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Haverty Furniture Companies, Inc. (HVT)

Q1 2016 Earnings Call· Tue, May 3, 2016

$22.40

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day and welcome to the Haverty's First Quarter 2016 Financial Results Conference Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time I would like to turn the conference over to Mr. Dennis Fink, Executive Vice President and CFO. Please go ahead, sir.

Dennis Fink

Management

Thank you, George. Good morning everybody. During this conference call, we will make forward-looking statements which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those made or implied in such statements, which speak only as of the date they are made and in which we undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise. Factors that could cause actual results to differ, include economic and competitive conditions and other uncertainties detailed in the company's reports filed with the SEC. Our President, CEO and Chairman, Clarence Smith, will now give you an update on our results and our direction. Clarence?

Clarence Smith

Management

Thanks for joining our 2016 first quarter conference call. As we previously reported, net sales increased 1.7% to $194.5 million, with comparable store sales up 0.9%. Our written sales were down 1.3% and written comparable sales down 2.2%. Our net earnings were $4.67 million, compared to $6.1 million last year, or $0.21 per share versus $0.27. SG&A dollars for the first quarter increased $4.1 million compared with the same period last year. These were related to additional advertising, particularly in digital and direct mail and selling expenses related to our H Design program and increased occupancy and depreciation, relating to our upgrades and new stores over the past 20 plus months. We are pleased with the recent sales increase so far in the second quarter, with April comparable delivered sales up 4.5% and written sales up 4.1% after adjusting for the Easter holiday. We feel that many of the investments we have made in our H Design program, our store upgrades and higher quality merchandise, aligned with our target marketing, is gaining traction. For the second quarter to-date, we have seen a higher closing rate on flat traffic. We were encouraged by the recent performance and hope the trends continue in the months ahead. We are investing approximately $33 million this year in CapEx, with almost half related to IT systems and hardware upgrades and a major expansion of our Lakeland, Florida distribution center opening this summer. The distribution center experience will allow us to import more product directly to Florida, bypassing our North Georgia distribution center, which has been the main storage facility for that state. This will help us reduce incoming freight cost, especially from Asia, and allow us to serve our 25 stores in the growing Florida markets, with specific coastal style merchandise much faster. We are…

Dennis Fink

Management

Thank you, Clarence. We covered our financial highlights in last night's earnings press release. I will touch on a few of those points now, before we open up the call to your questions. We customarily give guidance for expected gross margin and SG&A expenses for the current year, within each of our earnings releases. We don't publicize any sales forecast. But, we do announce our actual sales within a few days after each quarter end and then disclose how sales within each quarter to-date are trending, when we announce our quarterly earnings. Our total SG&A expenses for the first quarter of 2016 increased $4.1 million compared to the prior year. Selling costs increased $800,000 in 2016 over last year, due mainly to greater sales commissions and salaries. Occupancy expenses rose $800,000, primarily due to increases in depreciation and other costs, associated with the previous year's [ph] versus last year. Advertising and marketing expenses, as Clarence mentioned, were up $1.2 million. Our admin costs are $600,000 higher than a year ago, primarily from higher -- tight interim expenses, amortization in [indiscernible] has been partially offset by lower non-equity incentive comp. More employees have group medical coverage this year and newer prescription drugs and newer expenses -- the company has had stock loss, insurance coverage on our self-funded health plans, both on an individual claimant basis, and on an aggregate basis. Fixed and discretionary expenses for Q1 were $61.1 million compared to $57.9 million in first quarter of 2015. The increases in the rest of the year will be the largest in the second quarter and should be smaller increases in the third and fourth quarter and the guidance for the year has remained the same, as previously announced in February, and that is that $251 million for the year of these…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And our first question comes from Budd Bugatch with Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

Good morning Clarence. Good morning Dennis. Sorry you had those technical difficulties. I guess, Dennis, thank you for all the color on the cost side of the equation and some on the interruptions in sales. I am curious though to get a feel for how to think about sales and revenues going forward? You had to compare against some pretty substantial issues, including Texas, a couple of issues in Texas and building some new stores that probably wanted maturity when they started. Can you give us a feel as to how sales might progress from here? It seems like you -- well I will let you talk as opposed to mine.

Clarence Smith

Management

Well I think Budd, we feel pretty good about things, after we have seen in the start of this quarter. Texas has been a drag on us, with the oil issue, as well as the competitor issue in Dallas. I was telling Dennis earlier, I think your predictions that with us, a year and a half, two years ago, are pretty true. We were down double digit in Dallas, when the new competitor came in, but we are now positive. So we are now anniversarying that. I think that Texas or Dallas specifically is going to be a positive for us for the rest of the year and going forward. Texas, with the oil issue, was another factor. I mean, that is definitely a drag. But it isn't going to be the drag that it was the last six to nine months, in my mind, because I think it will start to level off. But that was the main issue, last year, as you know, was Texas. That was the real headwind that we had to take on, and I think that's more behind us. We feel better about it. And I have mentioned, that we have got a number of things that we feel pretty good about, investments that we have made that haven't yet started to pay off, particularly South Florida. We are very pleased with our new position down there, and it's just now starting to make sense for us, as far as profitability. So we feel better about things right now.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

And -- that's what I was getting to, the second question was on those new stores. They are coming along. Where are they on the maturity curve? When do they reach profitability? Have they all reached profitability yet?

Clarence Smith

Management

We did a lot of investment, not only in new stores, but a significant investment in rebuilding and remodeling existing stores, where we'd spend up to $3 million to $3.5 million redoing some of those. Those remodels, relocations have been very good for us. Most of them are profitable immediately, and kicking in immediately like we rebuilt a Lakeland store that's immediately accretive, so is our Greenville store; and the Winston, Salem, the relocation there has been immediately good. The position down in South Florida, those were three -- we took over a major player down there, as you know, and remodeled those. We are still gaining traction there. We are not yet where we want to be, but I think by the middle -- the end of this year, we will be positioned, where we are making the money we expected, in this period of time, and we feel good about that. Some of our other stores in Florida have been good, that we opened the Kissimmee store in Orlando was a really good store for us. The Texas stores we opened have not done quite what we wanted. But I think as we talked, I think they will start to come back. It usually takes two to three years for these to reach some kind of maturity. Some stores do faster than that, but it usually takes that kind of time.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

Okay. Couple of other questions; can you talk a little bit about the character of sales, what's selling, what's not? We have seen -- you did call out dining room and special order upholstery. I didn't read anything about mattresses or bedding and maybe bedroom and other parts of that, and are you seeing a [indiscernible]?

Clarence Smith

Management

About mattresses, we are in the middle as most of the industry is, carrying these name brands in the middle of a major bedding swap-out which took place in March and April. We now have those positions on our floor. Almost all of the vendors changed their line-up, and it was very disruptive for the stores. And in the first quarter, we were down in bedding and mattress sales. There was no particular trends amongst the individual vendors. I will say that, the second quarter to-date, we are up double digit. We feel good about it. We like the program, we like the line-up. Inner Spring is strong at this particular, a little different than what we have seen in the past. But the inner spring is doing really well for us. So we feel good about our line-up. We have made some significant changes, a lot of them, because the vendors made us do that, but we also have a new product mix and we are happy with it.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

Okay. And finally for me, the Lakeland DC rebuild to improve freight, any thought as to what that might be to the overall gross margin and is there any way to characterize what that could be in basis points, or how do we think about that, Clarence?

Clarence Smith

Management

I don't think we know yet. Now, we are going to have higher operating expenses and we believe the sales and freight will be more than enough to start generating the payback. But the exact numbers, not able to share right now.

Dennis Fink

Management

Well also, it comes to two different categories, one is in --

Clarence Smith

Management

Yeah, one is in gross profit and operating expenses, that's part of our increase in operating expenses this year.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

Okay.

Dennis Fink

Management

We think it's an important move, as I commented on for serving our Florida customer and our growth down there. It just doesn't make a lot of sense, as much as we are importing today, to bring everything through Braselton to Lakeland. Now we can bring it directly to Lakeland and serve the customer quicker.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

And I am going to sneak one other; you talked about South Florida. We have heard all those talk about South Florida being impacted by currency issues for South America and that customer, who may find it less attractive to make as many trips up to South Florida as they have been over the last three or four years. Are you seeing any of that impact, or can you see that --

Clarence Smith

Management

Well, we don't ship much to South America. However, I will say that there were and have been a lot of South Americans who come to -- let's just say specifically, not South Florida, but Orlando. They like Orlando, they like Central Florida, and buy a condo and want to furnish it. And that has softened significantly. So I would say that, the valuations and the currency issues has affected some of our clientele. We are not major exporters, but certainly, I think it has affected that clientele, who is the better customer.

Budd Bugatch

Analyst

Okay. Thank you very much. Good luck on the second quarter and the balance of the year.

Clarence Smith

Management

Thank you, Budd.

Dennis Fink

Management

Thanks Budd.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Brad Thomas with KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Brad Thomas

Analyst · KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Thank you and good morning Clarence and Dennis.

Clarence Smith

Management

Good morning Brad.

Brad Thomas

Analyst · KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Just a follow-up on some of the earlier questions from Budd. Just as we think about the most recent April results here, how much of the improvements is coming from Texas and lapping some easier comparisons in Dallas, versus what you are seeing across the balance of the chain?

Clarence Smith

Management

Well in order to get the increases we have been seeing, it's pretty balanced. Certainly, when we had a negative in Texas, let's just specifically say Dallas and that's a positive, that's a nice improvement. It was just such a drag, that it's now a positive, and that's major. I don't know about the factor there, Dennis, do you want to comment on that, about how much that impacted?

Dennis Fink

Management

Well it is -- Brad, well as you know, the soft open in March and then a grand opening, two months later. So we are kind of comparing against the soft opening right now. But in May -- starting this month, May, we will gauge whether or not we can get back and gain some back from the market. But it's to be seen. I mean, it’s a competitive environment and let's see how we do.

Brad Thomas

Analyst · KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Got you. And maybe, can you talk a little bit about your level of promotional activity, and maybe what's working and what's not and your likelihood to get more promotional or less promotional going forward?

Clarence Smith

Management

I don't see us changing significantly from what we have done in the past. But, we are not going to be known as a discounter. We are talking about our brand. We are more specific in our pricing of what we put out there, and not only in print, but on television. We are letting people know about our values a little bit more. But I don't think you are going to see, that we would be more promotional. Our advertising mix is a little different. We are doing more digital advertising now, more direct mail. We are still a major television advertiser. But I don't see us changing significantly from the last couple of years.

Brad Thomas

Analyst · KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Great. And then just on the topic of backlogs and out of stocks; it sounds like you have made real progress in delivering merchandise faster to the customer. Where does the backlog stand today, and how are you thinking about how the delivered comps or sales end up tracking, relative to your sales over the next couple of quarters?

Dennis Fink

Management

The backlog is roughly $3 million lower than it was a year ago. And we are able to deliver faster. I hope that continues. We [indiscernible] too. We got an inventory that's good stock and the best sellers and they are responding faster, and also we are moving special orders through them. So you'd like to keep your backlog as small as you can and push through it. But we have had better delivery sales last five, six months, seven months, than we had written and finally in April, that looks like a percentage increase and returns a little better than delivery. So if we are really relying on the backlog, we will be going into the next couple of months a little weaker, but we are able to continue to turn the orders out, it won't be an issue, and in fact, it will be a positive for service and sales growth.

Brad Thomas

Analyst · KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Very helpful. Well good luck keeping up the strong momentum here to the second quarter.

Clarence Smith

Management

Thank you, Brad.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And I am showing no further questions. I will turn the call back for any closing remarks.

Dennis Fink

Management

Thank you so much for joining us on our call. We appreciate your support of Haverty's.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.