Posted June 21, 2018 8:00 am by Comments

By Christen Smith

The Smith & Wesson booth during SHOT Show 2018 in Las Vegas. (Photo: Daniel Terrill/Guns.com)
Smith & Wesson issued a conservative outlook for revenue in the coming year following a fourth quarter sales decline of 25 percent.
The gun maker’s “challenging” fiscal year came to an end April 30 with overall net sales down nearly 33 percent to just under $607 million — and the next 12 months look worse, Chief Executive Officer James Debney told investors Wednesday.
“We don’t see that as a long term dynamic. We think the market will return to growth,” he said. “But when you do come out of periods of very robust buying, and we’ve certainly seen that over the last few years, you can expect a correction. And that can take up to two years.”
Debney said bankruptcies and consolidations across the industry will continue “driving uncertainty for some time.” He expects revenues of no more than $600 million in 2019. “I believe as we enter the next fiscal year, so what would be 2020 for us, then that’s when the market we anticipate would be returning to that longer term-growth,” he said. “Now obviously this is all in the absence of any fear based buying, which

Source: Guns.com

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