Operator
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to Central Garden & Pet's First Quarter Fiscal Year 2018 Financial Results Conference Call. My name is Darren, and I will be your conference operator for today. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session, instructions will be given at that time. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Steven Zenker, Vice President of Investor Relations, FP&A and Communications. Please go ahead. Steven Zenker - Central Garden & Pet Co.: Thank you, Darren. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us. With me on the call today are George Roeth, Central's President and Chief Executive Officer; Niko Lahanas, Chief Financial Officer; Howard Machek, SVP, Finance and Chief Accounting Officer; J.D. Walker, President, Garden Branded Business; and Rodolfo Spielmann, President, Pet Consumer Products. A press release providing results for our first quarter ended December 30, 2017 is available on our website at www.central.com, and contains the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation for the non-GAAP measures discussed on this call. Before I turn the call over to George, I would like to remind you that statements made during this conference call, which are not historical facts including adjusted EPS guidance for 2018, expectations for new product introductions, future acquisitions, and future revenue and profitability as well as the expected impact of the recent tax reform are forward-looking statements subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those implied by forward-looking statements. These risks and others are described in Central's Securities and Exchange Commission filings, including our Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on November 29, 2017. Central undertakes no obligation to publicly update these forward-looking statements to reflect new information, subsequent events or otherwise. Now I will turn the call over to our CEO, George Roeth. George? George C. Roeth - Central Garden & Pet Co.: Thank you, Steve. Good afternoon, everybody. The bottom line is that we are on track for the fiscal year and our long-term plans. Additionally, we expect to benefit from continued M&A related activity and changes to our tax situation. These catalysts give us even greater optimism going forward. Both of Central's Garden & Pet segments continued to perform in line with expectations in the first quarter and are executing well against their growth objectives. Together our Garden & Pet segments grew revenues by 5% in the first quarter with organic growth at 1%, despite difficult year ago comps and an unfavorable shipping calendar. Acquisitions, K&H and one month of Segrest, added another 4 percentage points of growth. As you may recall in the first quarter of last year, we grew 7% organically. And the way the calendar fell was more favorable for the first quarter last year than it was this year. So we continue to grow organically despite those challenging comps. And we certainly wouldn't expect the 1% growth rate to be normative for the year. Additionally, our growth investments were funded by our aggressive cost reduction program, which contributed to a 100 basis point increase in gross margin in Q1. Our Pet segment during the quarter was led by strong growth in several of our businesses, including dog and cat treats, chews and toys, where we recently invested in increased capacity to handle the expected growth in the years ahead. In addition, Central continues to keep pace with changes in consumer purchasing behavior in the Pet industry by increasing our capabilities in and focus on e-commerce channel, where rapid sales and share growth is more than offsetting declines in the Nielsen tracked channels. In our Garden business we continue to grow share and capture incremental shelf space by rolling out new products, including a collaboration between our Garden and Pet segments to market mosquito control products for the consumer market. Central has a long history in the professional mosquito control, and we are excited to be ramping up activity in the consumer markets with these new products under our AMDRO Quick Kill brand. We are optimistic about the upcoming garden season and believe we are well-positioned for success in the months ahead. January has already started off as expected, and our analysis indicates retail inventories are where they should be at this time of the year. Having said that though, the garden season is still very much ahead of us. Going forward for the total company, organic growth for the year is expected to be driven in large part by the continued rapid growth in the e-commerce channel, increased innovation, expanded distribution of both branded and private-label products across all channels, as well as the continued rollout of the store within a store concept in our Pet distribution business at a major grocery retailer. In terms of e-commerce, we are growing share at Amazon in the majority of our categories. On the innovation front, we are launching an array of products across our segments. In Pet, this includes a new line of our CADET dog treats, and the expansion of our NYLABONE Nubz to the mass market after its success in the club channel. In Garden, new products include the reformulation of our successful SEVIN pesticide line, where SEVIN's product improvements include increased efficacy and longer lasting benefits. And last but not least, we are continuing to expand our offerings across an array of private-label products from both our Garden and Pet segments. Beyond the strong operating earnings growth of 13% in the first quarter, there were a number of other items that impacted the bottom line. These included a seasonal loss on a JV investment, higher interest costs due to the $300 million of notes issued in December that are intended to fund acquisitions, a favorable change to our federal statutory tax rate, and a tax benefit related to the remeasurement of our deferred tax assets and liabilities. So putting it all together, we earned $0.50 a share for the quarter versus $0.15 a year ago on a GAAP basis. Adjusting for non-recurring items, non-GAAP earnings were $0.19 a share versus $0.12 a year ago, an increase of 58%. Niko will explain the non-GAAP items and their impact in detail in just a few minutes. However, before I turn it over to Niko, I want to talk a little bit how Central's business is evolving, as we move forward that gives us even greater confidence and optimism regarding our future. We have been very clear that Central first and foremost is focused on growing its revenue and profitability organically. This means we are spending more to support demand creation, funded by cost savings of almost 2% of controllable costs a year. We have seen the favorable impact of those savings in both sustained organic growth and improved margins. We are then using the cash flows generated by our core business to help fund value creating M&A. Recent events, tailwinds if you may have increased our confidence and capability to drive additional sales and profit growth and ultimately shareholder value. M&A is one such area, through our recent note offering where we raised $300 million at a very attractive rate, we are well-positioned to continue to make thoughtful, impactful and strategic acquisitions and investments to drive growth in the years ahead. But we never can predict specific transactions, I can say we have an active and healthy pipeline and are optimistic about our opportunities to put funds to use towards accretive acquisitions going forward. Additionally, the changes in the tax law that lower tax rates are a significant tailwind. Niko will explain the various changes, but suffice to say we will be paying a much lower rate than has been the case historically. This enables higher cash flow that can be utilized by a number of ways, including reinvesting into the business and its employees and increasing profitability, all driving significant gains and shareholder value in the years ahead. Now, I'll turn it over to Niko to go deeper on the quarterly financials. Nicholas Lahanas - Central Garden & Pet Co.: Thank you, George. Good afternoon, everyone. We issued our first quarter press release of our financial results earlier today. I'd like to now give you more detail on the results. As George mentioned earlier, Central's EPS on a GAAP basis was $0.50 for first quarter up from $0.15 over the same period a year ago. Fiscal 2018 reflects a $16 million impact of the revaluation of our deferred tax accounts, necessitated by the change in federal tax law. Fiscal 2017 includes a $2 million sale of the distribution facility in the first quarter of last year. On a non-GAAP basis, excluding those two items, EPS was $0.19 versus $0.12 a year ago. There were numerous factors that play during the quarter that impacted the results. So, I'll take you through them and give you some color on what transpired. Our first quarter sales rose 5% versus prior year to $442 million, principally driven by acquisitions. Our K&H business as well as the one remaining non-organic month of Segrest. Organic growth was 1% in both our Garden and Pet businesses. As George mentioned earlier, we were up against some tough organic comps versus a year ago. Keep in mind that the first quarter is typically our lowest in terms of sales and while on plan, we do not expect the 1% organic growth to be indicative of what we expect for the year. Consolidated gross profit rose $11 million and our gross margin increased 100 basis points to 29.8%. Aided by cost savings and a positive impact from our K&H and Segrest acquisitions. SG&A expense for the quarter increased 9% or $9 million versus a year ago. And as a percent of sales, increased 70 basis points to 24.7%. Excluding the $2 million sale of the Garden distribution facility last year, SG&A as a percent of sales increased 20 basis points. Operating income for the quarter increased 13% to $23 million on higher revenue and gross margin expansion. On a non-GAAP basis, the increase was 26%. Operating margin of 5.1% was up 30 basis points or up 80 basis points on a non-GAAP basis benefiting from the higher gross margin. Turning now to the Pet segment. Pet segment sales for the quarter increased 7% or $21 million to $325 million. The company's latest acquisition Segrest and K&H made up the majority of the gain. Organic sales increased 1% with the higher sales of other manufactured products and behind the strength in our animal health, small animal, and dog and cat businesses, offsetting weaker wild bird feed and aquatics results. The other manufacturers' Pet distribution business gains can be attributed to the continued rollout of its enhanced business model of running a store within a store concept at one large retailer and by strong sales in the e-commerce channel. We also saw sizable increases in e-commerce sales in several of our other Pet businesses. Wild bird was negatively impacted by warmer and less severe weather in the first quarter versus a year ago while aquatics has been impacted by the weaker sales in the pet specialty channel. Pet segment operating income increased $3 million or 8% compared to the prior year. Strength in Animal Health and dog and cat was largely offset by weakness in aquatics and wild bird feed. Pet operating margin increased 10 basis points to 11.1% as an increase in gross margin was partially offset by facilities and warehouse costs incurred in ramping up our Pet distribution business to service the large retailer I mentioned earlier. Now turning to Garden. For the quarter, Garden segment sales increased 1% or $1 million to $117 million, all of which was organic. Controls and fertilizer products exhibited strength versus a year ago benefiting in part from shipments of new products and expanded distribution while wild bird feed declined, due in part to unfavorable weather. Garden's operating income declined slightly to $2 million from $3 million in the first quarter of last year due to facility sale a year ago. Excluding the facility sale, Garden operating income increased $2 million. Operating margin was down 30 basis points but rose 150 basis points from the prior year excluding the facility sale. Higher gross margins across all categories except wild bird drove the increase, benefiting from our cost savings initiatives. Moving back to our consolidated results, in the first quarter, other expense increased to $3 million from $1 million a year ago. We've mentioned in previous earnings calls that the results from this line may vary significantly quarter to quarter in part due to the seasonal nature of our largest JV investment. Net interest expense increased $383,000 to $7 million, primarily due to incremental interest expense on our new notes that we issued in December of 2017. We raised $300 million from the issuance of 10-year notes at an interest rate of 5.125%. We were happy to secure the funds at a very attractive cost of capital and be able to stagger our debt maturities across multiple years. We expect to utilize the funds for M&A opportunities. The tax rate for our first quarter was positively impacted by the revaluation of our deferred tax accounts, which were impacted significantly by the recent reduction in federal corporate tax rates. The revaluation resulted in a negative GAAP tax rate for this quarter, which certainly is not indicative of what we believe our tax rate will be going forward. On a non-GAAP basis, the rate for the quarter was 17.3%. This adjusted tax rate includes the reduction in the federal tax rate and the impact from the changes in the recent accounting standards around non-cash equity compensation expense. The impact of the latter is likely to vary quarter-to-quarter, depending among other things the market price of our stock and employee option exercise activity. So for fiscal year 2018, we expect our effective tax rate to be 25% or less on a non-GAAP basis, which excludes the impact of the deferred tax liabilities and accounts for three-fourths of a year at the new lower federal tax rates. Now looking at our balance sheet and cash flow statement. Cash at the end of the first quarter was $283 million, up from $7 million at the end of the first quarter last year. The increase reflects the proceeds of the debt offering I mentioned earlier. That offering also increased our total debt to $691 million from $395 million a year earlier. Our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was 3.3 times, compared to 2.1 times a year ago, well within our target range. We also had $330 million of availability on our credit line at the end of the quarter. For the quarter, cash flow used by operations was $24 million, up from $13 million in the first quarter a year ago due primarily to changes in working capital and after taking into account the increase in our net income for the quarter, which was offset by the non-cash effects of the impact of the tax reform act. CapEx was $8 million versus $13 million in the first quarter of 2017. The decrease is partly timing versus a year ago. And we still expect CapEx to be somewhere around $40 million for the year. Depreciation and amortization for the quarter was $11 million, up from $10 million a year ago primarily due to recent acquisitions. During the quarter, we did not repurchase any of our outstanding stock and approximately $35 million remains available under the board approved stock repurchase program. Now I'll turn it back over to George. George C. Roeth - Central Garden & Pet Co.: Thank you, Niko. I will attempt to take all the complexity of the changes this year and incorporate them into our thoughts on guidance for the year. We're revising our guidance up for fiscal year 2018, reflecting a number of factors that were not present in our previous guidance of $1.62 or higher provided last quarter. The largest factor in the revision is the change in the company's tax expense. We currently estimate our effective tax rate will be no higher than 25% for fiscal year 2018. This excludes the impact of the revaluation of our deferred tax accounts that very favorably impacted our tax rate in the first quarter. Additionally, the guidance reflects higher interest costs from the $300 million of fixed rate notes that we issued in December of 2017. Taking all these factors into consideration, in addition to the current results of our operations coming in-line with our expectations, we are increasing our guidance for EPS for fiscal 2018 to $1.85 or higher. The gain won't be evenly spread across all quarters, reflecting the lumpiness of growth versus the prior year we have been foreshadowing. Having said all that, we feel great about our start to the fiscal year, the added tailwinds. And we have confidence in the $1.85 or higher guidance we've put forward. Now we'll open up the lines to questions.