Thirty million dollars worth of Funko Pop! figures – those big-headed, vinyl pop-culture dolls – will soon make their way into the hands of a new collector: The garbage collector.

Funko said in its fourth quarter earnings report that a combination of waning demand for the toys and a surplus of inventory is creating financial trouble for the company.

Last year, they had to rent excess warehouse space just to hold the buildup of Funko figures, which range from Baby Yoda to Eddie Van Halen.

Funko intends to “eliminate” a large portion of its stock. (Getty)

Funko was holding onto about $USD246.4 million ($360 million) worth of dolls at the end of 2022.

That’s 48 per cent more than what they had on hand just one year before.

The company intends to “eliminate” a bit of that nearly $US250 million ($370 million) in inventory in the first half of 2023 “to reduce fulfillment costs by managing inventory levels to align with the operating capacity of our distribution center,” Funko said in a statement Wednesday.

“This is expected to result in a write down in the first half of 2023 of approximately $30 to $36 million.”

In short, the product they’re storing is now worth less than the cost of keeping it on hand, so they’re dumping at least $US30 million ($44.4 million) worth of it.

A shelf of ‘Funko Pop’ at the tenth edition of DreamHack, at the Forum center Feria Valencia, on July 1, 2022, in Valencia, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain. DreamHack is the largest network of gaming and digital entertainment festivals worldwide. It was first held in Sweden in 1994 and has been awarded the Guinness World Record for the largest digital festival in the world in terms of unique visitors. (Photo By Rober Solsona/Europa Pre (Europa Press via Getty Images)

On a call with investors last week, CEO Brian Mariotti said Funko had already filled its Arizona distributing center to the brim with dolls and was forced to rent excess storage containers for them.

The cost of that extra storage, he said, was causing the company to lose money at a rapid clip.

Company executives also announced that they would cut 10 per cent cut of their workforce as a cost-saving measure.

Funko benefited during the pandemic boom, posting $US1 billion ($1.48 billion) in net sales for 2021 – a 58 per cent increase from 2020 – but those gains didn’t hold up as the global economy reopened.

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The company reported a total loss of $US47 million ($70 million) in the fourth quarter of 2022.

That’s down from a profit of $US17 million ($25 million) during the same period the year before.

“It was clear on our last earnings call that the business and our operations hit an inflection point,” Mariotti said.

“A combination of macro factors and Funko-specific issues have disrupted our financial and operating performance to an unacceptable degree.”

Funko stock has fallen by 9.4 per cent so far this year.

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