Starboard’s concerns stem from a transformation plan Newell announced in January that calls for shrinking the number of the company’s factories and warehouses as well as its customer base to save $6 billion.
It is also paring down to its core by jettisoning 10 business lines, many of which it acquired through the Jarden buyout including Rawlings and Goody.
Newell has declined to comment specifically on Starboard’s concerns since the investor’s letter, but said that its board was committed to continuously reviewing its capabilities and ongoing refreshment on behalf of shareholders.
“We had a particularly good outcome on cash flow but work to do on our other metrics,” Michael Polk, Newell Brands’ chief executive officer, said in the company’s earnings statement on Friday.
Revenue in Newell’s biggest business, Live, which sells home fragrances and food containers, rose 2.7 percent. Sales in its Play segment, which sells sporting items, increased 6.6 percent.
However, Newell’s Learn business, which sells the memorabilia brand Jostens, reported an 8.9 percent decline, in part due to a dispute with a prime customer who halted shipments of its writing products in the quarter.
Newell forecast net sales of $14.4 billion to $14.8 billion and an adjusted profit of $2.65-$2.85 per share for 2018.
The midpoint of these forecast ranges was above the analysts’ average estimate of $2.71 per share for earnings and $14.41 billion for sales, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Net income rose to $1.65 billion, or $3.38 per share in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, from $165.6 million, or 34 cents per share, a year earlier, helped by a tax benefit of $1.45 billion.
Excluding items, Newell earned 68 cents per share, 1 cent above estimates.
Net sales fell 10 percent to $3.74 billion, but beat estimates of $3.69 billion.
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