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DATE

Thursday, May 14, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Ron Lombardi
  • Chief Financial Officer — Christine Sacco
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Philip Terpolilli

TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue -- $281.6 million for the quarter, down 5% compared to $296.5 million, primarily due to lower Eye and Ear Care sales and Middle East shipping disruptions.
  • Organic Revenue Decline -- 4.5% decrease for the fiscal year; North America fell 4.9%, and International OTC dropped 2.8%, both excluding FX.
  • Adjusted Gross Margin -- 55.6% for the year, approximately flat to 55.8% in the prior year, with Q1 expected to remain flat sequentially.
  • Adjusted Diluted EPS -- $4.38 for the year, compared to $4.52 previously, reflecting lower sales despite a lower share count and reduced interest expense.
  • Free Cash Flow -- $246.4 million for the year, up 1.3% from the prior period, aligned with previous outlook.
  • Share Repurchases -- Over $150 million deployed during the fiscal year.
  • Leverage -- Net debt of approximately $900 million, and a covenant-defined leverage ratio of 2.6x at fiscal year-end.
  • Capital Expenditures -- Expected to be about $25 million in the coming year, representing 1%-3% of sales even with the inclusion of Pillar5.
  • Eye Care Supply Chain -- Acquisition of Pillar5 completed in December; new high-speed production line started, with Clear Eyes production ramping but material output growth expected in the second half of the upcoming year.
  • Advertising and Marketing Spend -- 13.7% of sales for the fiscal year, flat to prior, projected to remain above 13% in the near term.
  • Pending Acquisitions -- Breathe Right (over $125 million in expected revenue), and LaCorium Health (over $40 million in sales) are both expected to close in June and the subsequent quarter, and are not yet included in current guidance.
  • Fiscal 2027 Guidance -- Projected revenues between $1.1 billion and $1.12 billion, reflecting 1%-3% organic growth, adjusted EPS of $4.42-$4.51, and free cash flow of at least $250 million, with most Eye Care recovery weighted to the second half.
  • E-commerce Penetration -- Approximately 18% company-wide, with continued double-digit consumption growth in the channel.
  • GI and Women's Health Performance -- Dramamine, Fleet, and Hydralyte grew for the fiscal year, while Monistat maintained market share despite long-term category declines.

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RISKS

  • “a challenging fourth quarter that fell short of expectations, resulting in full year revenue declining approximately 4%.”
  • Ongoing “difficult consumer environment,” and “global conflict” led to shipment disruptions and continued pressure, especially affecting Clear Eyes and international segments.
  • International revenue was “affected by Middle East shipping disruptions,” with management expecting “continued pressure for international in our first quarter.”

SUMMARY

Prestige Consumer Healthcare (PBH 11.35%) directly reported significant headwinds, including shipment and production volatility in Eye Care, which depressed revenue and earnings metrics and affected sequential performance. Management committed to ramping Eye Care supply via the Pillar5 acquisition, expecting material improvement in output and sales weighted to the second half of the coming year. Strategic M&A, specifically the pending Breathe Right and LaCorium Health transactions, is expected to drive portfolio diversification and accelerate international expansion, although these impacts are excluded from current fiscal guidance. Elevated free cash flow supported both aggressive share repurchase activity and investments in manufacturing and acquisitions, while G&A expenses are set to increase primarily due to recent deals and normalizing incentive compensation.

  • Management stated that the $12 million sales shortfall for the quarter was attributed approximately two-thirds to Eye Care supply issues and one-third to Middle East shipping delays, with “increased lead times” continuing to affect international shipments.
  • For fiscal 2027, management forecast organic volume will account for roughly two-thirds of sales growth, with pricing contributing the remaining one third.
  • Breathe Right is expected to be “approximately $0.25 accretive to EBIT -- EPS, excuse me, on an annualized” once integrated, while LaCorium is viewed as “approximately neutral to EPS to maybe slightly positive” during initial phases, pending closure and synergy realization.
  • Management cited direct oversight of product quality in Eye Care and emphasized ongoing investments in preventative maintenance and staffing as central to resolving recent production instability.
  • Prestige Consumer Healthcare’s long-term outlook anticipates revenue CAGR approaching 10% through fiscal 2029, with post-acquisition organic growth possibly exceeding the previous 2%-3% algorithm as Eye Care and international initiatives gain traction.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • GLP-1: Glucagon-like peptide-1, a class of medications that can produce nausea, referenced in relation to GI product marketing.
  • SKU: Stock Keeping Unit; a unique product identifier for inventory and merchandising.
  • VAF: Vaginal Anti-Fungal, a product category relevant for Monistat’s market share commentary.
  • ASEPTIC: Pertaining to sterile manufacturing processes, especially critical for eye care product quality.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Ron Lombardi: Thanks, Phil. Let's begin on Slide 5. We experienced a challenging fourth quarter that fell short of expectations, resulting in full year revenue declining approximately 4%. A difficult consumer environment persisted into Q4 and was further impacted by global conflict. While these dynamics led to certain shipment disruptions late in the quarter, we expect to return to organic growth in fiscal '27, and are well positioned to manage ongoing macro pressures, including inflation, as we have successfully done in the past. In Eye Care, we continue to experience near-term volatility driven by our deliberate focus on high-quality production. In Q4, Clear Eyes sales were below expectations due to delayed shipments and production shutdowns ahead of line updates.

We are actively implementing initiatives to improve production volume and supply consistency which we believe are essential to supporting our long-term demand outlook. Many aspects of our diverse portfolio of leading brands continue to perform well despite the environment. For example, our GI franchises of Dramamine, Fleet and Hydralyte had solid success with all brands growing in fiscal '26. For our Women's Health category, Summer's Eve had a year of stabilization and continues to be positioned for growth, while Monistat held share in VAF despite the category declining significantly over the past 3 years. Moving down to P&L.

Adjusted gross margin was in line with the prior year, while adjusted EPS of $4.38 was down versus the prior year, largely tracking the sales change. Free cash flow was approximately $246 million for fiscal '26, up slightly versus the prior year and in line with the outlook we gave at the beginning of the year. This durable and resilient free cash flow profile allowed us to repurchase shares in fiscal '26, acquire our manufacturer Pillar 5, to enhance our long-term eye care output capabilities and build cash in advance of the pending Breathe Right and LaCorium acquisitions.

As we'll touch on later, this disciplined capital allocation strategy continues to enhance shareholder value and positions us for a robust multiyear outlook. Let's turn to Page 6 and review our strategy and our tactics that have delivered value over a longer horizon. Despite the challenging fiscal '26, our business models, 3-pillar strategy has a history of delivering value. First, we use our proven marketing strategy to leverage our leading portfolio of brands. Using consumer insights, we drive effective marketing, channel development and innovation that underpin our success. Second, the business model we operate leverages our leading financial profile to enable robust free cash flow.

And third, the model uses the first 2 points to enable strategic capital allocation optionality that further amplify shareholder returns. Our ability to use cash flows efficiently through disciplined capital deployment creates incremental value. This includes M&A like the Breathe Right and LaCorium Health transactions. Executing these pillars has created value over the last 5 years with a compounded annual growth rate of about 3% for revenues and free cash flow and adjusted EPS of approximately 6%. These results include the volatile fiscal '26 just discussed. Now let's turn to Slide 7 for a detailed update on Clear Eyes and our Eye Care supply chain.

In fiscal '26, we executed actions that supported our long-term strategic objective of best positioning our supply chain to support our Eye Care franchises long-term sales growth. This included the acquisition of Pillar5 in December, which gave us the opportunity to take direct control over this important element of our supply chain. Just over a quarter in, we've made meaningful progress to the benefits of having a dedicated aseptic eye care facility. For example, recently began producing product on a new high-speed line which we have plans for further volume output from during fiscal '27. Importantly, production is supported by our rigorous focus on coupon or quality product on time that underpins our operating model.

To that point, nearly all of our eye care supply chain has had recent regulatory visits, which helps reinforce this approach. For fiscal '27, we expect Clear Eyes to grow in the year as we continue to ramp production. This includes a meaningful increase in production, but entirely in the back half of the year. So in summary, our leading eye care brands are positioned for long-term growth in the attractive and growing eye care market. The investments we are making buying capabilities in eye care is a long-term, multiyear process but puts us on a path to returning to a historic sales level over the next few years, and we expect that growth to begin in fiscal '27.

So with that, let's turn to the next section and review a few key areas of how we drive base growth in more detail. As we've discussed in the past, our proven brand-building playbook starts with consumer insights. We seek ways to solve unique consumer needs and leverage our wide-ranging brand-building capabilities to drive long-term growth. Three of the major ways this manifests itself are: first, using marketing to establish consumer connection; second, launching relevant innovation that solves unmet consumer needs and being widely distributed and available where consumers are shopping. Ample of this is our GI franchise, where we've continued to experience long-term success in our Fleet and Dramamine brands.

As shown on the left side of the page, we leverage wide-ranging tactics to expand our category reach and relevance. We continue to lead in the motion sickness category with engaging motion sickness content like our iconic Ditch the Drama campaign and various travel suit stakes. We've continued to accelerate our penetration into the nausea category, entering pediatric nausea last year and adding new form factors to help consumers solve their nausea needs on the go. And we further broadened our relevance by using digital tactics and health care practitioner outreach to remind GLP-1 users, the benefits of Fleet and Dramamine and treating side effects.

These tactics continue to prove out in the numbers and Fleet shown on the right side of the page, we are driving category growth and have expanded our 50-plus percent market share. This is due to proven marketing tactics as well as innovation like the recent launch of Fleet Mini Animas. Let's turn to Slide 10 to discuss this, innovation and others in more details. Beyond executing successful marketing, innovation continues to be a key part of Prestige's brand building tool kit. We operate with a multiyear pipeline of new product development concepts to ensure we generate new SKUs that match the needs of consumers.

The Fleet Mini Anima is just one of the examples of product launches this year matching consumer needs. With this easy-to-use size and travel-friendly design, the product offers fast-acting constipation relief for both new and existing laxative users. Another innovation introduced in fiscal '26 is CompoundW skin tag remover, leveraging its leadership in release, CompoundW is utilizing its nitrophies technology to also solve for skin tags and adjacent niche category to wards. Other product launches like new forms of Dramamine, dental alertness for Goody's and great new flavors from Hydralyte are further example of our consistent pipeline. We are excited for additional new product launches in fiscal '27, and we'll update everyone as the year progresses.

Now let's turn to Slide 11 and discuss e-commerce. Alongside effective marketing and innovation, we are prioritizing investment in consumer relevant channels. As channel shifts remain -- our e-commerce business continues to deliver strong growth, reflecting the impact of our long-term investments. In fiscal '26, we continued to experience double-digit consumption growth and our e-commerce penetration for the company has reached approximately 18%. Looking ahead, consumers are not only shifting across channels, but also their behaviors, driven by AI, social media and other emergent influences. In response, we remain focused on continually refining our content to stay aligned with these trends.

By enhancing seasonal relevance, updating brand pages and emphasizing key terms tied to new innovations, we believe we have the capabilities in place to sustain our success across our e-commerce partners. With that, I'll turn it over to Chris to review the financials.

Christine Sacco: Thanks, Ron. Good morning, everyone. Let's turn to Slide 13 and review fourth quarter and fiscal '26 financial results in more detail. A quick reminder, information we're about to review contains non-GAAP information that is reconciled to the closest GAAP measure in our earnings release. Q4 revenue of $281.6 million declined 5% from $296.5 million in the prior year or 6.4% excluding FX. The revenue decline was attributable to lower Eye and Ear Care category sales owing largely to Clear Eyes supply constraints and a portion of international segment sales affected by Middle East shipping disruptions. As a reminder, in Q4, we also lapped an approximate $7 million benefit from the timing of certain e-commerce orders in the prior year.

Mimicking sales, both adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EPS declined high single digits as certain cost savings and below-the-line items were more than offset by lower sales and gross margin. Last, please note Q4 includes certain adjustments to reported results. These relate primarily to Pillar5 and the expected normalized cost structure following operational efficiency improvements as we continue to improve Pillar5 manufacturing volumes. Now let's turn to Slide 14 for a discussion around detailed consolidated results for the fiscal year. For fiscal '26, revenues decreased 4.5% organically versus the prior year. North America segment revenues decreased 4.9%, excluding FX.

Sales declines were largely due to constrained eye care supply we've discussed, which more than offset strength in the oral care and GI categories. International OTC sales decreased 2.8% versus the prior year, excluding FX. Segment sales declined due to limited eye care supply and disruption in the timing of shipments to distributors due to the Middle East conflict. We expect improved shipment trends and a return to an approximate 5% annual segment organic revenue growth in fiscal '27. Total company adjusted gross margin of 55.6% for the year was approximately flat to 55.8% in the prior year.

Looking forward, we expect adjusted gross margin in Q1 approximately flat sequentially versus Q4 and for the full year to approximate that of fiscal '26. Embedded in this assumption are incremental diesel costs stemming from the conflict in the Middle East. As a reminder, we have a history of taking actions across our portfolio to offset the dollar amount of inflationary headwinds. Advertising and marketing came in at 13.7% of sales for fiscal '26 flat to prior year. For fiscal '27, we anticipate both Q1 and full year A&M at over 13% of sales.

Adjusted G&A expenses were up versus prior year, primarily due to the timing of certain expenses and an increase in bad debt allowance in Q3 for one specific customer. For fiscal '27, we'd expect Q1 G&A of about $30 million and full year G&A of 10.5% as a percent of sales, with the increase primarily attributable to the inclusion of Pillar5, and normalized incentive compensation versus the prior year. Finally, adjusted diluted EPS of $4.38 compared to $4.52 in the prior year, as the lower sales more than offset other favorable line items like lower share count, interest expense, A&M and other income. Now let's turn to Slide 15 and discuss cash flow.

For fiscal '26, we generated $246.4 million in free cash flow, up 1.3% versus the prior year. At March 31, our net debt was approximately $900 million, and we had a covenant-defined leverage ratio of 2.6x. Our strong financial position continues to be underpinned by multiple attributes. Our business model, where the majority of revenue remains externally manufactured results in low capital expenditures of 1% to 3% of sales annually even with the recent inclusion of Pillar5. For example, we are expecting approximately $25 million in CapEx for fiscal '27.

Our products have strong margins, thanks to the characteristics of the categories we participate in, their importance to consumers' health and the regulated nature of OTC that creates high barriers to competitive entry. We have meaningful tax benefits from past acquisitions that results in a cash tax rate in the high teens. And we remain focused on profitability with continuous cost-saving efforts helping us maintain a strong low 30s EBITDA margin profile. The result of this model is clear. We generate best-in-class sustainable free cash flow, and our free cash flow conversion remains strong. This enables efficient capital allocation. Fiscal '26, this included over $150 million in share repurchases and a $110 million investment in long-term eye care manufacturing capabilities.

Looking ahead, we expect adjusted free cash flow growth in fiscal '27. Now let's turn to Slide 16 to review the priorities for capital allocation and use of this cash. Thanks to our strong financial profile, optimal capital deployment is a valuable driver in enhancing long-term shareholder value. Including the estimated benefit of pending acquisitions, we now anticipate that cumulative cash flow over the next 3 years approaches $900 million. This level of impressive cash generation enables significant capital deployment and allows us to further enhance shareholder value. To start, the #1 priority continues to remain investing in our strategic brands to ensure long-term success.

From there, we expect to execute disciplined debt reduction in the near term, rapidly working to deleverage back towards 3x following the closure of the acquisition of Breathe Right and LaCorium, which we intend to fund with new prepayable term loan debt. As we begin to deleverage and demonstrate continued strong free cash flow growth, we would likely consider a return to future share repurchases in the out years where we currently have over $90 million of existing authorization remaining. Last, of course, as we rebuild leverage capacity, we will continue to monitor for future M&A opportunities in consumer health care. With that, I'll turn it back to Ron to discuss our broader outlook.

Ron Lombardi: Thanks, Chris. Let's turn to Slide 18. Before discussing fiscal '27, I want to review the business attributes that leave us confident in our business outlook and have us well positioned for future growth. Our brands are trusted and diverse, which helps limit the impact from individual category slowdown. This diversity stretches beyond just brands but into diversity of channels, geographies and suppliers each of which benefits our business and periods of uncertainty and volatility. The majority of our brands also lead their categories with the #1 market share and are often synonymous with their categories, such as in the case of BC and Goody's, Monistat, Dramamine and many more.

This enables us to leverage our proven brand-building strategy, opportunistically growing categories and as a byproduct, our brands. Our superior financial profile has generated consistent and increasing cash flows over the long term. And finally, the model continues to be scalable and which allows us to reinforce organic growth with future potential M&A like the pending acquisitions of Breathe right and LaCorium. In summary, we have the right resources to continue our disciplined capital deployment playbook, while reinforcing investments in our existing business. We continue to have confidence that our business model and strong financial profile have set us up for long-term success. Now let's turn to the following pages and review our initial fiscal '27 outlook.

For fiscal '27, we are forecasting revenues of $1.1 billion to approximately $1.12 billion with organic growth of approximately 1% to 3% for the year. This is driven by solid consumption growth across our diverse portfolio of brands even against a continued volatile consumer and economic backdrop. As discussed earlier, we also expect improvement in Eye Care shipment trends, thanks to improving volume from production in the back half of the year. For profitability, we expect adjusted EPS of $4.42 to $4.51. This follows sales growth as we expect gross margin to remain relatively consistent with fiscal '26 and higher G&A costs in dollars from the addition of Pillar5 and normalized incentive comp versus the prior year.

Our forecast assumes continued oil-related inflation, and we believe this will be offset by cost reduction activities and tactical pricing as necessary. This is similar to prior inflationary periods and thanks to the benefits of having a diverse and leading brand portfolio. For Q1, we expect revenue to be approximately $250 million or about in line with prior year and adjusted EPS of $0.87, largely due to the timing of Eye Care supply. Lastly, we anticipate free cash flow of $250 million or more in fiscal '27. This strong free cash flow will allow us to accelerate debt reduction following the acquisitions of Breathe Right and LaCorium Health, which are expected to close in June and the second quarter, respectively.

Please note that the guidance I've just discussed does not yet include either of these acquisitions. We expect to update these outlooks on our first quarter call in August. We're excited about both opportunities for many reasons, the highlights of which are on Page 20. First, let's discuss Breathe Right. As we discussed in detail back in March, we are acquiring a portfolio of brands from Foundation Consumer Health care headlined by Breathe Right. It's a category-defining brand with an attractive, better breathing space. We expect Breathe Right to generate over $125 million in revenue and believe it is set up for long-term success by growing its category and expanding its international presence over time.

The business operates with a strong financial profile that is accretive to Prestige's growth and EBITDA margins. It also reinforces our long-term financial algorithm for organic sales and earnings and brings annual future tax savings that will benefit free cash flow. Now moving to LaCorium Health, which we announced last night. Australian-owned and headquartered in the same office building as our Care Pharma team, LaCorium generates over $40 million in sales and is headlined by the dermal therapy brand which will become our second largest brand in Australia behind Hydralyte. The business has been founder-led with a focused mission to treat therapeutic skin care elements like eczema, cold sores and more.

LaCorium marketing messages like the ITWorks campaign, the unique efficacy-driven innovation and geographic expansion have each helped the business grow double digits annually for a decade. We anticipate another solid year of sales growth, thanks to this proven model in connection around efficacy with consumers. Under Prestige, we intend to carry on this heritage while continuing to find opportunities for international expansion. We believe the portfolio can continue its rapid sales growth and be accretive to an international OTC business. In terms of profitability, we intend to leverage our distribution network to drive revenue and cost synergies and would expect EBITDA of approximately $12 million once the business is fully integrated.

So in summary, each of these acquisitions offers unique opportunities for us to further enhance and strengthen our portfolio of leading consumer health care brands. Now let's turn to Slide 21 and wrap up. Looking out at the next 3 years, we see several catalysts that we expect to strengthen our business profile and returns meaningfully. Let's begin with revenue. As the 2 acquisitions I just discussed closed, we believe they will provide accretive organic revenue growth in future years. Additionally, they also provide scale and accelerate our fast-growing international footprint, which we believe will approach 20% over the next few years. In addition to this, we see eye care sales improving as we grow long-term capacity.

Although the timing of this is fluid, we see significant opportunity off the current low base. And we also see a stable outlook for our diverse needs-based portfolio of brands. Collectively, these drivers position us to deliver a sales CAGR approaching 10% through fiscal '29, while creating a clear path towards sustained organic growth at the high end or above our 2% to 3% long-term range. Next is profitability. Thanks to our disciplined financial management, we believe we are well positioned to continue to maintain low to mid-30s EBITDA margins. We would then anticipate a magnifying effect on EPS from using cash to pay down prepayable debt.

These factors give us confidence in an approximate 8% or more CAGR between now and fiscal '29. Last, let's touch on free cash flow. We have a proven sustainable model that Chris outlined earlier, generating strong and durable cash flows. By reducing leverage, it both unlocks future capital deployment opportunities and reduces cash interest expense. Cash flow is expected to continue to be enhanced by cash tax savings which will have further benefits from the Breathe Right transaction. In aggregate, we believe there is a clear path to delivering free cash flow that could approach $900 million over the next 3 years enabling debt reduction and further enhancing shareholder value.

In summary, we remain confident in our strategy and our ability to execute against it. Our business attributes and leading brands support our formula for organic growth, leading free cash flow generation and a proven capital deployment strategy. We have an opportunity in Eye Care that can drive future upside and the pending acquisition should further enhance our formula, helping to drive superior returns in coming periods. With that, I'll open it up for questions. Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from the line of Susan Anderson of Canaccord Genuity.

Susan Anderson: Congrats on another acquisition. I guess maybe just to drill down a little bit more on LaCorium's brands in Australia and the U.S. Maybe if you could talk about just the landscape there and also in the U.S. and kind of who the competitors are? And then also, you talked about leveraging your distribution network and other operating expertise for revenue and cost synergies. Maybe if you could expand on that and talk about where you see the most opportunity to expand geographically and then also maybe potential category expansion, and then also where you see the efficiencies in the business?

Ron Lombardi: Susan. So LaCorium, right, we're excited to announce it. We've actually had this business on our radar screen for a very long period of time. It's actually in the same office building that our Care Pharma is outside of Sydney. So we're very familiar with what's going on there as we've kept an eye on it over time. So first of all, the brand is primarily anchored around Australia and New Zealand. It has a very small footprint in the U.S. and Canada. It's just getting going. So concentration of the business is in Australia. It has a broad offering of products to treat a variety of different skin care needs.

So the competitive landscape is fairly broad, whether it's therapeutic skin like skins -- excuse me, eczema on the skin or cold sores or other skin elements. So there isn't any one key competitor that would be there or it would focus on. Growth opportunities exist around further expansion to other skin care conditions as well as international distribution expansion starting first in the Australasia region, much like we're doing with Hydralyte. So we would look to piggyback off of the distributor relationships that we have in that region.

And then in terms of integrating into our business, we would look first to integrate into our sales force and take advantage of the sales folks that we have out calling on pharmacy and doctors and other caregivers, and then we'll look to integrate into our backroom organization as well to look for cost synergies there.

Susan Anderson: Okay. Great. That's really helpful. And then maybe also if you could just give a little bit more color on the eye care business and the time line that you guys see the recovery and a return to growth. also, I think you mentioned there was like a shutdown or something ahead of shipments that also impacted things. Maybe is that fixed now? I guess, should we expect things to go smoothly going forward? And when do you think the new plants will be folding up and running?

Ron Lombardi: Yes. So there's a lot in that question. So let me start, Susan, and I'll talk a little bit about the supply background, and then I'll let Chris talk a bit about our outlook, and maybe a bit about the impact we saw in Q4. So for starters, and we included some of this in the prepared remarks today is we were trying to talk about quality, right? We've received a number of questions following additional eye care headlines that have happened over the last quarter or so. So we thought it would be helpful to provide some context around the quality environment of eye care and why we prioritize quality first and foremost.

So at the end of March, we were into Pillar5, just about 90 days, right? We closed at the end of December. And we were motivated to acquire Pillar5 because we didn't have the confidence in the previous owner's ability to run the facility and manage the quality environment the way we felt that it needed to be. So as we got into this 90 days, we continue to believe it was absolutely the right thing to do. But as we saw last year, there's kinds of variability and unexpected shutdowns in the manufacturing base, right, in the eye care suppliers. And we saw that in the fourth quarter, really in 2 ways.

The first is there was a production that we were expecting to get released by the end of the quarter, for shipments that didn't happen. So that got released after the end of the fourth quarter, and that was a big element of the miss in the fourth quarter. The second part of it was the facility was shut down to do some upgrades and the shutdown ended up being quite a bit longer than was originally anticipated. So that impacted the fourth quarter a bit, but it's going to have a bigger impact on the first quarter. So as we gave our outlook for the first quarter, we reflected that expected impact on supply.

And then for the whole year, outlook, we've tried to give ourselves enough runway in the first half to get these things behind us and get back to a more predictable, meaningfully increased level of output versus what we realized in fiscal '26. So let me ask Chris to add a little bit about the outlook.

Christine Sacco: Yes. Yes. Just to expand a little. I mean we've taken actions in just these 90 days, Ron referred to, to improve output. We've hired additional staff -- we're increasing preventative maintenance practices, a whole bunch of things to help make gradual improvements in the long-term output. But in the near term, these efforts can impact shipments, right? So we'll have some likely period-to-period volatility. We're expecting Q1 Eye Care to be relatively flat to Q1 of the prior year. We're feeling that a bit more just also because we have a lack of safety stock that normally would cover for this, right? So we'll manage through it. It's difficult to predict.

But as we look to the '27 guide, we provided a broader range outlook than we have the last few years, due largely to eye care supply volatility and the consumer challenging backdrop we mentioned in the prepared remarks. So the 1% to 3% range reflects this potential lumpiness we've seen. Again, we're halfway through Q1 terms of our Q1 assumption that's built into the guide. As we make modifications to processes, we install long-term capacity and things that we've discussed in the back -- in the past. And so -- the bottom end of the range that we provided assumes no improvement from fiscal '26 for Eye Care.

And then the mid and high obviously assumes that the back half, we will have increased production with efforts mainly focused around Pillar5. So we think our outlook with the majority of the improvement in the back half gives us room for these initiatives for improvement.

Susan Anderson: Good luck with the acquisitions in the rest of the year.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jon Andersen from William Blair.

Jon Andersen: Wanted to just ask on the quarter itself, if you could kind of put a little more detail around the $12 million sales shortfall relative to your guidance. How much of that was related to the Clear Eyes supply issue? How much is related to -- I think you called out Middle East shipping disruptions. And on the Middle East shipping disruptions, just to follow up on the prior question. what's your level of conviction that, that's in the rearview mirror now and won't be an issue affecting international sales going forward?

Christine Sacco: Jon, it's Chris. So about 2/3 of the miss, the shortfall was related to eye care and about 1/3 related to the disruptions in the Middle East. Right now, we're seeing lead times increase to scheduled transportation into our distributors in the Middle East. Difficult to predict. Obviously, when orders will catch up to the natural state of our demand right now. But these increased lead times are included in our outlook. We are expecting continued pressure for international in our first quarter, and that's really related to eye care supply and the timing we just discussed is really weighted towards the back half as an organization.

But if you think about -- if you take eye care out of fiscal '26 for our international business and you take consideration for the Middle East disruption. We're pretty close to our long-term algo. And as we go into fiscal '27 for the year, again, Q1 is probably going to be a bit similar to Q4 because of eye care timing. We would expect the full year to get back to our long-term algorithm on international of about 5% growth.

Jon Andersen: Okay. And when you talked about for '27, kind of a little bit about the cost environment and energy prices are up, and obviously, that affects different parts of your business in different ways. What are you assuming on a full year basis, are you assuming an improvement in costs? Or are you kind of assuming a status quo? And then how confident are you in your ability to use price and as you've called it a very dynamic consumer environment, used prices, what are the levers to help offset that?

Christine Sacco: Jon, so our outlook for inflation related to the environment right now assumes that there is continued oil-related inflation at current levels. In terms of our confidence, just like past periods of significant inflation, including COVID, right, we believe our leading positions with our brands will enable us to execute surgical pricing is necessary, but we'll start with cost reduction activities as we always do, and plans are in place. The teams are working through that as we speak.

Jon Andersen: Okay. One more, if I can squeeze it in. Just I think when you announced the Breathe Right acquisition. You talked about 20 -- EPS accretion of about $0.25 in the first year. Am I remembering that right? Is that the right way to think about it? I know you're not giving formal guidance until it closes, but $0.25. And then how is LaCorium accretive to EPS right out of the gate as well and kind of how long will it take you to get to that full synergized EBITDA run rate of $12 million?

Philip Terpolilli: Sure. Jon, it's Phil. So you're exactly right. Back in March, we talked about Breathe Right being approximately $0.25 accretive to EBIT -- EPS, excuse me, on an annualized basis. So the time line that Ryan called out earlier expecting Breathe Right to close sometime in the June time frame would take a few periods of that into the full year. That is not incorporated in our guidance that we gave today. We'll incorporate that in the future once it closes and certainly still finalizing things like amortization, cost of borrowing, et cetera, that can impact that, but that's our estimate as of now.

And then on LaCorium, obviously, a smaller transaction, and we talked through the details of that earlier. We'd expect it to be approximately neutral to EPS to maybe slightly positive, but we'll update everyone once that transaction closes.

Jon Andersen: Okay. Maybe can I squeeze one more in? I'll try one more. I guess, I don't know, I kind of feel like the last time we talked or heard from you around the Clear Eyes supply that things seem to be progressing according to plan. And now it kind of feels like you've taken a step back there. And I'm really -- I know you've talked about some longer downtime ahead of some maintenance that was being done, I guess, in the Pillar5 facility. But when did this happen?

And what -- can you give us a little bit more detail around this time, you think you've kind of handicapped it or put the right programs in place to make sure that production levels and shipment levels are coming back by the second half of the fiscal year. And really, does this kind of push you out another year in terms of getting more shelf space when the retailers are resetting the shelves because I think they only do that once a year. So have you kind of missed the window for '26 on that -- '27 on that part of the recovery.

Ron Lombardi: Yes. So I guess to add a little more color, Jon. So we learned about this disruption or it happened late in the fourth quarter. And as we've seen in the past, right, of dealing with the previous owners and management at Pillar5 is what would start out as an expected 1 week shutdown to do something, turned into 2 weeks, would turn into 3, which would turn into 4 as things either got more complex or the work got expanded, right? The previous owners or in this case, we decided to expand the scope of work that was being addressed to get benefits in the future, right, to help prevent these kind of things from going on.

So again, 90 days in, we continue to believe we've made the right strategic investment here to get control of the strategic supply of sterile eye care. And again, our outlook for '27 as we're 90 days smarter on the ownership and what it's going to take to get this stabilized, we believe, gives us the right runway to get this kind of thing behind us and get to a more predictable environment.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Keith Devas of Jefferies.

Keith Devas: You've had some comments on what's happening in the eye drop industry, specifically in the U.S. and we've seen the recall headlines with some competitors. I'm just hoping you can talk through how you're thinking about that as an opportunity. Maybe it's a little early given you have supply ramping with Pillar5, but just maybe what you're hearing from your customers on the retail front and how you're thinking about the recall and the absence of some competitors as an opportunity long term.

Ron Lombardi: Keith, clearly, there's an opportunity for our leading Clear Eyes brand to take share and to grow above where it was historically. Once we get our supply chain caught up to the opportunity and the potential here, if you go out and you talk to the retailers, given the recalls that they're seeing for private label and the out-of-stocks that you're seeing broadly across the shelf is they're beginning to understand the importance of partnering with trusted suppliers and brands over time. We've talked about the importance of quality in the space a couple of times already this morning, and I think it's worth repeating.

We have a very high level of focus on quality to the extent that for all of our Clear Eyes suppliers, we review and release the product here in our quality group. We don't rely on the third-party suppliers or even Pillar5 when it was a third-party supplier to review and release product on their own. We've always felt that it was an important area for us to keep close control of. And in the recent environment where there was recalls of private label product, that's an example where if you're not actively involved, you can't be up to speed on what's going on.

So again, go back to the beginning of your question, we think that this is a solid opportunity for Clear Eyes and tears, quite frankly, over time.

Keith Devas: Great. Maybe just as a follow-up, I think you mentioned some consumer pressures in the fourth quarter. Maybe just high level, I think there's a lot of macro volatility, but just thoughts on what's driving that overall, I believe, consumption across a lot of consumer health categories in the U.S. at least, has been a little bit softer for longer than expected. So just thoughts on what's driving that? And then, I guess, in your guidance for organic growth, just expectations for recovery or more so status quo from what we're seeing in the fourth quarter and today?

Ron Lombardi: Yes. So let me start by talking about the consumer environment. And then again, I'll let Chris add some comments around the outlook for next year, right? -- fiscal '26 had a whole lot of factors going on that in a lot of ways, I feel very good that we successfully navigated them in '26, right? We started our fiscal '26 off with tariffs right? And lots of volatilities about when tariffs were going to happen and at what level and what level of disruption and that kind of thing.

And then it moved on to government shutdowns, disruptions into government payments as well as escalating inflation and interest rate volatility during the year and then over our last quarter ended March, conflict in the Middle East and concerns around where that will go and the impact on oil prices. So there's been a lot going on. And even with all that going on, we continue to see that our categories are the last place that consumers look to make a change in what they buy, right? Sticking with the trusted health care brand and products that worked in the past is something that's very consistent in consumers for a long time.

So we start with that benefit, and it really underpins how we're thinking about fiscal '27, right? These of continuing to reinforce that, continue to have a steady pipeline of new products that brings benefits to the user out there. So a lot going on, but again, we believe that we start in a good place given what's going on.

Christine Sacco: Yes, Keith, just to piggyback on that, obviously, difficult to predict, but our outlook assumes kind of status quo on the consumer to current conditions. But again, we extended our range to be prudent around both eye care and consumer sentiment at this point.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Rupesh Parikh of Oppenheim & Co.

Rupesh Parikh: So I guess maybe I just want to start a high-level question. So you have 2 M&A transactions that you need to on Clear Eyes, that's been challenged in recent years. It sounds like this year, you expect to make progress. So was just your overall confidence to be able to execute all these different priorities this year and going forward.

Ron Lombardi: Yes. Rupesh, so whenever we evaluate M&A opportunities, the first question we always ask ourselves is, can we successfully manage the opportunity, the acquisition, and that was true with Pillar5. We stood back and said, can we manage the complexity of the sterile eye care facility and given the expertise we have in-house and the ability to tap into outside experts, we felt very good about being able to manage that. And as the Breathe Right opportunity came up, right, largest acquisition in the company's history, we started with that question, okay? We got Clear Eyes going on are the people involved with that also going to be involved with the Breathe Right portfolio that we have enough bandwidth.

And the similarities of that business model with ours one makes it an easier -- I hate to use the word easy, but an easier transition into our business. We know the space sold through the same channels gives us a nice growth opportunity in international. So we felt good about the ability to execute this. As I mentioned earlier, we've been keeping an eye on LaCorium and actively engaging with the owner for over 5 years, where I think the owner and seller was avoiding our General Manager in the elevator because he likes to ask him when he was going to be ready to sell the business.

But we started with that in question, is there overlap between the integration resources for Breath Right and LaCorium Health. Can we get it done. And we did a deep dive on it. And essentially, there's not a lot of overlap in the Breathe Right business model in Australia. So very limited resources there will be working on both of them. So we feel very good about our ability to execute all of these things that need to go on in fiscal '27. Writing the Pillar5 and the sterile eye care supply chain, closing and integrating Breathe Right, we feel really good about that business opportunity and then closing and integrating the LaCorium business in Australia.

So again, it's been the key area of focus as we thought about these things.

Rupesh Parikh: Great. And then a follow-up question just on guidance. So for this fiscal year, how are you thinking about selling versus sell-out? And then within your longer-term targets for FY '27, FY '29? Just anything you can say at this point, phasing of EPS growth and just the magnitude of the Clear Eyes recovery opportunity that you see during that period?

Christine Sacco: Rupesh, it's Chris. So selling and sell-out are expecting to be normalized, right? We don't have any reason to believe there will be a large anomaly at any particular customer channel at this point. And I believe your second question was centered around Clear Eyes and the assumptions that we have in the guide. So for the other...

Rupesh Parikh: Yes. So -- yes. So FY '27, '29, just your longer-term targets, like anything you say about the phasing of the EPS growth and just what that recovery opportunity is in Clear Eyes?

Christine Sacco: Sure. We are not assuming by the end of fiscal '29, we are fully recovered. We're essentially planning our shipments and sales in line with our increased demand -- or excuse me, our increased production and capacity, which will meaningfully increase over the period, but not at the historical levels to get all the way back.

Operator: And our next question comes from the line of Anthony Lebiedzinski of Sidoti.

Anthony Lebiedzinski: So just in terms of the 4Q reported numbers and your organic sales outlook, can you speak to pricing versus unit volumes? How should we think about those?

Christine Sacco: Yes, Anthony, it's Chris. So limited pricing in Q4, probably consistent with historical levels and anticipated for fiscal '27. We're thinking volume is going to drive about 2/3 of our growth and price 1/3.

Anthony Lebiedzinski: And then just in terms of the different channels of distribution. So it sounds like the e-commerce channel is showing the most sales growth. Are there any other sales channels that you're seeing growth? And then conversely, where are you seeing the most pressure points in terms of your sales channels of distribution?

Ron Lombardi: Yes. Anthony. So channel shifting by that consumer continues, right? This has been some long-term trends here for us. As we talked about in the prepared remarks, the dot-com, the e-commerce business continues to grow very nicely for us, not only at the big player there, but at the dot-com arms of our brick-and-mortar partners as well. It's a focused initiative and investment area for us. It's not just happening to us. It's a managed investment and focused area that we feel will continue to grow well above the company's average here.

Mass continues to do well, the big player there as well and the channels with headwinds are consistent in the fourth quarter and in all of calendar '26, and we would expect them to continue heading into '27.

Operator: And our next question comes from the line of Mitchell Pinheiro of Sturdivant & Co. We are not getting response. I'll move to the next question. And our next question comes from the line of Doug Lane of Water Tower Research.

Douglas Lane: Just looking at Slide 21, talking about your longer-term outlook. The 10% revenue growth, I think if I understood you right, is probably low to mid-single digits organic and then mid- to high single digits from acquisitions. Is that about right?

Christine Sacco: About right. That's organic growth in line with our long-term outlook of 2% to 3% and then the acquisitions.

Douglas Lane: I think you actually said at the higher end, did you give a little bit more optimistic outlook during this period? Or is it right at the 2% to 3%?

Ron Lombardi: Yes. Doug, Ron here. So right, first thing we got to do is get these acquisitions closed. We feel really good about them. But in both cases, we've talked about their growth potential being above their comparable pieces of our business. So we think Breathe Right in North America can grow ahead of our organic North American business. And the international piece can be above what we have for the international piece. And then same thing for LaCorium. For LaCorium, we think it can grow and expect it to grow well above the international long-term organic outlook of 5%.

So the whole intent of getting that comment in there as we put these pieces together, get our eye care recovery going over the next few years that the organic piece of it could clearly push us above the 3% for periods going forward. So first thing is to get these things closed and get them behind us. But one of the important messages today that we wanted to get across and why we put this medium-term outlook out there is we don't want to get things lost into the fiscal '26 challenges that we had, right? Lots of things to unpack in fiscal '26. We started the year with a headwind from order timing.

That went into the fourth quarter of '25 as a result of tariffs. And then we've had the big impact on Clear Eyes this year as well as other factors going on that I mentioned earlier around all of the macro disruptions. So it was important for us to make sure we emphasize how well the business is positioned and the benefit that these major acquisitions are going to have on our business going forward. And again, we did not want that to get lift in today's discussions.

Douglas Lane: No, that's very helpful, and I get that. So I guess my follow-up question is, if the acquisitions are accretive, then why would you expect an EPS CAGR to be below the sales CAGR over this period?

Christine Sacco: Yes, Doug, what we factored into the long-term numbers is really the new term loan debt that we're anticipating as well as the repricing of our 2028 notes. So it's really the impact of interest on the model. All other factors would be similar to -- and consistent with what you'd expect from our long-term algorithm.

Douglas Lane: So operationally, you think margins will basically hold, maybe expand a little bit? I mean, how should we look at that?

Ron Lombardi: That's exactly right, Doug.

Operator: Thank you. We have now come to the end of the question-and-answer session. Thank you all very much for your questions. I'll now turn the conference back to Ron Lombardi for closing comments.

Ron Lombardi: Thank you, operator, and thanks for all the great questions this morning, and we look forward to providing an update in August. Have a great day.

Operator: Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect your lines.