Jane Morreau
Analyst · Consumer Edge Research
Okay. Thanks, Lawson and good morning everyone. During my comments today, I will reference the slides we posted to our website this morning. This will help you walk you through the two main areas of focus that I plan on covering in my prepared remarks. These two areas include, first; a review of our first half results. And second, our outlook of fiscal 2019, which reaffirms this morning. After I complete my prepared remarks, we’ll open the call up to Q&A. Okay, so let’s begin with slide three and it highlights our first half results, reflecting solid, top and bottom line underlying growth even after considering the impact that the cost of tariff began to have on our gross margin in the second quarter. First half underlying net sales grew about 5.5% as Lawson said a moment ago. Tariff-related inventory buy-ins, largely in Europe, and giveback associated with these buy-ins created quite a bit of noise in our underlying rate of sales growth from both quarters. On our last quarterly call, we estimated that tariff-driven retailer and wholesaler inventory buy-ins had contributed roughly two to three points to our 9% underlying net sales growth in the first quarter. We had anticipated that the buying-in effect would reverse by the end of the fiscal year and indeed it did, as essentially the entire giveback occurred during the second quarter, negatively impacting second quarter sales growth by about two points. In other words, our underlying net sales growth of 3% in the second quarter was equally as unrepresentative of our trends and our business as was the first quarter’s 9% growth. The first half growth rate of 5.5% on top of last year’s first half growth of 7% equates in over 6% CAGR, as illustrated on slide four. As we look over the balance of the fiscal year, it should be noted that the second half comparisons ease considerably plus 5% underlying net sales growth, implying that we should see modestly higher net sales growth in the back half given our current business trends, and that will keep us on track to deliver another year of 6% to 7% growth in underlying net sales. Now, the difference between the underlying operating income growth in the first half versus the second half is even larger. We grew underlying operating income by 4% in the first half of this fiscal year on top of a very strong 14% underlying growth registered in the same period a year ago. The combined impact of lower gross margins due in part to tariff costs as well as the fact that the A&P investments have been front loaded this year pulled down our year-to-date underlying operating income growth to 4%. These factors were partially offset by the continued tight management of SG&A spend. Now the company remains focused on efficiency programs and reallocation efforts to ensure that we are both leveraging prior investments and positioning our brands for long-term success in the marketplace. Now moving on to Slides five and six. You’ll see our reported net sales growth was pulled down by about 2 points due to foreign exchange and 1 point due to the adoption of the new revenue recognition standard. Slides seven and eight dig into our results by geography. Let’s start with the United States. We delivered 3% growth in underlying net sales during the first half of this year. The second quarter growth accelerated modestly despite a route-to-consumer change in the market and tough comparisons against last year’s first half where our U.S. business grew 6%, helped by last year’s first half heavy timing of promotional activities. As a result, our two-year average growth in the United States in the first half is in the 4% to 5% range, as shown on Slide nine. So acknowledging that there are always short-term fluctuations in 3-month takeaway trends, we believe our business in the U.S. is growing in the mid-single digits, and that’s supported by the blended Nielsen and NABCA value takeaway trends during the first half of the year as well as the 12-month trends. Our emerging markets delivered excellent underlying net sales growth. They were up 10% on top of 15% gain in the first half of last year. Our growth in the emerging markets remained broad-based, including strong contributions from Mexico, Brazil, Ukraine, China, Sub-Sahara Africa and India. Similar to the first quarter, it was in our developed international markets that tariffs had the largest impact on our growth rate, the tale of two quarters, if you will. The first quarter benefited significantly from retail and wholesaler-driven buy-ins in several developed markets in Europe. And the second quarter experienced the giveback from those buy-ins. Given our estimates that inventories are now largely in line with historical levels, we believe that the first half underlying net sales growth of 5% is roughly indicative of the trends we have seen in our developed international markets over the last several years. Germany, Australia and Spain were standout performers, while we also registered solid growth from the U.K. and France. And then finally, Travel Retail continued to grow well into the double digit, with underlying net sales growth of 14% on top of last year’s first half growth of 11%. This growth was fueled by an increase in travelers, growing demand for the American whiskey portfolio and new product introductions such as Jack Daniel’s Bottled-in-Bond. And moving on to Slide 10. You can see -- highlights our well-balanced delivery by growth, our growth by brand, with the Jack Daniel’s family of brands underlying net sales of 5% and our premium bourbon, including Old Forester and Woodford Reserve, up 24%. We’re particularly pleased with the continued U.S. leadership of Woodford Reserve in the super-premium bourbon category and very optimistic as we ramp up our investment and focus globally on Woodford as well as our super-premium whiskey portfolio. Further, tequilas, including Herradura and el Jimador as well as New Mix, continue to grow nicely, up 12%. Slides 11 and 12 examine our margins and other rates of growth. What I thought I might do now is spend just a moment talking about gross margins, which, as expected, began to experience the cost of tariffs during the second quarter. Specifically, when we started the fiscal year and in the absence of tariffs, we expected modest declines in gross margins, similar to what we experienced in fiscal 2018. And recall, this anticipated decline was due to higher input costs including wood and agave, as well as the incremental depreciation expense associated with our multiyear capacity expansion program. You may also recall on our first quarter call in August, we revised our outlook for gross margin declines to over 200 basis points for the full year, reflecting the net impact of tariff-related costs as we sought to invest behind maintaining the consumer momentum in our business. As a reminder, as one of our tariff mitigation items, we shifted a couple of months of inventory to Europe, which in conjunction with our normal inventory levels and considering the timing of tariffs when they took effect protected the majority of our business in Europe through the first five months of fiscal 2019. Thus, during our second quarter we began to realize the net tariff-related costs as well as the expected increase in input costs. These factors combined with the impact from the adoption of the revenue recognition standard, reduced our gross margin during the second quarter by 200 basis points, resulting in 100 basis point decline during the first half. And you can see this all illustrated on Slide 12. So now moving on to our operating expenses. Our underlying A&P investment grew 7% in the first half, a few points above sales growth due to the timing of spend. Underlying SG&A grew 3%, driven in part by costs associated with organization related changes and the early retirement program the company offered in the first quarter. In the aggregate, our underlying operating income growth through the first half was up 4% and was negatively impacted by roughly 2 percentage points due to the incremental costs associated with tariffs. A 19% effective tax rate, fueled by tax reform, helped drive the 8% growth in earnings per share to $0.93. So now, let me move on to my second topic and share with you our reaffirmed outlook for fiscal 2019 that you can see on Slide 13. So despite the tariff-driven lumpiness in our first and second quarter results, the underlying net sales growth in the first half keeps us on track to deliver another year of strong top line growth at Brown-Forman. Our takeaway trends for the brands remain solid and supportive of our growth ambitions. Second half results in the U.S. should benefit from the focused promotional support that we had planned for the large holiday selling season. As a reminder, top line comparisons ease by 2 percentage points in the back half. In total, our outlook remains unchanged from our first quarter call as we expect another year of 6% to 7% growth in our underlying net sales in fiscal 2019. Also unchanged from our first quarter guidance, we’re assuming that tariffs as Lawson said a moment ago, remain in effect throughout the remainder of fiscal 2019 in the EU, China, Mexico, Canada and Turkey. We continue to assess the timing and the amount of additional price increases on a market-by-market basis, but we do not expect that additional increases would offset the cost of the tariffs or the higher cost of goods we had already anticipated for the full fiscal year. As a result, we believe the gross margin pressure will continue during the second half of the fiscal year and cause an over 200 basis point decline for the full year, which is really consistent with what we’ve communicated to you in August. While first half underlying A&P growth came in well ahead of our underlying net sales growth, we anticipate that these 2 metrics will grow roughly in line on a full year basis. We expect tight management of SG&A should result in flat spend for the year, creating some modest operating leverage from gross profit to operating income. As a result, we are reaffirming our full year expectations for 4% to 6% underlying operating income growth for fiscal 2019. Our earnings per share outlook is also unchanged at $1.65 to $1.75, and this range represents a growth of 11% to 18% over last year's EPS of $1.48. As a sensitivity, EPS over the balance of the year will be impacted by roughly $0.04 as foreign exchange rates move 10% in either direction. So in summary, our company continues to register solid top line momentum. And as Lawson also said a few moments ago, in the absence of tariffs, we would be on track for another year of high single-digit underlying operating growth and operating income. Despite this short-term challenge, we continue to manage the business as we always have for the long term. We believe we have some of the best premium American whiskey brands and assets in the world, which, when combined with our whiskey-making knowhow and brand-building skills, position us well to continue creating shareholder value. Our results are well balanced, helped by our fast-growing business outside of the United States. Our business in the United States continues to benefit from our portfolio of SKU towards the fastest-growing categories, including American whiskey and tequila. We believe our portfolio, including our leading premium American whiskey brands, are significantly underpenetrated today relative to their long-term potential, and our teams are working hard at executing our 2025 strategy to capture this growth, which, by the way, you'll hear more about next week at our Investor Day. Equally important, we have invested significant capital in the United States to expand our business to fuel the growing demand we expect from current and future consumers of our brands around the world. This includes a multiyear period of stepped up CapEx and inventory investment, which had been a significant use of cash over the last several years. We expect to leverage these working capital investments in the coming years to drive additional free cash flow generation and provide opportunities to return cash to shareholders as we always have, thoughtfully, disciplined and opportunistically, since it’s fits to the broader environment, including our recent dividend increase of 5.1 percentage and our share repurchase activity in the second quarter. And so with that, wraps up my remarks. Dorothy, we can please open up the call for some questions.