Frank Conforti
Analyst · Morgan Stanley
Thank you, Dick, and good afternoon, everyone. I will begin my commentary discussing our total Company Q1 results versus the prior comparable quarter, followed by additional notes by brand. Total Company sales grew by 13% to a first quarter record of $1.1 billion, driven by a total Retail segment comp sales increase of 11%, a 6% increase in Wholesale segment sales and a Nuuly segment sales increase of $15 million. The growth in the Retail segment sales was driven by outperformance in the store channel versus the digital channel. Please remember, during the first quarter of last year North American stores faced capacity constraints and our European stores were largely closed due to government restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. This resulted in poor store performance and incredibly strong digital performance a year ago. This year, across both the stores and digital channels we saw increases in AUR, decreases in conversion rate while traffic was up in stores and down in digital. By product category, demand for women’s apparel and accessories were the strongest with home decelerating from their recent healthy trends. The growth in our Wholesale segment was due to strong full price channel sales at Free People which more than offset a slight decline at Urban Outfitters. Although we delivered double-digit sales growth, the operating environment remained challenging and weighed on profits. The decline in gross and operating profit margins in the quarter were largely due to supply chain disruptions resulting in continued increased inbound freight costs deleveraging product margins. Additionally, as stores faced capacity restrictions last year, we held staffing well under normal levels. Now that stores have opened-up again and traffic is rebounding nicely our store staffing levels are closer to historical averages and resulted in increased SG&A spend. As supply chain costs remain high and our SG&A comparisons remain historically low, we believe our profit margin will remain challenged in the second quarter versus the prior year. I will now provide more details by brand, starting with the Anthropologie group. The group delivered an impressive 18% Retail segment comp in Q1 versus the prior year. The double-digit comps were driven by exceptionally strong full price comps in apparel which increased by more than 50%. This led to over 100 basis points of improvement in the brand's markdown rate. Anthropologie started the season by strategically bringing in early receipts of an expanded dress assortment in anticipation of the consumers desire to return to events in the spring season. Dresses led the apparel category with outsized growth and BHLDN recorded the highest Q1 revenue on record. The brand pushed the boundaries on newness and style and the customer is responding. To support this strategy, the brand marketing team produced a compelling integrated dress marketing strategy refocusing on the original intended age demographic for the brand. Superior product execution and marketing in the quarter led to double-digit growth in new apparel customers to the brand. During the quarter, the home category was positive driven by strength in furniture and a positive comp in gift and entertaining. We believe gift and entertaining could moderate some as the customer is spending less time in her home than the previous two years. Overall, with current strength of apparel and accessories we believe the Anthropologie group could drive a nicely positive comp in Q2. Now I will call your attention to the Free People brand. Once again, the Free People team produced an extraordinary quarter with Retail segment comps achieving a 15% gain versus last year driven by strength in apparel and accessories. The brand continued their strong customer growth due in part to some of the best marketing campaigns in the industry. The wholesale channel returned to growth this quarter driven by strength in the full price channel along with many specialty stores operating at full capacity again. The FP Movement brand also delivered another outstanding quarter, delivering 42% total Retail segment growth. We believe Free People will continue to drive healthy sales growth in the Retail segment as well as continue to grow the Wholesale segment in the second quarter. Now moving on to the Urban brand which delivered a 1% Retail segment comp versus the prior year. UO Europe delivered a robust 44% comp which was largely offset by a negative 8% comp at UO North America. As Dick previously mentioned, we believe the macro environment, especially in North America is having an outsized impact on the UO brand and consumer. With inflation rates not seen in over 40 years in addition to lapping trillions of dollars in stimulus funding from the prior year it presents a unique challenge for the UO North America customer. While we know the macro environment for the Urban customer may remain challenging for some period, we also know we can execute better. The brands inventory is higher than where we would like it to be, and we are focused on correcting those inventory levels throughout the second quarter. As a result of difficult Q2 comparison, macro environment headwinds and execution opportunities, we believe UO could deliver a negative comp in Q2. Lastly, I will speak to Nuuly. The first quarter was a very strong one for Nuuly Rent. Nuuly finally experienced a period with limited COVID interruptions, and the business was well positioned to capitalize on the customer’s interest in fashion and going out. Marketing campaigns continued to build brand and concept awareness in addition to driving robust customer growth. Active subscribers ended Q1 up nearly 200% versus Q1 last year, and up nearly 50% from the end of Q4. The brand outperformed our expectations with stronger growth in new subscribers, more reactivated subscribers and greater subscriber retention than planned. Momentum built through the quarter, and as of today, the brand has over 82,000 active paying subscribers. We are looking forward to continuing to grow the Nuuly customer base and our learnings over the coming year. I will now turn the call over to Melanie Marein-Efron, our Chief Financial Officer.