Note 6 - Financing Arrangements |
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Mar. 29, 2026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Notes to Financial Statements | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Debt Disclosure [Text Block] |
Note 6 – Financing Arrangements
Factoring Agreements: To reduce its exposure to credit losses, the Company assigns the majority of its trade accounts receivable to CIT, a subsidiary of First Citizens Bank, pursuant to factoring agreements, which have expiration dates that are coterminous with that of the financing agreement described below. Under the terms of the factoring agreements, CIT remits customer payments to the Company as such payments are received by CIT. As such, the Company does take advances on the factoring agreements.
CIT bears credit losses with respect to assigned accounts receivable from approved shipments, while the Company bears the responsibility for adjustments from customers related to returns, allowances, claims and discounts. CIT may at any time terminate or limit its approval of shipments to a particular customer. If such a termination or limitation occurs, then the Company either assumes (and may seek to mitigate) the credit risk for shipments to the customer after the date of such termination or limitation or discontinues shipments to the customer. Factoring fees, which are included in marketing and administrative expenses in the consolidated statements of operations, were $335 thousand and $386 thousand during the fiscal years ended March 29, 2026 and March 30, 2025, respectively.
Credit Facility: The Company’s credit facility includes a revolving line of credit and a term loan of $8.0 million under a financing agreement with CIT. The Company may borrow up to $40.0 million under the revolving line of credit, which includes a $1.5 million sub-limit for letters of credit, bearing interest at prime minus 0.5% or the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) plus 1.6%, and is secured by a first lien on all assets of the Company. The financing agreement for the revolving line of credit matures on July 19, 2029. At March 29, 2026, the Company had elected to pay interest on balances owed under the revolving line of credit, if any, under the SOFR option, which was 5.3%. The financing agreement also provides for the payment by CIT to the Company of interest at prime as of the beginning of the calendar month minus 2.0% on daily negative balances, if any, held at CIT.
At March 29, 2026 and March 30, 2025, the balances on the revolving line of credit were $9.5 million and $11.9 million, respectively, there was no letter of credit outstanding and $12.5 million and $13.8 million, respectively, was available under the revolving line of credit based on the Company’s eligible accounts receivable and inventory balances. The financing agreement contains usual and customary covenants for agreements of that type, including limitations on other indebtedness, liens, transfers of assets, investments and acquisitions, merger or consolidation transactions, transactions with affiliates, and changes in or amendments to the organizational documents for the Company and its subsidiaries.
On January 2, 2025, the Company and its subsidiaries entered into a letter agreement with CIT with respect to the financing agreement, pursuant to which CIT waived the Company’s non-compliance with the fixed charge coverage ratio required under the financing agreement with respect to the Company’s fiscal quarters ended September 29, 2024 and December 29, 2024. In addition, the letter agreement modified the financing agreement by changing the Excess Availability (as defined in the agreement) to $7,000,000 (from 50% of the outstanding balance of the Company’s term loan under the financing agreement).
On February 10, 2025, the Company and CIT amended the Company’s financing agreement with CIT to: (i) waive, with respect to the fiscal year ending March 30, 2025, and through the fiscal year ending March 29, 2026, the Company’s obligation to comply with the fixed charge coverage ratio; and (ii) increase the Excess Availability required to be maintained by the Company with respect to its revolving line of credit under the financing agreement from $7,000,000 to $7,500,000, until further notice to the Company by CIT. After such notice, the Excess Availability required to be maintained by the Company shall be 50% of the outstanding balance of the Company’s term loan under the financing agreement.
On June 23, 2025, the Company and CIT further amended the Company’s financing agreement with CIT to: (i) provide that, until the Company’s term loan is paid in full, the Company shall maintain at all times Excess Availability equal to or the greater of (a) the sum of the balance outstanding under the Company’s term loan plus $1.0 million or (b) $4.0 million (the “Availability Covenant”); and (ii) reinstate the fixed charge coverage ratio; provided however, that the fixed charge coverage ratio shall not be tested at any fiscal quarter end in which, during the immediately preceding fiscal quarter, the Company at all times has been in compliance with the Availability Covenant. As of March 29, 2026, the Company was in compliance with the Excess Availability requirements.
The balance on the $8.0 million term loan as of March 29, 2026 was $4.7 million, including $2.0 million classified as current. The term loan was issued July 19, 2024, is payable by the Company in 48 equal monthly installments and bears interest at SOFR plus 2.25% (5.9% at March 29, 2026).
Credit Concentration: The Company’s accounts receivable at March 29, 2026 amounted to $18.9 million, net of allowances of $1.5 million. Of this amount, $16.3 million was due from CIT under the factoring agreements, which represents the maximum loss that the Company could incur if CIT failed completely to perform its obligations under the factoring agreements. The Company’s accounts receivable at March 30, 2025 amounted to $24.5 million, net of allowances of $1.7 million. Of this amount, $21.9 million was due from CIT under the factoring agreements, which represented the maximum loss that the Company could have incurred if CIT had failed completely to perform its obligations under the factoring agreements.
Fair Value: The Company evaluates the fair value of its debt using the three level fair value hierarchy. Fair value should be based on the assumptions market participants would use when pricing the liability and establishes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs used to develop those assumptions and measure fair value. The hierarchy requires companies to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs. The three levels of inputs in the fair value hierarchy are as follows:
The carrying value of financial instruments reported in the accompanying condensed consolidated balance sheets for cash, which is considered Level 1, accounts receivable, accounts payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities, which are all considered Level 2, approximate fair value due to the immediate or short-term nature of these financial instruments.
The following table presents fair value of the debt as of March 29, 2026:
The Company uses a valuation model to determine the fair value of its revolving line of credit and the term loan with CIT. The Company uses a discounted cash flow model to project the future principal and interest payments over the remaining life of the loans. The significant inputs used in the model are observable market data including SOFR Forward Curves.
The aggregate maturities of long-term debt for each of the five years subsequent to March 29, 2026 are: $2 million in 2027, $2.2 million in 2028, $500 thousand in 2029, $9.5 million in 2030 and $0 in 2031.
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