Steve Bramlage
Analyst · Barclays. Your line is now open
Thank you, Darren, and good morning. Revenue for the quarter was $2.2 billion, a decline of $272 million, or 11% from the prior year. This was due to the decline in retail sales of fuel of approximately $321 million driven by the lower number of gallons sold and the lower retail price of fuel. Total inside sales were up 5.1% to over $1 billion. Grocery and other merchandise sales increased by $58 million, while sales of prepared food and fountain fell approximately $9 million. Please note that all reported figures are favorably impacted by approximately 2% more stores being operated on a year-over-year basis. Just a reminder, that we do not record lottery ticket sales as inside sales. Rather, we record our net commission earned in other. Lottery ticket sales have performed well throughout the pandemic. And if we had recorded them as part of our inside same-store sales, our year-over-year performance in the second quarter would have increased by approximately 100 basis points. Casey's had gross profit, which we define as revenue less costs of goods sold but excluding depreciation and amortization, of $632 million in the second quarter, an increase of nearly $75 million from the prior year. This is primarily attributable to higher fuel and inside gross profit of $63 million and $11 million, respectively. Our grocery and other merchandise gross profit increased $19 million, while the prepared food and fountain gross profit declined $8 million. Generally our inside the store performance both in terms of volumes and margins improved sequentially on a year-over-year basis versus the first quarter as guest counts in the stores improved and our operating and merchandising teams executed well. Inside gross profit margins were 41%. Grocery and other merchandise margins were 33%, which is in line with the prior year. Prepared food and fountain margins were a touch above 60%, a decline of approximately 80 basis points from the prior year. While the margin decline is smaller versus the prior year than what we experienced in the first quarter, we continue to be pressured due to adverse mix and extra waste in this segment more than other areas of the business. The company has 70% of cheese usage locked at $1.98 per pound, but wholesale cheese costs rose considerably throughout the second quarter, causing the final total average cheese costs for the quarter to be $2.18 per pound, which is even with the prior year's second quarter. As a reminder, our cheese lock ends at the end of December, though we will be opportunistic buying forwards if favorable market conditions arise. Total operating expenses were up 10% to $410 million. There are several factors driving this increase. First, the increase from operating 38 or 2% more stores than a year ago is $9 million. We also incurred $9 million in incremental incentive compensation due to the company's strong performance. This increase is driven both by short-term incentive plans at both the store and corporate level, along with accounting for previously granted long-term performance-based equity compensation. We also incurred $1 million in expenses related to the Buchanan Energy acquisition, as well as $5 million in COVID-related expenses such as cleaning and sick pay. We are committed to taking care of our team members and guests during these extraordinary times. And calendar year-to-date, we have made $32 million in investments related to COVID and necessary safety measures. While we finished the quarter down 2% in same-store labor hours, our same-store operating expense dollar increase was closer to 4%. As we communicated previously, we plan to add labor to stores as traffic recover. However, we have experienced incremental staffing challenges with respect to COVID-related quarantines and that is driving additional overtime. Furthermore, a July minimum wage increase in Illinois fully impacted our wage structure in the quarter. We will continue to be diligent in monitoring our labor hours at the stores and right-sizing store hours vis-à-vis traffic patterns, but we do expect to incur additional COVID-related costs in the third quarter that will likely land between Q1 and Q2’s levels of spending. Interest expense was down 16% to $10.6 million, due primarily to the refinancing of the senior notes that was completed in August. The effective tax rate for the quarter was approximately 24%, comparable to the prior year. We believe we will finish the year with an ETR between 24% and 26% and this is inclusive of the impact that we expect from closing the Buchanan Energy acquisition. Net income increased nearly 37% to $112 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $223 million, compared to $184 million a year ago, an increase of 21%. Our balance sheet continues to be strong and has further benefited in the quarter from the refinancing. We have ample financial flexibility available to us both to absorb the Buchanan Energy transaction and to pursue our longer term strategic objectives. At October 31st, cash and cash equivalents were $405 million. And we have the full undrawn capacity of our $325 million in lines of credit. Our leverage ratio stands at approximately 1.9 times and we have no maturities of significance due until 2025. At the December quarterly meeting, the Board of Directors voted to increase the dividend 6% to $0.34 per share. The company generated $86 million in free cash flow in the second quarter, which we define as cash flow from operating activities of $200 million, less purchases of property and equipment of $114 million. This compares to negative $8 million in the prior year and was driven by higher earnings, favorable working capital performance and lower capital spending. Capital expenditures were down $27 million from the second quarter a year ago, primarily due to COVID-related delays in construction projects. The company has opened 15 stores so far this year. Our new store pipeline includes 77 sites, of which 23 are under construction. We also have four acquisition stores under agreement in addition to the Buchanan Energy transaction and we continue to believe we will finish the year with approximately 40 newly constructed stores. While we are not providing earnings guidance for the fiscal year, given the ongoing uncertainty around consumer behavior and traffic volumes from COVID-19, there are a few modeling guidelines that we can’t provide for the impacts of the Buchanan Energy transaction, which we continue to expect to close by the end of the calendar year. We expect to incur approximately $10 million in closing-related costs in our third quarter, and that's primarily advisory and legal fees. We also continue to anticipate a one-time non-cash tax expense of $6 million to $7 million that's associated with the revaluation of our deferred tax liabilities on closing due to a change in state income tax apportionment. Over the next several quarters, we expect to incur an additional $7 million to $10 million in integration-related costs. We expect the transaction will be EBITDA accretive to us in the fourth quarter of this fiscal year, and EPS accretive in our fiscal 2022. We continue to expect to realize $23 million in synergies by the third year on top of the $47 million in acquired LTM EBITDA. As for the financing of the transaction, we anticipate using approximately $250 million to $300 million in cash on hand, raising an approximate $250 million five-year term loan and taking a temporary draw on our revolver for the remainder of the purchase price. As a result, we expect interest expense for the remainder of our fiscal year to be between $25 million to $27 million. Debt-to-EBITDA is expected to be 2.3 times at closing, still leaving us with ample liquidity. Finally, I would like to remind you that seasonally the third quarter is free cash been negative for the company, and this year should be no different given the timing of our capital expenditures. I'll now turn the call back over to Darren.