Steve Bramlage
Analyst · Stephens. Your line is now open
Thank you, Darren, and good morning. I'd also like to thank the team for their great work during the quarter. Our results were solid, especially inside the store, where we continue to grow sales and expand margin. This was accomplished during a quarter of heavy integration that required stores across our footprint. Overall, this was another quarter of effective operational execution in what is shaping up to be a great fiscal 2024. Total revenue for the quarter was $3.3 billion, a decrease of $3 million or 0.1% from the prior year, due primarily to the lower retail price of fuel. Total inside sales for the quarter were $1.2 billion, an increase of $106 million or 9.5% from the prior year. For the quarter, prepared food and dispensed beverage sales rose by $36 million to $349 million, an increase of 11.4%. Grocery and general merchandise sales increased by $70 million to $866 million, an increase of 8.8%. Results were also favorably impacted by operating approximately 7% more stores on a year-over-year basis. Retail fuel sales were down $106 million in the third quarter, as an 11% decline in the average retail price of fuel was partially offset by a 6.9% increase in fuel gallons sold. The average retail price of fuel during this period was $2.98 a gallon compared to $3.34 a gallon a year ago. We define gross profit as revenue less cost of goods sold, but excluding depreciation and amortization. Casey’s had gross profit of $787 million in the third quarter, an increase of $49 million or 6.7% from the prior year. This is primarily driven by higher inside gross profit of $50.9 million or 11.3%, offset by lower fuel gross profit of $5.3 million or 2%. Inside gross profit margin was 41.3% and that's up 70 basis points from a year ago. Prepared food and dispensed beverage margin was 59.6%, up 230 basis points from prior year. The category margin benefited from lower commodity costs, specifically cheese, which was $2.06 per pound for the quarter compared to $2.30 per pound last year, a decrease of 10% or approximately 80 basis points. Margin also benefited from a lower LIFO charge than in the prior year as our broader input costs softened, benefiting margin by over 40 basis points. Modest menu pricing adjustments also helped. The grocery and general merchandise margin was 33.9%, a decrease of 10 basis points from the prior year. The change was primarily due to lapping favorable vendor-funded promotions in the prior year, partially offset by lower LIFO charge and private label continuing to increase its share of our mix. Fuel margin for the quarter was 37.3 cents per gallon. That's down 3.4 cents per gallon from the prior year. Fuel gross profit benefited by $3.4 million from the sale of RINs, and that's up $0.5 million from the same quarter in the prior year. Total operating expenses were up 10.3% or $53.2 million in the third quarter. Approximately 3% of the increase is due to lapping a one-time benefit to operating expense last year from the resolution of a $15 million legal matter. Approximately 6% of the total operating expense increase is due to unit growth and integration spending as we operated 167 more stores than the prior year. Same store employee expense accounted for approximately 1% of the increase, as modest increases in wage rates were partially offset by the reduction in same store hours. Depreciation in the quarter was $89 million. That's up $10.9 million versus the prior year, and that's primarily due to operating more stores. Net interest expense was $14.1 million in the quarter. That's up $2.4 million versus the prior year, primarily due to less interest income as we funded several acquisitions in the quarter out of cash-on-hand. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 24.1% consistent with the prior year. Net income was down versus the prior year at $86.9 million, a decrease of 13.2%. EBITDA for the quarter was $217.6 million compared to $221.7 million a year ago, that's a decrease of 1.9%. Our balance sheet remains in excellent condition, and we have significant financial flexibility. On January 31, we had total available liquidity of $1.1 billion. Furthermore, we have no significant maturities coming due until our fiscal 2026. Our leverage ratio, calculated in accordance with our senior notes, is 1.6 times. The third quarter tends to be our seasonal trough for cash flow generation. For that quarter, net cash generated by operating activities of $123 million, less purchases of property, plant and equipment of $150 million, resulted in the company using $27 million in free cash flows, and that compares to a generation of $27 million in the prior year. At the March meeting, the Board of Directors voted to maintain the quarterly dividend of $0.43 per share. During the quarter, we repurchased approximately $30 million of stock, and we have $310 million remaining on our existing share repurchase authorization. Investing in EBITDA and ROIC accretive growth investments remains our primary capital allocation priority, but currently given our low leverage levels and strong cash flow, we are repurchasing more shares than in the past. We have had an excellent unit growth year so far, especially with M&A. During the third quarter we closed on a transaction to enter our 17th state in Texas, and through the end of the quarter, we have built or acquired over 125 stores. As we prepare to finish fiscal year ‘24, we are reaffirming all of our fiscal year guidance as outlined in the third quarter press release. And before we get into our fourth quarter experience to-date, just a reminder that February had an extra day due to the leap year, and that will equate to an approximate 100 basis point increase to both same store results and total OpEx for the fourth quarter. Our results for February, excluding the impact of the leap day, were as follows: Inside same store sales are near the top end of our annual outlook range. Fuel gallons were near the low end of the annual outlook range. CPG was a touch below the mid 30s. Please note that February tends to be seasonally low in terms of fuel profitability, and that this February's result is a couple of cents per gallon higher than the same period last year. Current cheese costs are modestly favorable versus the prior year. And one last comment on total operating expenses. We expect to finish the year at the high end of our annual outlook range, and that will be driven by some discretionary fourth quarter year-end charitable contributions, as well as incremental incentive compensation expense due to the company's strong performance. I'd now like to turn the call back over to Darren.