focused strategy. ## Strategic Partnership and Pipeline Momentum The company announced a partnership with ReposiTrak, combining Spar’s on-demand workforce with proprietary technology aimed at improving inventory accuracy and on-shelf execution. Alongside this, management pointed to recent wins with blue-chip retailers and consumer goods companies and described the business development pipeline as encouraging, reinforcing expectations for stronger future quarters. ## Working Capital and Liquidity Position Spar ended the quarter with positive working capital of $18 million, excluding the line of credit and current portion of long-term debt, and held $4.3 million in cash. Management used these figures to argue that the company retains adequate near-term liquidity to fund operations and support its ongoing strategic transition. ## Revenue Decline from Strategic Pivot Net revenues fell 10.3% year over year to $30.5 million, a drop management described as largely intentional as it scaled back lower-margin remodel and project work. While this move has squeezed the top line in the short term, executives stressed that it should support structurally better margins and more predictable recurring revenue over time. ## Shift from Profit to Loss On a GAAP basis, the company swung to a net loss attributable to Spar Group of $0.553 million, or a loss of $0.02 per diluted share, versus net income of $0.462 million, or earnings of $0.02 per share, in the prior-year period. Adjusted net results followed a similar pattern, moving from a $0.528 million profit to a $0.274 million loss as the impact of the revenue mix shift flowed through. ## Operating Pressure and Cash Use Spar posted a small operating loss of $0.042 million in Q1 FY26, compared with $1.0 million of operating income a year earlier, reflecting near-term pressure from lower volumes and transition costs. Operating cash flow was also negative, with $3.9 million used in operating activities, which management attributed mainly to working capital timing associated with merchandising growth. ## Nasdaq Compliance Overhang An analyst raised the issue that Spar is currently out of compliance with Nasdaq listing requirements, injecting an additional element of near-term uncertainty. Management indicated that it has a plan to address the situation and intends to engage with the exchange, but did not provide detailed timing or specific remedies on the call. ## Short-Term Headwinds from Strategic Pivot Executives acknowledged that the deliberate pullback in lower-margin remodel and project work has created short-term revenue and profit headwinds. However, they framed this trade-off as necessary to reposition the company around recurring merchandising services that offer better margins, more stable demand, and stronger long-term value for shareholders. ## Forward-Looking Guidance and Outlook Management reaffirmed FY26 guidance, calling for revenue of $143–$151 million, gross margins of roughly 20.5%–22.5%, and SG&A of $25.5–$26.5 million excluding unusual items, while still targeting about 25% gross margins in 18–24 months. They expect Q2 and Q3 to be the strongest quarters of the year as the business mix continues to shift toward higher-margin services supported by technology partnerships and recent commercial wins. Spar Group’s earnings call underscored a company in the middle of a difficult but deliberate transformation, trading near-term revenue and earnings for a higher-quality, margin-rich business model. For investors, the story now hinges on whether management can deliver on its guidance, sustain liquidity, and navigate the Nasdaq overhang while the benefits of the merchandising pivot show up more clearly in future quarters. ### Related Stocks - [SGRP.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/SGRP.US.md) - [TRAK.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/TRAK.US.md) - [NDAQ.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/NDAQ.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [CFO Makes Bold Insider Move With Fresh Spar Group Stock Purchase](https://longbridge.com/en/news/285297042.md) - [South Africa's SPAR announces voluntary job cuts to improve costs](https://longbridge.com/en/news/279441340.md) - [HiPP baby food jars recalled from Austrian supermarkets over safety concerns](https://longbridge.com/en/news/283224724.md) - [Top Executive Makes Bold Move With Fresh Spar Group Stock Purchase](https://longbridge.com/en/news/271165505.md) - [SPAR Group reports Q1 2026: Revenues $30.5M, gross margin 22.3%, positive EBITDA](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286099079.md)