Vista Outdoor, one of the Minnesota's newest public companies, is probably not a familiar name. But outdoors enthusiasts are likely to know its brands — from Federal Ammunition to Bell bicycle helmets, CamelBak water carriers and Camp Chef outdoor cooking gear.
It has been almost five years since the company made up of sporting brands such as Federal Ammunition spun off from Alliant Technology Systems as part of that company's merger with Orbital Sciences Corp.
Since then, the company beefed up its consumer-product portfolio by acquiring well-known brands across the outdoors spectrum such as Blackburn bike accessories and Giro helmets. It also shed its Savage Arms and Stevens firearms brands.
"The whole vision then was to bring the world outside," said CEO Chris Metz, well known in Minnesota for leading Arctic Cat before it was sold to Textron in March 2017.
In the process, though, the company, which was relatively debt-free at the spinoff, added more than $1 billion in long-term debt through acquisitions made before Metz was hired in October 2017. One of Metz's priorities since joining Vista was to shrink that balance — and the company has, to $562 million.
It is one move in a five-point turnaround plan to both improve the bottom line and move the company's stagnant share price out of the cellar.
One cost savings was the headquarters move from Utah to Anoka, to the underused distribution center of Federal Ammunition, a brand with a deep roots locally. Vista subleased its Utah space.
Another was to move away from a centralized management approach of brands that needed to be more nimble in the marketplace, said Metz, who also had stints in private equity at Sun Capital Partners and at Black & Decker.