Jorge Alejandro Pereda
Analyst · Barclays
Thank you, Filipe. Good morning, and welcome to this conference call to review our first quarter 2026 results. Before we begin, let me remind all participants that today's conference call may include forward-looking statements that should be considered as good faith estimates made by the company. These forward-looking statements reflect management's expectations and are based upon currently available data. The actual results are subject to future events and uncertainties that can materially impact the company's performance. For additional details, please refer to the full disclaimer in the earnings release that was published earlier today. I am joined this morning by Ian Craig, our Chief Executive Officer; and Gerardo Cruz, our Chief Financial Officer. After prepared remarks, we will open the call for Q&A. To do so, please signal for questions using the raise hand feature in your Zoom toolbar. With that, let me turn the call over to Ian, our CEO, to begin our presentation about our first quarter results. Ian, please go ahead.
Ian Marcel Craig García: Thank you, Jorge. Good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for today's call. In Mexico, as expected, we faced the excise tax increase compounded by a soft consumer backdrop, which pressured demand. We're prepared ahead for this environment together with the Coca-Cola Company, with a comprehensive commercial and financial playbook designed to emerge with a strengthened competitive position that will support long-term sustainable growth. While Mexico volumes were soft during the quarter, they came in within our expectations and our strong 0.6 percentage point value share gain in CSDs and a 0.4 percentage point gain in NARTDs confirms to us that our strategy is working. In this context, we are leveraging the breadth of our portfolio, our scale, consistency in investment and execution and our differentiated digital enablers to win in the market and set the foundations for long-term growth. While Mexico presented near-term headwinds, our operations in Central and South America delivered solid performance during the quarter including record volumes for our first quarter in Guatemala, Colombia and Brazil. This reaffirms the value of our geographic diversification and our ability to continue building relative scale throughout all of our markets. We remain confident in our long-term strategy anchored in Coca-Cola FEMSA's differentiated strength of an unmatched portfolio of brands, the largest distribution footprint, consistent investment, relentless execution and leading-edge digital enablers. With that context, I will now walk you through our consolidated results after which I will provide more details on developments in each of our key markets before handing the call over to Gerry to expand on our divisional and financial results. During the first quarter, our volume increased 1.2% to reach 998 million unit cases. This growth was driven by a positive performance across most of our territories, which offset a volume contraction in Mexico explained mainly by the effects of the excess tax increase and softer consumer dynamics. Total revenue for the quarter grew 1.1% to MXN 70.9 billion, our volume growth and revenue management initiatives were partially offset by unfavorable mix effects and headwinds related to the currency translation from all our operating currencies into Mexican pesos. By excluding currency headwinds, our total revenues increased 6.0%. Gross profit increased 4.5% to MXN 33.3 billion leading to a margin expansion of 150 basis points to 46.9%. This margin performance was driven mainly by better PET and sweetener costs and the appreciation of most of our operating currencies as compared with the U.S. dollar. These effects were partially offset by unfavorable mix effects, coupled with higher fixed costs, such as depreciation. By excluding currency headwinds, gross profit increased 9.5%. Our OI declined 2.3% to MXN 9 billion with our operating margin contracting 50 basis points to 12.7%. On a comparable basis, operating income increased 2.6%. This operating margin contraction is explained mainly by rightsizing severance expenses and increased IT expenses related to the implementation of our new ERP, SAP S/4HANA. In addition, we recorded higher marketing and depreciation that were partially offset by expense control such as maintenance and freight. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter increased 0.9% to MXN 13.4 billion. And adjusted EBITDA margin remained even at 18.9%. By excluding currency translation, our comparable adjusted EBITDA increased 6.1%. Finally, majority net income declined 15.5% to MXN 4.3 billion, mainly reflecting a higher comprehensive financial result, which Gerry will address in his comments. Now turning to the main highlights across our major markets. In Mexico, our volume declined 2.6% year-on-year. As anticipated, we navigated a challenging first quarter marked by the effects of the excise tax increase and a softer consumer pattern. For instance, Nielsen's fast-moving consumer goods basket in our territories declined close to 3% year-over-year in terms of volume while inflation expectations moved up in recent forecasts weighing on consumer sentiment. Our execution in Mexico was strong, delivering both value and volume share gains across all categories, leveraging our fast-start initiatives of cold drink equipment expansion, increases in point of sale share of visible inventory and key SKU combined coverage improvements. These share gains indicate that our top line initiatives are working within the challenging environment that we are facing. Regarding our portfolio, we accelerated initiatives focused on providing attractive price points in both one-way and refillable formats. For example, in brand Coca-Cola, we increased coverage of our one-way [indiscernible] presentation by more than 7 percentage points year-on-year, resulting in 32% volume growth in March versus the previous year. We also continued expanding Coke Zero with accessible single-serve packs, such as the 200 and 355 ml one-way [indiscernible] bottle. As a result, Coke Zero achieved 10% volume growth during the quarter. Moreover, in flavors, we continue combining global strategies in core brands such as Fanta, Sprite, with local heritage regional brands such as [indiscernible], where we increased coverage by more than 10 percentage points as compared with the previous year. We also continue focusing on developing profitable noncarbonated beverages. For instance, we gained more than 3 percentage points of share in both the Energy segment with Monster and in the [indiscernible] categories with Fuze Tea. In parallel, regarding channels, our progress in execution and digital capabilities are reverting the negative trend in the traditional trade by enhancing our value proposition with higher digital penetration, improved service indicators and expanded cooler coverage. Notably, during the first quarter, we installed more than 47,000 doors, equivalent to 50% of the total coolers we installed during 2025. These actions enhance our ability to deliver a tailored called portfolio to feed diverse consumption occasions. With respect to Juntos+ Advisor, the continued increase in adoption is reinforcing our market presence. Since its launch in Mexico in September 2025, adoption metrics have continued to grow and usability metrics indicate strong engagement among our commercial teams with visitation improving 3 percentage points to 93.6% and combined coverages improving 2.8 percentage points to 81.3%. Finally, our supply chain team implemented a series of initiatives that are delivering improvements in productivity and service levels. Specifically, we strengthened order fulfillment to more than 97% and achieved a 6.5% productivity improvement versus the prior year. Accordingly, we are staying focused on our playbook, strengthening affordability, expanding refillables to defense household penetration and continuing to deploy state-of-the-art digital tools and revenue growth management initiatives. Additionally, in partnership with the Coca-Cola Company, we will continue investing for long-term growth, while in the short term, we capitalize on an ambitious plan to capture the FIFA World Cup opportunity. Now moving on to Guatemala. Our performance reflects a challenging start and a strong recovery towards the end of the quarter. Performance in January and February was impacted by unfavorable weather and reduced mobility due to a 30-day government-declared curfew measure in mid-January to combat violence and organized crime. Conditions improved in March, allowing us to recapture momentum. As a result, March became a record month for our Guatemala operation, supported by improved mobility, better execution and stronger consumer activity. This recovery enabled us to close the quarter with volumes growing 2.7% year-over-year, while continuing to strengthen our competitive position. From a category standpoint, Brand Coca-Cola remained the primary growth engine, supported by a recovery in multi-serve one-way presentations, which grew 4.6% year-over-year. Additionally, we're capitalizing on the FIFA World Cup, where promotions such as the Trophy Tour resulted in 6.7% growth versus the previous year in participating products. In addition, we continued advancing our position in flavors, where disciplined execution and availability improvements in Sprite drove share gains year-over-year. Stills also delivered a strong performance, led by hydration and energy with brands such as Dasani, Shangrilla and Monster, posting double-digit growth, benefiting from better availability and premium segment expansion. On the commercial front, we continue reinforcing the virtuous cycle of expanding cooler coverage, adding new customers and leveraging our digital tools to enhance execution. For instance, we have expanded our customer base by 10,000 accounts last year and added a further 5,700 during the first quarter. As we look ahead, Guatemala's future is focused on continued development of our core CSD brands and profitable stills categories, all while we capitalize on an ambitious plan for brand Coke and Powerade during and after the FIFA World Cup. Turning now to Brazil, where our first quarter volumes increased 3.6% year-on-year. Consumer dynamics remain constructive supported by low unemployment, which sits at 5.8% and real income growth in excess of 5.7% and despite more moderate temperatures and higher rainfall versus the prior year. Our Brazil operation delivered solid results, supported by disciplined marketplace execution and our commercial and digital capabilities, while volumes faced [indiscernible] comparables from continuous growth achieved in previous years, our team remains focused on gaining share and strengthening profitability through a balanced approach to RGM, availability and cost discipline. Importantly, we continue to gain share across key categories within the nonalcoholic ready-to-drink industry, reinforcing our competitive position in the market. Regarding non-caloric Coke Zero maintained its double-digit growth, growing 11.4% and reaching 28.6 percentage points in our colas mix. Importantly, Sprite accelerated, growing more than 30% versus the previous year. driven by applying Coca-Cola Zero playbook to Sprite Zero. As a result, Sprite Zero now represents more than 27% of our total Sprite volume. Regarding stills, we're utilizing Powerade to leverage both the FIFA World Cup and [ Cornwall ] tournaments, coupled with innovation to continue strengthening our value proposition. For instance, the recent launch of Powerade zero exceeded expectations with Zero already representing 9% of our power at mix. Similarly, energy drinks continue seeing double-digit growth from Monster and aligned with our strategic intent to offer zero sugar alternatives, formulas of Monster Zero and Ultra already represent 45% of our total Monster mix and more than 60% of its growth. Our digital agenda remains a meaningful differentiator in Brazil, Juntos+ supported by its AI capabilities continues enabling significant combined coverage increases from 49.6% to 58.6% while generating suggested orders that are personalized for each customer. In parallel, Juntos+ Advisor continues to drive higher visitation, improving 1.3 percentage points to reach 94.1% and enabling superior in-market execution with personalized guided missions that support our sales force activities, ultimately resulting in share gains and increased customer engagement. These capabilities are increasingly embedded across our operation and remain central to how we compete and grow in the market. As we look ahead to the rest of the year, we remain encouraged by Brazil's opportunities and our position within the market. Brazil's positive volume momentum is allowing for fixed cost and expense absorption that is resulting in profitability improvements that position us well for sustainable long-term value creation. As we previously mentioned, we anticipate that election-related spending, social programs and the FIFA World Cup will represent important tailwinds for our operations to capture these opportunities, our priorities are clear, continue accelerating growth in non-caloric offerings, capitalize on the strength of our core brands, sustain our disciplined execution across channels and leverage our digital platforms to consistently outperform the industry. With capacity investments that have resulted in an 8% year-on-year increase in manufacturing capacity and 6% year-on-year increase in warehousing capacity, we are well positioned to continue delivering value in Brazil throughout the year. Now moving on to Colombia. Our volumes increased 8.9% versus the previous year. Our positive volume momentum reflects both an improving consumer environment and the continued benefits of disciplined execution across our commercial and operating platforms. While the country navigates a complex backdrop, including higher interest rates, the labor market has remained resilient with real disposable income growing year-on-year supported by the minimum wage increase and the upcoming election cycle. As a result of these factors at the beginning of the year, Nielsen's FMCG basket and the beverage industry resumed growth year-on-year. Amid this improving backdrop, we continued strengthening our competitive positions with initiatives to adjust our price pack architecture in brand Coca-Cola. For instance, Coke Zero remains a growth engine with ample headroom, contributing 13% of brand Coca-Cola's total growth, while our affordability initiatives supported 30% volume growth in multi-serve one-way presentations of brand Coca-Cola. Aligned with our strategy, we aim to continue expanding our competitive position in flavors with increased innovation and availability. As a result of initiatives within Quatro and Sprite, our flavor sparkling portfolio increased 15% versus the prior year. Regarding stills, we are leveraging the FIFA World Cup to boost Powerade, resulting in 10% growth year-on-year. Additionally, within Energy, Monster grew more than 30% year-on-year, reflecting the attractive growth potential within profitable high-growth steel categories. Colombia continues to lead the way leverage in Juntos+ Premier loyalty program creatively to drive share and volume gains in the traditional channel. For example, during the quarter, we improved the percentage of customers reaching their volume targets by 12 percentage points. At the same time, we are encouraged by the profitability improvements of Colombia which are a result of volume growth, coupled with positive operating leverage and cost and expense controls. Now moving on to Argentina, our volumes increased 5.4% and while key economic metrics such as exchange rate and net reserves continue improving, a heterogeneous recovery across different sectors and soft employment continues weighing on consumer confidence. For instance, while the oil and gas, mining and agricultural sectors are growing double digits, Nielsen's FMCG basket remained flat year-on-year. In this environment, we continue responding with agility and consistency sustaining an affordability proposal that has enabled us to continue gaining share. Moreover, our savings [indiscernible] initiatives offering attractive promotions and price points for our consumers in the traditional trade increased its coverage by 8 percentage points versus the prior this year. In flavors, we delivered double-digit growth, led by Sprite and Sprite Zero while Coke Zero increased volumes 10% to reach 20.9% mix of brand Coca-Cola. Importantly, we are leveraging our Argentina consumers' passion for the FIFA World Cup with segmented promotions and value proposition initiatives that improved our single-serve mix by more than 3 percentage points to reach 28.4% and more than 4 percentage points of share gains in power. Regarding our digital initiatives, we continue driving digital client adoption with Juntos+ adding more than 7,000 customers as compared with the previous year. Finally, I want to recognize our team in Argentina who were once again awarded the Coca-Cola Company's prestigious Latin America Excellence scope, recognizing the region's best bottler for its excellence in execution, talent and culture. Let me close my remarks by saying that we see the majority of our key markets growing at a healthy clip. In the case of Mexico, we have plans in place to capitalize on the current low growth and excise tax increase environment to emerge with a strengthened relative competitive position, which should allow us to return Mexico to sustainable growth. For the remaining of the year, we expect to continue executing against our strategic imperatives. Number one, continue growing our core business by leveraging our big bets, accelerating Coke Zero, improving our competitive position in flavors with Sprite as a flagship and developing profitable noncarbonated beverages. Second, capitalize on Juntos+ AA capabilities and continuing to roll out and leveraging Juntos+ Adviser across our 4 largest markets. And third, continue fostering our customer-centric and psychologically safe culture for Coca-Cola FEMSA. With that, I will hand the call over to Gerry.