Jason Potter
Analyst · Wells Fargo
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call. In the first quarter, we delivered results in line with our guidance as our work to strengthen the business gain traction. We reported Q1 revenue of $1.17 billion, up 3.6% with comparable store sales down 1%, slightly ahead of our outlook for a decline of minus 2.5% and negative 1.5%. Traffic remained positive, up approximately 2%, with consistent improvement throughout the quarter. This was offset by continued basket pressure from lower units per transaction. Gross margin of 29.6% was also within our outlook range and included a 50 basis point impact related to our previously announced store closures. Adjusted EBITDA of $43.1 million came in at the top end of our range, while adjusted EPS of $0.05 was $0.01 above the guidance range we shared in March. As I mentioned, performance improved as the quarter progressed, with traffic strengthening each month and exiting March at a meaningful higher rate than at the start of the quarter. In the month of March, weekly traffic grew in the range of 2% to 5% year-to-year, reaffirming that our value-oriented product offering continues to resonate with consumers. While we're encouraged by the progress we're beginning to see, we're not satisfied with our current level of performance and are focused on the work we have in front of us. As we said in March, we entered 2026 with a clear agenda, restore what makes this brand special, tighten execution where we've fallen short and improve returns. That work is well underway, and while it's still early, the traction we see reinforces our conviction that we are taking the right actions. Grocery Outlet has meaningful strengths, a differentiated model, a highly relevant value proposition, strong independent operators and a format that resonates when we execute well. Our focus is on translating those strengths into a more consistent performance. Our work to achieve this center is on improving comp store performance while continuing to advance important strategic initiatives that deliver stronger long-term growth and profitability. Restoring customer value perception. Let me start with customer value perception because that's where our work begins. Our job right now is to make Grocery Outlet a more compelling choice for the customer. In this environment, value matters more than ever. We must make that value visible, consistent, exciting and easy to shop. We executed on that in several ways during this last quarter. First and most importantly, we've made meaningful strides to increase the mix of branded opportunistic products in our stores. Our best opportunistic deals offer savings up to 70% versus conventional retailers. These savings when paired with the excitement of a treasure hunt experience, provide a compelling experience that our customers love. Since the start of the year, we've increased our opportunistic mix by nearly 2 percentage points with meaningful improvement across inventory, shipments, variety and sales. We've made meaningful progress improving our sourcing, increasing product visibility and helping operators further differentiate their stores. That works included upgrading systems and reporting, expanding supplier outreach, shortening delivery times, testing short-dated offerings and engaging suppliers more directly at the leadership level. These efforts enabled us to move quickly in Q1 on excess inventory from several top-selling brands, delivering significant savings for customers while creating high margin, high volume opportunities for us and our operators. Second, we invested in reshaping value perception. As we work to improve the impact of our opportunistic supply, the near-term synthetic promotional support we're providing is driving customers into our stores. It's been especially effective around high-traffic occasions like this year's Super Bowl and Easter where event-driven promotions helped drive meaningful traffic gains. This is an important first step in restoring comp performance as the momentum from our improving opportunistic product mix begins to translate into stronger transaction trends. Through the first quarter, we received positive feedback from both customers and our IOs. And as we invest, we're managing the impact on gross margins through disciplined promotional targeting and our ongoing focus on improving our mix. We continue to expect these investments to be in the range of $20 million for this year. Third, we're sharpening our value messaging through our extreme value campaign. This work is focused on making our value proposition unmistakable, highlighting the significant savings customers can find on branded products often at meaningful discounts to conventional retailers and reinforcing the excitement of the treasure hunt experience that defines Grocery Outlet. To support this, we're driving awareness through targeted at home and digital campaigns that bring our deals and product discovery to life. In market, we're focused on awareness-based media, in-store, we're simplifying signage and elevating key value items to make savings more visible, easier to navigate and more compelling at the shelf. Together, these 3 initiatives with a singular focus of improving value are beginning to drive a meaningful positive customer response, reflected in improving sales, improving traffic trends, Net Promoter Score and survey data while reinforcing one another. Though there's much to do to restore comp performance, the trends we're seeing in traffic are consistent with the initial stages of stabilization that we would expect at this point. Improving the in-store experience. We also continue to improve the in-store experience to support stronger store level performance across our fleet. One of the most important of these initiatives is our store refresh program. And in the first quarter, we completed 34. As of today, we've completed 58 stores in total. These refreshed stores are benefiting from improvements in layout, signage and merchandising to make the shopping trip easier and reinforce value more clearly. We continue to receive positive feedback from both customers and operators, and we are confident that improving the customer in-store experience is the right step for Grocery Outlet and that it will become an important lever over time. The impact of our value restoration initiatives in Q1 reinforces our conviction that an all hands on deck focused on executing our opportunistic engine is the fastest and most effective path to improving results across the business. With a clear path to deliver on that objective, the results that support that focus, we're prioritizing our initial resources on that work. That requires deliberate choices about how we execute our other priorities this year, including taking a more measured pace on our store refresh program. We will continue to invest in these longer-term improvements to our stores while maintaining a near-term focus on driving comp sales through opportunistic initiatives that I've discussed. As we balance our resources around these efforts, we now expect to complete approximately 100 store refreshes by year-end. This sharper focus will reduce distractions and help us return comp growth as quickly as possible. Supporting independent operators. Independent operators are central to restoring our performance, and they've been clear about what they need, better analytical tools, more actionable insight greater visibility into what is working across the system. And that's exactly what we're focused on delivering. In Q1, we made meaningful progress. During the quarter, we held regional forums to share best practices across operators. We enhanced benchmarking capabilities and expanded the functionality of our real-time order guide. We also streamlined commercial communications to help operators simplify execution at store level. Importantly, we also launched a new annual business review, or ABR, process across our entire store base. This process benchmarks each store against top quartile peers with similar market characteristics and sales volumes. Then translates those performance gaps into clear profit opportunities for our operators to pursue. For each store, we can now help operators quantify the potential opportunity across sales mix, shrink and other important operating expenses while enabling operators to track progress against those opportunities over time. Just as importantly, we pair these insights with best practice recommendations and field support to help operators realize those improvements. While company-wide margin performance in Q1 was impacted by strategic promotional investments as well as inventory liquidations associated with our store closures, we're encouraged by the underlying operational trends we're seeing at store level. Operators saw encouraging trends in profitability during the quarter, driven primarily by better shrink performance. If these Q1 improvements are sustained through the balance of the year, they could translate into meaningful incremental annual operator income per store. Over time, improvements like these create meaningful upside for Grocery Outlet through stronger gross profit performance across the system. Our ABR process encourages accountability while giving operators a practical road map to improve their business, supported by quarterly reviews and ongoing field partnership. And we believe that as operators see benefits from these enhanced analytical tools, engagement with the key company initiatives will also improve. When operators have the right tools, visibility and support to execute effectively, the customer experience improves, store performance improves, operator economics strengthen and the overall business should become more productive and resilient. Optimizing the store base and strengthening returns. As I mentioned earlier, we continue to drive our key strategic objectives as we work to restore comp performance. Among our most important objectives are optimizing the store base and improving our returns. As we outlined in March, we are closing 36 underperforming stores this year. These closures are now complete and have improved fleet quality and will strengthen the earnings profile of the business over time. Based on the progress we've achieved to date, we continue to expect adjusted EBITDA improvement of approximately $12 million at the conclusion of our restructuring on an annual run rate basis. We've also tightened our approach to new store growth. We continue to believe that there is substantial white space ahead for Grocery Outlet, but growth must be disciplined, productive and supported by the right economics. That means being more selective on real estate, applying rigorous underwriting and holding ourselves to high standards on capital returns. This approach would position us to grow from a stronger foundation and create more value over time. We are focused not just on growing but growing in a sustainable way. Finally, as we noted in March, we're continuing to explore strategic options for UGO and we'll provide updates when we have more to share. Securing top talent. Having the right strategy is critical to our success, so Is having the right talent to execute it. We recently welcomed Jim Porterfield as our next Chief Marketing Officer. Jim brings more than 30 years of brand leadership and consumer insight experience to Grocery Outlet. Jim previously served as Chief Marketing Officer at Pinsight Media and as a Senior Vice President at Bernstein-Rein Advertising before founding his own firm, Meaningful Works. Most recently, he's advised several well-known retail and restaurant brands, including Grocery Outlet. Jim's experience, strategic judgment and passion for building strong brands make him the right leader to help advance our strategy and strengthen Grocery Outlet's position as one of America's most loved brands. Securing top talent is also a priority at our Board level. In April, we added 2 exceptional independent directors. Frances Allen brings over 40 years of consumer and food industry expertise across brand strategy, marketing, franchising, technology and operations. Felicia Thornton brings more than 30 years of executive leadership across grocery retail, specialty retail, with deep expertise in corporate finance, strategic growth and operational restructuring and governance. Both new members have highly relevant experience that will help our efforts to strengthen execution and reinforce Grocery Outlet's long-standing leadership in value. Finally, in closing, when taken together, we believe that our near-term actions and continued execution against our strategic priorities position us for improved performance. While we still have work ahead, we're making solid progress that's beginning to be reflected in the business. We're executing our plan, improving consistency and building a more durable foundation. I'm confident that the work underway will position Grocery Outlet to become a stronger, more productive and more profitable business for many years to come. I want to thank our independent operators, our team members and our supply partners for their hard work and their commitment. I'd also like to thank our shareholders for your continued support as we move the business forward with focus and attention. I'll now turn it over to Chris to walk through the quarter and the financials in more detail. Thank you.