Jonathan Sinclair
Analyst · TD Cowen
Thank you, Dani, and good morning, everyone. Today, I shall be comparing the fourth quarter ended April 2, 2023 with the prior year quarter, which ended on April 3, 2022, unless I say otherwise. Overall, we were very happy with our results for the quarter. They were largely as expected and notably, we closed out the year with some excellent momentum in our Asia Pacific and EMEA regions. As anticipated and indicated with the Q3 results, the United States was somewhat softer with a tougher macroeconomic backdrop. Although still early days in a smaller quarter for us, we're encouraged by the momentum that we have seen across all regions in the first quarter to date. I'll go into a bit more detail here shortly. But first, some more color on Q4. Total revenue grew 31.4% to $293.2 million in the fourth quarter. DTC revenue increased 22.6%, driven by new stores as well as solid performance overall from existing stores. We ended fiscal 2023 with 51 permanent stores compared to 41 permanent stores at the end of fiscal 2022. DTC Comparable sales grew 6.9% and 3.3% excluding Mainland China. And that was driven by growth within the existing store network more than offsetting e-commerce business as consumers return to experiential shopping. As Dani mentioned, we have plans to execute on a number of initiatives, many of which are digitally enabled, and that should help position us well to further enhance store productivity and e-commerce performance in the not-so-distant future. Wholesale revenue grew 30.4% in the fourth quarter on timing of shipments delayed from Q3 as well as higher order book values compared to the prior year quarter. Revenue from the Other segment was $20.2 million compared to $2.6 million in the prior year quarter, primarily due to higher product availability to employees, friends and family. Now for performance by geography. In North America, revenue grew 41.2% in Canada, and that was partially offset by a small decline of 4.5% in the U.S. Asia Pacific revenue increased 65.4% without the disruptions from COVID-19 restrictions that existed in the comparative quarter. EMEA revenue grew 27.3% with strong growth across all channels. Turning to our profit metrics. Gross profit increased to $36.2 million, primarily due to higher revenue, partially offset by our gross margin decline. Gross margin of 64.9% was impacted by an increase in the obsolete raw material provision as we evolve the materials to be used in production. Gross margin was also impacted by higher product costs, resulting from input cost inflation, albeit that, that was offset by pricing and the impact of the fair value adjustment for inventory acquired through the Japan joint venture. DTC and wholesale gross margins were 73.3% and 35.6%, respectively. Our full year DTC and wholesale gross margins landed at 76.3% and 49.7%, respectively, as we expected. Operating income increased largely due to higher gross profit. That increase was partially offset by higher operating costs, and they related to increased headcount, our larger store network, higher consulting fees in support of our strategic initiatives, including the transformation program as well as costs associated with the Japan joint venture. Our adjusted EBIT increased to $27.6 million, primarily due to the higher gross profit and partially offset by higher operating costs, as I've just described in respect of the team, the store network and the operation of the Japan joint venture. Net loss was higher than the comparative quarter, primarily due to higher net interest, finance and other costs as well as the income tax expense, and that was partly offset by higher operating income. Adjusted net income increased from the prior year quarter due to the higher operating income offset by higher income tax expense. Now turning to the balance sheet. Inventory of $472.6 million compared to $393.3 million in the prior year quarter. Japan represented around $19.2 million of the inventory balance at the quarter end, and therefore, represented around 1/4 of the growth. Higher inventory levels are attributable to lower-than-expected sales in the Asia Pacific region for most of fiscal 2023. As we said at Investor Day, we are focused on improving working capital and inventory turnover. However, we remain comfortable with finished goods inventory levels as the inventory composition continues to skew the high-margin evergreen finished goods. And raw material inventory levels were down 15% from the prior year. We ended Q4 with cash returns of $286.5 million compared to $287.7 million at the end of the comparative quarter. Net debt, including capitalized leases, was $468.1 million compared to $333.8 million at the end of the prior year quarter. We're very comfortable with net debt leverage of 1.7x adjusted EBITDA at the end of the quarter. The increase in net debt was primarily due to increased lease liabilities on retail expansion as well as, of course, as the financing needs of the Japan joint venture. During the quarter, we repurchased a little over 407,000 subordinate voting shares for a total cash consideration of $10 million. Now turning to our outlook. We expect fiscal '24 revenue to be between $1.4 billion and $1.5 billion. This assumes that the macroeconomic environment does not worsen in any of our geographies. DTC revenue is anticipated to drive this growth and comprise mid- to high 70s as a percent of total revenue through the addition of new stores and stronger comparable sales growth. We're targeting 16 permanent retail stores and for them to be fully operational in the second half of the year. Approximately half are slated to open in Asia Pacific, with the vast majority of the remainder concentrated in the U.S. This assumes DTC comparable sales growth in the mid-single digits to mid-teens, excluding Mainland China, comparable sales growth is assumed in the negative low single to high single digits. Including expected revenue from our new travel retail channel, we assume a 6% wholesale revenue decline as we focus on expanding our retail store network as well as our ongoing editing and upgrading of wholesale partners. We expect our wholesale door count to decline approximately 6%, leaving it at around 60% of the size of the network at the time of our IPO. The challenges wholesale faces are sector-wide. And hence, we have, as always, manage the demand and continue to supply less than we are asked to keep the channel healthy and clean. This also gives us a space and opportunity to lean further into our DTC expansion where it creates further scope for margin expansion. We expect the percentage of revenue generated across the quarters to follow a similar patent to fiscal 2023. In Q1, at 5%; Q2, at 20%; half the business in Q3 and the rest in Q4. This is anticipated to change in the next few years as we create new and expand existing categories for more all-season relevance. But I will say we are very familiar with and adjusted to the current shape of the revenue split. We assume consolidated gross margin will be in the high 60s as a percentage of total revenue, with DTC and wholesale gross margins remaining stable in the high 70s and mid- to high 40s, respectively. Moving to profitability. We expect adjusted EBIT of $210 million to $240 million for a margin of 15% to 16%. In fiscal '24, we plan to invest in talent, technology and of course, in our store network as we accelerate the expansion of our retail footprint. Flowing through, we expect adjusted EPS per diluted share of $1.20 to $1.48. And that assumes an effective tax rate in the low 20s as a percentage of income before tax. We assume weighted average diluted the of $106.3 million, and we do not consider any incremental share buyback activity. As you'll recall, we recently launched the transformation program as we first introduced it at our Investor Day in February. This is a multiphase, multiyear program intended on achieving meaningful change for the business. which is right at the beginning of its journey. It spans stores, sourcing, products, organization, marketing and technology and is thus far reaching in its scope. We expect it will contribute gradually and increasingly to our margin journey. Consistent with the $150 million goal we outlined in February. Now we are 2 months into our program. And therefore, at this stage, we're about setting ourselves up with the work on each stream. So it's a bit too soon to include any benefits in our fiscal '24 outlook. As we progress, we expect to incur a number of onetime costs associated with external support and other implementation costs. Lastly, I will cover our outlook for the first quarter. We expect total revenue of $70 million to $80 million, adjusted EBIT loss of $115 million to $105 million, and that flows down to an adjusted net loss per basic share of $0.89 to $0.82. Now to give the top line some context, while wholesale is expected to be lower overall, we're working with our wholesale partners on product timing and expect some shift will occur from Q1 into Q2. However, the key point here is that DTC revenue growth is expected to be strong with comparable growth in the high teens to low 20s. I can underscore our confidence in this regard. Even this is a smaller quarter, we are pleased to see encouraging momentum in our DTC networks across all regions in quarter 1 as of Sunday night. Of particular note, Asia Pacific DTC comparable sales growth has just entered triple digits, granted that this is against easier comps, but we believe that there is no question that it signals brand strength and a good likelihood of sustained momentum as the region enjoys the full retail experience free from restrictions. Despite a tougher macroeconomic backdrop in the U.S., our new stores have still managed to approach or exceed our sales-sensitive targets. More stores to come here this year as we are significantly underpenetrated, and we have so much demand to cover. We have seen EMEA retail progress meaningfully. We look forward to seeing these stores further establish their presence. You heard us talk about our confidence and ambition in February for this business. This year is step 1 of our plan, and we are so excited for the year ahead and beyond. There is no shortage of opportunities we plan to seize and we're ready. We're focused on executing on our strategic pillars, on our luxury brand positioning and on implementing our transformation program to generate profitable growth consistent with the goals we set. And with that, I'll pass it over to the operator to begin Q&A.