NASDAQ:RMCF Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Q2 2026 Earnings Report $1.93 0.00 (0.00%) Closing price 05/22/2026 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$2.05 +0.12 (+6.42%) As of 05/22/2026 07:51 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.09Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ARocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$6.82 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ARocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2026Date10/14/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, October 14, 2025Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory's Q4 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, May 26, 2026, based on past reporting schedulesConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Q2 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 14, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory has enacted significant operational improvements under its new VP of Operations, reducing waste, cutting overtime, streamlining logistics, and positioning the production facility for efficient holiday-season output. Positive Sentiment: The company’s franchise development momentum is strengthening, driven by a new VP of Franchise Development, strategic market targeting, and renewed interest from well-capitalized existing and prospective franchisees. Positive Sentiment: A comprehensive rebrand and digital upgrade—including new store design, refreshed packaging, an updated website, loyalty program rollout, and expanded third-party delivery partnerships—aims to modernize the customer experience and drive sales. Negative Sentiment: Despite a slight year-over-year revenue increase to $6.8 million, the company reported a Q2 net loss of $0.7 million (-$0.09 per share), mirroring the prior year’s losses. Negative Sentiment: As of August 31, the balance sheet shows $2 million in cash versus $7.8 million in total debt, funded by recent borrowings at a 12% interest rate, underscoring ongoing leverage concerns. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Q2 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 5 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to today's conference call to discuss Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory's financial results for the fiscal second quarter 2026. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. Joining us on the call today is the company's Interim CEO, Jeff Geygan, and CFO Carrie Kass. Please be advised, this conference call will. Speaker 300:00:25Contain statements that are considered forward-looking. Operator00:00:27Statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain known and unknown risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are also subject to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the Company's filings with the SEC. Do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which are being made only as of the date of this call. Except as required by law, the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. I will turn the call over to the Company's Interim CEO, Jeff Geygan. Jeff, please go ahead. Speaker 100:01:10Thank you and good morning everyone. Over the past 16 months, we've taken meaningful steps to modernize our business, strengthen operations, and lay the groundwork for stable growth, progress that's now becoming evident across the enterprise. These foundational steps are largely complete, and our focus is shifting towards disciplined execution. We're moving from transformational planning to transformational performance. The results of that shift are reflected in how we operate our business, how we support our franchisees, and how we present our brand to customers. The changes we're making today and in the past are intended to create value for investors over the long run. In the short run, we've made many difficult personnel and operating decisions that had to be put in place. Despite the immediate cost, we believe those changes were necessary and a prerequisite to allowing the company to achieve its long run potential. Speaker 100:02:14There's more work to be done with sales, production, and franchise development, but we believe we put the right people and processes in place to execute in ways that will allow us to return to historic levels of profitability over the coming quarters and years. Today, I'll walk you through several developments that highlight our progress, including franchise growth, brand development, and operational improvements as we move into the holiday season. Our ongoing operational challenges evidenced in our Q2 report are being met through a combination of improvements initiated by our new VP of Operations who took over midway through the quarter. Speaker 100:03:01Within weeks of his onboarding, he laid out new money-saving strategies including ways to eliminate overtime compensation, reduce scrap and waste, and improve in-stock items to fulfill incoming franchisee orders as a first step to increasing the ratio of Durango products sold in every store, a significant financial opportunity for the company. In addition, we're continuing to overhaul our warehouse and logistics operations to ensure lean inventory levels and more frequent delivery to franchise locations as we expand our geographic footprint. Continued improvement with operations is necessary as we enter our busy Q3 and Q4 holiday seasons, including both Christmas and Valentine's Day. We're well positioned to meet franchisee demand and that of our remaining specialty markets customers. Speaker 100:03:59We're deploying more technology and automation in our production facility today without compromising our beloved handcrafted legacy that accounts for much of the nostalgia from nearly 45 years of customer engagement and satisfaction. Our franchise development momentum continues to build. We're seeing renewed enthusiasm from both existing and prospective operators who recognize the opportunity within the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory system. We hired a new VP of Franchise Development in August. He attended our September National Franchisee Convention and engaged with well over a dozen current franchisees to lay out a vision for future store growth and area development agreements. We're continuing to canvass the U.S. and designate where we want to locate new stores in a very thoughtful and strategic array. The first wave of new store builds will come from our existing franchisees, followed by a group of new to the system operators. Speaker 100:05:06We're in discussions with several now with a focus on developing new markets where we've historically had little or no presence, including both north and south of the border where we think there are significant development opportunity. This is a renaissance for Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. We're entering a new era of growth, not growth for growth's sake. We'll be very intentional with every move we make, always looking for ways to create and enhance shareholder value. We remain focused on increasing store ownership per franchisee. As I cited in our prior investor call, we recently opened a Charleston, South Carolina store, the first location to feature our refreshed branding and new store design and the fourth store for this current franchisee. This location had its soft opening this summer and we're planning a grand opening next month. Speaker 100:06:03The Chicago State Street store remains on track to open around the holidays. Construction is underway. This location will also serve as a showcase for the new Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. From design and layout to product presentation and customer experience, we continue to build a healthy pipeline of new locations. We recently signed franchise agreements for the Palladio in Folsom, California and the Jersey Shore Premium Outlets in Tinton Falls, New Jersey. We're also in the final stages of negotiation for a Houston Hobby Airport location. We recently completed our first remodel at the Corpus Christi, Texas company-owned store. As expected, store sales experienced an immediate pickup, and shortly afterwards we had our busiest day in store history. As we have more empirical data related to remodels, we'll share that with investors. Speaker 100:07:03The combination of openings, remodels, and multi-unit franchise interest gives us a strong development pipeline, the strongest we've had in years. More importantly, we're focused on quality over quantity, partnering with well-capitalized, experienced operators in attractive, high-traffic markets. Our disciplined approach to development and franchise recruitment is expected to drive meaningful long-term potential for our system's performance. Turning to our rebrand, we've continued to make strong progress evolving the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory brand. Over the past year, we've modernized nearly every customer touch point, from our new logo, contemporary store design, updated packaging, refreshed website, makeover of our longtime mascot, Truffles the Bear, and the overall in-store experience. The refreshed look elevates the brand while maintaining the warmth, quality, and authenticity customers have always associated with Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. Speaker 100:08:13We expect most of our remodel work across the system to begin in early calendar 2026, with the goal of having nearly all stores align with the new brand identity in 24 months. These remodels will include new exterior signage, updated interior layouts, and enhanced merchandising designed to create a more cohesive and engaging customer experience across all stores, both new and remodeled. We're making meaningful progress improving product presentation and packaging. Our new packaging has rolled out to most stores, and feedback from franchisees and customers has been positive. The updated design conveys the premium nature of our products and complements the in-store brand aesthetic. Speaker 100:09:03Our package is modular in design, so when franchisees asked for a new sampler package during our recent national convention, we were able to develop and roll that out in about six weeks, a feat never before even considered but now a reality due to our unique design, which allows us to take in customer data and respond rapidly as we adjust to real-time feedback. In addition, we recently hired a new world-class R&D executive who has experience in the confectionery business. His addition to our team will accelerate the introduction of many new and exciting products to offer our franchisees and customers. Altogether, these initiatives are strengthening how customers experience our brand. They represent the next stage of our development, a consistent, elevated experience that supports the long-term franchisee success and a deeper customer connection. Speaker 100:10:08We've been modernizing the way customers interact with the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory brand online. Earlier this quarter, we launched our refreshed website, which reflects our contemporary identity and provides a cleaner, premium look. This refresh is an important step in aligning our digital presence with the in-store experience and features our updated package offerings just in time for the holidays. As originally conceived, our website will be an on-ramp for consumers to experience a small sampling of our delicious products, with all signs leading to a nearby store for the full selection of premium offerings. This will lead to our next iteration of store-level SKU reorientation, in which every store will carry all of the items that Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory offers from Long Branch, New Jersey to Huntington Beach, California. To strengthen customer attention and engagement, we're preparing to roll out a new loyalty program. Speaker 100:11:15This loyalty program will deliver a personalized and mobile-friendly experience, allowing us to better understand purchasing behavior and reward purchase frequency. We plan to launch new programs shortly after the first of the year. We're also expanding third-party delivery to meet customers where they are. Our partnership with DoorDash and other third-party delivery services continues to progress as we standardize store listings, locations, and menu data across the system. We're encouraging franchisees to transition to DoorDash's storefront model, which provides broader reach with stronger unit economics compared to the traditional delivery structure. In addition, this creates an operating structure to expand across all major third-party delivery platforms, which will be an ongoing initiative for every location. The economics of these platforms are expected to be accretive to store-level sales and profitability. Taken together, our digital initiatives represent the next phase of customer engagement for the brand. Speaker 100:12:29They extend the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory experience beyond the store walls as we take our premium offerings to mobile third-party delivery and corporate customers, deepening relationships and supporting incremental profitable growth for our franchisees. In August, we acquired a long-standing store in Camarillo, California for $165,000. Last year that store generated $700,000 in sales. Under our management, it will shift to a more traditional mix of Durango and store-made products, creating a pickup in Durango production demand and improving store-level profitability. If you reference our segment analysis in the current 10-Q, you will see our retail operations have generated a pre-tax margin between 15% and 20%. The acquisition of this store is expected to be accretive to our overall earnings. Speaker 100:13:31In addition, it gives us physical presence in the important Southern California marketplace while also creating a third company-owned store that we'll use as a test bed to explore new ways to engage with customers. Over time, we expect to have more company-owned stores located in strategic markets where we can use those to test and develop best practices. For too many years, we've often simply taken orders, not selling. The unique attributes of Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory brand and experience need to be sold. A shift to selling represents a fundamental change in how we approach our customer engagement and is the single most exciting opportunity on the horizon, pivoting to an in-store customer experience unlike anything the company has executed in decades. We're in the early stages of developing a clear articulation of our message for both franchisees and customers. Speaker 100:14:39We're developing a message that ties together our new logo, store design, packaging, website, and truffles. The bear, the next leg of our journey, will show our transformation in its full color with all the possibilities this brand has previously been unable to capture. Of course, operational execution remains the center of our attention. The team in Durango continues to work on driving efficiency gains as we prepare for the holiday season. We now have the flexibility to extend production hours and add shifts as needed to meet upcoming seasonal demands. Thanks to the insight and experience of our new VP of Operations, inventory levels are healthy heading into the holidays and a production plan is focused on maintaining freshness and product availability across the system. To support that, we've increased staffing to extend production run times, which improves efficiency and minimizes downtime between changeovers without incurring expensive overtime pay. Speaker 100:15:47Our raw materials and key ingredients are flowing well. We're positioned to meet demand for the season ahead. We've improved logistics by moving consumer packaging back to Durango and added warehouse capacity in Albuquerque, taking it from Salt Lake City and in the process reducing transit time to the factory from seven hours to three hours. This change has improved responsiveness and reduced transportation cost. Combined with disciplined pricing, freight optimization, and ongoing process improvements, these initiatives are improving our cost structure and profitability. Culturally, this is a very different company than it was 16 months ago. We've built a leadership team and organization that is aligned, accountable, and focused on results. Across every function from Durango to the field, there's a growing sense of purpose, collaboration, and execution discipline. We've made tough decisions necessary to stabilize the business and have been deliberate in how we built for the future. Speaker 100:16:56The progress we're seeing now is a direct result of that approach. Our transformation is continuing as planned. The foundation we've laid is solid. The factory is running more efficiently, franchisees have better tools and support, and our brand continues to evolve in ways that resonate with customers today. As we enter the holiday season, the organization is aligned around one simple objective: executional excellence. That means keeping product flowing, supporting franchisees, and delivering a consistent premium customer experience. As I began the call today, I reiterate we are focused on creating value for our equity owners over time. We will invariably experience unforeseen challenges in the short run, be those operational, personnel, or resource driven that we will have to navigate, but will never lose sight of where we're headed over the long run. Our goals are lofty, our team is focused, our mission is clearer. Speaker 100:18:07Thank you for your attention. With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO Carrie Kass to step you through our fiscal Q2 financial results. Speaker 300:18:17Carrie, thank you, Jeff. Please note that unless otherwise stated, all comparisons are on a year-over-year basis. Total revenue for the quarter was $6.8 million compared to $6.4 million in the same period last year. Product sales were $5.2 million compared to $4.9 million last year, and franchise and royalty fees were $1.6 million, up from $1.5 million in the same period last year. The total product and retail gross profit was negative $33,000. The decrease reflects year-over-year comparability factors, the timing of inventory adjustments, and is partially offset by continued factory efficiency gains. Total costs and expenses were $7.3 million, which were essentially flat compared to the same period last year. The net loss of $0.7 million, or negative $0.09 per share, compared to the net loss of $0.7 million or negative $0.11 per share in the second quarter of 2025. Speaker 300:19:28Turning to the balance sheet, as of August 31, 2025, we had cash of $2 million compared to $0.7 million at February 28, 2025. During the quarter, we added $1.8 million in new borrowings to support working capital and seasonal needs. This included a $1.2 million term loan and $6 million incremental loan under our existing credit facility. Both loans carry the same 12% interest rate, interest-only payments, and the same September 30, 2027 maturity as the original $6 million facility established last year. As a result, total debt outstanding was $7.8 million as of August 31, 2025. This concludes our prepared remarks. We'll now open it up to Q&A. Operator, back to you. Operator00:20:23As a reminder to ask a question, please press star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. Please stand by while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question will be coming from Peter Thomas Sidoti of Sidoti & Company. Your line is up. Speaker 100:20:47Hi. Speaker 200:20:48A couple quick questions. One, can you discuss the background of the new Chief Operating Officer? Speaker 100:20:54Yeah, of course. This is Luis Burgos. He has 30+ years in manufacturing and operations. He has worked for startups with as few as 150 people and managed operations with over 3,000 people. He's operated in the U.S. and internationally, and notably he was employed by Kimberly Clark on two separate occasions. He has a fantastic experience and background, and he's fluent with the FDA rules and regulations. Speaker 200:21:30Okay, great. As you open new stores, do you have targets for number of openings you expect to 2026 and 2027, Peter? Speaker 100:21:39Not that we've disclosed yet, but our stated goal is to be net positive in store growth on an annual basis, which means whatever the stores that are closed, we exceed that with new openings. Speaker 200:21:51Can you just discuss the thinking between owned and franchised? Speaker 100:21:57Yes, sir. Historically, the company has had relatively few owned stores. Philosophically, we think if we're going to be a good franchisor, we need to be able to talk the talk, run the businesses, and have proof positive that we know what we're doing as an operator, not just as a franchisor. We had, until recently, two stores. One in Durango, which we've owned for many, many years, and a second in Corpus Christi, which was acquired roughly three years ago, which has gone through a very nice turnaround. Camarillo, California, which I cited in our numbers here, was able to be purchased at a very attractive rate, put us in a strategic market where we have boots on the ground, which we think is relevant. Speaker 100:22:40My expectation is in the not too distant future, we'll have a handful of additional stores that strategically put us into markets where we can develop and potentially turn around and sell a cluster of stores to a prospective franchisee while we're developing those stores in those markets. With each store, we'll have an opportunity to test new products, new practices. Speaker 200:23:06Okay. Just one last question. You seem to be burning a little cash at this point. Can you just talk to me? How long do you think that will continue, and will there be a need for equity financing? Speaker 100:23:21Of course, our fiscal Q1 and Q2 are historically our slow periods. Q3 and Q4 historically are better periods. We're performing the budget this year. The discussion about any type of capital raise would be one that would have to be considered with the Board of Directors. Speaker 200:23:43I'm sorry, could you just repeat it so I understand it? Speaker 100:23:47Yeah, sure. Any type of capital raise would be at the discretion of the Board of Directors. Speaker 200:23:53Right. You are burning cash at this point in time. Do you expect to continue to burn cash for the next 12 months? Speaker 100:23:59We do not. Speaker 200:24:00You do not. All right, great. Thank you. Speaker 100:24:03Thanks for your questions, Peter. Operator00:24:05Thank you. I'm showing no further questions in the queue. I would now like to pass the call to Sean Mansouri for email questions. Speaker 400:24:14Thank you, Latonya. To address a few questions that have come in via email over the past week, Jeff, Carrie first here. Can you expand on what's driving the increase in franchise demand beyond the visual aspects of the brand? In other words, what tangible changes in the business are making Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory a more investable system for operators today? Speaker 100:24:37Yeah, thanks, Sean. It's a good question. For starters, I think one aspect of our offering that differentiates us from a lot of our competitive offerings is our relatively low labor model in a world where labor costs, among other things, are rising. That's attractive. Number two, with the new store design, we've been able to move more closely to a defined number in terms of what it would cost to build. Once we have the defined number, we've been able to reduce those costs. I think our ability to articulate the ROI to a prospective franchisee in terms of cost to build and expected cash flow, those numbers are very attractive. We've worked with existing franchisees to try to get our store growth kick started. Speaker 100:25:29Frankly, in most cases, it was just simply a matter of asking our franchisees if they had an interest, to which most of them said, yeah, I was waiting for someone at corporate to ask. That was an easy answer. We've also hired a new VP of Franchise Development, as I mentioned during my prepared remarks, who started in August, who has 20+ years of franchise development and has a proven track record of building small systems into larger systems. We feel very optimistic about not just the design and the economics, but we're putting the mechanics in place to do this on a repeated basis. As I've said on several occasions, we're looking for financially sophisticated, well-capitalized entrepreneurial franchisees to join our system. We've had conversations with a number of those type of investors recently. Speaker 400:26:23That's great. Moving on to the next one. Can you walk through what's changed in your factory operations that's most meaningfully impacting cost per unit or fulfillment reliability? Speaker 100:26:37Sure. Carrie, do you want to take that? Speaker 300:26:39Sure. As Jeff mentioned, we just recently hired the new VP of Operations. He has made a number of changes in the factory, most of which have happened after the end of the quarter. We're still testing best practices downstairs. We've made a lot of progress in a lot of areas in the business. That's one we're still working on. Speaker 400:27:08Thank you. With cocoa prices easing from historic highs, how are you thinking about the potential margin benefit and timing, including your hedging strategies and supplier costs? Speaker 100:27:22Yeah, it's a great question. Good observation too. As we speak, the price per metric ton of cocoa is $5,806. Sixteen months ago, for perspective, if we could lock into cocoa pricing at $8,000 per metric ton, I felt pretty lucky. $8,000 for many months was as low as it traded, and then it had bumped up a couple times to $10,000 or $11,000. Recently, for a variety of reasons that are mostly geopolitical and some weather related, the price dipped below $8,000 into the $7,000 then $6,000 range. We took full advantage of that, locking in some amount of production. Bear in mind, it's not an all or none, and we're not in the spot market. Every time we lock at today's lower price, we still have the long tail backwards that are prices that we locked previously. The highest price we've locked since I've been here is $8,000. Speaker 100:28:19We expect that we'll pick up some margin and lower raw material costs, and this cocoa, of course, becomes chocolate for us. Chocolate represents 40% of our raw material costs, so this will be meaningful for us, and we expect to see improved margins over time as a result. Speaker 400:28:39Excellent. That concludes the email portion of the Q and A session. Latonya, over to you to close the call. Operator00:28:48Certainly. This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your phone lines at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Earnings HeadlinesRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Reports Preliminary Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2026 Financial ResultsMay 15, 2026 | markets.businessinsider.comRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory to Present at LD Micro Invitational XVI Conference on May 18, 2026May 15, 2026 | quiverquant.comQ$30 stock to buy before Starlink goes public (WATCH NOW!)In the next 3 minutes… James Altucher – legendary investor and venture capitalist… And someone who’s known for playing his cards “close to the vest”… Is going to give you the name and ticker symbol of a company he believes will skyrocket thanks to the coming Starlink IPO…May 25 at 1:00 AM | Paradigm Press (Ad)Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory to Participate in the LD Micro Invitational XVI Conference on May 18, 2026May 15, 2026 | globenewswire.comRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory (NASDAQ:RMCF) & Noodles & Company (NASDAQ:NDLS) Critical ContrastMay 14, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Expands Corporate Presence with New Location at Opry Mills, NashvilleMay 1, 2026 | quiverquant.comQSee More Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Rocky Mountain Chocolate FactoryRocky Mountain Chocolate Factory (NASDAQ:RMCF) is a specialty chocolate confectionery franchisor and manufacturer headquartered in Durango, Colorado. Established in 1981, the company develops, produces and markets a range of premium chocolate products, including truffles, caramels, toffees, fudge, nuts, dipped fruits and caramel apples. It operates company-owned retail stores as well as a franchised network, supplying handcrafted confections and related gift items through more than 300 retail locations across North America and select international markets. From its origins as a single store in downtown Durango, Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory introduced its first franchised outlets in the mid-1980s and completed a public offering in 1985. Its proprietary manufacturing facility supports seasonal and year-round product lines, which are shipped to both corporate and franchise stores. Over time, the company has expanded its offerings to include ice cream, specialty beverages and holiday-themed gift collections, maintaining a focus on small-batch recipes and hand-crafted quality. Retail operations feature an in-store experience that allows customers to select and customize confections, with an emphasis on gift packaging and seasonal promotions. Beyond its storefronts, the company sells products through an e-commerce platform and enters into licensing agreements to distribute certain items through third-party retailers. Its business model combines brand licensing fees, franchise royalties and direct product sales to drive revenue and support new franchise development. Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory serves markets in the United States, Canada, Guam, Saipan, Aruba and other select overseas territories. The enterprise is governed by a board of directors and managed by an executive leadership team responsible for finance, marketing, operations and franchise relations. Moving forward, the company continues to pursue strategic growth through new store openings, product innovation and enhanced digital marketing initiatives.View Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Ross Stores Earnings Beat Sends Stock To New HighsWas Decker’s Double Beat a Bullish Signal—Or Mere HOKA’s-Pocus?Workday Validates AI Flywheel: Stock Price Recovery BeginsApparel Earnings Winners and Losers: Ralph Lauren Takes OffWhy Walmart, Target and TJX Got Such Different Reactions After EarningsThe Careful Consumer: What Q1 Earnings Reveal—And Where Cracks May AppearOverextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back Half Upcoming Earnings AutoZone (5/26/2026)Marvell Technology (5/27/2026)PDD (5/27/2026)Synopsys (5/27/2026)Bank Of Montreal (5/27/2026)Bank of Nova Scotia (5/27/2026)Salesforce (5/27/2026)Snowflake (5/27/2026)Autodesk (5/28/2026)Costco Wholesale (5/28/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 5 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to today's conference call to discuss Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory's financial results for the fiscal second quarter 2026. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. Joining us on the call today is the company's Interim CEO, Jeff Geygan, and CFO Carrie Kass. Please be advised, this conference call will. Speaker 300:00:25Contain statements that are considered forward-looking. Operator00:00:27Statements under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain known and unknown risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are also subject to other risks and uncertainties that are described from time to time in the Company's filings with the SEC. Do not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which are being made only as of the date of this call. Except as required by law, the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. I will turn the call over to the Company's Interim CEO, Jeff Geygan. Jeff, please go ahead. Speaker 100:01:10Thank you and good morning everyone. Over the past 16 months, we've taken meaningful steps to modernize our business, strengthen operations, and lay the groundwork for stable growth, progress that's now becoming evident across the enterprise. These foundational steps are largely complete, and our focus is shifting towards disciplined execution. We're moving from transformational planning to transformational performance. The results of that shift are reflected in how we operate our business, how we support our franchisees, and how we present our brand to customers. The changes we're making today and in the past are intended to create value for investors over the long run. In the short run, we've made many difficult personnel and operating decisions that had to be put in place. Despite the immediate cost, we believe those changes were necessary and a prerequisite to allowing the company to achieve its long run potential. Speaker 100:02:14There's more work to be done with sales, production, and franchise development, but we believe we put the right people and processes in place to execute in ways that will allow us to return to historic levels of profitability over the coming quarters and years. Today, I'll walk you through several developments that highlight our progress, including franchise growth, brand development, and operational improvements as we move into the holiday season. Our ongoing operational challenges evidenced in our Q2 report are being met through a combination of improvements initiated by our new VP of Operations who took over midway through the quarter. Speaker 100:03:01Within weeks of his onboarding, he laid out new money-saving strategies including ways to eliminate overtime compensation, reduce scrap and waste, and improve in-stock items to fulfill incoming franchisee orders as a first step to increasing the ratio of Durango products sold in every store, a significant financial opportunity for the company. In addition, we're continuing to overhaul our warehouse and logistics operations to ensure lean inventory levels and more frequent delivery to franchise locations as we expand our geographic footprint. Continued improvement with operations is necessary as we enter our busy Q3 and Q4 holiday seasons, including both Christmas and Valentine's Day. We're well positioned to meet franchisee demand and that of our remaining specialty markets customers. Speaker 100:03:59We're deploying more technology and automation in our production facility today without compromising our beloved handcrafted legacy that accounts for much of the nostalgia from nearly 45 years of customer engagement and satisfaction. Our franchise development momentum continues to build. We're seeing renewed enthusiasm from both existing and prospective operators who recognize the opportunity within the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory system. We hired a new VP of Franchise Development in August. He attended our September National Franchisee Convention and engaged with well over a dozen current franchisees to lay out a vision for future store growth and area development agreements. We're continuing to canvass the U.S. and designate where we want to locate new stores in a very thoughtful and strategic array. The first wave of new store builds will come from our existing franchisees, followed by a group of new to the system operators. Speaker 100:05:06We're in discussions with several now with a focus on developing new markets where we've historically had little or no presence, including both north and south of the border where we think there are significant development opportunity. This is a renaissance for Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. We're entering a new era of growth, not growth for growth's sake. We'll be very intentional with every move we make, always looking for ways to create and enhance shareholder value. We remain focused on increasing store ownership per franchisee. As I cited in our prior investor call, we recently opened a Charleston, South Carolina store, the first location to feature our refreshed branding and new store design and the fourth store for this current franchisee. This location had its soft opening this summer and we're planning a grand opening next month. Speaker 100:06:03The Chicago State Street store remains on track to open around the holidays. Construction is underway. This location will also serve as a showcase for the new Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. From design and layout to product presentation and customer experience, we continue to build a healthy pipeline of new locations. We recently signed franchise agreements for the Palladio in Folsom, California and the Jersey Shore Premium Outlets in Tinton Falls, New Jersey. We're also in the final stages of negotiation for a Houston Hobby Airport location. We recently completed our first remodel at the Corpus Christi, Texas company-owned store. As expected, store sales experienced an immediate pickup, and shortly afterwards we had our busiest day in store history. As we have more empirical data related to remodels, we'll share that with investors. Speaker 100:07:03The combination of openings, remodels, and multi-unit franchise interest gives us a strong development pipeline, the strongest we've had in years. More importantly, we're focused on quality over quantity, partnering with well-capitalized, experienced operators in attractive, high-traffic markets. Our disciplined approach to development and franchise recruitment is expected to drive meaningful long-term potential for our system's performance. Turning to our rebrand, we've continued to make strong progress evolving the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory brand. Over the past year, we've modernized nearly every customer touch point, from our new logo, contemporary store design, updated packaging, refreshed website, makeover of our longtime mascot, Truffles the Bear, and the overall in-store experience. The refreshed look elevates the brand while maintaining the warmth, quality, and authenticity customers have always associated with Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. Speaker 100:08:13We expect most of our remodel work across the system to begin in early calendar 2026, with the goal of having nearly all stores align with the new brand identity in 24 months. These remodels will include new exterior signage, updated interior layouts, and enhanced merchandising designed to create a more cohesive and engaging customer experience across all stores, both new and remodeled. We're making meaningful progress improving product presentation and packaging. Our new packaging has rolled out to most stores, and feedback from franchisees and customers has been positive. The updated design conveys the premium nature of our products and complements the in-store brand aesthetic. Speaker 100:09:03Our package is modular in design, so when franchisees asked for a new sampler package during our recent national convention, we were able to develop and roll that out in about six weeks, a feat never before even considered but now a reality due to our unique design, which allows us to take in customer data and respond rapidly as we adjust to real-time feedback. In addition, we recently hired a new world-class R&D executive who has experience in the confectionery business. His addition to our team will accelerate the introduction of many new and exciting products to offer our franchisees and customers. Altogether, these initiatives are strengthening how customers experience our brand. They represent the next stage of our development, a consistent, elevated experience that supports the long-term franchisee success and a deeper customer connection. Speaker 100:10:08We've been modernizing the way customers interact with the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory brand online. Earlier this quarter, we launched our refreshed website, which reflects our contemporary identity and provides a cleaner, premium look. This refresh is an important step in aligning our digital presence with the in-store experience and features our updated package offerings just in time for the holidays. As originally conceived, our website will be an on-ramp for consumers to experience a small sampling of our delicious products, with all signs leading to a nearby store for the full selection of premium offerings. This will lead to our next iteration of store-level SKU reorientation, in which every store will carry all of the items that Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory offers from Long Branch, New Jersey to Huntington Beach, California. To strengthen customer attention and engagement, we're preparing to roll out a new loyalty program. Speaker 100:11:15This loyalty program will deliver a personalized and mobile-friendly experience, allowing us to better understand purchasing behavior and reward purchase frequency. We plan to launch new programs shortly after the first of the year. We're also expanding third-party delivery to meet customers where they are. Our partnership with DoorDash and other third-party delivery services continues to progress as we standardize store listings, locations, and menu data across the system. We're encouraging franchisees to transition to DoorDash's storefront model, which provides broader reach with stronger unit economics compared to the traditional delivery structure. In addition, this creates an operating structure to expand across all major third-party delivery platforms, which will be an ongoing initiative for every location. The economics of these platforms are expected to be accretive to store-level sales and profitability. Taken together, our digital initiatives represent the next phase of customer engagement for the brand. Speaker 100:12:29They extend the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory experience beyond the store walls as we take our premium offerings to mobile third-party delivery and corporate customers, deepening relationships and supporting incremental profitable growth for our franchisees. In August, we acquired a long-standing store in Camarillo, California for $165,000. Last year that store generated $700,000 in sales. Under our management, it will shift to a more traditional mix of Durango and store-made products, creating a pickup in Durango production demand and improving store-level profitability. If you reference our segment analysis in the current 10-Q, you will see our retail operations have generated a pre-tax margin between 15% and 20%. The acquisition of this store is expected to be accretive to our overall earnings. Speaker 100:13:31In addition, it gives us physical presence in the important Southern California marketplace while also creating a third company-owned store that we'll use as a test bed to explore new ways to engage with customers. Over time, we expect to have more company-owned stores located in strategic markets where we can use those to test and develop best practices. For too many years, we've often simply taken orders, not selling. The unique attributes of Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory brand and experience need to be sold. A shift to selling represents a fundamental change in how we approach our customer engagement and is the single most exciting opportunity on the horizon, pivoting to an in-store customer experience unlike anything the company has executed in decades. We're in the early stages of developing a clear articulation of our message for both franchisees and customers. Speaker 100:14:39We're developing a message that ties together our new logo, store design, packaging, website, and truffles. The bear, the next leg of our journey, will show our transformation in its full color with all the possibilities this brand has previously been unable to capture. Of course, operational execution remains the center of our attention. The team in Durango continues to work on driving efficiency gains as we prepare for the holiday season. We now have the flexibility to extend production hours and add shifts as needed to meet upcoming seasonal demands. Thanks to the insight and experience of our new VP of Operations, inventory levels are healthy heading into the holidays and a production plan is focused on maintaining freshness and product availability across the system. To support that, we've increased staffing to extend production run times, which improves efficiency and minimizes downtime between changeovers without incurring expensive overtime pay. Speaker 100:15:47Our raw materials and key ingredients are flowing well. We're positioned to meet demand for the season ahead. We've improved logistics by moving consumer packaging back to Durango and added warehouse capacity in Albuquerque, taking it from Salt Lake City and in the process reducing transit time to the factory from seven hours to three hours. This change has improved responsiveness and reduced transportation cost. Combined with disciplined pricing, freight optimization, and ongoing process improvements, these initiatives are improving our cost structure and profitability. Culturally, this is a very different company than it was 16 months ago. We've built a leadership team and organization that is aligned, accountable, and focused on results. Across every function from Durango to the field, there's a growing sense of purpose, collaboration, and execution discipline. We've made tough decisions necessary to stabilize the business and have been deliberate in how we built for the future. Speaker 100:16:56The progress we're seeing now is a direct result of that approach. Our transformation is continuing as planned. The foundation we've laid is solid. The factory is running more efficiently, franchisees have better tools and support, and our brand continues to evolve in ways that resonate with customers today. As we enter the holiday season, the organization is aligned around one simple objective: executional excellence. That means keeping product flowing, supporting franchisees, and delivering a consistent premium customer experience. As I began the call today, I reiterate we are focused on creating value for our equity owners over time. We will invariably experience unforeseen challenges in the short run, be those operational, personnel, or resource driven that we will have to navigate, but will never lose sight of where we're headed over the long run. Our goals are lofty, our team is focused, our mission is clearer. Speaker 100:18:07Thank you for your attention. With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO Carrie Kass to step you through our fiscal Q2 financial results. Speaker 300:18:17Carrie, thank you, Jeff. Please note that unless otherwise stated, all comparisons are on a year-over-year basis. Total revenue for the quarter was $6.8 million compared to $6.4 million in the same period last year. Product sales were $5.2 million compared to $4.9 million last year, and franchise and royalty fees were $1.6 million, up from $1.5 million in the same period last year. The total product and retail gross profit was negative $33,000. The decrease reflects year-over-year comparability factors, the timing of inventory adjustments, and is partially offset by continued factory efficiency gains. Total costs and expenses were $7.3 million, which were essentially flat compared to the same period last year. The net loss of $0.7 million, or negative $0.09 per share, compared to the net loss of $0.7 million or negative $0.11 per share in the second quarter of 2025. Speaker 300:19:28Turning to the balance sheet, as of August 31, 2025, we had cash of $2 million compared to $0.7 million at February 28, 2025. During the quarter, we added $1.8 million in new borrowings to support working capital and seasonal needs. This included a $1.2 million term loan and $6 million incremental loan under our existing credit facility. Both loans carry the same 12% interest rate, interest-only payments, and the same September 30, 2027 maturity as the original $6 million facility established last year. As a result, total debt outstanding was $7.8 million as of August 31, 2025. This concludes our prepared remarks. We'll now open it up to Q&A. Operator, back to you. Operator00:20:23As a reminder to ask a question, please press star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. Please stand by while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question will be coming from Peter Thomas Sidoti of Sidoti & Company. Your line is up. Speaker 100:20:47Hi. Speaker 200:20:48A couple quick questions. One, can you discuss the background of the new Chief Operating Officer? Speaker 100:20:54Yeah, of course. This is Luis Burgos. He has 30+ years in manufacturing and operations. He has worked for startups with as few as 150 people and managed operations with over 3,000 people. He's operated in the U.S. and internationally, and notably he was employed by Kimberly Clark on two separate occasions. He has a fantastic experience and background, and he's fluent with the FDA rules and regulations. Speaker 200:21:30Okay, great. As you open new stores, do you have targets for number of openings you expect to 2026 and 2027, Peter? Speaker 100:21:39Not that we've disclosed yet, but our stated goal is to be net positive in store growth on an annual basis, which means whatever the stores that are closed, we exceed that with new openings. Speaker 200:21:51Can you just discuss the thinking between owned and franchised? Speaker 100:21:57Yes, sir. Historically, the company has had relatively few owned stores. Philosophically, we think if we're going to be a good franchisor, we need to be able to talk the talk, run the businesses, and have proof positive that we know what we're doing as an operator, not just as a franchisor. We had, until recently, two stores. One in Durango, which we've owned for many, many years, and a second in Corpus Christi, which was acquired roughly three years ago, which has gone through a very nice turnaround. Camarillo, California, which I cited in our numbers here, was able to be purchased at a very attractive rate, put us in a strategic market where we have boots on the ground, which we think is relevant. Speaker 100:22:40My expectation is in the not too distant future, we'll have a handful of additional stores that strategically put us into markets where we can develop and potentially turn around and sell a cluster of stores to a prospective franchisee while we're developing those stores in those markets. With each store, we'll have an opportunity to test new products, new practices. Speaker 200:23:06Okay. Just one last question. You seem to be burning a little cash at this point. Can you just talk to me? How long do you think that will continue, and will there be a need for equity financing? Speaker 100:23:21Of course, our fiscal Q1 and Q2 are historically our slow periods. Q3 and Q4 historically are better periods. We're performing the budget this year. The discussion about any type of capital raise would be one that would have to be considered with the Board of Directors. Speaker 200:23:43I'm sorry, could you just repeat it so I understand it? Speaker 100:23:47Yeah, sure. Any type of capital raise would be at the discretion of the Board of Directors. Speaker 200:23:53Right. You are burning cash at this point in time. Do you expect to continue to burn cash for the next 12 months? Speaker 100:23:59We do not. Speaker 200:24:00You do not. All right, great. Thank you. Speaker 100:24:03Thanks for your questions, Peter. Operator00:24:05Thank you. I'm showing no further questions in the queue. I would now like to pass the call to Sean Mansouri for email questions. Speaker 400:24:14Thank you, Latonya. To address a few questions that have come in via email over the past week, Jeff, Carrie first here. Can you expand on what's driving the increase in franchise demand beyond the visual aspects of the brand? In other words, what tangible changes in the business are making Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory a more investable system for operators today? Speaker 100:24:37Yeah, thanks, Sean. It's a good question. For starters, I think one aspect of our offering that differentiates us from a lot of our competitive offerings is our relatively low labor model in a world where labor costs, among other things, are rising. That's attractive. Number two, with the new store design, we've been able to move more closely to a defined number in terms of what it would cost to build. Once we have the defined number, we've been able to reduce those costs. I think our ability to articulate the ROI to a prospective franchisee in terms of cost to build and expected cash flow, those numbers are very attractive. We've worked with existing franchisees to try to get our store growth kick started. Speaker 100:25:29Frankly, in most cases, it was just simply a matter of asking our franchisees if they had an interest, to which most of them said, yeah, I was waiting for someone at corporate to ask. That was an easy answer. We've also hired a new VP of Franchise Development, as I mentioned during my prepared remarks, who started in August, who has 20+ years of franchise development and has a proven track record of building small systems into larger systems. We feel very optimistic about not just the design and the economics, but we're putting the mechanics in place to do this on a repeated basis. As I've said on several occasions, we're looking for financially sophisticated, well-capitalized entrepreneurial franchisees to join our system. We've had conversations with a number of those type of investors recently. Speaker 400:26:23That's great. Moving on to the next one. Can you walk through what's changed in your factory operations that's most meaningfully impacting cost per unit or fulfillment reliability? Speaker 100:26:37Sure. Carrie, do you want to take that? Speaker 300:26:39Sure. As Jeff mentioned, we just recently hired the new VP of Operations. He has made a number of changes in the factory, most of which have happened after the end of the quarter. We're still testing best practices downstairs. We've made a lot of progress in a lot of areas in the business. That's one we're still working on. Speaker 400:27:08Thank you. With cocoa prices easing from historic highs, how are you thinking about the potential margin benefit and timing, including your hedging strategies and supplier costs? Speaker 100:27:22Yeah, it's a great question. Good observation too. As we speak, the price per metric ton of cocoa is $5,806. Sixteen months ago, for perspective, if we could lock into cocoa pricing at $8,000 per metric ton, I felt pretty lucky. $8,000 for many months was as low as it traded, and then it had bumped up a couple times to $10,000 or $11,000. Recently, for a variety of reasons that are mostly geopolitical and some weather related, the price dipped below $8,000 into the $7,000 then $6,000 range. We took full advantage of that, locking in some amount of production. Bear in mind, it's not an all or none, and we're not in the spot market. Every time we lock at today's lower price, we still have the long tail backwards that are prices that we locked previously. The highest price we've locked since I've been here is $8,000. Speaker 100:28:19We expect that we'll pick up some margin and lower raw material costs, and this cocoa, of course, becomes chocolate for us. Chocolate represents 40% of our raw material costs, so this will be meaningful for us, and we expect to see improved margins over time as a result. Speaker 400:28:39Excellent. That concludes the email portion of the Q and A session. Latonya, over to you to close the call. Operator00:28:48Certainly. This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your phone lines at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by