Earnings beat on volume strength. Mission Produce (NASDAQ: AVO) reported Q1 2026 GAAP EPS of $0.10, beating the consensus estimate of $0.07 by 36.4%. Net income reached $7.3 million despite a challenging pricing environment that saw industry avocado prices normalize significantly from elevated prior-year levels. The food distributor delivered the beat through 14% volume growth and improved per-unit margins in its core Marketing & Distribution segment, which saw adjusted EBITDA surge 33% year-over-year.
Revenue misses on pricing headwinds. Revenue of $278.6 million fell short of the $286.7 million consensus by 2.8% and declined 16.6% from the year-ago quarter’s $334.2 million. The shortfall reflects a 30% decline in avocado pricing driven by abundant Mexican supply and higher harvest yields, not execution issues. Gross margin expanded 190 basis points to 11.3% as the company’s volume-centric strategy offset the pricing pressure. Q1 2026 EPS matched the prior-year quarter’s $0.10 despite the revenue decline, underscoring improved operational efficiency.
Leadership transition and Calavo conviction. CEO Steve Barnard, marking his final earnings call before transitioning to Executive Chairman, said: “Between the momentum we’re carrying, the pending Calavo acquisition we announced in January, and the team we have in place, Mission has never been positioned better.” Incoming CEO John Pawlowski reinforced confidence in the January-announced Calavo Growers acquisition, stating: “We continue to see at least $25 million of annualized cost synergies achievable within 18 months of close. And we believe, as we have stated earlier, that there is meaningful upside potential to that number.” The transaction remains on track to close in Mission’s fiscal Q3, with integration planning underway and regulatory filings advancing in both the U.S. and Mexico.
Q2 outlook signals margin compression. CFO Bryan Giles guided Q2 fiscal 2026 avocado industry volumes up 10% to 15% year-over-year, but pricing down 30% to 35% from the prior-year quarter’s $2.00 per pound average. Management expects per-unit margin contraction in Q2 due to single-origin sourcing from Mexico and a delayed California harvest—running approximately one month behind last year as growers await better pricing. The company anticipates consolidated adjusted EBITDA below prior-year levels for Q2, with Blueberries segment profitability pressured by lower yields per hectare as newer acreage matures. For full fiscal 2026, capital expenditures are expected at approximately $40 million, down from prior-year levels and positioning the company for accelerated free cash flow generation.
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