Beyond Meat (NASDAQ:BYND) held its fourth-quarter earnings conference call on Tuesday. Below is the complete transcript from the call.
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Full Transcript
OPERATOR
Thank you everyone and welcome to the Beyond Me Inc. 2025 fourth quarter conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. Later, you'll have the opportunity to ask questions during the question and answer session. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the Star key followed by zero. To ask a question, you may press Star then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press Star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to turn today's conference over to Rafael Gross, Partner of ICR Inc. Please go ahead.
Rafael Gross
Thank you. Hello everyone and thank you for participating in today's call. Joining me are Ethan Brown, Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer and Luby Katua, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Chief Financial Officer and Trustee, Treasurer. By now everyone should have Access to our fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings press release filed today after market close. This document is available in the Investor Relations section of Beyond Meat's website at www.BeyondMeet.com. before we begin, please note that during the course of this call management may make forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in these forward looking statements. Forward looking statements in our earnings release along with the comments on this call are made only as of today and will not be updated as actual events unfold. We refer you to today's press release, our quarterly report on Form 10Q for the quarter ended September 27, 2025 and our annual report on Form 10K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025 to be filed with the SEC along with other filings with the SEC for a detailed discussion of the risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward looking statements today. Please note that on today's call management may reference adjusted ebitda, adjusted loss from operations and adjusted Net loss which are non GAAP financial measures. While we believe these non GAAP financial measures provide useful information for investors, any reference to this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with gaap. Please refer to today's press release for a reconciliation of these non GAAP financial measures to their most comparable GAAP measures. And with that, I'd now like to turn the call over to Ethan Brown.
Ethan Brown
Thank you Rafe and hello everyone. We entered a challenging year for our brand with an equally challenging quarter. We used this period however to accomplish a series of foundational building blocks for the company. First, we retired the majority of our 2027 convertible debt notes and second, we raised significant capital, two measures that fundamentally changed and strengthened our balance sheet. Third, we invested in an enterprise wide transformation initiative with a focus on rightsizing our operations and expanding our margins. Fourth, and as you will see reflected in our Q4 2025 numbers, we took another hard look at the assets, products and inventories we believe are not needed going forward and took action to disposition them. Fifth, we continue to lead the category in bringing clean plant based meats to the consumer while hammering away at persistent misinformation promulgated by the incumbent industry. Finally, we laid the groundwork for repositioning Beyond Meat to Beyond the Plant Protein Company so that we can bring the strength of our brand, technology and expertise to adjacent categories. Having touched on the significant actions we took to strengthen our balance sheet through the elimination of approximately $900 million in debt in the addition of approximately $149 million in cash on our previous earnings call, I will forego further detail here. Instead, I will focus my comments on a quick financial review of Q4 2025 before turning to our transformation work product narrative and our brand repositioning and entry into adjacent markets. What I hope will be clear from these comments, especially for the investor who desires to drill down a level deeper than headline numbers, is that we are highly focused on reducing baseline operating expense and cash use, increasing conversion efficiency in our production facilities and addressing category headwinds straight on even as we take significant steps to diversify beyond it. Financial results for the fourth quarter 2025 reflect persistent weak demand in the plant based meat category, resulting in lower volumes, the impact of which ripple throughout our P and L. This negative pressure was coupled with a number of significant nonroutine charges, many of which, though not all, stem from our transformation activities. Sales were 61.6 million, down 19.7% from the year ago period. Lower sales led to lower overhead absorption which together with higher trade negatively impacted gross margin. More significant, however, for large non routine or unusual items. These include such items as increased provision for inventory obsolescence, partly reflecting the strategic discontinuation of certain lower profit products and accelerated depreciation related to the cessation of our operational activities in China. The net result was a reported gross margin of 2.3%. Similarly, despite progress in reducing the baseline cost of operating our business, significant non routine items including large non cash charges increased our reporting operating expenses to 134.2 million versus $47.8 million in the year ago period. These included $48.1 million in non cash charges related to the write down to fair value of certain of the company's long lived assets, a $38.9 million litigation related accrual and higher non cash stock compensation expense of approximately $13.3 million related to our convertible debt exchange transaction. Stripping out these non routine items and the impact of the transaction related change in non cash stock compensation, one can see that the run rate operating expense of our business is down considerably year over year. Finally, also reflecting the aforementioned transaction net income was $409.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to a loss of $44.9 million in the year ago period, reflecting a $548.7 million gain on debt restructuring. To summarize, our fourth quarter 2025 results reflect both continuing challenges in the category as well as substantial noise in our reported numbers due to, among other factors, several of our transformation initiatives. I will now turn to this transformation activity where we are encouraged by the progress of our Transformation Office led by our Interim Chief Transformation Officer John Boken. As I noted, we've seen further reduction in underlying operating expenses excluding the nonroutine items and transaction related stock compensation increase for both the fourth quarter and full year 2025 on a year over year basis and we are pursuing other cost reduction measures going forward. Also setting aside certain non routine charges. We believe we are making progress against our goal to sustainably return to healthy gross margins. As previously shared, we've largely completed the consolidation of our production network and continue to improve asset utilization at our manufacturing facilities. Further, we're now in the process of optimizing our new continuous production line at our facility in Columbia, Missouri and are investing in automation. These and other measures are already showing up in a year over year improvement in conversion costs across our network, a key component of our cogs reduction initiatives. Further, through our Transformation Office, we are seeking to reduce material costs through RFP actions, the cultivation of secondary sources and formulation improvements. We are further consolidating our warehouse network and reducing logistics expenses. We are exiting less profitable product lines and we are making substantial progress on driving down inventory. Finally, we remain very focused on cash management and significantly reduced our baseline cash use in the fourth quarter compared to prior periods excluding extraordinary items. I'll now turn briefly to our ongoing efforts to dispel the persistent cloud of misinformation regarding our products. As I have noted countless times in these calls, the incumbent industry did a masterful job of seeding doubt in the mind of the consumer for the time being. We operate in an upside down world where protein from peas, lentils, fava beans and brown rice mixed with avocado oil and a limited number of other clean ingredients is disingenuously, though broadly cast as less than healthy. I believe this confusion will ultimately clear in the interim. We remain focused on innovating around taste and health and helping to communicate the latter via various accreditations and certifications, including our now 20 plus certifications from the Clean Label Project for our latest center of the plate innovations such as Beyond Steak Filet or Beyond Ground Fava. Consumers can now order directly from Beyond Test Kitchen, our direct to consumer platform. These products, their great taste, simple and clean ingredients and the impressive macronutrient content are winning accolades from consumers even before they reach retail stores. Beyond Steak Filet boasts 28 grams of protein, baba beans, wheat, gluten and mycelium and only 1 gram of saturated fat from avocado oil while boasting zero cholesterol and only 230 calories. Beyond Ground Fava delivers 27 grams of protein from fava beans and potato, 4 grams of fiber from psyllium husk, has no saturated fat or cholesterol and is only 140 calories. Moreover, Beyond Ground fava is made from only four ingredients, water, fava protein, potato protein and psyllium husk, and performs extremely well in dishes such as tacos, bolognese and protein bowls. Finally, I'll now turn to a key and central communication. Notwithstanding the many changes occurring through our Transformation Office that I've discussed above, when I noted late last year that going forward you should not expect more of the same, I was most of all referring to the broadening of the aperture that you see as we move from beyond meat to beyond the plant protein company. I believe that no company has innovated with plants under more scrutiny than Beyond Ever. We're now bringing the resulting hard fought expertise and capabilities, our commitment to health and clean ingredients, and our brand to adjacent categories where we believe we can be disruptive and win. Our first foray in this broader delivery of the power of plants to consumers is our exciting new drink platform Beyond Immerse. The Beyond Immerse platform, a clear and slightly carbonated beverage, is designed to provide the consumer with protein, fiber, antioxidants and electrolytes, effectively immersing the body in the nutritional benefits of plants. We launched Beyond Immersed as we now plan to do with all new retail innovation on the Beyond Test Kitchen to early fanfare and excitement, generating over 3 billion media impressions and selling out of our first limited run inventory quickly. Beyond Immerse is formulated to support muscle health and recovery, gut health, immune function and hydration. Each serving contains 10 or 20 grams of protein, 7 grams of fiber and only 60 or 100 calories depending on the level of protein. Beyond Immerse is made without added sugar, sugar, alcohols, artificial sweeteners or flavors, stabilizers, carrageenan and many other ingredients present in many popular protein drinks. Easier to drink than a thick protein shake and made without whey so it is dairy free. The product is designed for the casual to competitive athlete as well as the busy student or professional who wants protein, fiber, antioxidants and electrolytes at the gym, home, work or on the go. Moreover, we believe it is particularly well suited for DLP1 users. I personally find it satisfying post workout at breakfast or late afternoon when I'd like a boost between meals. It's been fun to watch consumers enjoy it and like all things beyond, we continue to innovate and iterate based on what we believe is a state of the art science and consumer use and suggestions. Far from stepping away from our mission to change the source of protein at the center of the plate from animals to plants, we reaffirm it and take to these promising adjacencies to introduce our brand to a much larger number of consumers and currently participating in a plant based meat category. We do so not to dabble, but with a firm and serious belief that our technology, our brand, and our commitment to human health and the power of plants allows us to successfully deliver unique and compelling value within the certain segments we've identified. In the end, it is our aspiration that, though indirect, this expansion will lead more consumers back to beyond at the center of the plate as they enjoy our brand, clean ingredients and commitment to their health in less controversial, more convenient products like Beyond Immerse. As such, I close today's comments as I have many others that we remain focused on building tomorrow's global protein company of size and significance. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Luby.
Luby Katua
Thank you Ethan and good afternoon everyone. I'll begin with a review of our fourth quarter financial results before providing some brief comments on our outlook and additional matters regarding some of our recent disclosures. Total company net revenues decreased 19.7% to 61.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 from 76.7 million in the year ago period. The decrease was primarily driven by a 22.4% decrease in volume of products sold, partially offset by a 3.5% increase in net revenue per pound. Ongoing softness in volume of products sold primarily reflects weak category demand in many of our key geographies and channels and lower sales of chicken and burger products to QSR customers both in the US and abroad. Net revenue per pound increased primarily as a result of changes in product sales mix, favorable changes in foreign exchange exchange rates and price increases of certain of our products, partially offset by higher trade discounts. Breaking this down by channel US retail channel net revenues decreased 6.5% to 31.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to 33.9 million in the year ago period. The decrease was primarily volume driven, which again largely reflects weak category demand, while net revenue per pound was flat. Although volume headwinds persist, we are beginning to see some benefit from recently announced distribution gains in the mass channel, which is helping to mitigate the general softness in US foodservice. Net revenues decreased 23.7% to 8 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to 10.5 million in the year ago period. The decrease was primarily driven by a 25.1% decrease in volumes of products sold, partially offset by a slight year over year increase in net revenue per pound. Although category dynamics in the foodservice channel also remain weak, much of the decline in our business was due to the lapping of sales of chicken products to a US QSR customer in the year ago period. Turning to international international retail channel, net revenues decreased 32.5% to 8.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to 13.1 million in the year ago period. The decrease in net revenues was primarily driven by a 33.5% decrease in volume of products sold, partially offset by a 1.5% increase in net revenue per pound. The decrease in volume of products sold was primarily driven by reduced burger sales in the EU and certain retail channels in Canada. Although our Canadian business generally remains healthy year over year, comparisons were negatively impacted in part by stocking activity in the year ago period in anticipation of potential tariffs. Finally, in international foodservice, net revenues decreased 31.8% to 13.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 from 19.3 million in the year ago period. The decrease in net revenues was driven by a 34.1% decrease in volume of products sold, partially offset by a 3.4% increase in net revenue per pound. The decrease in volume of products sold was primarily attributable to reduced sales of our chicken and burger products to certain QSR customers. The increase in net revenue per pound primarily reflected favorable changes in foreign currency exchange rates and changes in product sales mix partially offset by higher trade discounts. Moving down the P and L gross profit in the fourth quarter of 2025 was $1.4 million or gross margin of 2.3% compared to gross profit of $10 million or gross margin of 13.1% in the year ago period. Gross profit and gross margin in the fourth quarter of 2025 included 2.4 million in non cash charges related to SKU rationalization initiatives and 1.5 million in expenses related to the shutdown of our China business. Additionally, gross profit and gross margin in the fourth quarter of 2025 were negatively impacted by increased cost of goods sold per pound partially offset by increased net revenue per pound. Reduced production volumes in response to weak demand continue to represent a meaningful headwind in terms of fixed cost absorption even as we have been encouraged by improvements in our variable conversion costs overall by cost bucket, the increase in cost of goods sold per pound primarily reflects higher materials costs and increased inventory provision, partially offset by lower manufacturing expenses including depreciation and lower logistics costs. Operating expenses were $134.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to 47.8 million in the year ago period with the significant year over year increase on a reported basis reflecting the inclusion of certain large non cash charges. Specifically and of note, operating expenses in the fourth quarter of 2025 included $48.1 million in non cash charges related to the loss from write down of assets held for sale reflecting certain PP and E assets which were no longer deemed core to our strategic objectives going Forward forward. A $38.9 million litigation related accrual and $13.3 million in incremental share based compensation expenses related to the convertible debt exchange. Excluding these and other lesser items, the decrease in operating expenses compared to the year ago period was primarily driven by decreased marketing expenses below the line. Total other income net was $542.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to total other expense net of $7 million in the year ago period. The increase was primarily due to a gain on debt restructuring resulting from our debt exchange and to a lesser extent a gain from remeasurement of warrant liability partially offset by a loss from remeasurement of derivative liability and an increase in interest expense. Net income was $409.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 or $0.84 per common share compared to net loss of $44.9 million in the year ago period, or a loss of $0.65 per common share. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of 69 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared to a loss of 26 million in the year ago period, although I would note that adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter of 2025 includes the previously mentioned loss from write down of assets held for sale. Turning to our balance sheet and cash flow highlights, our cash and cash equivalents balance including restricted cash was $217.5 million as of December 31, 2025 and total outstanding carrying value of debt was $415.7 million, which includes the total undiscounted future cash flows of the new 2030 notes. In accordance with TDR accounting guidelines, net cash used in operating activities was $144.9 million in the year ended December 31, 2025 compared to $98.8 million in the year ago period. Capital expenditures totaled $12.3 million in the year ended December 31st, 2025 compared to $11 million in the year ago period. Net cash provided by financing activities was $223.4 million in the year ended December 31, 2025, compared to net cash provided by financing activities of $45.8 million in the prior year. In 2025, net cash provided by financing activities included $100 million in draws from our delayed draw term loan facility, partially offset by related debt issuance costs and aggregate net proceeds of approximately $148.7 million from sales of customers common stock under our ATM program. As a reminder of the Key highlights As a reminder of the key highlights of our Q4 debt exchange, we exchanged over 97% of the $1.15 billion aggregate principal amount of the 2027 convertible notes for approximately $209.7 million in aggregate principal amount of new second lien 2030 convertible notes and approximately 318 million new shares of common stock. This leaves approximately 29.5 million of the 2027 convertible notes outstanding today in combination with the nearly $150 million in net proceeds we raised from our ATM program in Q4. We believe these actions have meaningfully strengthened our balance sheet and support our continued efforts to execute our Business Transformation Plan Plan. Let me now touch briefly on our outlook. We continue to experience elevated levels of uncertainty and therefore low visibility within our core category of plant based meat. Accordingly we believe it remains prudent to provide only limited and very near term guidance until we begin to see more clear signs of stabilization within our operating environment. With that context, we are providing the following Revenue guidance for the first first quarter of 2026, we expect net revenues to be approximately $57 million to $59 million. Finally, I'll close by making a few remarks on some of our recent disclosures regarding the Company's internal controls over financial reporting as part of our fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial close procedures and in addition to a previously identified material weakness related to the accounting for non routine and complex transactions, we identified an additional material weakness related to controls associated with the accounting for inventory provision, including amounts recorded for the provision of excess and obsolete inventory. We are clearly disappointed with these findings and are actively working on plans to remediate the identified deficiencies. In part, while assessing the impact of these material weaknesses on our financial statements, we identified certain errors related to our previously issued Interim Condensed Components Consolidated financial statements for 2025, which we determined were immaterial to those interim financial statements. We intend to correct those errors prospectively when we file our quarterly reports in 2026, and we have also furnished as corrected amounts for certain key effective financial measures. In today's press release, we want to assure all our stakeholders that we are fully committed to our efforts for remediating the identified issues and strengthening our controls as applicable, and we have already taken measures to advance these objectives. Lastly, as we noted in our earnings release, we are unable to file our annual report on Form 10K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025 within the prescribed deadline. As we require additional time to complete our fourth quarter and year end financial close procedures, we are working diligently to address these matters. However, at this time we are unable to estimate when the form 10k will be filed. As a result, the Company will be considered an untimely filer and will no longer be eligible to use Form S3 registration statements until it regains timely filer status by filing in a timely manner all reports required to be filed under the securities Exchange act of 1934, as amended for a period of 12 calendar months. And with that, I'll turn the call
OPERATOR
over to the operator to open it up for your questions. Thank you. Thank you. We will now begin the Question and Answer session. To ask a question, you may press Star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, Please press star then two at this time. We will now pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from Ben Thoyer with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Ben Thoyer
Yeah, good afternoon, Ethan and Luis. Thank you very much for taking my question a few ones. So maybe to kick it off a little bit on the outlook for new products and product lines. You've talked a little bit about the beverage opportunities here and then obviously you've talked about a pipeline of potential new products under the new branding of Beyond Immerse. So really want to understand, Ethan, from you, is that to be seen as like really pivoting away from what? Kind of like the initial mission of beyond was to really look to diversify the portfolio. And I really would like to understand where you are in terms of researching and developing those products to get a better understanding in terms of the timeline when we can expect those products to come to market. That will be my first question.
Ethan Brown
Great, thank you Ben, appreciate it. So I think first and foremost, no, it is not in any way abandoning the original mission and focus that we have had. It's simply broadening the aperture of our business and meeting consumer where they are today. And if I could just comment a little bit on why we're making this pivot and then get into kind of the timing and focus of the pivot. If I thought that beyond in our original value proposition, we're struggling during a period when the role of science and public discourse and social media and government was pronounced and effective, when pricing and economic stability and buying power are all favorable and the American political landscape were characterized by a sense of common ground versus division and Beyond. We're really suffering. You know, I would be very concerned for our long term prospects and for the plant based meat category overall. But you know, none of that is true. Right. This is a very difficult period for the world and it's a difficult period for our country. And I think one of the things that is most significant for our business in terms of what's impacting it is this kind of surround sound of pseudo scientific jargon and positioning and promotion that really overwhelms what is decades and decades and decades of science. And I think nothing in our lane is more obvious than is more obvious representation of this troubling trend than the resurgence of red meat. And I've spent over 17 years now seeking and listening to the counsel, some of the very best cardiologists in the country at some of our most prestigious institutions. And I can only look at these current Trends with a mixture of sadness for the folks that are going to be impacted by it and increased in patience for those that are seeking to profit from it. I was very glad to see the American Heart association today take a stand. I think in a major newspaper I actually got a clipping of it. You know, summarize it as the new nutrition guidance from the American Heart association advises getting protein from plants rather than meat, choosing low fat or fat free dairy and using olive soybean and canola oil instead of beef tallow and butter. So you have an independent institution backed by science that is saying the exact opposite of where our culture is going on diet. But the good news is that this is a pendulum. It's going to swing and it's going to swing back. And I'm very comfortable that beyond will prosper when it does, but I'm not going to wait around for that. And because of the work we've done particularly over the last 10 years to really lead the category in developing extremely clean, healthy products, we're really well positioned to look outside the category and take that technology, take that science, take that brand into segments that are and categories that are many, many, many, many times the size of the plant based meat category. So you have a great brand. We just, for example, again got the Time magazine list, best brands in the world. You take the science that continues to win awards and accolades for some of the development work we've done around plant based protein for the center of the plate. And you take a massive trend within the consumer that is around protein and fiber and things like that, you say, okay, where can we apply all this? And the first, we did a lot of work over the last year understanding which adjacent markets we can get into. And the first one that we've identified and been public about and others will follow is a beverage category. And we launched an initial version online earlier and sold out very quickly that initial inventory. And what we're doing is as we did with beyond Ground faba, learning from the consumer what they like and don't like and making adjustments. And that process is going great. And so the product that we're going to be launching soon I think is going to be one of the best protein drinks on the market. It satisfies so many different needs for the consumer, whether it's protein, fiber, antioxidants, electrolytes. It does so in a really clean way. And the fascinating thing for me is we get into these other categories and I start looking at some of the key competitors in those categories. The really big ready to drink protein companies, they're putting things in their products that we could never put in our products because of the scrutiny we're under and because of our guidelines around clean ingredients. I mean you're looking at, I think one of the top ones has sucralose, has carrageenan, has a acesulfame potassium, another one has artificial flavors and all of the above. Another one has hexametaphosphate as well as all the above. So it just goes on and on. Things that we put in, they'd be kind of front page news from our friends in the incumbent industry. So we're going to take that relentless innovation, we're going to take that commitment to clean ingredients and we're going into those categories. And I think the drink category is the one that's most clearly on horizon for us, the one that I'm willing to most to speak most publicly about. And so I think this summer you'll see us be pretty active there.
Ben Thoyer
Okay, got it. And then this is maybe more for loopy. If we kind of like look at the balance sheet and like in connection with the cash flow statement, clearly throughout the quarter you got a little bit of a relief on where we are on the cash balance. But if we kind of look at just the underlying trend within cash from operations, it continues to be somewhat in that range. 40, 50 million ish dollars negative on a quarterly basis shipping out at about 140, 150 for the year. So what are the things that you can kind of like work on just given where the environment is? And I mean Your outlook for 1Q early points to not necessarily a top line driven recovery in 2026. So all that operating leverage continues to be probably a headwind or the lack of operating leverage. Let's put it this way. So what are the levers you can pull to kind of like maybe further reduce any incremental cash burn with durations that you're facing?
Ethan Brown
I can just give a quick answer and then turn it over to lubium. And one, I think you'll see that we're doing some really interesting things with inventory. So that's going to give us some favorability. And then second, I think you just got to back out some of these one time charges that have been so difficult for us. And once you do that, you see a dramatically slowing use of cash. So you do it this quarter, for example, you are down significantly from where we were a year ago. If you back up those one time charges or some of the extraordinary stuff related to convertible debt exchange And I think you'll only see that as we go forward continue to be favorable for us. Hey Ben, I appreciate the question. Yeah, I would probably just echo a lot of what Ethan just mentioned. We have been focused now for a while on our working capital management and in particular ensuring that our stocking levels of inventory are appropriately sized given where the business is. I think the team has done a really good job in managing the inventory. Inventory down. But I think there's more to come in that regard. The other important thing to, and again Ethan mentioned this is in the last couple of quarters we have had some fairly large what we would consider sort of non ordinary course business expenses in the fourth quarter. In particular, these were related to, to the debt exchange, the business. We continue to execute our transformation plan. All right. For this business. And so from time to time we will see, you know, some of these unusual items all in, you know, sort of service of trying to, you know, reposition this business more appropriately, you know, towards our goals to profitability. But I would expect that in 2026, some of the larger items certainly that we saw in recent quarters should not recur. Recall as well that last year in 2025, we unfortunately did have a couple of reductions in force and the associated severance payments that are related with that. Related to that. And then just lastly I would say that, you know, we are focused on, you know, trying to expand our gross margin. You know, Ethan in his prepared remarks mentioned, you know, that we are, we're standing up our sort of first continuous production line. We do end to end production and you know, know we're going to be, that's going to give us an opportunity to internalize additional volume that's, you know, previously outsourced and increase our internal asset utilization. So I think all of those measures taken together should help to reduce that rate of cash consumption.
Ben Thoyer
Okay, perfect. Well, thank you very much for that and I'll pass it on.
OPERATOR
The next question comes from Kalmil Garjawala with Jeffries. Please go ahead.
Kalmil Garjawala
Hey guys, I guess first question, congratulations on the financing and all that. Maybe are there things that you can now do that maybe you were prohibited from doing before as you sort of execute the turnaround? And then also I guess in the context of the refinancing as it relates to the filing and some of the financial disclosure issues, does that change anything related to the transactions that you've done or is there anything that we just need to be aware of if for Some reason the 10k comes out even later than planned? Just things that we should know about that could happen.
Ethan Brown
Thanks for the question. I'll take the first one and then pass it on to Luby. You know, I don't think we're going to be making any, you know, outsized investments as a result of the cash we brought on. I think we're just continuing to focus on trying to hit that EBITDA positive target and minimize cash use. But there are some things that we now have the ability to do. So if you look at last year, we cut way back. I think part of the issue with our fourth quarter results on the top line, we didn't market a lot and we were just in cash conservation mode as we were doing our debt exchange. It was incredibly expensive and so I pulled back considerably on marketing. So this year we won't do that, particularly as we get into some of these exciting categories where marketing is important and then just on like the automation and on continuous line. So and things like that. You will see us make capex investments that will allow us to drop down some more cash out of just general sales and operations. But I do think, you know, if you take a step back and look at our P and L for the quarter as we were talking about on operating expense, there's just a lot of noise in these numbers. And I tried to touch upon that. Like I think if you look at take gross margin for example, we did have lower volumes which led to some of this lower fixed overhead absorption. But we did have these charges, right? We had some of the SKU racidization charges. We had expenses related to shutting down our China business. Then we had much higher inventory provisions than normal things like that. So that's masking these kind of lower conversion costs throughout our plants, lower logistics costs and things of that nature. And so if you take a step back to okay, the company is converting materials at a lower rate than it has before, right? Then you go to OPEX and you say, okay, strip out all those one time charges. The company is operating its business at a much lower rate than it was before. And so now it's just incumbent cashiers too. Same thing. If you take out all those one time charges, cash consumption is lower. And so if you start to put that picture together, you say what this company really needs to do is fix the stop line. And you know, I've tried for years to do that through the existing category and I think the headwinds are going to be here for a little bit longer and it's something we got to get outside the category to address. And that's why you see us in some of these adjacencies. So, you know, it's difficult for people to see if they just look at the top line numbers. But if you take a step back, what the missing piece really is becoming now is just getting that top line to be where it needs to be. And we're very focused on that.
Kalmil Garjawala
Yeah, and Kumail, maybe if I would just add a couple things to that. So, you know, as far as, you know, what putting the sort of balance sheet restructuring behind us now enables us to do, I think Ethan sort of covered that well, you know, and the raising of the additional proceeds from the atm. Right. Allow us to, I think, spend a little bit more on the marketing front, which we do think will be important to stabilize the top line and as we start to expand into some of these adjacent categories. But I think the other thing as well is just the focus that we are able to reallocate to the primary business. As you guys know, we had been talking about the debt restructuring for quite some time on these earnings calls, and so that did consume quite a bit of the management team's focus. And so it's a relief to put that behind us and really focus now on the very important steps and measures that we need to continue to make to turn the business around. Your question regarding the disclosures around the material weakness and the impacts that's had on our financial statements, I would say it doesn't necessarily change anything immediately, but obviously we're very focused on ensuring that we can file our 10k as quickly as possible, notwithstanding the fact that we were not able to do so within the prescribed timeline. Great, got it. And then as it relates to the beverage product, what does the supply chain look like for something like that? Can you leverage your current PP&E assets to produce it? Do you need to use third party co packers? It sounds like. It just sounds so different from the core of what you're doing. That, yes, it's cool and likely to be promising, but how does that impact the actual practicality of production and such?
Ethan Brown
Yeah, that's a very, very good question. Before I answer that, I want to just note one thing on the core business that I moved over too quickly. If you look at the results on a segment by segment basis, in US retail, we were down 6.5%. And to me that's actually encouraging because if you look at the overall numbers, they were down more than that. Right. But if you start to see stabilization in US Retail in our core business, which I think we're Going to see, I can't say exactly when, you know, then everything we're doing on these adjacencies is kind of additive, right? If you can turn around that retail position in terms of the retail number. And so I was very encouraged by that. And it has to do with some of the new distribution we've been able to obtain in some of the larger mass stores. So as we layer in things like drinks, I think getting it reconnected to the US retail consumer seems like it's within reach on the supply chain side of me. I guess the first thing I would say is that despite our past, we actually have a lot of beverage expertise. We have some of the, I think some of the best minds in beverage on our board with Seth and just iced tea and Jim and Boston beer, Cathy and Coke. So it's not like we're coming to this without a lot of experience. It's just something we haven't done before as the company. And so the supply chain issues is actually pretty similar from an ingredient perspective. We're dealing with protein, we're dealing with fiber, we're dealing with flavor, things like that. So that is not a stretch for us at all. And the production. If you think about turning plants into meats for the center of the plate and you think about blending together protein and fibers and flavor in a drink, the latter is much easier. And so this is not something that we're worried about from a logistics perspective. CO packing is readily available throughout the United States. It has much less arduous terms from a, you know, scale up perspective. You know, often we'd have to go teach the co packer how to make our products. That's obviously not the case here. And I think what you're really going to see is our ability to understand all the characteristics of plant materials, the proteins, the fiber, fiber and how to optimize their taste for the consumer is going to shine in these drinks. And that's what I'm excited about.
Kalmil Garjawala
Great, thank you very much. Thank you.
OPERATOR
The next question comes from John Baumgartner with Mizuho. Please go ahead.
John Baumgartner
Good afternoon. Thanks for the question. Maybe first off, Ethan, just to build on that last line of thinking, just sticking with the expectations for the beverage expansion and the adjacencies more broadly. Can you walk us through how you plan to scale it, how you'll manage distribution, the specific channels that you'll enter, how you will allocate budget to enter these categories. Just how do we think about milestones as you ramp up and the impact on cash Burn.
Ethan Brown
So we're taking a pretty careful approach. So you'll see the same pattern that we've just done the drinks now initially launching dtc, getting feedback from the consumer, making adjustments, and then you'll see us go into a particular regional distribution, likely emphasis on natural, and then into mass. And so we'll take it step by step. As we see success or failure, we'll adjust how much we're spending. But so far, and these are very early days, the indications we're getting from the drinker are very positive in terms of distributor interest and things like that. All of it is speculative at the moment. So I don't want to promise anything, but I think what you'll see is a kind of measured approach from us and we'll spend a certain amount, make sure that we're still on track, then spend an additional amount. But one of the neat things is that we're not necessarily creating entirely new brands. So the, the drink is called Beyond Immerse. But we're relying on the fact that beyond is a very well known brand so we don't have to kind of reinvent the wheel. And we have a strong consumer base. That's particularly interesting what we're doing. And so that gives us an advantage relative to someone who's just starting out. Right. We're able to sell additional product to a consumer that's already buying Beyond. If you have any comments. No, I think you covered it well, Ethan. You know, what I would say is, you know, to your question around, you know, potential impact on cash burn. I think one of the things that's, you know, attractive about the beverage category can be attractive about the beverage category, particularly at scale, is the margin profile. Right. So obviously, as we are, you know, in relatively limited distribution and you know, producing at much smaller, smaller quantities, the economics won't look, you know, quite as favorable as, you know, if we are successful and begin to scale up. But you know, it's certainly the margin profile for that category of products would be attractive. And so, you know, with the supply chain that we have in place and these co packer agreements, et cetera, we actually think that the impact on total cash use will not be overly burdensome.
John Baumgartner
Okay, thanks for that. And then I'm curious about your vision for the Beyond Meat portfolio going forward as you work through this ski rationalization. Where have you chosen to retrench in terms of product or products and what have you identified as the foundation for the core going forward?
Ethan Brown
Is it steak? Is it burgers? How should we think about that? Yeah. So as I mentioned in my comments, we have 20 plus products that are clean label project certified and I really focus on Those and the Beyond 4 portfolio, for example, just because it just dynamite on taste and on health and areas where maybe there's less differentiation than I'd like to see. You can picture what that might be, some of the breaded items, things like that. Less interested in that, more interested in where we can deliver really unique value to the consumer. And so beyond steak filet is a good example. That's 28 grams of protein. It's 1 gram of saturated fat from avocado oil. It's got mycelium, which is terrific ingredient. It's got fava beans, et cetera. So focusing on things that really help tell the story around beyond and tell the clean ingredient and healthy narrative are the ones that we're focusing on going forward. Thanks, Ethan. Thanks, Luby. Sure. Thanks. The next question comes from Peter Sala with btig. Please go ahead.
Peter Sala
Great. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe Ethan. I guess the first question I had was on the beverage lineup you mentioned initially getting some feedback and then making adjustments. So maybe can you talk a little bit about the initial, what feedback you may have gotten and any adjustments you've made. And then if you could just help us out here, who is the target customer here for for this beverage lineup? And then I have a follow up as well. Thanks. Sure.
Ethan Brown
So I think one of the things we're learning about beverages is unlike where we have a really clear North Star with does this taste like a beef burger or not? The reason there's so many beverages in the market is that people have different tastes. And so what we're trying to do is find that sweet spot where we can appeal to a broad group of consumers in terms of taste profiles. And so I think what we found is the 10 gram we put out kind of home run, the 20 gram. A lot of people either love it or didn't like it much and enough people thankfully love it that we're able to keep going. But that was more polarizing than the 10 gram. And so what we've done is tap back some of the intensity of the flavors in the 20 gram and some of the sweetness, 10 to 20 gram. And the product that they've developed, and we're probably on our sixth or seventh iteration since we launched, is just phenomenal. Again, I put a stand behind this. I think it's going to be one of the best protein drinks on the market. To the holistic picture, the protein content, the fiber, the Antioxidants, the electrolytes, the environmental footprint, the ease of consumption. I'm probably drinking too many a day and I've watched people in our office and in my home. It is a hell of a product. So I'm looking forward to it. But that was the type of feedback we reacted to it and there's nothing wrong with that. Right. Like even with Beyond Ground Fava which we just got an award that's under embargo right now for the innovation, there was that 4 ingredient, 27 grams protein product. We just like to iterate with our consumers like it's a new model, I think food that we're very, very fast at what we do and letting them weigh in and tell us what they like and don't like.
Peter Sala
Great. And then just. Luby, on the Gross margin for 20, 26, is there anything you can provide or share with us at this point? Should it mirror? 25 should be much better. Lower anything on the cadence? That would be helpful, thanks.
Luby Katua
Yeah. Peter, you know, unfortunately like we're not providing guidance for gross margin for the year and I think, you know, you know, just to provide a little bit of context around that is, you know, one of the reasons why, you know, we continue to provide only near end guidance on revenue is the fact that our category, right. Remains our core category. Plant based meat remains sort of very volatile and volumes remain soft. And obviously with that being, you know, obviously at this stage, the vast majority of our business, right. The impact that softer volumes has on margins can be pretty significant. Right. And so I mentioned in my prepared remarks that we, you know, the lower fixed cost absorption continues to be, continues to be a headwind on margin. And so I think it's just extremely difficult for us to you know, sort of forecast gross margin, you know, to any degree of certainty when you know, there's so much variability on the top line. So you know, we obviously we have initiatives in place to that are aimed at expanding margins including the continuous line that I mentioned. But ultimately we need to see some stabilization on the top line in order for us to have greater confidence in terms of where margins will shake up.
Peter Sala
Understood, thank you very much.
OPERATOR
This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Ethan Brown for any closing remarks.
Ethan Brown
Thanks everyone for the questions, appreciate all the interest and I think if I look back over the last year, I do want to compliment the team. This transaction that Luby and his group executed was just an enormous undertaking and so there's a lot of work went into that and I think he's particularly pleased to have that behind him. But, you know, as we look forward, we're excited to see what's going to happen as we pivot our brand into some areas that are maybe not as challenged as our core category. We're going to be talking with you guys pretty soon, and I think we'll have more information then as to how things are going. Thanks very much.
OPERATOR
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect. Sam,
Summary
Beyond Meat reported a 19.7% decrease in Q4 2025 sales to $61.6 million, primarily due to weak demand in the plant-based meat category.
The company retired most of its 2027 convertible debt and raised $149 million in capital, strengthening its balance sheet.
Strategic initiatives include rightsizing operations, expanding margins, and repositioning Beyond Meat as 'Beyond the Plant Protein Company' to enter adjacent categories like beverages.
Significant non-routine charges impacted financial results, including inventory obsolescence provisions and asset write-downs.
Future guidance is cautious, with limited near-term revenue expectations for Q1 2026 at $57-59 million due to ongoing category volatility.
Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company's SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants' and analysts' statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.
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