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MillerKnoll, Inc. Q3 2026 Summary of Earnings Calls

MillerKnoll, Inc. Q3 2026 Earnings Call Summary – Moby
  • Performance was driven by disciplined execution and the strength of the North American Contract segment as a revenue generation engine, despite adverse weather and global uncertainty.

  • North American contract growth is supported by improving benchmarks in Class A leasing trends and office returns, with order growth across all industry sectors.

  • The Global Retail segment achieved comparable sales growth of 5.5% through four strategic levers: store expansion, product variety, e-commerce, and brand awareness.

  • The performance of the International Contract depends on the regional sequence where the strength of markets such as India, China, and the UK mitigates the softness of others.

  • Management maintains a competitive advantage with the MillerKnoll Performance Program (MKPS), a 30-year partnership with Toyota that ensures manufacturing efficiency and quality.

  • The Company has been able to effectively offset tax costs through the informed navigation of policy changes and expects to continue this reduction for the remainder of the financial year.

  • Q4 guidance includes an estimated $8 to $9 million from the Middle East war, primarily due to shipping disruptions and higher shipping costs.

  • The company plans to open 14 to 15 new stores in fiscal year 2026, implementing a long-term strategy to double the DWR and Herman Miller store space.

  • Management expects to ship only a modest amount of approximately $12 million in Middle East-related orders in the fourth quarter due to continued regional instability.

  • The strategic investment in the creation of new products for the workplace and healthcare is timed for the upcoming Design Day trade show in early June.

  • Capital allocation priorities remain focused on reducing the total debt to EBITDA ratio to a target range of 2.0x to 2.5x while maintaining equity commitments.

  • Bad weather in January resulted in store closures and reduced store traffic, which accounted for a large portion of the top line miss compared to internal guidance.

  • The Middle East conflict is expected to affect Q4 EPS by $0.09 to $0.10, driven by both lost sales and petroleum-related input costs.

  • Sales margins were depressed by last year’s lack of inventory turnover and targeted promotional actions used to offset weather-related traffic declines.

  • Management is monitoring potential cost increases in plastics and foam due to oil market volatility, although no immediate pivots are needed.

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  • Management noted that while they have not seen a rise in commodity prices so far, they expect a potential increase in fuel-related products such as plastics and foam.

  • Surcharges are considered a ‘tool in the toolbox’ to adjust for rapid cost changes, although Retail allows for faster price fluctuations than the Contract segment.

  • The tech sector is still very active, especially in the Bay Area and Austin, with AI-driven growth outpacing layoffs in other small tech sectors.

  • Federal government business is expected to be ‘difficult’ as funding is diverted to international disputes, although long-term infrastructure projects continue.

  • Adjusting for last year’s ‘pull forward’ orders caused by price hike announcements, underlying order growth is estimated at around 2% year-on-year.

  • The International and Trade segments show growth in the first weeks of the current quarter despite the noise of increased demand driven by the surcharge.

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