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Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. (NATR)

Q1 2024 Earnings Call· Tue, May 7, 2024

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for participating in today's conference call to discuss Nature's Sunshine's Financial Results for the First Quarter ended March 31, 2024. Joining us today are Nature's Sunshine's CEO, Terrence Moorehead; CFO, Shane Jones; and General Counsel, Nate Brower. Following their remarks, we'll open the call for analyst questions. Before we go further, I would like to turn the call over to Mr. Brower as he reads the company's safe harbor statement within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that provides important cautions regarding forward-looking statements. Nate, please go ahead.

Nathan Brower

Management

Thank you. Good afternoon, and thanks for joining our conference call to discuss our first quarter 2024 financial results. I'd like to remind everyone that this call is available for replay via telephonic dial-in through May 21 and via a live webcast that will be posted in the Investor Relations portion of our website. at ir.naturesunshine.com. The information on this call contains forward-looking statements. These statements are often characterized by terminologies such as believe, hope, may, anticipate, expect, will and other similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, and the actual results may be materially different from the results implied by forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause results to differ materially from those implied herein include, but are not limited to, those factors disclosed in the company's annual report on Form 10-K under the caption Risk Factors and other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The information on this call speaks only as of today's date, and the company disclaims any duty to update the information provided herein. Now I would like to turn the call over to the CEO of Nature's Sunshine, Terrence Moorehead. Terrence?

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Thank you, Nate, and good afternoon, everyone. I want to thank you for joining today's call to discuss our first quarter results as we continue to advance our global growth strategies: digital first, brand power and field energy. And in the first quarter, we continued to gain traction and delivered positive results. Today, I'll provide some context for our first quarter performance and offer some insights on how we believe the business is progressing. From there, Shane will take you through our financials in more detail. During the first quarter, our omnichannel approach, high-quality products and field activation initiatives combined to drive continued momentum in the business as net sales came in at $111 million, up 4% versus prior year on a constant dollar basis, outpacing the market once again. EBITDA slightly improved in the quarter, coming in at $9.2 million, flat versus prior year as increased macroeconomic headwinds placed added pressure on the business, especially gross margins. I'll come back to discuss gross margins a little bit later. But first, I want to talk about our strategic investments in digital and field activation that continue to have a positive and transformative impact on our business. For the quarter, we continued to see strong results in North America as revenue outpaced industry trends with a 5% increase in net sales. Importantly, digital sales surged 33% and as new customer growth increased 34%, driven by strong consumer campaigns and attractive creative content. Our New Year, New You digital campaign kicked off the year, generating strong sales and consumer engagement by featuring some of our most attractive products. Beyond the strong digital performance, we were also pleased to see continued stability with our nutritional health practitioners and specialty retailers. Overall, we're very excited about the momentum we're seeing and believe our omnichannel…

Shane Jones

Management

Thank you, Terrence. We are excited about the momentum in our key markets, especially in North America where the turnaround continues, driven by our healthy and growing digital business. Consolidated net sales in the first quarter were $111 million compared to $108.6 million in the year ago quarter, representing a 4% increase on a local currency basis or 2%, including the impact of foreign exchange. The increase was driven by strong performance in our digital business, along with continued robust growth in Taiwan. Looking at results by market in the first quarter. Asia Pacific sales grew 5% on a local currency basis to $46.2 million despite significant macroeconomic pressure. Foreign exchange rates posed a $2.5 million headwind, yielding basically flat year-over-year results net of FX. In addition to the foreign exchange impact in Asia, poor macroeconomic conditions, along with deteriorating consumer sentiment in China, impacted results in that market with sales down 13% or 9% on a local currency basis. While our digital live streaming approach has been well received by consumers, current leading indicators suggest that the difficult macroeconomic situation is likely to deter growth in China for the near term. In Japan, sales were up 3% on a local currency basis. But due to the recent spike in the yen-dollar exchange rate, sales were down 8% net of foreign exchange. The sequential dip in growth is primarily due to the timing of events, and we expect to be back on track with stronger growth through the remainder of the year. Taiwan continues to show strong momentum, reporting 15% growth on a local currency basis, or 11% including foreign exchange during Q1, driven by the adoption of Subscribe & Thrive along with strong overall execution in the field. Korea also showed good momentum in Q1, with sales on a…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Linda Bolton-Weiser from D.A. Davidson.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

I guess on top line growth, your 4% in constant currency actually kind of beat our estimate. But the FX aspect was a little more negative than expected. I mean it seems to me -- I mean, I don't know about my calculations, but it seems to me that currency translation for the year might be closer to negative 2%, not negative 1%. Is that although you said negative 1%. So I don't know, can you shed some light on that?

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Shane, do you want to comment on that?

Shane Jones

Management

Yes, absolutely. So it really depends, Linda, on what exchange rates continue to do through the remainder of the year. Our expectation is they don't get any worse, they get a little bit better. But you could be right. If exchange rates continue where they're at or get a little worse, then it could be more than the 100 basis points that we've talked about.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Okay. And so you rightly said and pointed out that the comparison in the prior year comp is pretty hard in the second quarter. I mean do you feel pretty confident you'll have constant currency sales growth -- positive growth year-over-year? Or is it possible that sales could actually be down a little bit in constant currency?

Shane Jones

Management

In Q2 -- and obviously, we're giving guidance only for the year. Our year guidance is we're sticking to what we said, but Q2 is a difficult comp. And so difficult to say exactly what will happen there, but we expect to be close to flat.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

In constant currency?

Shane Jones

Management

In constant currency, yes.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Yes. Okay. That's very helpful. And then -- so on the gross margin, again, you really weren't far off from where we were at. So when you say the difficult environment, do you mean that you need to promote a little bit more to get consumers to kind of step up and buy and that affects your gross margin? Or what was the connection between the macro and the gross margin? Just if you could clarify that.

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Yes. It was actually a couple of things. And we actually didn't do a tremendous amount more promotions, but there was some mix in there, inflation and foreign exchange. Shane, do you want to add some more color commentary?

Shane Jones

Management

Yes. Those are primarily the biggest things is we continue to see some inflation in the ingredients that we purchase as well as in labor for the manufacturing that we do. But in addition to that, the FX impact, the foreign exchange impact does actually hurt our gross margins as well. So those are the 2 primary things. There is a little bit of promotionality there. We were a little bit more promotional in Q1 than we had been in the previous Q1 -- previous year. But that's not the biggest...

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Yes. Margin. Yes. I think overall, though, Linda, we still feel good about our gross margin kind of plan and the trajectory going forward. So I think we got -- we took a hit in the second quarter. Again, we saw some shifts in mix, especially in some high-margin markets where we had some softness, but again, going forward, we feel good.

Shane Jones

Management

And that's the other thing that I should have mentioned is as if we have stronger APAC sales, that helps our gross margin. And if APAC doesn't grow much, or Asia Pacific, then that hurts our gross margin as well. So that mix impact also was part of Q1.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Right. Although APAC kind of grew faster than the other regions, isn't it? I thought it was up 7% or something like that.

Shane Jones

Management

On a local currency basis, it was up 5%. Asia Pacific.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Up 5%, yes. Yes. So it was the same as North America, okay. Got you. So I mean, given -- well, let me ask about EMEA, if I could. I mean, EMEA, I guess, return to growth, what you said. And so is it the result of the strategic actions that you've taken there? Or is it just kind of settling in after the whole Russia thing? Or like what -- because I don't know if the economy is super great in Europe either. But what do you -- how do you describe the return to the growth? And it sounded like you were pretty confident it would continue. So just give a little more color on that, please.

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Yes, 2 big things. First and foremost, some really good just field activation type programs, just to kind of drive orders and keep the field organization kind of moving forward and growing. And then secondly, the launch of our Power Line products. Power Line, the Greens product is the most successful new product launch in the history of our European business unit. So that really helped attract a significant number of new customers to the business, kind of gave kind of the sales force something to, again, put a little extra bounce in their step and gave them an excuse to go out and reactivate some inactive or lapsed customers. So it really was quite a strong order growth driver for them for the quarter. And we expect that strength in their business and that momentum to continue throughout the year.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Okay. And then let's see. Just going back to the numbers and the guidance. So EBITDA was flattish in this quarter and you're saying up 4% to 19% range for the year. I mean how confident are you -- I guess the growth is going to be all kind of second half weighted because the second quarter has the hard comp. I mean are you feeling more comfortable at the lower end of the range? Or is the middle still something you see as doable? I'm just wanting to know how you're feeling about that.

Shane Jones

Management

Obviously, we're in May now. There's still a lot to come. We're excited about what we're seeing with a lot of our initiatives. We're seeing some good progress, but we're also seeing some significant headwinds in FX and other things. So at this point, we are keeping that guidance. But if you had to -- if you pin me down, we'd be at the lower end or lower half of that guidance at this point.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. And I don't mean to, whatever, compare you to another company because I know you're all very different. But in the direct selling area, USANA nutritional supplement actually said that their promotion in China helped them quite a bit in the quarter. It really seemed that there was a lot of responsiveness to it. I'm just -- it's interesting to hear you sort of just more negative about China. I guess they had more of a positive tone, like maybe things are coming around. Is there any way you can give a little more color? I guess maybe you don't do the same kind of promotion to drive sales activity maybe. Any color?

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Yes, we don't, Linda. But I also think the momentum behind our business had been previously -- we've had consecutive quarters of positive growth, and I'm not sure if they were necessarily in the same place where we've been. So I think the headwinds are -- they hit us in Q1. Again, we believe in the business. Our digital approach to the marketplace is really quite powerful. Going forward, though, we'll have to make sure that we're truly engaging consumers because they're under a lot of pressure right now. So we've got some things to address in China, but again, we've got a powerful model to help us do that with our digital live streaming.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Okay. And then just on Korea, South Korea. That was actually really encouraging because I think you've been declining in South Korea for quite some time, if I'm not mistaken. So again, it sounds like you're not promising it's going to continue, but it sounds encouraging. Could you give a little more color on what's going on there?

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Yes. They had a great quarter. They kind of really just went back to some good solid field fundamentals. They're trying to reconstitute the business after being essentially shut down due to COVID for several years. So they still have a lot of work to do ahead of them. And for the full year, I think we're looking at some positive momentum for them. But they'll be fluctuating results from quarter-to-quarter. But I think they're putting in place all the right building blocks to get them back on track for a positive year.

Linda Bolton-Weiser

Analyst

Okay. And just finally, I was curious about getting an update on the personalization effort, which I think is just in North America. What's going on with that? Like these pill packs and things of that nature, are you proceeding with that? Where are we on that initiative?

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Yes. That's still a slow growth initiative for us right now. I think I had mentioned a couple of quarters ago, we believe in -- we believe personalization is very important in this space as it allows for convenience, it allows for easy kind of reengagement of the consumers every single month. But we also believe that it's going to take some time just to build adoption rates. So it's up and running, and it's just a slow build for us over time as expected. So right now, our marketing dollars are focused on driving engagement with areas like the Power Line, where we've seen tremendous success driving kind of digital activation where we're seeing great success in new customer growth and making sure that we're getting people into Subscribe & Thrive. So those are probably priorities that we're putting at the front of the line right now, Linda. But personalization is still there, and we're making sure that we're providing that service to people.

Operator

Operator

And there seems to be no further questions at this time, I'd now like to turn the call back over to management for final closing comments.

Terrence Moorehead

Management

Okay. Well, thank you very much. We'd like to thank everyone for listening to today's call, and we look forward to speaking with you when we report our second quarter 2024 results in August. So once again, thank you, and take care.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines. Have a lovely day.