Jane T. Elfers - The Children's Place, Inc.
Analyst · Morgan Stanley
Thank you, Bob, and good morning, everybody. Second quarter was another outstanding quarter for The Children's Place. Strong product acceptance and reduced promotional activity versus last year helped us deliver positive comp sales, significantly expand gross margin and operating margin, and beat the high end of our guidance range by $0.11. As a result, we are raising our full year 2017 guidance to $7.23 to $7.33 per diluted share. Moving on to current business. I know that everyone is curious as to early the back-to-school read. Although, we are only a few weeks into the key back-to-school selling season, we are very pleased with the customer response to our back-to-school assortment. You may remember that coming out of back-to-school last year, we recognized that we had a significant sales opportunity to further fund the basics, so we increased our investment in key basic styles and sizes by 3 million units, and this investment is already producing strong results. In our prepared remarks, Anurup will provide a detailed financial update, and Mike will update you on our progress with respect to some of our operational initiatives. My prepared remarks will cover four topics that are in everyone's mind: one, mall-based, brick-and-mortar retailing in the context of The Children's Place portfolio; two, the Gymboree bankruptcy announcement and the significant opportunity it represents for The Children's Place; three, the Amazon Children's Place partnership; and four, an update on our Personalized Customer Contact Strategy. Before I jump in, I just want to mention that there are a lot of new statistics referenced in my remarks, and we will be happy to review them again with you offline following the call. First, the mall: we are very proud of the work we have done over the past five years to position our real estate portfolio from maximum flexibility and leverage in the current retail environment. We made the decision years ago to dramatically slow down new store openings, accelerate store closures and shorten lease terms, and that decision has proved to be the correct one. The U.S. has been over stored for decades. However, recently, the landscape has shifted dramatically and created a retail mall bubble. The bubble has burst, and we are now experiencing an unprecedented pace and number of retail bankruptcies and retail store closures. These bankruptcies and store closures are partly attributable to the massive disruption of digital commerce and the significant drop in foot traffic associated with the consumer buying shift. But the situation is and has been further exacerbated by unsustainably high debt level, unchecked new store opening strategies and chronic product issues, all of which we just saw with the Gymboree bankruptcy announcement. The obvious result of these headwinds has been and will continue to be a rapid reduction in retail square footage. But as we all know, all retail real estate is not created equally. And while there are many, many centers that are in serious trouble, there are many more centers that are at full occupancy and that are very productive. Approximately 30 malls have shut down over the last five years, but several prominent real estate research firms are calling for a dramatic increase in the number and speed of mall closures, with projections identifying as many as 260 out of the approximately 1,060 malls in the U.S. to close within the next five years. We internally referred to these 260 targeted malls as dying malls, and I'll walk you through how our real estate portfolio is positioned with respect to these 260 malls. First, of the 260 malls that have been identified by the real estate research firm as closure candidates, we are not in 74% or 193 of them. Second, of the remaining 67 dying malls that we are located in, our average lease term is approximately one year. And combined, these 67 stores make up only approximately 3% of our total U.S. revenue. Our long-term internal projections have conservatively anticipated that all of these malls will close in the next five years. So if the landscape improves and some of these 67 centers remain open, that would be upside to our projection. If you assume for purposes of this discussion that the 260 dying malls were to close, that would leave approximately 800 A, B and C malls in the US, which break out as follows: A+ and As, 37%; Bs, 51%; and C malls, 12%. So of the remaining 800 U.S. malls, 88% of them are designated A or B centers. Now let's look at how this compares to our remaining U.S. based mall portfolio. Of the remaining 800 U.S. malls, The Children's Place is only in 466 or 58% of them. And it breaks down as follows for us: A+ and As, 29%; Bs, 62%; and Cs, 9%. So of the 466 malls we are located in 91% of our stores are located in A and B mall. We've been ahead of the curve when it comes to store closures and positioning our real estate portfolio for maximum flexibility. And we have all but eliminated the P&L jeopardy associated with the potential significant increase in dying mall closures over the next five years. But more importantly, we have been proactive in the balance of our portfolio. After you account for the dying malls, even though 91% of our remaining mall based locations are in vibrant A and B centers, we clearly understand that we are operating in a very fluid environment. So even in these very productive centers, we have worked hard over the last several years to secure a high degree of flexibility with lease terms now averaging less than three years in our A and B locations. And the remaining 40% of our U. S. store base is not located in traditional malls. Our significant number of off-mall locations provides us further flexibility and leverage when it comes to our portfolio, and we have applied the same proactive approach to reducing lease term in our off-mall locations. At the same time that these dramatic brick-and-mortar changes are playing out across the U.S., we are focused on continuing to drive several self-help initiatives with respect to digital transformation and personalized customer contact. These strategies will not only help us drive more traffic to our remaining brick-and-mortar locations, they will help fuel our outsized growth in digital commerce. Second topic, the Gymboree bankruptcy: we are clearly the best-positioned retailer to gain significant market share from Gymboree's recent bankruptcy announcement, and we are already seeing positive results. We have put a tremendous amount of time and effort into fully understanding this opportunity by center. So let me walk you through our analysis. Gymboree announced that it is closing 330 stores in connection with its bankruptcy filing. The Children's Place is directly co-located with these closing stores, meaning we are in the same center in 216 or 65% of their closures, and this includes all store types: traditional malls, outlets, lifestyle and strip centers. The breakout by brand is 139 Gymboree locations, 74 Crazy 8 locations and the three Janie and Jack stores. Now let's break out the Gymboree liquidation into traditional malls versus other center types. Of the 330 stores that Gymboree is liquidating, 75% or 246 of them are located in traditional malls like the ones we just discussed in our real estate portfolio update. Of these 246 locations, 186 or 76% of Gymboree's closing stores are located in A or B mall. We were surprised by how many of their closures were in thriving A and B centers which leads us to believe that there may potentially be more store closures ahead. The Children's Place is directly co-located, meaning in the same mall, in 178 or 72% of these 246 traditional mall locations. Of these 178 stores where we are directly co-located, 139 or 78% are in A or B malls. These large percentage of overlap in highly productive A and B malls illustrates the significant opportunity that we have to capture increased market share in these locations. And the Gymboree liquidations have already started to benefit us. In the centers where we are directly co-located with Gymboree liquidation stores, we have been tracking our sales, traffic and other key metrics by location, by day since the Gymboree liquidation began on July 18. To-date, in the locations where we are directly co-located with the Gymboree's liquidation events; our sales and traffic have increased versus where they were pre-liquidation. We've also conducted a detailed store-by-store analysis to determine the type of sales lift we can expect following each closure based on proximity and number of competitors in each center. As mentioned on our last call, we have seen an increase of approximately $150,000 in locations where we were directly co-located with them and they have previously closed their location. Additionally, with the progress we are making on our digital transformation effort, we have been working on several strategies to proactively acquire Gymboree's customers in their closing locations. In the past, we do not have digital tools to proactively acquire customers where competitors were closing location. We will continue to learn as Gymboree closes the first 25% of its stores, and we will be well-positioned in the future to continue to gain additional market share from additional competitor closure. Also, it is important to note that as our competitors exit viable centers where we have identified our store as a closure candidate, we have the lease flexibility to reevaluate that decision once we understand that the additional sales transfer metrics. In fact, we have already delayed one store closure that was slated to close at the end of last month for an additional six months to give us time to more fully understand the opportunity presented by Gymboree's liquidation in that center. And lastly, we are clearly the best-positioned retailer to take advantage of Gymboree's liquidation. When you consider Carter's, the other key competitor in young children's wear, let's take a look at how Carter's is positioned with respect to Gymboree's store closures. Carter's is directly co-located in only six of the traditional mall locations where Gymboree is closing stores. When you include all store types, our analysis shows that Carter's is directly co-located in only 47 out of the 330 stores that Gymboree is liquidating versus 216 co-located stores for The Children's Place. Third topic, the Amazon Children's Place partnership. We began our partnership with Amazon in 2014. In addition to our fashion products, we have a growing and profitable replenishment business with Amazon. We expect to have nearly 4,000 SKUs up and running in this program by holiday 2017, up from only 300 SKUs when we launched the program last year. On the marketing front, we are partnering with Amazon by utilizing key tools to increase sales and build relevance and brand recognition on their site. We were both very pleased with our results on prime day where we were the number two overall brand for kids and babies. Our newest initiative with Amazon is our partnership with Amazon Canada, which will go live for holiday 2017. In addition, we are currently working with Amazon to pursue other international opportunities. We will continue to work closely with Amazon on the significant opportunities for both of our brands. And our last topic, Personalized Customer Contact: on our first quarter call, we shared with you that our Personalized Customer Contact Strategy is our single biggest opportunity. We announced this morning that Steve Rado will be joining us on August 14 as our Chief Digital Officer. Steve's deep leadership experience in all aspects of marketing will be invaluable as we move forward with our digital transformation initiative. Personalization is causing a seismic shift across the landscape of consumer-facing brands. Brands that can create personalized experiences through the integration of digital technology and proprietary data are the ones that will be successful in the years to come. We believe personalization leaders stand to capture a disproportionate share of sales. And as we have previously discussed, we have made the decision to significantly accelerate development and implementation of the opportunity that personalization represents. We outlined that our Personalized Customer Contact Strategy consists of three key elements: customer insights, Personalized Customer Contact Strategy and digital delivery. Let's start with an update on customer insight. We have engaged with an outside partner to build the best-in-class CRM system, an analytical solution platform that brings together strategy, first and third-party data as well as advanced analytics for a complete 360-degree view of our customer across both online and retail channels. This capability will allow us to better recognize, target and engage our customers, measure the impact of marketing initiative and allow us to more effectively collaborate through third-party marketing partners to achieve quantifiable business outcome. We have also completed building out a behavioral segmentation of our customer base and started to construct our advanced predictive analytics capabilities, to proactively anticipate how, when and where our customers are likely to shop. These predictive capabilities provide the raw material to fuel our customer contact strategy and will allow us to continuously improve the relevancy of our customer's shopping experience through personalized marketing and omni-channel experiences. Second, our customer contact strategy. Our high-value customers drive an outsized percentage of our total sales, and personalization will unlock our ability to enhance loyalty with these and other customers by tailoring the experience to their individual user journey. In conjunction with our external partners, we have successfully launched our cross-functional insights lab and have started executing the first waves of in-market tests. These first testing waves lay the necessary groundwork for us to establish a rapid test and learn culture within our organization. Building upon our customer analytics and segmentation work, the testing is focused on delivering targeted, personalized marketing through our digital marketing channels and moving away from a one size fits all approach. We're also using the learning from our customer analytics efforts to structure innovative tests that target what we know are high-value opportunities, including for example, greater engagement with our loyalty and private label credit card program. These tests focus on engaging with our customer via both digital marketing as well as in-store, where the majority of our customers still shop. While the primary focus of the insights lab is launching innovative tests to inform our personalization strategy. We are also using it and the relationship with our external partners to reinvent our behind the scenes marketing processes to build a nimble personalization strategy that we can automate and scale. And third, digital delivery, the strategic advantage that brick-and-mortar retailers have over a pure digital player is that we can merge digital and physical channels to deliver an integrated personalized experience. Building on our initial success with reserve online, pick up in store, we successfully launched our Buy Online, Pick Up In Store pilot in two states: New Jersey and Florida. With the success of this pilot, we will be rolling out focus to our entire U.S. store fleet by the end of August. The re-architecture of our digital platform has continued with the successful launch of three of our five digital releases. These initial releases have begun the migration to our new digital platform while updating several key capabilities including our checkout process. The final two releases are scheduled to be completed by the end of September. Included in these last set of releases is the re-launch of our mobile app. The app will provide a platform for a host of new capabilities and features. So in summary, we were and are ahead of the curve with respect to our fleet optimization initiatives. We built off-mall early and we are proactively closing underperforming stores and optimizing our real estate portfolio, leaving us maximum flexibility and leverage to react to the significant and rapid changes in the retail real estate landscape. We are intensely focused on a Personalized Customer Contact Strategy, which we believe is our single biggest opportunity. We view the digital disruption in the industry as a major opportunity for The Children's Place as we have the perfect customer for our personalization initiative. A mobile millennial mom who is ready to digitally engage with us through our various omni-channel initiatives, and we also have the luxury of a built-in Gen Z customer, which will serve us well in the years to come. Our biggest mall-based competitor announced bankruptcy and is liquidating the first 25% of their stores in fiscal 2017, the majority of them in thriving A and B centers. We are the best positioned to profit from Gymboree's bankruptcy announcement. And in locations where we are directly co-located with their liquidation events, we have already seen a pickup in sales and traffic. Product has always been our number one priority, and we believe we have the best children's wear product team in the industry. We have deep talent and expertise in sourcing, production, design and merchandising. And we are confident that our brand will continue to strongly resonate with our customer. We were an early partner of Amazon. We are one of their top children's wear vendors, we have a strong relationship and we continue to work together to service growth opportunities. We have minimal debt and a pristine balance sheet, which provides us with maximum financial flexibility. And most importantly, we've had a forward-looking strategy in place for several years that has created significant value for our shareholders, and we're looking forward to continuing to deliver strong results in 2017 and beyond. Thank you. And now I'll turn it over to Mike.