Jeremy Smeltser
Analyst · UBS. Your line is open
Thanks, David. Good morning, everybody. Let’s turn your attention to Slide 11 for a review of our Q2 results from continuing operations. Net sales decreased 1.5%. Excluding the impact of $1.2 million of favorable foreign exchange, organic net sales decreased 1.6%, primarily due to year-over-year sales declines in small kitchen appliances, softness in North American aquatics and the impact of the SKU rationalization decisions we made in fiscal 2023 within our Global Pet Care and Home & Personal Care businesses, offset by higher sales of our controls products. The sales decline was generally in line with our expectations and earnings framework with favorable weather trends, providing a bit of a tailwind for our Home & Garden business. Gross profit increased $58.9 million and gross margins of 38.1% increased 870 basis points, largely driven by lower cost inventory and inventory-related expenses along with favorable mix and impacts from cost improvement actions, partially offset by lower volume. Operating expenses of $197.5 million decreased 32% due to the $65 million settlement for claims under representation and warranty insurance policy related to the TriStar acquisition, reduced project spend on restructuring, optimization and strategic transaction activities, distribution cost favorability, lower factoring charges and reduced intangible asset impairments compared to last year. These were partially offset by increased investment spend in advertising and marketing as we reinvest in our brands. Operating income of $75.9 million improved by $152.9 million driven by the gross margin improvements and lower operating expenses I mentioned. GAAP net income and diluted earnings per share both increased primarily driven by the higher operating income, higher investment income, lower interest expense and lower share count. Adjusted EBITDA was $112.3 million, an increase of 120% driven by improved gross margins and investment income of $17 million. Adjusted EBITDA, excluding investment income was $95.3 million. Adjusted diluted EPS increased by $1.76 to $1.62, driven by higher adjusted EBITDA and the reduction in shares outstanding. During the second quarter, we returned $98 million to shareholders through our share repurchase program and reduced our outstanding shares by approximately 4% or 1.2 million shares. Our current share count is approximately 29% lower than it was prior to the closure of the HHI transaction. Let’s turn now to Slide 12. Q2 interest expense from continuing operations of $16.9 million decreased $14.7 million due to our lower outstanding debt balance. Cash taxes during the quarter of $14.4 million were $8.7 million higher than last year. Depreciation and amortization of $25.4 million was $3 million higher than last year, and separately, share-based compensation was flat. Capital expenditures were $12.5 million in Q2, down from $15.9 million last year. Cash payments towards strategic transactions, restructuring-related projects and other unusual nonrecurring adjustments, were $6.6 million versus $22.9 million last year. Moving to the balance sheet. We had a quarter end cash balance of $746 million, plus $500 million in short-term investments and $490 million available on our $500 million cash flow revolver. Total debt outstanding was approximately $1.4 billion consisting of $1.3 billion of senior unsecured notes, and $84 million of finance leases. We ended the quarter with $155 million of net debt. Now, let’s get into the review of each business unit to provide details on the underlying performance drivers of our operational results. I’ll start with Global Pet Care, which is Slide 13. Reported net sales decreased 2.3%. Excluding favorable foreign currency, organic sales decreased 3%. Global companion animal sales were essentially flat to last year while North American aquatics declined high single digits. This quarter sales were adversely impacted by our decision in fiscal 2023 to exit several nonstrategic categories and lower profit SKUs. We have now anniversaried the majority of the SKU exits. As a reminder, these activities reduced our North American active item count by nearly a third and while the impact from a top-line perspective is a purposeful headwind, these actions are having a very positive impact on margins, inventory turns and cash flow. North American aquatics sales continued to be impacted by lower foot traffic and sales within the pet specialty channel, where aquatics has a larger presence as we see the North American consumer shift purchasing toward e-commerce and other channels. In fact, GPC’s e-commerce sales grew almost 12% year-over-year making this a quarter of high mark of e-commerce sales as a percentage of total sales for GPC. In addition, we are now seeing aquatics nutrition growing low single digits, which is a sign of stabilization in that category. We have also had a strong start to the pond season, which is contributing to the aquatics consumables recovery. On the innovation front, we are celebrating the 20th anniversary of GloFish this year and unveiled the new GloFish Starfire Red Angelfish at the Global Pet Expo in March. This is the largest fish we’ve ever offered and was specifically designed to broaden the GloFish platform’s appeal to more hobbyists who generally keep larger fish tanks. Our new Cat Treats line launched earlier under the Meowee and Good ‘n’ Tasty brands that continue to gain traction. We secured several new listings that will begin to ship next quarter. In EMEA, we launched Chews and Treats extensions in both Good Boy and 8-in-1 and built on the success of our earlier IAMS dry cat food launch with dry food for dogs in Q2 and with optimized claims and all new packaging. Adjusted EBITDA for GPC increased by 34.6% or 590 basis points to $62.3 million, delivering a record high adjusted EBITDA for the business in the quarter. Similar to the first quarter, this quarter’s increase of $16 million was primarily driven by a favorable comparison – favorable comparison to last year’s sales of higher cost inventory, favorable mix due to the exit of low-margin SKUs and our continued focus on operational productivity investments. This was partially offset by lower volumes, increased investments in programming and advertising and FX. This is the fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth for GPC and fourth consecutive quarter where the GPC business delivered adjusted EBITDA of over $50 million. With the business consistently delivering higher-margin results, we are increasing commercial investments in trade promotions, brand advertising and new innovation launch support to accelerate growth and drive market share gains. We expect top-line growth in the second half of the year, but with lower adjusted EBITDA margin levels as we focus on increasing brand and innovation investments to drive future growth. Although still challenged, the aquatics category is showing signs of recovery, particularly in consumables, which is very encouraging. Let’s move now to Home & Garden, which is on Slide 14. Net sales increased 4.8% in the second quarter, driven by double-digit sales growth in the controls category. Favorable weather trends in key regions drove higher retail POS and retail orders. The retailer reorder patterns we saw in the quarter support our view that retailers started this season with healthier inventory levels compared to last year, particularly in the controls category. Our retail customers have also allocated off-shelf and promotional space to our category ahead of last year. Our Spectracide brand grew ahead of category in the quarter with strong POS driven by consumer demand as we head into the peak quarter for the business. While we were encouraged by the early season weather, increased promotional space and strength of our brands, we continue to expect retailers to be cautious in building inventory for the season and to reorder in a more typical seasonal manner compared to 2023. Sales of household insect controls and repellents were lower this quarter than last year, which signals a slower buildup to a season that typically starts later in the summer. In cleaning, rejuvenate sales declined low double digits. While sales of some subcategories have improved sequentially, total category consumer demand continues to be soft. Our earnings framework assumes the weather in 2024 is similar to 2023, but with retailer orders much more in line with POS than last year. The collaboration and partnership with our key customers has been very strong throughout the lawn and garden season pre-build. We are supporting our new products and innovations through increased media investments, which communicate our product’s superior value to results-driven consumers. Our Spectracide One-Shot line with the tagline, "You Hold The Power", kills and prevents weeds for up to five months. This is our longest-lasting Spectracide product and is gaining traction at retail. We are supporting this product launch with focused top and bottom funnel advertising, allowing us to quickly geotarget our media spend when we see regions with the right weather for high consumer demand. In the repellents category, our new Cutter Eclipse Zone Mosquito Repellent provides 40 hours of invisible mosquito protection for families. We are supporting this product with both online and digital media campaigns with our tagline Protect Your People. Adjusted EBITDA margins increased by 840 basis points nearly doubling to $29.2 million from last year’s $15.1 million. The adjusted EBITDA increase was primarily driven by higher sales, sales of lower-cost inventory manufacturing efficiencies, cost improvement initiatives and favorable mix, offset by increased brand investments. Labor and raw material costs continue at fiscal 2023 levels that we have not experienced meaningful cost inflation this year. And finally, Home & Personal Care, which is Slide 15. Reported net sales decreased 4%. Excluding unfavorable foreign exchange, organic net sales decreased 3.7%. The organic net sales decrease was driven by low double-digit declines in global home appliances, offset by high single-digit global growth in Personal Care. We continue to see the largest sales declines in North American home appliances, but are encouraged as the rate of decline has slowed and we see North American consumer demand stabilizing in this category. Our pricing and product mix is improving, and our promotional activity has delivered higher top and bottom line contributions. Global e-commerce sales for HPC grew almost 25% in the quarter year-over-year, driven by increased investments in this channel and a shift in consumer purchasing behaviors. Sales in the EMEA region grew low single digits with growth in Personal Care from strong hair care sales, offset by a decline in home appliance sales after last year’s strong top-line performance. Sales in LatAm posted mid-double-digit growth in both Personal Care and home appliances, partly driven by pricing and inflationary markets. Commercially, our Remington Balder Pro Head Shaver is performing well on shelf and online as Remington reacts to trends among men to embrace bald hair styles. We are investing behind the Remington ONE product line, particularly in EMEA, to capitalize on the higher price point for Remington in that region and are seeing both retailer and consumer excitement for the product line. We also recently launched the innovative and all-new Russell Hobbs Comb Kettle, blending the expertise of our design and product development experts supported by AI. The product launched in the UK a market where Russell Hobbs is the number one kettle brand. Adjusted EBITDA was $17.8 million in the quarter compared to a loss of $1.9 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA margin improved to 6.6%, driven primarily by lower cost inventory and inventory related expenses, fewer low-margin promotional events, FX and pricing in certain inflationary markets and the continued benefit of our cost improvement initiatives. This was partially offset by lower volume and the increased brand-focused investments. Let’s turn now to Slide 16 and our updated expectations for 2024. We are updating our expectation for net sales and now expect net sales to be relatively flat to fiscal 2023 driven by higher demand in our Home & Garden business, offset primarily by lower consumer demand in the small kitchen appliance category with an HPC with tempering sales declines in small kitchen appliances, and continued growth in Personal Care. Adjusted EBITDA, excluding investment income is expected to grow in the low double digits, driven primarily from lower cost inventory as compared to last year, offset by increased investments in our brands and our people. From a phasing perspective, we now expect each business to deliver sales growth in the second half of the year. In Global Pet Care, we expect growth now that we have anniversaried the majority of the SKU exits. In Home & Garden, we expect second half growth compared to last year when retailers were reducing inventory levels during that time. We do, however, expect our large retail customers to defer taking on inventory until closer to consumer demand. Turning to Slide 17, depreciation and amortization is expected to be between $115 million and $125 million, including stock-based compensation of approximately $15 million to $20 million. Cash payments towards restructuring, optimization, and strategic transaction costs are expected to be approximately $50 million. Capital expenditures are expected to be in the range of $65 million to $75 million, and cash taxes are expected to be approximately $40 million. For adjusted EPS, we use a tax rate of 25%, including state taxes. To end my section, I want to echo David and thank all of our global employees for their hard work so far this year. Now back to David.