Harmit Singh
Analyst · JPMorgan. Please go ahead
Thanks Chip. Good morning, everyone. I hope all of you, your families and loved ones are safe and healthy. We had a very strong quarter and holiday season, both beating our expectations despite the resurgence of the virus and resulting store closures, mainly in Europe. Quarterly revenue comparisons to prior year have continued to improve sequentially from 62% down in Q2 to 27% down in Q3 to 12% down in Q4. The structural economics of our business continue to improve as we reshaped our P&L with ongoing and outsized digital growth, continued improvement in gross margin and a reduction in base operating costs, while reallocating dollars to strategic choices that will accelerate growth. The fourth quarter was profitable and generated positive cash flow despite the double-digit revenue decline versus prior year. I’m very optimistic heading into 2021, as we continue to focus on executing our strategies with disciplined high ROI investments driving margin and cost productivity and working capital efficiencies. And I remain convinced we will emerge from this crisis as significantly more profitable and cash generative company with adjusted EBIT margins of at least 12% and with ROIC in the mid-teens. As I walk you through additional detail of our fourth quarter results, my comments will reference constant currency comparisons on a year-over-year basis in U.S. dollars, unless I indicate otherwise. We published the details of our results in today’s press release, so I will not repeat all of those here. The 12% decline in fourth quarter net revenues beat our guidance of a 14% to 15% decline, despite the adverse impact of unexpected store closures. Almost 15% of our global store base was closed in November, including about a third of our stores in Europe. And these store closures have continued into December and January. Based on the trends we’re seeing through October, we estimate that closing our stores net to the amount we saw shift to online cost us approximately two points of revenue growth and $0.03 of EPS in quarter four. We also had a 53rd week and a Black Friday in the fourth quarter, which benefited year-over-year reported revenue comparisons by approximately 3 percentage point. Our total digital ecosystem, the combined revenues of the e-commerce sites we operate and the online sites of our wholesale account comprise 23% of total company fourth quarter revenues, up from 15% a year ago. Total digital sales grew in the fourth quarter by more than 30%. Growth accelerated in November as we pivoted consumer demand in Europe to online. Specifically, our own e-commerce business grew 35% in quarter four and nearly doubled as a share of total company’s revenue to 8%. Our increased focus on our e-commerce business has enabled us to recapture about half the lost sales of our physical stores. And as I shared last quarter, e-commerce profit for incremental units is higher than wholesale. Adjusted gross margin expanded 30 basis points to 54.6%, the highest fourth quarter adjusted gross margin we have ever posted, again, demonstrating the intrinsic health of our brands and channels. Price increases and a higher share of sales from our direct-to-consumer channel were again the primary drivers. Levi’s AURs around the world rose slightly. Gross margin expanded significantly for both e-commerce and wholesale as we’ve tightened discounts and reduced sales to the off-price channel. Adjusted SG&A was down [$61 million] from prior year, a 9% decline. We’ve continued to deliver strong cost reductions across the board, primarily reflecting our structural cost reduction initiatives. We’re reinvesting a portion of the savings behind the areas driving our growth, namely DTC and technology. Other SG&A costs were slightly higher than our prior expectation, primarily due to higher variable costs on our revenue beat. Fourth quarter adjusted EBIT was $113 million, adjusted EBIT margin was 8%, and adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.20 for the quarter, all higher than our expectation. Now, I’ll share a few highlights from our three regions. Fourth quarter revenue in the Americas declined 11%, slightly better than the company. Latin America was a bright spot in the region, especially our acquired Andes business, which grew in the quarter and through holiday. The full digital ecosystem in the region grew [30%] in the quarter. U.S. e-commerce growth rate accelerated through the quarter to 73% for the month of November, with the full quarter growing nearly 30%. And finally, the region’s operating income was really strong, declining only 8% on the 12% revenue decline. Europe was tracking slightly above prior year levels through October, demonstrating the resilience and strength of the brand we’ve consistently seen. Then the lockdown hit in November, which led to a third of our doors closing and the region’s quarterly decline of 12%. E-commerce growth rates continue to accelerate as we posted e-commerce growth of more than 50% for the quarter, which significantly increased in November to over 150% when we closed our doors. Our brand equity continues to grow, the most popular denim brand in Europe by far, Levi’s continues to gain share in the marketplace. The team in the region is getting experience with the COVID playbook, which combined with the consumers’ strong demand for the brand gives us the confidence that as the surge subsides and the lockdowns lift, we should snap back as we did after the first surge. Asia, as a region, declined 15%, a significant sequential improvement from last quarter as India began to reopen. Excluding India, the remainder of Asia was down 11%. The full digital ecosystem in the region grew 27% in the quarter. China was nearly flat to prior year as DTC grew high-single digits, while reduced sales to franchisees to proactively manage inventory health. We’re increasing our investment and focus on Asia whether Levi’s brand has high brand awareness and we have a significant opportunity to accelerate sales growth. Turning to balance sheet and cash flows. Inventories at the end of the year, net of reserves, were 8% below prior year due to our revenue outperformance and disciplined inventory management. At year-end, inventory composition remained healthy with more than 65% able to carry over into future seasons. Our cost in working capital actions again yielded strong adjusted free cash flow in the fourth quarter, bringing full-year adjusted free cash flow to $141 million, a 22% increase over prior year. I’m particularly proud of how our entire organization raised the bar on cash management as we focused on managing through the different crises while emerging stronger. And while we prudently reduced our original CapEx budget of 200 million when the pandemic hit, we continued to invest behind high ROI growth initiatives. Full-year CapEx was $130 million, two-thirds of which went towards technology and a third to accelerate our DTC initiative. We continue to expand our store footprint, primarily internationally in Type A locations most digitally enabled and generally with rents at much better rates than we had pre-COVID. We opened 90 doors during the year and added another 85 doors from our organic acquisition, bringing total company operating store count at year-end to 1,042. We expanded our AI and data analytics team and continued automating and digitizing processes. And in late November, we successfully went live with SCP in Mexico, the first market in our global multi-year cloud-based ERP upgrade. The implementation was done remotely and the automation the system brings will greatly enhance the efficiency and agility of our team there. We are next moving on to North America starting with Canada. The fourth quarter brings to a close what has been a year like no other I’ve ever experienced. We have much to be proud of. Sales from our digital ecosystem accelerated through the year and it finished with full-year growth of 26%. Our own e-commerce is now profitable on a fully allocated basis a year ahead of schedule, and is generating a low-single-digit EBIT margin. We expect that EBIT margin in this channel should expand and ultimately track to parity with the company average as the business doubles in size in the coming years. We’ve delivered adjusted gross margin expansion of 60 basis points to 54.4% and at levels above our growth algorithm. We’ve executed structural cost savings of around 200 million collectively in head count, rent, travel, and negotiated vendor savings, even as we continued to invest in initiatives driving growth. The strong gross margin and cost savings enable us to have only one unprofitable quarter and to deliver high-single-digit adjusted EBIT margins in quarter three and quarter four, despite double-digit revenue declines in this quarter. And we drove tremendous improvement in working capital. Before sharing thoughts on the year ahead, let me take a moment to discuss our holiday results. As a reminder, we define holiday as the combination of November and December. Both months were impacted by lockdowns and store closures. Adjusting for the impact of store closures, we estimate holiday revenue down 11%, better than Q4, with a much stronger December. We saw steady fundamental improvements through the holiday season. Revenue growth in our digital ecosystem accelerated to 33%, ahead of the market, thus growing our digital market share. Our own e-commerce remains profitable through the holiday period as we took a surgical approach to online promotion. And gross margin held strong, increasing in December as we tightened promotions. Regional colorful holiday included the following; in the Americas, holiday shopping started earlier this year, mid-October with Amazon’s pandemic Prime Day, which was a record for us in terms of Prime Day sales. And we kept discounts tight in a very promotional environment. And in Asia, those who direct-to-consumer returned to growth versus prior year with China and India both growing double-digits in December as the changes were made to the store fleet are starting to pay back. Now, I’ll share some thoughts on 2021. We run this business for the long-term and I’m very confident in our strategy. But as we’ve all seen, things can change suddenly in this environment. And unprecedented events require a quick and unprecedented action. Given the very low near-term visibility, we’re taking the approach of planning our 2021 fiscal year one-half at a time. As the year unfolds and we gain more visibility, we’ll update our outlook. In terms of revenue, we’re expecting first half revenue growth in the range of 18% to 20% versus 2020. And based on the underlying strength of demand for our brands and assuming conditions improve as the vaccines roll out, we continue to believe that revenues should return to pre-pandemic levels during the second half of the year, with Q4 of 2021 the first full quarter with revenues above the comparable quarter of 2019. And there could be markets across the world where this happens earlier such as China or Europe. With respect to Q1 2021 specifically, we anticipate first quarter revenues will be down high-teens in constant dollars compared to Q1 of 2020. In addition to the fact, we’re lapping a really strong quarter wherein the COVID impact was minimal; the comparison will be adversely impacted by two significant factors: First, Q1 of 2020 had a Black Friday, which will adversely impact the Q1 2021 growth rate by 2 points. Second, store closures have increased. Currently about 17% of our global store base is closed, including about 40% of our stores in Europe. We’re assuming these store closures will continue through the remainder of Q1 2021 and we expect this will cost us 6 points or 7 points of growth. Turning to gross margin. We expect first quarter adjusted gross margin will be about 100 basis points higher than last year’s record of 55.7%. This is driven by the accelerated shift of our business towards international DTC and digital, combined with the benefit of price increases being less promotional, operating with a healthy inventory, and incremental COGS saving. In terms of adjusted SG&A dollars, the structural cost savings we took against our pre-pandemic run rate will take us all the way back to right around Q1 2019 level despite higher investment behind our strategic growth initiative. We anticipate our first quarter tax rate in the high-single digits and first quarter adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $0.20 to $0.24. We estimate EPS would have been $0.10 to $0.12 higher if it weren’t for the store closures. Uses of capital in 2021 include full-year CapEx of around $210 million. Two-thirds of the investment will go towards technology in areas like e-commerce, omni-channel initiatives, AI, data analytics, and the [SAP upgrade]. In terms of DTC brick-and-mortar, we anticipate opening around 80 stores globally. Most of these will be international, with the biggest share in China. In the U.S., we plan to open around 15 full-price next-gen doors in 2021, which would take a smaller footprint, mainline door count, in the U.S. to above 25 on our way to 100. I’m also pleased to announce that we are reinstating our quarterly dividend payment at $0.04 per share based on our positive cash flow and our continued confidence that we are emerging stronger. If business trends continue to improve, we’ll consider increasing quarterly dividends as we move through 2021. And finally, with respect to our current levels of debt, we intend to pay back much of what we borrowed last year. We’ll take a call on the timing and amount of the paydown as the year progresses and visibility improves. In summary, the store closures are unfortunate, but that’s outside our control. The business within our control is really strong and our now profitable e-commerce business is recovering a good portion of the lost store sales. As a result, we remain confident about our path to revenue recovery once stores reopen. When revenues do recover to pre-pandemic levels, we expect to be a much stronger, more profitable business with annual adjusted EBIT margins at 12% plus, notably higher than 2019’s 10.6%. This will be driven primarily by a much stronger gross margin while we reinvest in accelerating the shift to DTC technology and other strategic growth initiative. As we navigate and emerge from these uncertain times, we have committed to driving profitable growth and returning capital to our shareholders. With that, we’ll now open it up and take your questions.