F

Sysco Corporation (SYY) FY2025 Earnings Quality Report

SYY·FY2025·English

Grade: F — Major Red Flags

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2025-08-22, FY ended June 28, 2025) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP — Unqualified opinion (1 critical audit matter)

One-line verdict: Sysco is the largest U.S. food distribution company, generating $81.4 billion in revenue and $2.5 billion in operating cash flow — a capital-light, high-volume business that consistently converts earnings to cash (CFFO/NI of 1.37). The F grade is driven by structural balance sheet features common to mature distributors: $14.5 billion debt against $1.1 billion cash, goodwill+intangibles at 345% of a thin equity base, and AR growth outpacing revenue for two consecutive years. A noncash goodwill impairment charge in the Guest Worldwide business reduced operating income. These are real flags under the screening framework, but they reflect the business model of a leveraged distributor rather than financial distress — Debt/EBITDA is a manageable 3.5x and the Z-Score of 2.94 is in the safe zone.

Grade: F — Major Red Flags
MetricResult
❌ Red Flags**3** (financial 3 + management 0; AR outpacing revenue 2 years; Cash 7% of debt; Goodwill+Intangibles 345% of equity)
⚠️ Watch Items**1** (financial 0 + management 1)
Checks Completed**20/23** (financial 15/18 + management 5/5 G1-G5; 3 N/A: SG&A, impairment, M-Score data)
Beneish M-Score**N/A** (insufficient data)
Altman Z-Score**2.94** (safe zone)
AuditorErnst & Young LLP — Unqualified, serving since 2002

The Distribution Machine: Thin Margins, Huge Volume

Sysco's business model is straightforward: buy food from producers, distribute it to restaurants, hospitals, and institutions. Per the filing, "A majority of our sales orders are filled within 24 hours of receipt."

The Distribution Machine: Thin Margins, Huge Volume
MetricFY2025FY2024FY2023
Sales$81,370M$78,844M$76,325M
Gross Profit$14,969M$14,608M$13,955M
Gross Margin18.4%18.5%18.3%
Operating IncomeDecreased 3.6% from FY2024
Net Income$1,828M$1,955M$1,770M
Net Margin2.2%2.5%2.3%

Per the filing, operating income decreased 3.6% compared to fiscal 2024 "primarily due to a noncash goodwill impairment charge in our Guest Worldwide business." Adjusted operating income increased 1.2%.

Gross margin is razor-thin at 18.4% — typical for food distribution where "cost of goods sold primarily includes inventory costs (net of supplier consideration) and inbound freight." The business earns its keep on volume, not margin.

Cash Flow: Consistently Converting Earnings to Cash

Cash Flow: Consistently Converting Earnings to Cash
MetricFY2025FY2024FY2023
Operating Cash Flow$2,510M$2,989M$2,868M
Net Income$1,828M$1,955M$1,770M
CFFO / NI1.371.531.62
CapEx$906M$832M$793M
Free Cash Flow$1,604M$2,157M$2,075M

CFFO/NI ratios of 1.37-1.62 across three years demonstrate strong cash conversion. FCF declined 26% to $1.6 billion as CapEx grew 8.9% while CFFO dropped 16%. The CFFO decline from $2.99 billion to $2.51 billion warrants monitoring — even as revenue grew 3.2%, cash generation declined.

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

Revenue Quality
#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangeDSO 25 days, stable
A2AR vs Revenue GrowthAR outpaced revenue for 2 consecutive years
A3Revenue vs CFFORevenue +3.2%, CFFO -16.0%

A2 red flag context: AR growing faster than revenue for two straight years in a distribution business can signal loosening credit terms to customers — often restaurants under financial pressure. With DSO stable at 25 days and total AR at $5.5 billion (allowance of $17 million), the absolute dollar risk is manageable, but the trend demands monitoring.

Expense Quality

Expense Quality
#CheckResultDetail
B1Inventory vs COGSInventory +8.0% vs COGS +3.4%
B2CapEx vs RevenueCapEx +8.9% vs revenue +3.2%
B3SG&A RatioInsufficient data
B4Gross Margin18.4%, -0.1pp, stable

Inventory of $5.1 billion (up from $4.7 billion) grew faster than COGS but remains within normal bounds for a distributor managing product mix and inflation.

Cash Flow Quality

Cash Flow Quality
#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs Net IncomeCFFO/NI = 1.37, profits backed by cash
C2Free Cash FlowFCF $1.6B, FCF/NI = 0.88
C3Accruals Ratio-2.5%, low accruals
C4Cash vs DebtCash $1.1B covers 7% of $14.5B debt

C4: Total debt grew from $12.9 billion to $14.5 billion over FY2024-2025. Cash improved from $696 million to $1.1 billion, but coverage remains thin at 7%. For a company with this much recurring revenue and cash flow, this is a business model choice rather than distress — but it leaves no margin for a liquidity crisis.

Balance Sheet

Balance Sheet
#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + Intangibles$6.3B = 345% of equity
D2LeverageDebt/EBITDA = 3.5x, interest coverage 4.9x
D3Soft Asset GrowthOther assets +17.2% vs revenue +3.2%
D4Asset ImpairmentNo structured data

D1: Goodwill of $5.2 billion and intangibles of $1.1 billion total $6.3 billion — 345% of the thin $1.8 billion equity base. This is common for acquisitive distributors. Sysco's equity is thin because it returns capital aggressively through buybacks and dividends while maintaining leverage. Debt/EBITDA of 3.5x is reasonable.

The Guest Worldwide goodwill impairment mentioned in the filing signals that at least one acquired business is underperforming expectations.

Acquisition Risk

Acquisition Risk
#CheckResultDetail
E1Serial Acquirer FCFFCF after acquisitions positive
E2Goodwill SurgeGoodwill+Intangibles flat YoY

Manipulation Score

Manipulation Score
#CheckResultDetail
F1Beneish M-ScoreInsufficient data
**G1-G5****Management signals (new)****✅⚠️✅✅✅**

Management Signals (New G1-G5 Framework)

**Why separate management signals?** Schilit's *Financial Shenanigans* treats abrupt executive, auditor, and director departures as important early-warning signals. 8-K Item 5.02 executive/director changes and auditor-change filings help separate clean financial statements from governance or continuity risk.

Management Signals (New G1-G5 Framework)
#CheckResultDetail
G1CEO changeNo abnormal signal in the last 18 months
G2CFO / key financial officer change⚠️Brandon Sewell (Chief Financial Officer) interim appointment
G3Independent director / audit committee departureNo abnormal signal in the last 18 months
G4Key operating or legal leader departureNo abnormal signal in the last 18 months
G5Auditor changeNo abnormal signal in the last 18 months

18-Month Management Change Timeline

18-Month Management Change Timeline
DateEventSourceRisk Signal
2026-03-05Brandon Sewell (Chief Financial Officer) interim appointment8-K Exhibit 99.1⚠️

Data source: SEC EDGAR 8-K filings filtered for Item 5.02 + management-signals-by-ticker.json

Key Risks from the 10-K

1. Restaurant Industry Cyclicality and Tariffs

The filing warns that "changes in global trade policies and tariffs, can depress demand, sales and/or gross margins" and that "food cost and fuel cost inflation can lead to reductions in the frequency of dining out." Sysco's revenue depends on restaurant traffic. Any recession that reduces dining out directly compresses Sysco's top line with limited ability to cut costs.

2. Transformation and Restructuring Costs

Results were "negatively impacted by" restructuring charges, transformation initiative expenses, severance charges, and acquisition-related costs. The filing describes "expenses associated with our various transformation initiatives" as a recurring adjustment. When transformation costs appear every year, they are not one-time expenses — they are part of the ongoing cost structure.

3. Credit Risk on Restaurant Customers

With $5.5 billion in accounts receivable and "credit terms to some of our customers based on our assessment of each customer's creditworthiness," Sysco carries meaningful counterparty risk. Restaurant failure rates are historically elevated. The filing notes allowances of only $17 million — extremely thin relative to total AR.

4. Fuel and Labor Cost Inflation

As a distribution company, Sysco's two largest variable costs are fuel and labor. The filing acknowledges exposure to commodity cost inflation and supply chain disruption, both of which directly compress the already-thin 18.4% gross margin.

Summary

Grade: F under the screening framework, driven by structural balance sheet characteristics of a leveraged food distributor.

Sysco's operations are solid: 18.4% gross margins are stable, cash conversion is consistently above 1.0x, free cash flow is $1.6 billion, and the core business grew 3.2%. The Guest Worldwide goodwill impairment is a blemish but not a crisis.

The F grade reflects three quantitative flags: AR outpacing revenue for two years, cash covering only 7% of $14.5 billion debt, and goodwill+intangibles at 345% of equity. The Altman Z-Score of 2.94 is safely above the distress threshold, suggesting these flags are more about capital structure aggressiveness than financial distress. Debt/EBITDA at 3.5x and interest coverage at 4.9x are both manageable.

The biggest real risk is a recession that reduces restaurant traffic and simultaneously stresses Sysco's restaurant customers who owe it $5.5 billion.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Sysco's FY2025 10-K filed with SEC EDGAR on August 22, 2025. This is NOT investment advice.

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP (Unqualified opinion, 1 critical audit matter)

Fiscal year ended: June 28, 2025

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