Acme United Corporation (ACU)
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

Apr 23, 2026

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Acme United first quarter 2026 financial results call. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Walter Johnsen , Chairman and CEO. Please go ahead, sir.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Good morning. Welcome to the first quarter 2026 earnings conference call for Acme United Corporation. I'm Walter C. Johnsen, Chairman and CEO. With me is Paul G. Driscoll, our Chief Financial Officer, who will first read a safe harbor statement. Paul?

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

Forward-looking statements in this conference call, including without limitation, statements related to the company's plans, strategies, objectives, expectations, intentions, and adequacy of capital and other resources are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Investors are cautioned that such forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, including, among others, those arising as a result of a challenging global macroeconomic environment characterized by continued high inflation, high interest rates, and the imposition of new tariffs or changes in existing tariff rates. In addition, we have experienced supply chain disruptions in the past, and we may experience these disruptions in the future. We are also subject to additional risks and uncertainties as described in our periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and in our current earnings release.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Thank you, Paul. Acme United had a difficult first quarter of 2026. While our net sales increased 14% to $52.3 million, our net income was $985,000 compared to $1.6 million last year, and earnings per share were $0.24 compared to $0.41 last year. As you may remember, we purchased MyMedic for $18.6 million during the first quarter of 2026. The company sells directly to consumers and is cyclical, with most of the profits generated in the fourth quarter of the year. It also generates high gross margins, which it spends on advertising, promotions, new product development, and customer support. Our sales increase of 14% in the first quarter of 2026 includes approximately 8% from MyMedic, which was at break-even in P&L. Revenues excluding MyMedic increased 6%. The company's gross margins in the first quarter of 2026 were 39.7% compared to 39% last year.

When the impact of the high gross margins at MyMedic are removed, the core gross margins declined due to higher costs and tariffs. We turn our inventory about twice per year, so the costs reflected in the first quarter were from products made and purchased when the tariffs were at their peak. We expect to run through these items during the second quarter with a return to normal levels in the third quarter. Shortly after the war in Iran began, we started purchasing higher than normal quantities of raw materials and finished goods inventory. So far, we have purchased approximately $10 million of incremental inventory. While we hope for a quick end to the war, we are planning and acting to be prepared for increasing costs and shortages. Operationally, we're working to increase the revenues of MyMedic by expanding its retail distribution and building a strong core of non-seasonal business.

Our teams are integrating product lines, leveraging our purchasing strengths, and reducing duplicate expenses with the goal of generating significant profits throughout the year. The project is well underway. We're completing the move into our new Spill Magic facility in Mount Pleasant, Tennessee. Production has begun there, even as additional equipment is being installed. Orders for the business are strong, and we are experiencing record growth. In Europe, sales increased 19% in local currency to EUR 4 million. Our growth there includes the acquisition last November of Schmiedeglut, a small direct-to-consumer company, which is exceeding expectations. Our first aid business in Europe had record performance, and we continue to expand its product line and sales team. The Westcott cutting tool business overcame market headwinds and increased 10% in Europe. In Canada, First Aid Central had a strong quarter, and the cutting segment also grew.

Overall, our Canadian business increased 16% compared to the first quarter of 2025. I will now turn the call to Paul.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

Acme's net sales for the first quarter of 2026 were $52.3 million, compared to $46 million in 2025, a 14% increase. Excluding MyMedic, sales increased 6%. Net sales in the U.S. segment increased 12% in the quarter, driven by higher sales of first aid and medical products, including MyMedic products. Net sales in Europe for the first quarter of 2026 increased 19% in local currency compared to the first quarter of 2025, due mainly to the new line of cutting and sharpening tools. The base business had a good performance with a sales increase of 12%. Net sales in Canada for the first quarter of 2026 increased 11% in local currency due to higher sales of first aid products. The gross margin was 39.7% in the first quarter of 2026 versus 39% in the first quarter of 2025.

The favorable mix from higher margin direct-to-consumer MyMedic products was mostly offset by the impact of increased tariffs. SG&A expenses for the first quarter of 2026 were $19 million, or 36% of net sales, compared with $15.5 million or 34% of net sales for the same period of 2025. The higher SG&A was primarily due to the addition of the MyMedic business. The higher percentage of sales was due to the higher amount of advertising needed for the direct-to-consumer MyMedic business. Net income for the first quarter of 2026 was $1 million or $0.24 per diluted share compared to net income of $1.7 million or $0.41 per diluted share for the same period of 2025, a decrease of 40% in net income. The decline in net income was primarily due to the higher tariff and Med-Nap costs we experienced in the first quarter of this year.

The higher tariff spending commenced in July of 2025. However, the costs were capitalized into inventory, and we started to realize the full impact to earnings as the high-cost products were sold in the first quarter of 2026. We expect the tariff impact to gradually lessen over the next three quarters as the tariff rate declined in November 2025 and again in February 2026. Additionally, the incremental cost to enhance the quality assurance protocols at the Med-Nap facility will not repeat in the second quarter of 2026. Now to the balance sheet. Net debt increased from $27.2 million at March 31, 2025, to $38.6 million at March 31, 2026. During the 12-month period ended March 31, 2026, we paid $14.6 million for the acquisition of the assets of MyMedic, distributed approximately $2.4 million in dividends and purchased a cutting and sharpening line of products in Germany for $1.6 million.

Additionally, we generated approximately $14.2 million in free cash flow before the purchase of a new $6 million manufacturing and distribution facility in Tennessee in July 2025 to expand our Spill Magic business.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Thank you, Paul. I will now open the call to questions.

Operator

Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you'd like to remove your question from the call. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Richard Dearnley with Longbow Partners. Please proceed with your question.

Richard Dearnley
Analyst, Longbow Partners

Good morning. Could you put a dollar amount or a rough dollar amount on what the quality assurance protocols are involving?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Just some background on that. Last March, the FDA inspected our facility in Brooksville, Florida, and we make alcohol prep pads and BZK wipes and lens wipes there. They found a number of deficiencies in mostly our documentation of good manufacturing practices or documentation of some of the equipment being qualified. It's a lot of work to get it to be the state it needs to be to address the U.S. hospital market, and that is our goal. We hired a consulting firm to work with us to upgrade, in response to the FDA audit, which was very helpful, to upgrade the entire facility. Last year, Paul, was it about $1.2 million?

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

Yeah. $1 million, yeah.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

About $1 million we spent last year in consulting, and that's in addition to some equipment that were purchased. For example, we've upgraded a microbiology lab that we really didn't have before, and we've upgraded the chemical laboratory for testing. It was about $1 million in consulting. In the first quarter of this year, it was about $250,000?

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

$300,000.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

About $300,000. Dick, it was about $300,000. So far we've done, I think in total it's about $1.25 million or $1.3 million.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

Correct.

Richard Dearnley
Analyst, Longbow Partners

Right. That's all aimed at qualifying the Med-Nap products for hospital use.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Well, it's

Richard Dearnley
Analyst, Longbow Partners

Getting approval.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Yes. Well, it's not getting approval. We could sell them now, but you wanted to have it done right. In fact, our products do get sold into hospitals now. When we get done with the project, and we're about three-quarters done, we'll have a facility that we'll be very proud to take major distributors in the United States to visit and do their own audits, and we'll have confidence that we've really done the best job we can for the quality of the products that will go out. We're three-quarters through, and I think it's all expensed it, but we've been doing it, and I view it as an investment.

Richard Dearnley
Analyst, Longbow Partners

Right. Yeah. Your comment, I mean, that tracks along to the comment about investing in automation everywhere, or whatever the phrase was. Could you size the other investments? I mean, last year, you were talking about $2 million. I believe the year before was $2 million. Is that current run rate? Because those investments tend to have large productivity payoffs.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Yeah. You're addressing something that is important to us. The automation that we've been doing over the past few years has been with robotics. One of the big projects is taking the bulk product, for example, bulk BZK wipes that we produce at Med-Nap, and putting them automatically in packages that then go into the refills in our first aid kits. As you know, the refill business is an important part of our company. By automating it, we're reducing cost on a product line that is very consistent and growing. Some of the projects we're doing right now relate to automating, in the Spill Magic facility, automating the packaging of the Spill Magic powder and putting them into different sized packages. That has a pretty big payback. Honestly, I don't remember the number that we put in there, but maybe it's $500,000 .

It's an important one because we've got business that will keep that machine going. Another area is in our Rocky Mount facility, and I wouldn't call this automation, but we've reconfigured the entire process flow so that we have less people, but we have some small automation that we just put in. For example, there's drones that are doing daily cycle counts. You can imagine when we're doing our numbers, we tend to have high confidence that, in fact, the cycle counts hold. When we do physical audits at the end of the year, it speeds up the time we're down while we're doing them. That's some automation that just went in. There's other things. You may have seen robotics that can vacuum your floor in a home.

Well, there are industrial ones like that that scrub the floor in our 370,000 or 340,000 sq ft facility in Rocky Mount so that it is a production site, and it's a very clean warehouse handling a lot of medical items. It's very clean. It's now done with some robots. Those are some examples of them, Dick. There's another robot machine that we're working on in Brooksville, Florida, that's already been purchased, and we've got some business that is for lens wipes. There, the repetitive loading into the boxes can be done with robotics, with site sensors, and that's being worked on and should be online by June. Those are some examples.

Richard Dearnley
Analyst, Longbow Partners

Oh, yeah. Great. That's good. The MyMedic DTC business, does any of their expertise in DTC translate over into either your First Aid or Westcott business somehow?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Our last two acquisitions, the small Schmiedeglut acquisition in Germany and MyMedic, are both direct-to-consumer. As you may know, that means you're using social media as a selling tool, and you're putting ads in places like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, of course, there's Google Search. There's a consistent pattern of videos that are delivered onto the site, and the purchases are coming directly off the website. In the case of MyMedic, that's our first step in the United States to do direct-to-consumer. It lends itself to selling things like craft items. Again, because you can demonstrate there's a lot of differentiation in the product, and when we do new product introductions, you have a ready platform of potential customers who are following you. The benefit of MyMedic is we're not establishing a social media base.

We have 500,000 social media followers today, and we put out videos every two days. Sometimes it's how to use first aid kits, sometimes it's success stories and life-saving stories on what the use of a bleed control kit did and how it saved somebody's life. In other cases, it's for training or new products. The answer is, as we get experience with it, I hope that we do broaden the amount that we bring of our other product lines. I think in the Westcott line, that would be in the craft area.

Richard Dearnley
Analyst, Longbow Partners

I see. Good. Thank you.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Tim Call with The Capital Management Corporation. Please proceed with your question.

Tim Call
President and Chief Investment Officer, Capital Management Corporation

Congratulations on so many accomplishments within just two quarters.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Well, Tim, you try so hard to have your accomplishments, and then when you get a setback because of a tariff or changes that you aren't priced for, it's frustrating. You ride it the best you can, and as I hope we laid out, as we're looking through the coming quarters, the impact of the tariffs will be less, and we're hedging by buying $10 million of inventory for potential shortages or price increases out as a result of the war in Iran. Hopefully, that is just extra inventory and we sell it over the course. We're looking at and preparing ourselves in case this is an extended conflict.

Tim Call
President and Chief Investment Officer, Capital Management Corporation

You can handle the short-term volatility. In the long term, you've completed two complementary acquisitions. You've consolidated facilities, you've expanded capacity, allowed for future capacity expansion, and immediately expensed upgrades in technology and automation. Do you see all of these achievements made within the last six months adding to your long-term sales, margins, and earnings growth over many years?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Oh, Tim. Yeah, we certainly do. As an example, we spent $6 million to buy the facility in Mount Pleasant, Tennessee for Spill Magic. Spill Magic now has room to grow. For those that may need a refresher, the products that we sell there are used to clean up oily spills, bodily fluids, and blood. The opportunity to create some new products and hit them in scale and do it in that facility is exciting. We are out of the Smyrna facility at the end of this month. That's Smyrna, Tennessee. Spill Magic will be fully operational, and it's basically there now in Mount Pleasant. As I mentioned too earlier, the automation that we're putting in, it's expensive, it's heavy, and you want to do it once. Now we have a home to be able to place it properly.

I wouldn't say this is a trend, but we've been having very, very good success with Spill Magic since we purchased the property. It's almost like it's willed itself to say, "Hey, we've got room to grow, so let's do it." It is. This past quarter, it was up, I think over, was it over 30%, Paul? Yes. Yeah. It's good quarter. It's making progress.

Tim Call
President and Chief Investment Officer, Capital Management Corporation

With these two new acquisitions, your past acquisitions have benefited from cross-selling and your wider geographic footprint. They're getting new retail channels and distribution networks. How long could it take these two recent acquisitions to experience sales growth from these different avenues?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Well, I was just on the phone with First Aid Central, our Canadian subsidiary, literally an hour ago. We were talking about MyMedic and its product line. We would produce them in Canada, meeting Health Canada specifications. We're very excited about launching that way sooner than we expected. The reason is because the name recognition is actually carrying over into Canada, and we had no idea. You've got a name recognition, you've got a half million followers, and when we put the products into production in Canada, we're expecting some growth, and that would be happening this year. As an aside, having spoken to our Canadian team literally today, we're about to add another 30% capacity to our operation in Laval, outside of Montreal, and it's because of growth.

Tim Call
President and Chief Investment Officer, Capital Management Corporation

Well, thank you for all your hard work and success. Looking forward to the long-term growth of the company.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Thank you very much, Tim.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Georgie Vishenko with Freedom Broker. Please proceed with your question.

Georgie Vishenko
Analyst, Freedom Broker

Thank you. Good afternoon. My question is about cutting and sharpening segment. It was under pressure in 2025. What was the revenue trends in Q1? Did they recover?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Yeah. The cutting and sharpening area last year was impacted when the tariffs were instituted in April. You may remember it was called Liberation Day, and it was April 2nd, which is a day I remember. At that point, the tariffs stopped a lot of things that would've been going forward as promotions because you couldn't price product when there were costs as high as 145% in tariffs. The retailers couldn't price. The promotional activity for things in the summer, in the fall, in the winter were basically stalled. That was one of the reasons that Westcott, in particular, it had a decline. Paul, what was the decline last year? It was about 13%.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

It was 10%.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

10%.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

Overall company wide.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Yeah. Westcott was down about 10%, and that was the promotional activity. In the first quarter, you're going up against comparables without the tariffs having been put in place. Westcott was down, what, about 8% or 10%?

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

This first quarter?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Yeah.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

No, I think it was barely a couple points, maybe 2%.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Westcott was down 2%. It's come back, but the big part coming back is really second, third, fourth quarters, where last year we had no promotions, and this year, unless something happens dramatically with the war, we're expecting good promotional activity. In fact, we're actively quoting. That's a roundabout way of saying I think we have easy comparisons coming in in the second, third and fourth quarter for the cutting and measuring tools area, and we should be showing growth.

Georgie Vishenko
Analyst, Freedom Broker

Thank you.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

It was a good question.

Operator

Thank you. Once again, as a reminder, if you'd like to join the question queue, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from the line of Jake Patterson with Talanta Investment Group. Please proceed with your question.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Hey, guys. Just a couple quick ones, because most of them got answered already. The SG&A number, I know you said there was like $300,000 of one-time expenses in there. Call it what? Like $18.7 million. Is that kind of a fair run rate to look at for the rest of fiscal 2026? I know you said you had some savings you could pull out of MyMedic, but I'm just curious on that.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

You were referring to a number of 18.7? What? No. It's more like 30.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Well, that'd be your $19 minus your $300,000 of consulting.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Oh, okay. No.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Should be a lot.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Well, in terms of percentage, it's probably like 33%.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

For a full year, that's like the target 3% of revenue?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Yes.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Okay. Gotcha. I know you said the gross margin in the legacy business was down. Is there any way you can give a number for that, or is it?

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Well, I think we can give you a number. It's probably 2%.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

I would say it's about 200 basis points.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Okay. Cool. Thank you.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

That's really driven by tariffs.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Okay.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

It's just tariffs.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Yeah. CapEx for 2026. I know you mentioned some automation investments, Canada expansion. I was kind of curious if you guys had any range for CapEx expectations.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

I think we're looking at about $6 million.

Paul G. Driscoll
VP and CFO, Acme United

Probably $7 million.

Jake Patterson
Research Analyst, Talanta Investment Group

Okay. Cool. Thanks. That's it for me.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Okay. Thank you, Jake.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question and answer session. I'll turn the floor back to Mr. Johnsen for any final comments.

Walter C. Johnsen
Chairman and CEO, Acme United

Like to thank the audience for asking some very probing questions and having hopefully given some very thoughtful answers. This call is complete, and I'd like to thank you for joining us. Goodbye.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

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