Patrik Frisk
Analyst · Deutsche Bank
Thank you, Lance, and good morning, everyone, and welcome to our fourth quarter and year-end 2020 conference call. Before we start, I'd be remiss not to point out what a fantastic past weekend this was for sport and for Under Armour. From Stephen Curry scoring 57 points, the eighth time he scored more than 50 in a game, to Chase Yarn winning the NFL Defensive Rookie of the year and Joel Embiid putting up 33 to keep the 76ers in first place to Jordan Spieth posting a career-best 10 birdies in a round, there was no shortage of UA highlights this weekend. Oh, and of course, there's one more highlight or better yet, make that the seventh as a #7 for the gold quarterback, Tom Brady, as he had led the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for their second-ever Super Bowl victory. With Tom, it's quite easy to run out of ways to describe yet again another incredible accomplishment he's added to his unparalleled career. In his 10 years as an Under Armour athlete, Tom has exemplified what perseverance, hard work and leadership can do in pursuit of excellence. On behalf of the entire Under Armour family, Tom, thank you for making us better. Now turning back to our results. As I reflect on my first year as CEO amid a global pandemic that has tested all of us, I'd start by underscoring just how incredibly proud I am of our team's resilience and their ability to execute at an incredibly high level against our long-term strategy. We've made significant progress on our way to becoming a stronger brand and a better run company during the past year from managing through a 3-month global retail shutdown and relaunching our North American e-commerce platform to executing a comprehensive restructuring effort and divesting the MyFitnessPal platform, our mantra, the only way is through, turned out to be even more foretelling than perhaps we had intended it to be. Despite an incredible amount of uncertainty in 2020, we stayed the course by harnessing the strength of our rearchitected go-to-market engine to deliver performance-based products and experiences along with targeted data-driven storytelling, Under Armour showed up stronger and more holistically as a brand than in years past. From an operations perspective, increasingly more effective supply and demand planning, along with our best-in-class distribution network, enabled us to quickly adapt to the needs of our customers and consumers with greater precision and efficiency, getting the right product to the right place at the right time. As we closed out 2020, our efforts over the past couple of years to pursue a clearly defined target consumer, rebase our cost structure and fundamentally change the way we work is beginning to yield results, empowered by a clear identity of who we are, a leading athletic performance brand, our foundation is solid, our discipline tested and proven and the opportunity before us is robust. As I look ahead, I'm energized by our transformation. I'm confident that our operating model is strengthening our ability to drive sustainable returns to our shareholders over the long term, yet we remain confronted with uncertainty due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, some parts of our business have fundamentally changed, including new ways of working and interacting with our consumers, customers and teammates. How these changes ultimately play out over the next few years remains to be seen. Still, I'm confident that we are significantly better equipped to navigate through the changes, given our improved levels of agility and optionality. The last year has also brought about meaningful changes in consumer behavior and related marketplace demand impacts. In this respect, we remain focused on controlling what we can while staying prudent. This means being patient and measured in how we manage our business and conscious about where we are within our journey while maintaining the same level of discipline that got us here. To this effect, we will continue to constrain demand in 2021, a decision that, as discussed in previous calls, may impact our ability to drive top line volume in the near term. However, whether through proactive wholesale door-reduction efforts in North America or ordering slightly less product against future demand based on the brand and margin benefits that we realized in 2020, we are confident that this focus will help elevate our premium positioning with consumers and, therefore, driving better profitability. Carrying forward into 2021, there are 4 areas of focus that we laid out on our last call. First is continuing to strengthen the brand through increased engagement and consideration with the focused performer. Second is continuous improvement within our operating model to drive even greater efficiency across all end-to-end processes. Third is elevating a D2C-focused approach to deepen and amplify our most intimate connection with Under Armour's consumers. And finally, as we get back to profitable growth in 2021, making sure our discipline stays aligned with driving shareholder value over the long term. Starting with brand strength and engagement. About a year ago, we launched a powerful global Under Armour voice to drive increased consideration with our target consumer, the focused performer, empowered by enhanced tools and real-time metrics as consumer behavior shifted towards e-commerce as well as working out from home, including a large shift towards running, we too altered course. From the only way is through to through this together and other variations along the way, we refocused our efforts more surgically to drive greater returns at an exceedingly dynamic environment. And while these efforts, of course, take time to manifest into sea change, exiting a year like 2020 with increased consideration, conversion and higher selling prices in many parts of our business gives us greater confidence in our strategy and execution for the year ahead. Successful storytelling, of course, needs to partner with great products. In 2020, we stuck to our playbook and leaned heavier into brand and product marketing to support successful introductions like our Project Rock collection, Meridian Pant, Infinity Bra, UA SPORTSMASK and in footwear, the HOVR Machina, Phantom 2 and the Breakthru. One highlight we're especially encouraged by is the continued momentum in our women's business, specifically bras and bottoms and broad-based interest across our run category, led by our innovation-driven HOVR franchise. Another highlight is the launch of the Curry brand in December. As a purpose-led collaboration powered by Under Armour, we're excited to partner with Stephen to deliver performance products that, along with focused partnerships, will help fund youth sports in under-resourced communities through equitable access and safe places to play. As a pinnacle expression of this effort, we launched the Curry 8 basketball shoe, the first product to feature UA Flow. As the second footwear cushioning technology released under our reengineered go-to-market, Flow's proprietary nonrubber outsole has manifested into our most obedient and highest traction footwear yet. Up next, UA Flow is set to launch in one of our largest long-term growth opportunities: running. Building on the success and momentum of HOVR, the UA Flow running platform will help us accomplish 2 things. As an innovation, we believe this product's performance attributes, including its unique traction, ride and energy return structure, will help drive even more significant consideration and authenticity with core runners. And second, as our most pinnacle running footwear offering, it will broaden our ability to segment and help differentiate our assortment, thereby creating opportunities for shelf space expansion within running specialty and key wholesale accounts. Switching gears to our second area of focus is our operating model evolution. Throughout 2020, we work to rebase our cost structure to ensure we are positioned from a strategic, operational and financial perspective with an appropriate foundation and agility to scale with future growth. And within our comprehensive restructuring plan, we believe our central purpose continues to put us in a position to return to double-digit operating margin over the long term. In this spirit, we've been asked many times if we've reached an optimal cost structure for Under Armour or where our general breakeven ratio lies. At $2.2 billion of SG&A in 2020, our cost structure is not meant to support the $4.5 billion revenue that we realized last year, but instead, a larger top line business where we can begin to leverage some of the foundational investments necessary for our growth expectations. As laid out in this morning's press release and details that Dave will discuss later, we plan to return to profitability in 2021. Therefore, our breakeven is somewhere around the $4.7 billion mark. With our cost structure now appropriately rebased, it's important to understand a few elements of how we're thinking about SG&A expenses and investments moving forward. When considering our restructuring efforts and how they've impacted or will continue to affect our overall cost structure, it's essential to remember that most of these efforts have been related to future cost avoidance versus current cost reductions. That said, we had realized underlying SG&A benefits in certain areas. However, it's not as simple as cutting cost to gain leverage. As we mentioned early within our restructuring efforts, our main objective was to unburden ourselves of decisions and commitments made when we expected to be a much larger company than we are now. Within those scenarios, there was also an expected level of productivity that was never realized. As a business in pursuit of brand-right growth, we will continue to invest in driving that growth. And for us specifically, that means marketing, IT and elevating our international and D2C footprints. More simply put, while the absolute SG&A dollars may not change much in the near term, I'd underscore that productivity and return on the investments that we are making are appropriately greater than just a few years ago. And should market factors impact our growth track in the near term, we're now also capable of flexing and managing our costs with greater discipline and optionality to maintain a more consistent profitability trajectory. These factors, along with improved visibility and tighter alignment of our demand and supply planning functions, have afforded us greater flexibility with our customers and our ability to service higher-than-planned demand. This is especially evident in our year-end inventory position, which was at the same level that we ended 2019. In 2021, we plan to manage this even more tightly, helping us drive fuller price selling across all distribution points while keeping an eye on increasing our productivity and therefore, turns. Moving to our third priority, elevating a D2C-focused approach, and the pandemic has certainly magnified and accelerated digital adoption rates worldwide. With e-commerce up 40% in 2020 and representing nearly half of our total D2C business for the full year, we are hyper-focused on better understanding the consumer journey and building greater personalization capabilities to unlock even deeper connections with athletes. In our retail stores, we are working to evolve concepts to drive more profitable formats, particularly for our full-price brand house locations. Our factory house business is about driving greater productivity in store, reducing our promotional levels and leveraging the fleet to clear through excess product. While this foundational work continues to help us in our journey to be a best-in-class retailer, with the acceleration of e-commerce and tightening of wholesale, this truly becomes an omnichannel conversation. Whether it's drop ship, endless aisle or RFID, we believe executing a powerful omnichannel strategy will enable us to create a more seamless and connected shopping experience across all consumer touch points. And finally, being in a position, both strategically and operationally, to pursue this channel-agnostic approach is something that we believe will serve as a key unlock to strengthening our brand ecosystem wherever and whenever consumers choose to engage Under Armour. Bringing all these strategies together leads us to our last priority, maintaining our discipline around profitability to drive sustainable shareholder value over the long term. From operating model refinements, our innovation pipeline and brand-elevating strategies to our tighter inventory management and a rebased cost structure, it's well understood across the enterprise what we must do as we work to deliver greater leverage and sustainable profitable growth over the long term. So to wrap up, I am proud of what Under Armour has accomplished in the last year, particularly our ability to efficiently navigate an incredible amount of marketplace variability while continuing to advance our transformation. Building on this demonstrated proficiency, as we move into 2021 amid uncertainty that has carried over from last year, I am confident about our ability to meet near-term challenges, accomplish our goals, and balance them with our long-term objectives. And with that, I'll hand it over to Dave.