Thibaut Mongon
Analyst · Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question
Thank you, Sofya. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining the call. Alongside our first quarter earnings report today, you will have seen that we have also announced plan for a CFO transition and I’ll speak more about that shortly. To begin with our results, we entered 2025 with clear and deliberate plans to accelerate profitable growth over the course of the year. We have an enviable portfolio of leading and resilient consumer health brands where efficacy and trust matter to consumers. While we are not immune to significant macro shifts and seasonal variability in parts of the portfolio, we are well positioned to navigate through the current complex environment. In Q1, our teams demonstrated strong execution of our plans. As such, we are maintaining our organic sales growth outlook for the year and we are updating our adjusted operating margin and adjusted diluted EPS outlook to reflect the estimated impact of incremental costs associated with current tariffs and of current foreign exchange rates. As anticipated, following a first half where we continue to expect the underlying health of the business to be masked by well identified factors, we expect to accelerate our top-line performance in the back half of the year as we realize the compounding benefits from the structural changes and investments we have implemented across the business. While staying agile and flexible amidst dynamic market conditions, we continue to advance our three strategic priorities. First, our new operating model is now fully activated. Our brands are benefiting from more innovation and impactful marketing activation campaigns supported by more competitive level of investments. As discussed at CAGNY, we are increasingly leveraging what we call our Kenvue’s five extraordinary powers to unleash the full potential of our brands, leveraging our superior science, launching insights-led innovation, increasing our presence with healthcare professionals, activating breakthrough marketing campaigns and driving seamless commerce. Second, we are continuing to optimize our cost structure through operational efficiencies. In April, we reached a major operational milestone, completing our Transition Services Agreement program, finalizing the exit of more than 2,300 TSAs as per plan and without any disruption to our business. We are starting to see the benefits from our more streamlined and efficient systems and processes that are fit for purpose for Kenvue. Third, we are strengthening our performance culture with new ways of working, new reward systems and a new milestone. In March, we moved into our new global headquarters in Summit, New Jersey, where we consolidated seven US locations under one roof for the first time in our history, unlocking greater internal and external collaboration and speed. So now let me provide more contexts on our first quarter results. Organic sales declined 1.2% versus Q1 last year, which was consistent with our full year outlook. As anticipated, this included a 3% to 4% headwind from the combined impact of destocking mostly in China and the strategic investments we are making in price and trade spend in the U S to improve the competitiveness of our brands. As we have discussed, the destocking in China is driven by both the lingering impact of the weak pediatric pain and fever season and actions we are taking to improve distributor execution. We are on track with our plans to strengthen and streamline our distributor network and expect to have these two factors behind us by the end of Q2. Globally, we are activating our five extraordinary powers, driving stronger consumption performance for the company in Q1 relative to Q4. In fact, consumption for the quarter outpaced organic sales growth across each of our three segments. In self-care, we delivered organic sales growth of 0.3%. Growth was broad based across our allergy, digestive health and smoking cessation franchises and more than offset a decline in the cough, cold, and flu category. Our self-care brands are stronger and performing better than ever with nearly 80% of the business expanding or maintaining market share. We further enhanced our leadership positions around the world this quarter. As it relates to cough, cold and flu, both consumption and replenishment in the US exceeded our expectations due to higher than anticipated incidences, helping mitigate the impact of a very subdued season in EMEA and Asia-Pacific, where consumptions and destocking were worse than anticipated. Importantly, our teams capitalized on the seasonal spike in the US and strengthened Tylenol’s number one position, gaining share for the eleventh straight quarter and widening the gap further with competition. We rolled out successful innovation and drove consumer engagement with our “Greatness Hurts” football themes campaign. And once again, Tylenol was the only brand in the category gaining value and volume share in Q1, increasing household penetration and expanding points of distribution. In Allergy, we strengthened Kenvue’s leadership in the category with Zyrtec growing both value and volume share this quarter, also widening the gap relative to our competition. Similar to what I just described for Tylenol, our teams delivered an increase in household penetration and in distribution behind the excellent execution of a packaging refresh that leverage consumer insights and the strategic implementation of value pricing on some codes. While a prolonged winter shifted the start of the season this year, we are well positioned to continue to win with consumers. In Skin Health and Beauty, organic sales declined 4.8% amidst a decelerating category backdrop, largely due to three reasons, the impact from destocking in China, the soft sun season in Latin America and our planned strategic price investment in the US, along with a loss of rotations in the club channel this quarter. Our EMEA region remained an area of strength with organic sales growing year over year for the twelfth consecutive quarter, largely driven by double-digit growth in our Aveeno brand with excellent performance in the UK and the successful rollout of the brand across new doors in Central Europe, as well as continued momentum in OGX. Similar to what we discussed for Self Care, consumption outpaced organic sales as expected. In the US we have driven sequential consumption improvement in Q1 versus Q4 as a result of our breakthrough brand building campaigns, paired with expert recommendation and relevant value equation. In April, we drove positive consumption for our priority platforms of Neutrogena Face Care, Aveeno Body Care and OGX Hair Care, which represent together the majority of our US business. And the investments we made on several Neutrogena and Aveeno lines to ensure our pricing was in line with consumer psychological thresholds are starting to pay dividends in sell out with double-digit volume growth for a number of important offerings in face and body care. In particular, looking at our biggest brands, Neutrogena, we launched our new Beauty to a Science brand positioning in February. We supported it with a 360 degree media campaign featuring artist and Gen Z influencers, Tate McRae, and world-renowned dermatologist, Dr. Shah. The buzz across social media behind this campaign has been terrific with over eight billion earned media impressions so far, and it is enabling Neutrogena to reach a new younger audience in a highly relevant and authentic manner. In fact, Neutrogena’s household penetration with Gen Z consumers grew 30 basis points, a critical demographic driving about half of the growth in the skincare category. And all of this has been showing up in market share with Neutrogena’s face maintaining its number one share position in America in both value and volume for the second quarter in a row. So while we expect global organic sales for Skin Health and Beauty to continue to contract in the near-term due to the remaining impact from destocking in Asia, strategic price investments in the US and what has been so far a slow start to the sun season, we are encouraged by the improvement in the underlying health of our brands. With the recent momentum in consumption growth and the strong slate of innovation we are activating in the back half, we remain laser-focused on returning the segment to growth this year. Finally, in Essential Health, Q1 organic sales flat in the context of global category deceleration, as growth in Wound Care was offset by declines in Women’s Health and Oral Care. While we did see positive global consumption, organic sales were negatively affected by competitive pressures in certain geographies, which we are addressing and destocking in Asia. We continue to do well with our premium offerings. Two examples from the US market in mouthwash, our most premium platform, Listerine Total Care and Listerine Clinical Solutions, grew double-digits in Q1. And Listerine is now the fastest growing brand in dollars and in units on Amazon. And in Baby, Aveeno grew double-digits in Q1, growing four times faster than competition and is the fastest growing brand in the category. Moving forward, while we are seeing a deceleration in the categories, we are activating a two-pronged approach designed to ensure that we capture consumers across the price spectrum. On one hand, we continue to drive premium innovation to gain distribution and increase household penetration. In Q2, just to name a few examples, we are rolling out Listerine Clinical Solutions outside the US, while launching a new variant targeted at sensitivities in the US. We are also expanding the Band-Aid brand and Aveeno Kids ranges with Band-Aid Waterproof and Aveeno Kids for coily hair. At the same time, we are bringing to market additional entry price point offerings across categories to meet the evolving consumer needs and continue to implement our strategic price and trade investments in the US. So throughout the portfolio, we are seeing increasing evidence that our new operating model is working and we remain focused on continuing to bring new users to our categories expand usage occasions for our brands. Now before I turn it over to Paul, I want to share more on our CFO transition. First, I want to thank Paul for his leadership and many valuable contributions to Kenvue as we established the company as a standalone business through the separation and the IPO. With much of the work to establish Kenvue as an independent company completed and our strengthened commercial and operational foundations now in place, now is the right time for this transition. We wish Paul all the best in his next chapter and appreciate him continuing to support the company through a transition period. We are pleased to share that Amit Banati will join us on May 12 as our new Chief Financial Officer. Amit is a world-class executive with thirty years of experience at global consumer product companies and a proven track record in both financial and operational roles. So we look forward to his contributions as Kenvue moves into its next chapter. And now, I will turn it over to Paul.