Lee Boyce
Analyst · Stephens Inc
Thank you, Alison, and good morning, everyone. Before I go through our Q3 performance, I want to remind everyone that we completed the sale of our North American snacks business on February 27, 2026. Accordingly, our reported and adjusted financial results contain the results of North American snacks in January and February, but not in March. When we speak about organic net sales, by definition, we exclude the results of North American snacks from the calculation, both in the current quarter as well as in the comparable period. When we talk about certain items, excluding snacks, we exclude the impact of North American snacks and TSA proceeds and assume removal of associated stranded costs. For the third quarter, we saw an organic net sales decline of 6% year-over-year, driven primarily by lower sales in the International segment. The decline in organic net sales reflects an 11-point decrease in volume mix and a 5-point increase in price. Adjusted gross margin was 21% in the third quarter. This represents an approximately 90 basis point decrease year-over-year, while improving by approximately 150 basis points sequentially. The year-over-year decrease was driven primarily by inflation and lower volume mix, partially offset by productivity savings and pricing. The sequential increase reflects the North American snacks divestiture as well as actions taken, including SKU simplification, more effective trade management, targeted pricing and productivity initiatives. SG&A decreased 6% year-over-year to $59 million in the third quarter, primarily driven by a reduction in employee-related expenses. SG&A represented 17.5% of net sales for the quarter as compared to 16.1% in the year ago period. SG&A stranded costs less the impact of mitigation actions and TSA proceeds were negligible in the quarter. As Alison mentioned, we are making good progress in the elimination of stranded costs, which are now expected to be in the high end of the $20 million to $25 million range. We've already initiated actions to remove nearly 70%, primarily people-related costs, which we were able to implement quickly. The remaining costs will be reduced through fiscal 2027, with roughly half coming out by the end of Q2 and the remainder by the end of Q4. In the near term, our transition services agreement, or TSA, is generating proceeds from providing ongoing support to the recently divested snacks business. Together with actions taken to date, this has essentially eliminated any near-term stranded cost impact. We are nearly finished with our restructuring program to date, having taken $108 million in charges associated with the transformation program, excluding inventory write-downs, out of an expected charges of $115 million to $125 million. We remain on track to deliver the targeted $130 million to $150 million in benefits through fiscal 2027. Interest expense rose 17% year-over-year to $14 million in the quarter, primarily driven by higher spreads over variable rates due to last year's refinancing as well as increased amortization of deferred financing fees related to the credit agreement amendment and repayment of term loans using proceeds from the snacks divestiture. We have hedged our rate exposure of more than 70% of our loan facility with fixed rate of 7.1%. We continue to prioritize reducing net debt over time. Adjusted net loss, which excludes the effect of restructuring charges amongst other items, was $1 million in the quarter, or $0.01 per diluted share as compared to adjusted net income of $6 million or $0.07 per diluted share in the prior year period. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $26 million in the third quarter compared to $34 million a year ago. The decrease was driven primarily by lower gross margins partially offset by a reduction in SG&A. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 7.8%, demonstrating sequential improvement from 6.3% in the second quarter. Turning now to our individual reporting segments. In North America, organic net sales declined 3% year-over-year, primarily driven by lower sales in Baby & Kids, partially offset by growth in Beverages. As Alison mentioned, the core is relatively healthy with growth in tea, yogurt and Earth's Best finger food and cereal. Excluding country brands, which consist of oil, nut butter and soup brands, organic net sales in North America would have grown 3%. Third quarter adjusted gross margin in North America was 23.4%, an increase of 100 basis points versus the prior year period. The increase was driven primarily by productivity savings and pricing, partially offset by lower volume mix and cost inflation. Excluding snacks, gross margin would have been 30% in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA in North America was $17 million or 10% of net sales, reflecting a decrease of 1% from the year ago period. The decrease resulted primarily from lower volume mix and cost inflation, nearly offset by SG&A reduction, pricing and productivity savings. Excluding snacks, adjusted EBITDA margin would have been 16.4% in the quarter, demonstrating the strength of the go-forward margin profile in North America. In our International business, organic net sales declined 8% in the quarter, primarily driven by lower sales in Meal Prep and Baby & Kids. International adjusted gross margin was 18.5% and a 270 basis point decrease versus the prior year period. The decrease was driven primarily by cost inflation, partially offset by productivity savings and pricing. Adjusted EBITDA was $20 million or 11.7% of net sales, reflecting a decrease of 12% compared to the prior year period. The decrease resulted primarily from cost inflation and lower volume mix, partially offset by productivity savings and pricing. Now turning to category performance. In Baby & Kids, organic net sales were down 14% year-over-year, driven primarily by continued industry-wide volume softness in purees in the U.K., as well as by purees and formula in North America, partially offset by growth in finger foods in both regions and cereal in North America. In terms of consumption, we have continued to see strength in Earth's Best finger foods and cereal in North America, with each showing dollar sales growth of mid- to high single digits year-over-year. Ella's Kitchen finger food also saw value sales growth of low single digits year-over-year. And while still in decline, we are seeing signs of stabilization in the wet baby food category in the U.K. and expect to see improvement as we begin to lap the industry-wide declines in May. In the Beverages category, organic net sales were flat year-over-year as growth in tea in North America and private label nondairy beverages in international was offset by a decline in branded non-dairy beverage. We expect branded non-dairy beverage trends to improve in Q4 as we roll out significant innovation, including clean label and protein offerings. In Meal Prep, organic net sales were down 5% year-over-year. The decline was driven primarily by pantry brands in North America, spreads and drizzles in the U.K., partially offset by strength in yogurt in North America. [Greek God] continue to outpace the category, growing dollar and unit sales by high teens and low 20s percent, respectively, and gaining share. Our SKU simplification efforts in our pantry brands had approximately a negative 1 point impact on Meal Prep organic net sales in the quarter, though these efforts are driving a more productive assortment that positions the business for stronger margin performance over time. Following the sale of the North American snacks business, the snacks category is comprised of [indiscernible] in the International segment. Organic net sales in snacks were down 7% year-over-year. Hartley's remains the #1 brand in Jelly pops, and we expect the category to recover as consumers continue to prioritize healthy snacking, and we bring meaningful new innovation. Further, we are launching upgraded [four] jelly SKUs in Q1 with the cleaner ingredient list and the new look and category-leading innovation with our new protein collagen jelly, offering 10 grams of protein. Shifting to cash flow and the balance sheet. As Alison mentioned, we had a strong cash delivery in the quarter. Free cash flow in the third quarter was $35 million, an increase compared to the outflow of $2 million in the year ago period. The improvement was primarily driven by inventory delivery, improved accounts receivable collections and insurance proceeds, partially offset by lower benefits from accounts payable and accrued expenses. We are pleased with the progress we made on inventory, driven by improved operating discipline. Inventory continues to be an area of focus for fiscal 2026. Days inventory outstanding improved to 73 days in the quarter to our lowest level in 2 years. This compared to 75 days in Q2 2026 and 79 days in the prior year period. As a reminder, every day of inventory is worth approximately $3.5 million. We also made progress in our days payable outstanding with days payable outstanding of 59 days in the quarter, an improvement from 57 days in Q2 2026, but down from 61 days in the year ago period. CapEx of $4 million in the quarter was down from $7 million in the prior year period. We expect capital expenditures to be approximately $20 million for fiscal 2026. The completion of the North American snack sale and cash generation this quarter brought cash on hand to $44 million and net debt to $505 million, a reduction of $145 million since the beginning of the fiscal year. We also have $196 million of available liquidity under our revolver and remain in compliance with all credit agreement covenants. With leverage of 4.3x in the quarter, we have plenty of headroom under the covenant of 5.5x. We have a disciplined approach to capital management and continue to prioritize debt reduction. We have reduced net debt by $272 million over the last 11 quarters. We are proactively addressing our December maturity. Our strategic review yielded a multistage plan aimed at materially improving liquidity and leverage, while creating value for shareholders. The sale of the North American Snacks business was an important first step. As we continue to execute the next phases of this plan, we are advancing additional actions, including further asset sales and operational improvements. We remain actively engaged with our lenders while we evaluate potential strategic transactions. We continue to believe that aligning the maturity solution timing with the execution of the strategic plan will enable us to achieve the strongest long-term outcome for the company and for shareholders. We are confident that we will be able to refinance, extend or repay our debt prior to maturity. Turning now to our outlook. As previously communicated, we are not providing numeric guidance on fiscal 2026 operating results given the uncertainty around the outcome and timing of the completion of our strategic review. Looking ahead, we expect the divestiture of North American snacks to be gross margin and EBITDA accretive, and the profile of the go-forward North American portfolio to have gross margin above 30% and EBITDA margin in the low double digits. For fiscal 2026, we continue to expect positive free cash flow for the full year. While it's too early to provide guidance on fiscal 2027, I did want to provide a little bit of context. In fiscal 2027, our fundamental priorities will be continuing to stabilize as through our five actions to win, thereby setting the foundation for future growth, driving gross and EBITDA margin improvement versus fiscal 2026, generating cash and eliminating stranded costs. Upon completion of our strategic review, we plan to provide guidance for fiscal 2027. Now I'll turn the call back to Alison for some closing remarks.