SWBI
Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc.Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. designs, manufactures, and sells firearms worldwide. The company offers handguns, including revolvers and pistols; long guns, such as modern sporting rifles, bolt action rifles; handcuffs; suppressors; and other firearm-related products under the Smith & Wesson, M&P, and Gemtech brands. It also provides manufacturing services comprising forging, heat treating, rapid prototyping, tooling, finishing, plating, machining, and custom plastic injection molding to other busi
2-Year Price History
Quarterly Financials & Projections
| Period | Rev | EBITDA | OpIn | NI | OCF | FCF | CapEx | Cash | Debt | Shares | ROIC | IntCov | EV/EBITDA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Est | 2028-Q3 | 145.0 | 18.9 | -- | 7.3 | -- | 20.3 | -4.1 | 152.0 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2028-Q2 | 132.0 | 16.5 | -- | 5.9 | -- | 21.1 | -4.0 | 131.7 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2028-Q1 | 90.0 | 7.2 | -- | -1.8 | -- | -7.2 | -3.2 | 110.6 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q4 | 158.0 | 30.0 | -- | 14.2 | -- | 34.8 | -4.4 | 117.8 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q3 | 140.0 | 16.8 | -- | 5.6 | -- | 18.2 | -4.2 | 83.1 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q2 | 128.0 | 14.7 | -- | 4.5 | -- | 19.2 | -4.1 | 64.9 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2027-Q1 | 88.0 | 6.6 | -- | -2.2 | -- | -8.8 | -3.5 | 45.7 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Est | 2026-Q4 | 155.0 | 28.7 | -- | 13.2 | -- | 31.0 | -4.7 | 54.5 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Act | 2026-Q3 | 135.7 | 13.8 | 6.5 | 3.8 | 20.5 | 16.8 | -3.6 | 23.5 | 108.5 | 44.8 | 8.5% | 6.6x | 10.5x |
| Act | 2026-Q2 | 124.7 | 12.1 | 4.1 | 1.9 | 27.3 | 31.6 | -4.3 | 27.3 | 123.6 | 44.7 | 4.9% | 6.1x | 10.3x |
| Act | 2026-Q1 | 85.1 | 5.5 | -3.0 | -3.4 | -8.1 | -12.4 | -4.3 | 21.2 | 129.4 | 44.3 | -3.6% | 4.6x | 8.9x |
| Act | 2025-Q4 | 140.8 | 22.6 | 14.7 | 9.7 | 40.8 | 33.5 | -7.3 | 25.2 | 114.7 | 44.4 | 16.7% | 30.3x | 9.0x |
| Act | 2025-Q3 | 115.9 | 11.7 | 4.1 | 1.7 | -9.8 | -16.2 | -6.4 | 26.7 | 145.1 | 44.4 | 4.9% | 6.8x | 7.6x |
| Act | 2025-Q2 | 129.7 | 15.2 | 7.0 | 4.1 | -7.4 | -2.7 | -4.7 | 39.1 | 135.6 | 44.9 | 8.2% | 10.7x | 8.3x |
| Act | 2025-Q1 | 88.3 | 6.2 | -1.9 | -2.1 | -30.8 | -35.5 | -4.7 | 35.5 | 107.2 | 45.3 | -2.1% | 8.4x | 9.1x |
| Act | 2024-Q4 | 159.2 | 40.5 | 25.3 | 26.1 | 43.6 | 38.0 | -5.6 | 60.8 | 77.8 | 46.0 | 32.1% | 66.8x | 9.4x |
| Act | 2024-Q3 | 137.5 | 19.3 | 12.1 | 7.9 | 25.4 | 7.1 | -18.2 | 47.4 | 102.7 | 46.0 | 15.2% | 20.2x | 9.4x |
| Act | 2024-Q2 | 125.0 | 12.0 | 3.8 | 2.5 | -2.9 | -37.9 | -35.0 | 44.2 | 103.3 | 46.4 | 4.7% | 18.6x | 9.0x |
| Act | 2024-Q1 | 114.2 | 13.6 | 4.4 | 3.1 | 40.6 | 8.5 | -32.1 | 55.5 | 63.9 | 46.6 | 5.2% | -- | 7.5x |
| Act | 2023-Q4 | 144.8 | 26.4 | 17.8 | 12.8 | 38.0 | 12.9 | -25.1 | 53.6 | 64.5 | 45.9 | 24.1% | -- | 7.1x |
| Act | 2023-Q3 | 129.0 | 21.4 | 8.4 | 11.1 | 6.9 | -18.3 | -25.2 | 44.6 | 64.3 | 46.2 | 9.7% | 42.1x | 3.9x |
| Act | 2023-Q2 | 121.0 | 20.9 | 12.5 | 9.7 | -35.3 | -63.4 | -28.0 | 43.0 | 39.9 | 46.1 | 19.1% | 49.9x | 3.4x |
| Act | 2023-Q1 | 84.4 | 12.1 | 3.9 | 3.3 | 7.1 | -4.5 | -11.6 | 110.5 | 40.1 | 46.1 | 6.5% | 28.0x | 2.9x |
| Act | 2022-Q4 | 181.3 | 54.9 | 46.7 | 36.1 | 25.5 | 16.6 | -9.0 | 120.7 | 40.3 | 45.9 | 74.8% | 103.5x | 2.2x |
| Act | 2022-Q3 | 177.7 | 47.7 | 39.7 | 30.5 | 6.9 | 1.9 | -5.0 | 107.3 | 40.5 | 47.2 | 75.7% | 80.3x | -- |
| Act | 2022-Q2 | 230.5 | 74.0 | 65.4 | 50.9 | -3.7 | -8.2 | -4.4 | 159.4 | 40.7 | 48.7 | 109.4% | 158.7x | -- |
| Act | 2022-Q1 | 274.6 | 107.4 | 99.9 | 76.9 | 109.1 | 103.3 | -5.8 | 171.4 | 41.0 | 49.1 | 221.8% | 197.3x | -- |
Multiples vs the company's own history — cheap or rich relative to itself? Historical fiscal years, then TTM, then forward projections (E). Forward rows hold today's price against projected earnings, so the multiple compresses if the company grows into it.
| Year | Price | Rev Gr | EBITDA % | EBITDA | EV/EBITDA | EV/FCF | P/E | P/S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 7.55 | — | 32.9% | 284 | 1.4× | 3.4× | 2.4× | 0.5× |
| 2023 | 12.24 | -44.5% | 16.9% | 81 | 7.6× | n/m | 16.4× | 1.3× |
| 2024 | 9.48 | +11.8% | 15.9% | 85 | 6.9× | 37.4× | 14.5× | 1.1× |
| 2025 | 9.78 | -11.4% | 11.7% | 56 | 9.5× | n/m | 32.7× | 0.9× |
| TTM | 15.22 | -1.4% | 11.1% | 54 | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× |
| 2027E | 15.22 | +5.7% | 0.1% | 1 | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× | 0.0× |
EBITDA in reporting-currency $M. Historical multiples use year-end market cap (split-adjusted price history); TTM & forward years use today's.
AI Analysis
LLM Evaluations
Smith & Wesson is a well-known firearms brand trading at a seemingly cheap 9x TTM FCF with a 4.6% dividend yield, but this masks significant cyclicality, legal tail risk, and secular challenges. The Q3 FY2026 results were genuinely encouraging — handgun market share gains of 28% unit growth vs. a declining market, pricing power demonstrated via a 3% increase with no pushback, and aggressive debt reduction. However, FCF is highly seasonal and lumpy, the firearms market is in a post-COVID normalization phase, and massive unaccrued legal contingencies (CAD$150M+ in Canadian class actions plus domestic derivative suits) represent a material overhang that could wipe out multiple years of earnings. The company competes in a fragmented market against Glock's dominance in law enforcement and low-cost imports. At current levels, the stock is roughly fairly valued — the dividend yield provides support but growth is limited to low-single-digits at best. Not compelling enough to be a strong buy, but not broken enough to short.
Latest Earnings Call
Transcript Summary
Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. delivered a strong Q3 fiscal 2026, with revenue climbing 17.1% to $135.7 million and adjusted EPS rising to $0.08. The company demonstrated significant market share growth in handguns, where unit shipments rose 28% despite a broader market decline in adjusted NICS. This success was fueled by new product introductions, which accounted for 44% of handgun shipments, and a successful 3% price increase implemented in January. While long gun sales faced a difficult year-over-year comparison, management remains confident in its diverse portfolio and potential expansion areas. Financially, the company strengthened its balance sheet by significantly reducing debt and improving operating cash flow by over $30 million compared to the prior year. Gross margins improved to 26.2%, aided by reduced promotional activity and higher production volumes, although tariffs remained a minor headwind. The professional and law enforcement segments are gaining momentum, supported by the recently launched Smith & Wesson Academy. For Q4, management forecasts a 10% to 12% revenue increase and further margin expansion, supported by a robust product pipeline and stable consumer demand.
Valuation & Metrics
Market Stats
TTM Financial Snapshot
DCF Fair Value Estimate
Forward Outlook & Risk
Short Interest
Options
| Strike | Call Bid/Ask | Call OI | Put Bid/Ask | Put OI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $12.00 | $3.20/$4.20 | 0 | $0.10/$0.45 | 0 |
| $13.00 | $2.55/$3.30 | 0 | $0.25/$0.45 | 0 |
| $14.00 | $2.00/$2.25 | 0 | $0.35/$0.70 | 11 |
| $15.00 | $1.35/$1.55 | 39 | $0.80/$1.10 | 6 |
| $16.00 | $0.85/$1.10 | 0 | $1.40/$1.60 | 1 |
| $17.00 | $0.50/$0.80 | 12 | $2.00/$2.30 | 0 |
| $18.00 | $0.30/$0.55 | 3 | $2.80/$3.10 | 0 |
| $19.00 | $0.15/$0.40 | 1 | $3.20/$4.40 | 0 |
Forward Projections & Estimates
Employees
Institutional Ownership
Headline & net flow
In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 10.0% of float, sold 1.3%. 1 filer moved >1% of shares (1 buying, 0 selling).
Ownership composition
Top holders
| Fund | $ value | Cost basis | Δ QoQ | Δ YoY | α life | Fund AUM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BlackRock, Inc.Passive | $56.4M | $12.03 | +$34K | −$3.5M | -0.2% | $5.69T |
| DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive | $37.5M | $11.15 | +$2.1M | −$3.8M | -0.4% | $480.92B |
| RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC | $30.8M | $12.22 | −$671K | −$7.0M | +1.2% | $63.91B |
| VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive | $26.6M | $14.33 | +$26.6M | +$26.6M | — | $4.04T |
| TWO SIGMA INVESTMENTS, LP | $23.8M | $11.80 | +$11.6M | +$21.5M | -0.9% | $117.03B |
| CHARLES SCHWAB INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC | $17.3M | $9.70 | −$1.5M | +$9.0M | +0.7% | $645.81B |
| GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive | $15.9M | $11.85 | +$515K | +$570K | +2.3% | $1.61T |
| STATE STREET CORPPassive | $12.1M | $10.92 | +$2K | −$1.9M | -0.2% | $2.89T |
| GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC | $7.6M | $11.27 | +$3.2M | −$2.6M | -0.2% | $760.93B |
| JANE STREET GROUP, LLCMM | $7.5M | $12.55 | +$4.8M | +$7.0M | -0.1% | $92.10B |
| AQR CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC | $6.9M | $12.09 | +$4.0M | +$6.6M | -0.2% | $218.19B |
| Allianz Asset Management GmbH | $6.4M | $11.03 | +$1.9M | +$6.4M | -0.2% | $86.14B |
| AMERICAN CENTURY COMPANIES INC | $6.3M | $12.27 | +$1.3M | −$4.8M | +0.7% | $193.48B |
| VANGUARD PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT LLCPassive | $6.1M | $14.33 | +$6.1M | +$6.1M | — | $1.91T |
| Bank of New York Mellon Corp | $6.0M | $9.04 | +$56K | −$1.3M | -0.2% | $543.21B |
| Trexquant Investment LP | $5.6M | $10.93 | +$1.1M | +$5.4M | -0.2% | $13.81B |
| ARROWSTREET CAPITAL, LIMITED PARTNERSHIP | $5.2M | $13.16 | +$2.1M | −$5.8M | +0.1% | $184.72B |
| NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive | $5.0M | $11.78 | +$251K | −$528K | -0.2% | $755.34B |
| HRT FINANCIAL LP | $5.0M | $12.30 | +$3.1M | +$5.0M | -0.6% | $39.46B |
| MORGAN STANLEY | $4.4M | $11.38 | +$387K | +$1.2M | -0.3% | $1.65T |
Trading behavior
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Biggest decreases this quarter
New buyers this quarter
Top-5 holders · 48.3%
Top Holders Over Time
5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price
Analyst Coverage
| Quarter | Revenue | EBITDA | Net Inc | EPS | EPS Range | # Analysts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 Q1 | 119M | 26M | 1M | $0.02 | $0.02 – $0.02 | 2 |
| 2025 Q2 | 152M | 34M | 11M | $0.25 | $0.21 – $0.29 | 2 |
| 2025 Q3 | 79M | 17M | -5M | $-0.10 | $-0.10 – $-0.10 | 1 |
| 2025 Q4 | 124M | 27M | 1M | $0.02 | $0.02 – $0.02 | 2 |
| 2026 Q1 | 126M | 28M | 2M | $0.04 | $0.04 – $0.04 | 1 |
| 2026 Q2 | 155M | 34M | 10M | $0.23 | $0.23 – $0.23 | 1 |
| 2026 Q3 | 90M | 20M | -3M | $-0.07 | $-0.07 – $-0.07 | 1 |
| 2026 Q4 | 126M | 28M | 3M | $0.06 | $0.06 – $0.06 | 1 |
| 2027 Q1 | 137M | 30M | 4M | $0.09 | $0.09 – $0.09 | 1 |
| 2027 Q2 | 154M | 34M | 10M | $0.23 | $0.23 – $0.23 | 1 |
Corporate
Executive Compensation (2023-2025)
Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)
Revenue Breakdown
Revenue Segments
| Firearm | $228.9M | NEW |
| Outdoor Products And Accessories | $49.1M | +69% |
Filing Risk Analysis
Filing Risk Scores
Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc.: Legal Crosshairs and Shrinking Margins
Counter-Thesis
Counter-Thesis & Recent News
Smith & Wesson reported a significant 11.4% drop in net sales for fiscal year 2025, with handgun sales specifically plunging 13.1%. Most recently, in March 2026, while the company beat low Q4 CY2025 estimates, management highlighted a 160-basis point negative impact on gross margins due to tariff uncertainty. Furthermore, the company previously declined to issue full-year guidance for fiscal 2026, citing macroeconomic volatility and an 'overhang' from potential trade policy changes (Tiger Brokers, Investing.com).
The core bear thesis centers on 'demand normalization' as the post-COVID and political-fear-driven sales surges have fully dissipated. Analysts expect revenue to continue declining by roughly 1.5% over the next 12 months. A critical concern is the fixed cost base; the company has struggled to adjust its manufacturing model to shrinking demand, leading to a 41.8% annual decline in EPS over the last five years. High inflation is also actively suppressing consumer discretionary spending on 'big-ticket' firearms (StockStory, Barchart).
Operating margins have shrunk significantly, averaging just 6% over the last two years, indicating an inability to pass rising R&D and compensation costs onto customers. Despite a recent share price recovery, the stock has essentially been 'dead money,' trading flat compared to its levels over a decade ago. Blank Capital Research issued a 'Reduce' rating in March 2026, and Simply Wall St noted that the company is underperforming the leisure industry's average growth rate (Simply Wall St, Alpha Spread).
The company continues to lose market share to foreign competitors, most notably Glock, which has displaced Smith & Wesson as the preeminent choice for law enforcement and many individual buyers. Additionally, Smith & Wesson faces pricing pressure from low-cost imports in a highly fragmented market. Domestic peers like Sturm, Ruger & Co. (RGR) and Vista Outdoor (VSTO) compete for the same shrinking pool of discretionary consumer dollars (Seeking Alpha, StockStory).
Customer sentiment is currently characterized as 'cautious' and 'tapped out.' The 'panic-buying' cycles seen during previous years have been replaced by extreme price sensitivity. Management admitted in recent earnings calls that consumer cautiousness regarding discretionary spending was 'more pronounced' than anticipated, leading to a softer demand environment that has forced the company to rely on price increases (2%-3%) to protect margins, which may further alienate budget-conscious buyers (Smith-Wesson Investor Relations, Investing.com).
Full Earnings Call Transcript
Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q3 • 2026-03-05
Operator: Good day, everybody, and welcome to Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. Third Quarter Fiscal 2026 Financial Release and Conference Call. This call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Kevin Maxwell, Smith & Wesson's General Counsel, who will give us some information about today's call. Thank you. You may begin. Kevin Maxwell: Thank you, and good afternoon. Our comments today may contain forward-looking statements. Our use of the words anticipate, project, estimate, expect, intend, believe and other similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements may also include statements on topics such as our product development, strategies, market share, demand, consumer preferences, inventory conditions for our products, growth opportunities and trends and industry conditions in general. Forward-looking statements represent our current judgment of the future and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by our statements today. These risks and uncertainties are described in our SEC filings, which are available on our website, along with a replay of today's call. We have no obligation to update forward-looking statements. We reference certain non-GAAP financial results. Reconciliations of GAAP financial measures to non-GAAP financial measures can be found in our SEC filings and in today's earnings press release, each of which is available on our website. Also, when we reference EPS, we are always referencing fully diluted EPS and any reference to EBITDA to adjusted EBITDA. Before I hand the call over to our speakers, I would like to remind you that when we discuss NICS results, we are referring to adjusted NICS, a metric published by the National Shooting Sports Foundation based on FBI NICS data. Adjusted NICS removes those background checks conducted for purposes other than firearms purchases. Adjusted NICS is generally considered the best available proxy for consumer firearm demand at the retail counter. Because we transfer firearms only to law enforcement agencies and federally licensed distributors and retailers and not to end consumers, NICS generally does not directly correlate to our shipments or market share in any given time period, we believe, mostly due to inventory levels in the channel. Joining us on today's call are Mark Smith, our President and CEO; and Deana McPherson, our CFO. With that, I will turn the call over to Mark. Mark Smith: Thank you, Kevin, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We are very pleased with our third quarter results, which demonstrated continued market share growth while simultaneously maintaining resiliency in our pricing power and profitability. This is a direct function of the entire team's discipline in staying focused and executing against our long-term strategy. The strength of the iconic Smith & Wesson brand, along with our laser focus on innovating to keep ahead of market trends. Once again drove impressive average selling prices in the quarter, which, together with increased unit shipments delivered not only solid top line performance, but also translated into both strong profit margins and balance sheet performance. Our Q3 performance exceeded our expectations across the board. Net sales increased over 17% year-over-year to nearly $136 million. EBITDAS of $16.8 million was up nearly 21% and adjusted EPS was $0.08 compared with $0.03 in the prior year period. Importantly, we also delivered another quarter of significant growth in operating cash flow, which is up more than $30 million year-over-year. We believe our purposeful deployment of capital will allow us to continue consistently delivering long-term value for our stockholders. Looking at our performance by category. Our handgun results were exceptional. Our unit shipments of handgun into the sporting goods channel were up 28%, while mix was down 2.2%. With distributor inventory weeks of supply remained flat during the period, this indicates significant market share growth. This outstanding performance was driven by several factors, including strong demand for our newer products, a favorable shift in product mix towards higher price models, robust consumer demand and the benefit of a modest 2% to 3% price increase that we implemented late in the quarter on January 1. Notably, we saw this growth across our entire semi-auto pistol line, indicating that the hard work that the team has been putting in on marketing messaging, targeted promotions and new product development execution across the line is paying dividends. Performance in long guns was consistent with our strategic positioning in the market, and we are pleased with our performance in the categories where we actively compete. For the quarter, our long gun shipments into the sporting good channel were down 25%, while overall mix was down 5.6%. However, we believe this was largely due to channel fill in the prior year period of several new caliber introductions on our higher-end 1854 lever-action rifle products, combined with the relative outperformance in the industry, of the hunting segment versus the self-defense segment, where our product line is more heavily weighted. Diving a little deeper into innovation. New products represented 44% of handgun shipments and 28% of long gun shipments during the quarter. In handguns, while we continue to have success with the BODYGUARD platform, as I just mentioned, the growth we experienced in Q3 was across the entire line of our semi-auto pistols, where we introduced several new models outside the subcompact space, most of which are positioned at higher price points. Once again, I'm incredibly proud of our award-winning product management, engineering, design and production teams who consistently deliver products that resonate with consumers while meeting their expectations of world-class quality and reliability associated with our legendary brand. Driven by this mix NICS shift, and as I mentioned earlier, we were again pleased to continue seeing strong overall average selling prices in the hanging category. with ASPs up 5.2% versus a year ago to over $419 and also above Q2 levels. On the long gun side, ASPs were also strong at $535 although down about 11% versus a year ago. Similarly, NICS was the primary driver here, as I just mentioned, with the year-ago period, including the channel fill of higher-priced new product introduction from the 1854 rifles. For both categories, the strength of the Smith & Wesson brand and our ability to ensure our product assortment is aligned to market trends continues to allow us to maintain healthy pricing and profitability while only participating selectively in promotions. Turning now to our balance sheet. We continue to make significant progress reducing our debt and further strengthening our financial position. We ended Q3 with $75 million in debt versus $90 million at the end of Q2, and we paid down an additional $20 million subsequent to the end of Q3. We were pleased with our internal inventory position of $175 million which was down $23 million versus last Q3, resulting in excellent cash generation in the period of over $20 million. I'd like to once again commend the team for their hard work on our disciplined process for aligning production to sales expectations across the product portfolio, which drove these results. And we're also very pleased with our distributor inventory levels, which remained flat in terms of weeks of supply, maintaining at approximately 9 weeks throughout the quarter, right in line with our target. With our strong sales in the period, this indicates solid sell-through of our products at the retail counter. Before I turn the call over to Deana, I want to touch on a couple of additional points. First, we attended the annual industry SHOT Show in Las Vegas at the end of the quarter, where we were very pleased with customer feedback on our performance, product portfolio and forward strategy. This feedback, combined with our recent results and strong outlook for the remainder of the fiscal year, which Deana will cover in a moment, indicates we are winning in the marketplace. And looking forward, we will continue to be laser-focused on execution across the business and sustaining these gains. Next, the Smith & Western Academy, which launched just 6 months ago, along with our focus on the professional channel is already exceeding our expectations. Thanks to the hard work of our Academy staff and law enforcement sales team and the ongoing success of our purpose-built, rugged and reliable duty weapons, we are not only growing in the consumer channel, but also gaining significant momentum on the law enforcement side. You may have seen that we were awarded a number of large agency orders recently. And as a matter of fact, have shipped to nearly 1,000 separate federal, state and local law enforcement agencies just within the past 18 months. With a strong sales pipeline and growing momentum, we're very pleased with the results to date and beyond proud and humble to be trusted by these men and women with the tools they need to come home safe to their families every day as they put themselves in harm's way to protect and serve our country and our communities. In summary, momentum is strong and building, and our brand and product assortment are driving continued healthy profitability, and we remain confident in the direction and trajectory of our business against the backdrop of a healthy and stable market. We continue to lead with a proven innovation strategy that consistently resonates with consumers backed by the powerful Smith & Wesson brand, along with our commitment to operational excellence and maintaining a strong balance sheet we are well positioned to continue winning in the marketplace and delivering long-term value to our stockholders. As always, I want to thank our entire team of talented Smith & Wesson employees for their tireless dedication and putting their skills to work each and every day to make us successful. With that, I'll turn the call over to Deana to cover the financials. Deana McPherson: Thanks, Mark. Please note that all comparisons are between the third quarter of fiscal 2026 and the third quarter of fiscal 2025, unless stated otherwise. Net sales for our third quarter of $135.7 million were $19.8 million or 17.1% above the prior year on the strength of our new handgun products. During the quarter, distributor inventory in terms of actual units increased by approximately 20% over the end of the prior quarter, but only by about 4% compared with the end of January 2025 with weeks of supply remaining steady at approximately 9 weeks. We believe, based on feedback from our customers, that strong demand for our products will continue in the coming months. Handgun ASPs were up slightly versus Q2 levels due to continued strong demand for certain premium products, but offset by the strength of certain of our lower-priced products. Long gun ASPs decreased by about 11% due to lower overall volume of certain of our higher-priced products, driven by channel fill for new products in the prior year, as Mark covered earlier. Gross margin of 26.2% was up 210 basis points over the prior year on increased production volume combined with lower promotion costs and lower federal excise taxes partially offset by a 160 basis point negative impact from tariffs. Having focused on driving inventory levels down over the last 12 months, we are now turning our focus to increasing production to meet market demand which should continue to have a positive impact on margins. Operating expenses of $28.9 million were $5.7 million higher than the prior year due primarily to a $2.3 million gain on the sale of real estate that was reported last year. Increased profit related and stock-based compensation expense contributed to the remaining increase. Higher revenue and related margin resulted in net income of $3.8 million compared with $2.1 million in the prior year period. GAAP earnings per share in the third quarter was $0.08 compared with $0.05 a year ago. On a non-GAAP basis, earnings per share was $0.08 compared with $0.03 a year ago. Cash generated from operations during the third quarter was $20.5 million compared with cash used from operations of $9.8 million in the prior year quarter. This was due primarily to lower inventory, which decreased $7.9 million during this quarter versus an increase of $2.9 million in the prior year quarter. We spent $3.6 million in capital projects in the third quarter compared with $6.3 million a year ago. We expect our capital spending for the year to be between $25 million and $30 million. We paid $5.8 million in dividends and ended the quarter with $23.5 million in cash and investments and $75 million in borrowings on our line of credit. Subsequent to the end of the quarter, we repaid $20 million on our line, bringing our outstanding borrowings down to $55 million. Finally, our Board has authorized our $0.13 quarterly dividend to be paid to stockholders of record on March 19, with payments to be made on April 2. Looking forward to the fourth quarter, we believe the strength of our brand, product assortment and new product offerings are helping us drive growth and take share in an otherwise stable market. Therefore, we expect our fourth quarter sales will be up 10% to 12% over Q4 2025 sales, with a small reduction in channel inventory as distributors begin to plan for the slower summer months. With 8 additional operating days compared with Q3 and an increase in production to meet demand, we expect Q4 gross margin to increase by several percentage points over Q3 and a point or 2 over last year's fourth quarter. Operating expenses in Q4 will likely be about 10% higher than last year's fourth quarter due to increases in research and development costs, stock compensation, profit sharing and other profit related costs. Additionally, we expect continued healthy cash generation during the fourth quarter. Our effective tax rate is expected to be approximately 29%. With that, operator, can we please open the call to questions from our analysts? Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Mark Smith with Lake Street Capital. Mark Smith: I want to ask first about kind of recent pricing changes. Can you talk about any price that's been taken, whether that's been across the board? And anything that you can quantify?. Mark Smith: Sure, Mark. The price increase we put in was effective January 1, as I covered in the prepared remarks. And it was largely across the board. It was -- there were some categories that took a little bit steeper increase and some categories took a little bit, little bit less so just really driven on market demand and our position within each category. But overall, across the board, it was pretty close to 3%. Mark Smith: Okay. Any feedback for as you look at distributors? Or as you think about kind of consumers on that, does it seem like that's gone through well? Or has there been any pushback on the pricing? Mark Smith: No, it's no pushback whatsoever. As you may recall, it's been a little bit since we've taken a price increase and really has gone through smoothly, no impact whatsoever. And I think as you saw from the results, an uptick in demand throughout the quarter. So... Mark Smith: Perfect. And I want to look at just handgun sales, really strong results there, especially as we think about new products. I'm curious, without giving out too much competitive details here, anything that you can expand on, on what's kind of helped drive some of that strength. I'm curious like colorways, some of your ported options? Are these things that have helped or is just having the right product for consumers right now? Mark Smith: Yes. You know we've had great success with BODYGUARD over the last -- really the last couple of years. That category, we kind of own it. On the -- we've done a lot of work and that strategy, I talked about a lot, long-range strategy is let's make sure we're refreshing the entire product line. And I think we're starting to see the results of that. And it's really just it's across the board. It's all of what you just talked about Mark. And obviously, we're not going to give too much detail for the reason you just covered. It's looking at the market trends and having a team that really understands the industry and what is trending out there, where do we need to make some updates and changes. And making those changes, and we've been really happy with the results that are coming out with that. And now that polymer pistol line across the board is really starting to gain a lot of profitable share. And obviously, as we start to move now into one of the -- out of the subcompact into the compact and full-size markets, that's obviously at the higher end of the pricing hierarchy and that is really helping ASPs and the momentum continues. Mark Smith: Perfect. And then just similar question shifting over to long guns. I'm curious, anything that you guys can do today to kind of drive more strength in that long gun market. And I realize there's some things in the comparable that make it this quarter tough. But as we think about the hunting category. Is there interest in entering there? Is there more maybe on SBRs or anything that you can do to drive more long gun business?. Mark Smith: Yes, the SBRs, as you're well aware, the tax changes that occurred on January 1 are helping a little bit there in that category. But at the end of the day, as I covered in the prepared remarks, it really is, it's one is the difficult comp versus last year as we were introducing kind of the last couple of calibers and the lever action rifle, which obviously are at the very high end of our pricing hiearchy on long guns, but also that our product portfolio is kind of more weighted towards that self-defense market and the hunting market, obviously, we're in it with the 1854 and very pleased with the performance there. But there's -- I'll just leave it at this, is there's a lot of white space there for us and we're always looking at long-term opportunities. Mark Smith: Perfect. And I think the last one for me. You called it out a bit in your commentary, just the law enforcement opportunity and improving sales there. I'm curious, just where you're at in that process? It seems like that's a big market and maybe just scratching the surface. Is that something that is a big focus and where you think you can really move the needle on revenue as there's more drive in law enforcement. And then similarly, I'm curious as we think about maybe international within military, if there are similar opportunities. Mark Smith: Yes, it's definitely a focus area as I think you've been around long enough now you know that's a much longer sales cycle than on the consumer side. So what I'm pleased about is the pipeline that we have even with the strong results this quarter, we've got a pretty healthy pipeline coming up behind it. And that is a direct result of all of the intangibles of the academy and being able to service that law enforcement customer in a more meaningful way, purpose-built products, changes to the product, there's innovation happening there as well. And that expands beyond just domestic law enforcement, it moves into federal agencies. state, local and federal and then outside into foreign militaries as well. So a lot of good things happening in that space. Still does remain kind of a smaller section of our business right now, but a lot of momentum there and a pretty healthy pipeline coming up behind it. Operator: Our next question is from Rommel Dionisio with Aegis Capital. Rommel please check for line is muted. I believe he was having some technical difficulties. We do not have any further questions at this time. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mark for closing remarks. Mark Smith: Thank you, operator, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today and your interest in Smith & Wesson. We look forward to speaking with you all again next quarter. Operator: Thank you. This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and thank you for your participation.