Thanks, Joanne, and good morning, everyone. As Fran mentioned, we are pleased with our first quarter results. We continue to maintain financial discipline, delivering another quarter of strong expense leverage while investing in the strategic initiatives that are transforming the business and driving top line growth.
I'll cover our first quarter results then provide an update on our outlook for 2018. Net sales were $731 million, up 11% from last year, with foreign currency accounting for approximately $25 million or 4 percentage points of the increase and the calendar shift resulting from the 53rd week in 2017 accounting for approximately $10 million or 1 percentage point of the increase.
Comp sales were up 5% with positive comp sales in all brands. Pages 6 and 7 of the investor presentation illustrate our recent comp sales performance. By geography, comp sales for the quarter were up 8% in the U.S. and approximately flat in international markets.
By brand, comp sales were up 6% for Hollister and up 3% for Abercrombie. Hollister delivered another quarter of comp sales growth across channels and geographies with traffic being the primary driver.
Abercrombie posted its second consecutive quarter of positive comp sales with strength in the U.S. in both channels where traffic and conversion both grew.
Our direct-to-consumer business also continued to perform strongly with double-digit growth in both the U.S. and international markets. For the quarter, DTC sales were up 14% with comp sales up 8% and accounted for approximately 27% of total sales.
Gross margin rate was 60.5%, 20 basis points higher than last year and better than our expectations coming into the quarter as we stabilized promotional activity. On a constant-currency basis, gross margin rate was approximately flat.
I'll now recap the rest of our results for the quarter compared to last year on an adjusted non-GAAP basis. Excluded from our adjusted first quarter results were certain pretax legal charges of approximately $6 million.
Beginning with expense. Adjusted operating expense, excluding other operating income, was up 2% to last year on significantly higher sales. We continued to maintain tight operating discipline, delivering 530 basis points of expense leverage. Aside from higher sales, the key drivers of expense leveraged for the quarter came predominantly from store occupancy costs coupled with savings from our ongoing continuous profit improvement initiative. This was partially offset by increased investments in marketing, lease termination charges and a provision for the restoration of incentive compensation.
Adjusted operating loss narrowed to $37 million compared to a loss of $70 million last year and included benefits from foreign currency of approximately $3 million.
The adjusted effective tax rate for the quarter was 5%. A tax benefit on the pretax loss were reduced by tax charges of $8 million related to a change in share-based compensation accounting standards that went into effect last year.
Adjusted net loss per diluted share improved to $0.56 compared to a net loss per diluted share of $0.91 last year and included benefits from foreign currency of approximately $0.03.
Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $592 million in cash compared to $421 million last year and $253 million in gross borrowings outstanding compared to $268 million last year. We continue to maintain a strong balance sheet to ensure we have the necessary liquidity available to execute against our strategic plans.
We ended the first quarter with inventory up 2% compared to last year, in line with our expectations coming into the quarter. Our inventory is well balanced, reflecting our ongoing focus on assortment architecture and tight inventory management balanced with continued investment in our must-win and must-grow categories.
Looking forward, we expect to end the second quarter with inventory up low single digits.
Turning to our outlook for 2018. We now expect both comp sales and net sales to be up in the range of 2% to 4%. For the second quarter, we expect net sales to be up high single digits, including benefits of approximately $10 million from foreign currency and approximately $30 million from the calendar shift.
For the full year, we expect foreign currency to benefit net sales by approximately $50 million and the loss of 2017's 53rd week to adversely impact net sales by approximately $40 million, as detailed on Page 12 of the investor presentation.
We continue to expect gross margin rate for the year to be up slightly to the 2017 rate of 59.7% with higher average unit retail, including net benefits from foreign currency to be partially offset by slightly higher average unit costs.
For the full year, based on the midpoint of our sales outlook, we now expect GAAP operating expense to be up approximately 2% from 2017 adjusted operating expense of $2 billion. Relative to our prior full year outlook, this includes certain legal charges of $6 million, lease termination charges of $4 million and volume-related expenses on higher sales. We are maintaining a disciplined approach and continue to expect to drive operating leverage for the year.
For the second quarter, we expect operating expense to be up mid-single digits from fiscal 2017 adjusted non-GAAP operating expense of $479 million, reflecting higher volume-related expenses, including the impact of foreign currency and the calendar shift as well as increased marketing spend to improve our brand reach.
We expect the full year effective tax rate to be in the mid-30s, including tax charges of approximately $9 million related to the share-based compensation awards, the majority of which were reflected in our first quarter results. For the remainder of the year, we expect the effective tax rate to be in the mid to upper 20s. Beyond 2018, we currently do not anticipate share-based compensation significantly impacting the effective tax rate.
Moving on to capital allocation. Coming out of the quarter, we continue to maintain a strong liquidity position. Consistent with what we said at our Investor Day, as we move through 2018, we expect to exceed our minimum liquidity target of $700 million as we evaluate opportunities to accelerate potential investments. These will include store closures, including flagship lease buyouts and kick-outs, store remodels and rightsizes, new store openings as well as investments to accelerate our transformation efforts.
For 2018, we now expect capital expenditures to be in the range of $135 million to $140 million, up from our previous expectation of $130 million, reflecting accelerated investments in systems and tools informed by early findings related to our transformation efforts. Our CapEx plans for the year include approximately $85 million for new store and store updates and between $50 million and $55 million for the continued rollout of omnichannel and CRM capabilities, including our loyalty programs and IT systems and tools. After investing in our business and those projects that have the highest return on a risk-adjusted basis, our remaining capital allocation priority is to return cash to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases, which are evaluated quarterly with our directors considering both liquidity and valuation factors.
During the first quarter, we repurchased approximately 800,000 shares at an aggregate cost of approximately $19 million. As of quarter-end, we had approximately 6 million shares remaining available for purchase under our publicly announced stock repurchase authorization.
In addition, we recently announced that our Board of Directors approved the $0.20 quarterly dividend.
With that, I'll turn the call back over to Fran.