Bob Eddy
Analyst · Baird. Your line is open
Thanks, Lee, and good morning, everyone. We delivered industry-leading results during this past fiscal year, enabled by a terrific performance by team members throughout the chain, taking great pride in serving their communities through these unprecedented times. I’m so proud of their efforts and I’m thrilled to share the results of their work with you today. This past year has, in many ways, been the most transformational year in our company’s history. Our team’s efforts have allowed us to capitalize upon the opportunities afforded by the challenges of 2020. We have a record membership, our relevant and growing omni business, a robust real estate pipeline, and a revamped balance sheet. BJ’s is a much stronger company than it was at the time of our IPO, and the opportunities provided in this challenging year set us up to be even stronger in the long-term. Let’s turn to our results for the fourth quarter. Net sales for the quarter were $3.9 billion. Merchandise comp sales, which excludes sales of gasoline increased by 16% and were driven by ticket and traffic. Across our geographies, we continue to gain share, and our members are expanding their baskets and increasing their trips to our clubs. In the first three weeks of November, comps were running north of 20% as we continue to see increased food-at-home trends and elevated consumer home investments. We also experienced much earlier holiday shopping. In the last week of November, we began to see a relative slowdown given the absence of large parties and holiday gatherings. This continued through December followed by a stronger January. Our digitally enabled sales grew by approximately 168% and drove about 5 percentage points of our 16% merchandise comp. We continue to invest behind digital platforms, particularly in BOPIC, curbside pickup and same-day delivery, which together drove more than 80% of our digital growth during the fourth quarter. As you know, with digital, our economics are advantaged versus many of our peers and the concentration of digital orders being fulfilled by our clubs furthers that thought. We operate a limited SKU warehouse environment with higher average ticket, allowing us to be more efficient. BOPIC and curbside sales tend to skew towards bigger baskets and same-day-delivery sales have the same margins as traditional sales in our clubs. Most importantly, the growth of these businesses highlights our increasing relevance with our membership. Digitally engaged members shop more categories, have average baskets that are 30% larger and make on average five more trips per year than members who only shop traditionally. Our success in capitalizing on these trends bodes well for membership renewal rates as generally the more a member shops and spends, the more likely that member is to renew. Comps in our grocery division grew by 18%. We saw robust comps across all categories, most notably in perishables, where we saw strong growth in fresh meat, frozen meals and fresh produce. In edible grocery, beverages and salty snacks grew nicely. And in our non-edible grocery division, paper products, cleaning supplies and wellness solutions led the way. Our general merchandise and services division saw comp growth of 9% driven by strong sales of TVs, indoor furniture, small appliances and consumer electronics, although we made great progress, our services business is still ramping back to its full run rate potential and represents a great opportunity for growth in the new year. In our gasoline business although sales were impacted by lower prices we continue to gain market share. Gallons sold at comp clubs in the fourth quarter, grew by approximately 5%, significantly outpacing overall market performance. Over the course of the year and this past quarter, we delivered industry leading results that demonstrate strong market share gains, while these share gains were in part driven by demand associated with the pandemic our execution, accelerated merchandising activities and digital expansion were also significant drivers. In stock-up category, such as household cleaning products, where we grew almost three times the rate of market growth. Our share gains were driven by strong inventory levels and elevated member demand for these key items that have value. At the same time we’re extremely pleased with share gains in new categories we introduced, including Better-For-You snacks, which grew at six times the rate of market growth and prepared foods, which grew nine times the market rate. We continue to focus on improving our perishables assortment, enabling us to grow twice as fast as the market with strong share gains in dairy, fresh produce and frozen meals this past quarter. In our sundries division, where we continue to make significant progress we grew at 13 times the market rate. With significant gains in wellness solutions, cleaning and baby food. Our focus is to continue to build on these share gains and drive further growth. Membership fee income or MFI grew by 11% during the fourth quarter to $86 million. The transformation of our company takes root here. We have unprecedented levels of total members, retention rates and membership quality. We saw growth in new members, renewals and favorable membership mix during the quarter. We delivered a new all-time high renewal rate of 88% for our tenured members along with increasing our new member retention rate by 300 basis points relative to the prior year. Our penetration of higher tier memberships increased to 31% and easy renewal enrollment is at 70%. As you know, we’re beginning to lap the heights of new member acquisition of the pandemic back in March and April. While, it’s obviously too early to discuss renewal rates for these members, we find their elevated shopping behavior and digital engagement encouraging. When we look at their baskets in Q4, they’re approximately 19% larger than typical first-year members. In addition, they’re opting into easy renewal and our higher tier programs at higher rates. These new members are utilizing our app at double the rate of historical first-year members and leveraging our digital services, including BOPIC, curbside and same-day-delivery at more than six times historical new member rates. Let’s move now to our gross margins, excluding the gasoline business, our merchandise gross margin rate increased by 50 basis points driven by CPI initiatives and the mix of general merchandise sales. These gains are partially offset by increased COVID related distribution costs. SG&A expenses for the quarter were $593 million and included approximately $27 million of total costs associated with the pandemic. These costs are primarily driven by increased labor, safety and sanitation costs. Our adjusted EBITDA grew by 36% to $205 million reflecting robust sales growth and margin expansion. Adjusted net income in the fourth quarter was $97 million or $0.70 per share and reflected a 75% year-over-year growth on a per share basis. Our earnings growth highlights the strength of our business and reduced interest expense provided by our transformed balance sheet. I’d like to take a moment to highlight our full-year performance. During 2020, we had merchandise comp sales growth of 21% and eclipsed $15 billion in net sales. Membership fee income of $333 million, an increase of 10%, margin rate grew by 10 basis points despite significant price investments and elevated distribution costs associated with COVID. Adjusted EBITDA of $857 million growth of 47%, and we more than doubled the adjusted EPS. It’s hard to overstate the strength of this performance, but for just a better perspective, note that we started the year with a plan to do just over $600 million in adjusted EBITDA. Our team should be very proud. We also generated a record $676 million of free cash flow this year. This cash flow has allowed us to transform our balance sheet with 1.2 times funded leverage versus 2.8 times last year. This tremendous free cash flow allowed us to repay more than $0.5 billion in debt. More importantly, this reduced level of debt will allow us great flexibility with which we can invest into our future. As we allocate capital going forward, our overwhelming priority is to grow our business, investments to support membership, omni and our real estate growth plan will be funded by these cash flows and enabled by this new form of flexibility. Our next priority is to opportunistically enhance our already strong and healthy balance sheet. Finally, we plan to continue to return capital to shareholders. In 2020, we returned approximately $100 million to our shareholders by repurchasing 2.6 million shares. The evolution of the pandemic and associated member behavior, government stimulus efforts and associated costs of running our business are far from clear. As a result 2021 is very difficult to forecast. Given these uncertainties, we will not offer formal detailed guidance. We do hope and expect that the pandemic will fade as we progress through this year. Based on current pandemic trends and vaccination timelines, we expect consumer demand will remain elevated through the first half of the year when compared to pre-pandemic levels. If current shopping trends continue, that would imply high-teens double-digit stacked costs in Q1. We also currently expect something that looks more like normal life to emerge. As more people are vaccinated, as that happens and more people venture back to restaurants, we expect to give up some of the sales gains experienced in 2020 that resulted from increased consumption of food at home. But at this point we cannot accurately judge the timing or degree of these changes. From a membership standpoint, we expect a member count to be flat or better during 2021 and expect MFI growth to be in-line with historical years. Lastly, we expect to continue to incur COVID related costs for at least the first half of the year. Note that we will also continue to invest in our business and our team, particularly in membership, digital and geographic expansion. Despite these costs, we expect to achieve strong adjusted EBITDA and earnings growth relative to 2019. BJ’s Wholesale Club is a much different and better company today than at our IPO in 2018. This is true in ways big and small, but let me focus on just a few. At the conclusion of this fiscal year, we had nearly 20% more members, about 1 million more than at our IPO. Not only do we have more members, but the membership is a vastly better quality. We have the highest renewal rates for both new and tenured members in our history. Tenured renewal rates are 200 basis points higher today than at our IPO. Higher tier memberships are 600 basis points higher at 31%, easy renewal penetration is 1,700 basis points higher at 70%. We discontinued the practice of offering free trial memberships, pivoting towards acquiring paid members with better lifetime values and continually engaging those members through renewal. Most importantly, we are intent on investing heavily to retain the members gained in 2020. We have tremendous momentum here in our intent on keeping it going. We have a relevant and growing omni business. At our IPO, our digitally-enabled sales were approximately $140 million. Today’s business is more than five times that big and growing. In 2018, we had launched BOPIC and same-day-delivery, but the experience was not great and we lacked key current capabilities such as curbside pickup and the ability to order fresh goods. In the fourth quarter, approximately 50% of our BOPIC orders were picked up curbside. And the usage of our app is twice as high as it was at our IPO. We continue to invest in these offerings as they are the future and enable members more convenient ways to access our tremendous value. We’ve witnessed the tremendous acceleration of our real estate pipeline. In the year of our IPO we only opened one new club, this past year we opened four new clubs, all successful and we will open six in 2021, five of the six will be in the back half. Moreover, we see a path to 10 clubs per year in 2022 and beyond. Finally, we have a transformed balance sheet. At year end in 2018 we had more than three times funded debt-to-adjusted EBITDA. We find ourselves today at just above one times, this allows us tremendous flexibility to invest in our business and return capital to shareholders in ways we couldn’t have considered just two short years ago. While, the coming years’ financial results may be noisy and hard to predict, we have great momentum and are pivoting from a deleveraged story to a story about growth. Our pre-COVID algorithm included very low-single digit top line growth, while our return towards normal may temporarily cloud the picture. We expect membership trends and our progress on our real estate pipeline to power our revised algorithm that includes mid-single digit top-line growth in the future. Those early signposts in membership and real estate should be easy to see concrete and powerful unlocks of future growth. In conclusion, we have a team doing the best work I’ve seen in my long tenure with the company I’d like to once again thank them all and I can’t wait to report their future results. And now I’ll turn the call back over to the operator to begin the Q&A session.