Tom Greco
Analyst · Morgan Stanley. Sir, your line is open
Thanks Zaheed and good morning everyone. And welcome to our second quarter conference call. I joined Advanced Auto Parts four months ago and I am even more energized today than I was when I started. We are conducting a deep dive into our business to fully understand the challenges we faced over the past few years. I am finding many areas for significant improvements based on actions and strategies that are well within our control. I have no doubt we will address these challenges. In fact we’re developing a long-term strategy to put this behind us, to accelerate growth, and to drive profitability. We need to always put the customer first. This is essential to drive growth. We must earn and retain the trust of our customers which can only be achieved through outstanding service every single day, every single time. As you saw from our release our comp performance in the quarter was a disappointing negative 4.1%. These results are certainly not acceptable given our potential. They are in line with the near-term expectations we provided last quarter. This is in part because we have been spending our time working on the real changes required to put us in the leadership position we expect. We’ll execute better with more accountability in the near-term. In parallel we’re working on material and significant change for the long-term, specifically identifying issues and opportunities while creating a sound winning strategy for Advance which we can execute flawlessly. We know we have work to do. I remain extremely confident in our ability to address the current challenges we face which largely have been self inflicted. In terms of profitability our adjusted operating margin rate of 10.8% and adjusted EPS of $1.90 reflect the impact of lower than expected gross margin performance in the quarter, higher supply chain expenses, and operating deleverage. There were a couple of drivers of sales and profit performance in the quarter. First of all, our customer service metrics were just not where we need them to be. In Q2 we conducted significant primary research with both our commercial customers and DIY consumers. We now know in excruciating detail what's important to them. We know where opportunities exist to better serve customers for Advance as well as for our competitors. Of course consistent product availability is at the very top of the list. It is table stakes in our business. Our performance against the availability metrics that matter to customers were just not where we need them to be and that cost us in Q2. As in Q1 we experienced availability challenges in several key markets. There are clear areas for improvement here and we’re addressing them today and we know that they are fixable. At the same time while inventory was down slightly on a sequential basis over Q1, inventory still grew 7.3% over last year. As indicated on our Q1 call, inventory growing faster than sales without the requisite improvement in availability is inconsistent with our objectives. We have dedicated a team against this challenge and they are focused on ensuring the improved inventory productivity and consistency of product availability, while improving working capital and ROIC going forward. Secondly, another factor in our P&L flow through in Q2 was a sizable insurance adjustment. Mike will explain this in a few minutes. Finally, our performance in the quarter was disproportionately impacted by results in the North East in Great Lakes region. In retrospect we just didn’t adequately plan for a transition to daily replenishment in these markets. We moved too far too fast significantly burdening our DCs with unnecessary complexity over the past few months. And we didn’t sufficiently prepare our DC and field leaders for the substantial changes we’re asking them to execute. Not only did this materially increase our supply chain cost in the quarter this initiative negatively impacted our fill accuracy in the North East. As a result the stores that were being serviced by these DCs were actually experiencing much worst availability as a result of the move to daily replenishment. Obviously increasing cost and complexity with inconsistent availability is just not acceptable. Since my arrival in April, we have been intensely analyzing our supply chain and distribution processes. And we’re currently working on near and long term changes to improve order and fill accuracy and ultimately availability to best in class levels. What's most important to customers is the reliability and consistency of our service. They have to be able to trust us to have the right part at the right time. Therefore our primary objective is to provide best in class service to our customers by delivering high quality, great value parts accurately, reliably, and consistently exactly when our customers need them. That is the goal. DC to store delivery frequency is not our goal. We have been carefully analyzing our asset base and processes and we are confident we can leverage our assets in a manner that enables us to efficiently deliver best in class customer service while lowering cost and the inventory. The great news is we are already seeing a positive impact on our performance from the initial steps we have taken. And we absolutely expect to see improvement in customer service metrics and inventory reduction in the second half of the year in these markets. I have no doubt we can do a much better job leveraging our assets in order to provide the best service for our customers while producing the best returns for our shareholders. To sum up Q2, we are not where we need to be. I know that and my team knows that. There is a heightened sense of urgency and accountability at Advance and we will drive it throughout the organization. Given where we are we do not expect to turn our performance around overnight. We simply can't. We will execute better but we need to make sure we focus on the material and significant step change opportunity in front of us and make certain we execute these changes flawlessly versus trying to fix aspects of our existing strategy that are flawed in the current state. Our goal at the present time is to build a rock solid foundation for future growth and we won’t compromise on this goal to prop up short-term results. Therefore our annual comp store sales estimate remains unchanged in a range of down 3 to 5 for the year. Accelerating growth and transforming our business is an exciting opportunity. Changes necessary to win are well within our control and there are no structural impediments to our success. While we now know many of the areas where we can improve, we cannot rush. We need to be thoughtful and disciplined as we transform and create a growing platform for the future. That said, today we are taking decisive actions to deliver near-term improvements in two key areas, commercial growth and execution. Allow me to talk first about how we are going to accelerate commercial growth. Our commercial business accounts for approximately 60% of our business and will be an area of growth for years to come. Getting our structure and people right in commercial is foundational to improved performance and position us for longer-term growth and market leadership. As you saw in today's release we named Bob Cushing, formerly President of WORLDPAC to serve in the newly created position of Executive Vice President, Commercial. Bob is going to oversee all of the company’s commercial operations including Advance, Carquest, Autopart International, and of course WORLDPAC. As I look at the organizational structure of Advance today it’s clear we need a unified leader for the entirety of our commercial business. As we consider the leadership skills necessary to accelerate growth, we have to start with the customer therefore we need a leader who puts the customer first always. We need a leader who deeply understands customer service and customer intimacy and finally, we need a leader with a track record for driving growth, improving profitability, and building industry leading capabilities. Fortunately Bob Cushing is the perfect person for the role as he is uniquely qualified to spearhead this effort. Bob is an exceptionally talented industry veteran with over 30 years of experience, has been the driving force behind WORLDPAC's tremendous growth and market leading position. He has a proven track record of delivering results and he is an industry pioneer who long ago recognized the role of technology and e-commerce in better serving customers. Last but not least Bob is competitive. He is going to be relentless on driving out numbers and he will expect nothing less than the best as he instills a high performing culture and ensures we execute and we win in the marketplace. This is a significant first step in the transformative process to leverage all of our assets, to create the leading commercial organization in North America which provides the absolute best service to customers. Secondly, I will comment on the importance of improving execution. Two weeks ago we flattened our organizational structure when we announced our three division field leaders as well as others who will now report directly to me. These changes will facilitate faster, more efficient decision making and I am confident this change will elevate operating intensity, drive greater accountability, and improve execution across the organization. To summarize these actions we’re moving thoughtfully and swiftly to improve the trajectory of our business. In addition to driving near-term performance these changes are important steps in strengthening our foundation for the future. To that end we’re hard at work in constructing a comprehensive five year strategic business plan with a goal of delivering industry leading performance. As we outlined for you last quarter, the focus of the plan is around three value drivers; growth, productivity, and people. We’re excited with our progress and our potential. With respect to growth as I indicated earlier, we’ve conducted a deep dive into the drivers of demand for our business and we’ve collected volumes of customer insights that the organization has never had before. We’re laser focused on customer needs as well as future trends to help guide us on how we position the business for tomorrow. The drivers of demand are key inputs for our growth agenda and will inform us on our holistic supply chain and availability strategy. In terms of supply chain we’re doing considerable work on improving the consistency of part availability, dedicating disproportionate resources towards addressing this massive opportunity for Advance. The goal is clear, get the right part to the right customer at the right time; accurately, reliably, and consistently. We’ll be making changes in how we distribute, assort, and deliver parts to our customers and we’ll do it faster, more accurately, and more consistently than we do it today. We’re testing multiple solutions to address these opportunities and we have several pilot programs across the country to assess alternative strategies to improve product assortment, reduce delivery time, and to reduce inventory. While it is early, our results from the pilots are extremely encouraging and will drive growth going forward. That leads us to our second area of focus, productivity. We’re being a clearly defined productivity pipeline aimed at improving margins and profitability for building new capabilities to fuel our future growth agenda. This includes establishing productivity targets for our DCs, network, fleet, procurement, and stores. We’re looking across our entire supply chain and we’re challenging each discrete cost. We’ve identified multiple projects which will yield savings in 2017 and beyond. In the second quarter we also launched zero based budgeting. I know many of you are familiar with zero based budgeting and the proven track record this approach has had in other companies and other industries. We plan to move as fast as possible on ZBD [ph] for remaining mind fold that we cannot affect service to our customer. In fact the plan is to drive out unnecessary costs, such that we can invest in better service for our customers. I believe the productivity opportunity in Advance is significant, and will fuel our growth for years to come. Finally, people and culture are a major component of our strategic business plan. We’re in the process of developing a comprehensive people strategy to support our business strategy. In Q2 we established HR as a separate function. It was previously combined with our legal team. We subsequently hired a talented and experienced Senior Vice President of HR, Natalie Rothman. Natalie joins us from PepsiCo following a highly successful career there. Natalie and the team are also hard at work developing our people strategy. Specifically we’re making sure that we have the right talent to succeed, the right culture to attract and retain a diverse and high performing team, and the right capabilities to compete at the highest level that differentiate us and to win with our customers. You will hear more about growth, productivity, and people when we provide an overview of our strategic business plan later this fall. With that allow me to turn it over to Mike.