Matthew Reintjes
Analyst · Jefferies
Thanks, Arvind, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today. Looking at our first quarter, we're very pleased with our performance, but Q1 reinforced something more fundamental about YETI, the earnings power of the model. Demand is more diversified, our platforms are scaling more efficiently, and our operating system continues to execute with discipline in a dynamic and often unpredictable environment. Importantly, we've entered the second quarter with global demand trends showing strength, continuing momentum from the last 2 quarters. Scott will walk through the financials and outlook in detail, so I'm going to focus my time on what matters most from an investor perspective. What is getting structurally better in the business, why our advantages are durable and defensible and why we believe YETI is positioned to deliver sustained growth and compound value over time. I'll start with 4 key takeaways from Q1. First, demand for YETI is resilient, diversified and increasingly repeatable. In the quarter, we saw broad-based strength across categories and channels. That diversification matters because it reduces reliance on any single product cycle or channel dynamic and allows us to invest consistently behind innovation, brand and capabilities without chasing short-term volatility. Across our core product platforms of Drinkware and Coolers and equipment, performance was driven by the right assortment, augmented by innovation and amplified by our omnichannel model. That combination continues to be a strategic advantage. Second, our business is delivering strong growth as we are moving past some of the market dynamics and supply disruptions that we faced last year. Importantly, we're broadening our customer base while building upon our core. Innovation continues to attract customers, particularly in newer categories like bags, soft coolers and sports hydration drinkware, while repeat purchasing and retention remains strong. At yeti.com, 12-month retention held steady, while lifetime value continued to grow. Our consumer metrics reinforce this strength. In the U.S., brand awareness, consideration and preference increased across coolers, drinkware and bags, with bags reaching their highest levels since tracking began in 2022. Brand NPS remained healthy across demographic groups. Product satisfaction is approximately 98% and nearly 2/3 of our survey customers now own products across multiple categories. Taken together, these indicators point to a brand that is expanding its reach while maintaining its promise, which is exactly what we aim to deliver. Globally, we continue to accelerate to scale with strong economics. This remains a compelling and addressable long-term growth opportunity, and we are still early in unlocking it, even with international trending towards 23-plus percent of full year sales in 2026. As Scott will discuss, we expect to deliver at our guided growth levels for international in 2026 with strong gross margins and overall contribution to YETI. Our approach internationally is deliberate and repeatable, right assortment, right distribution, localized activation and disciplined investment. In Europe, we continue to expand doors and invest in awareness with improving productivity in our top accounts. In Asia, Japan is in the ramp phase, while Southeast Asia continues its rollout and China and Korea remain targeted for the second half of the year. Canada and Australia remain our largest international markets and despite macroeconomic pressures, we expect solid full year performance from both. Third, Drinkware is proving it remains a scalable, durable platform. We delivered a second consecutive quarter of Drinkware growth with global drinkware up 5% year-over-year, including growth in sell-in and sell-through in the U.S. This performance was not driven by a single hero SKU. The key point is that growth is broadening across the platform, supported by refreshed core products, targeted extensions and disciplined pricing and promotional posture, reflecting innovation and newness including stackable cups, chug bottles, ceramic mugs and the Yonder Shaker bottle. Drinkware today is about platform health, cadence and discipline and those are the drivers of durability. Drinkware not only has a solid foundational cash-generative base but also drives incremental upside from proven adjacencies. We see additional runway deepening our presence in sport and fitness hydration which continue to attract younger consumers and new use cases, making it additive to the platform and expanding the addressable market over time. Shifting to Coolers and Equipment. In Coolers and Equipment, we delivered double-digit growth led by soft coolers and bags, Daytrip and Camino continue to outperform, extending YETI further into everyday use while remaining true to our heritage of toughness and reliability where supply has been constrained, demand remains strong. Fill rates in certain soft cooler and bag programs ran short through 2025 and into Q1 2026, with demand carrying through into the current year. Additional capacity coming in the back half of the year should allow us to better capture that demand. That matters for 2 reasons. It's a near-term growth lever as availability improves and it reinforces the long-term opportunity in our ecosystem of bags, soft coolers and carry solutions used repeatedly across everyday occasions. In hard coolers, seasonal color innovation supported the category as we lapped prior year product transitions. Cargo performed well across platforms with particular strength in the GoBox 1 protective case establishing a foundation for future expansion coming in 2026. Fourth, wholesale momentum is validating brand strength and product relevance. Global wholesale grew 19% year-over-year, our strongest wholesale quarter in more than 3 years, driven by consumer pull across both U.S. and international markets. The headline growth is notable, but what matters most is what's underneath it. Double-digit sell-through growth in the U.S., balanced inventory positions and strong partner confidence in our expanding innovation pipeline. U.S. wholesale inventories remain well managed and aligned with demand across major categories. Our approach to the channel remains disciplined and consistent, protect brand presentation, maintain premium positioning and prioritize long-term shelf productivity, not short-term volume. Within D2C, demand was strong across e-commerce, Amazon and YETI stores, offset by softer corporate sales. Importantly, underlying consumer demand across our owned and marketplace channels tracked well with our overall growth. Performance was driven by seasonal color launches, expanded customization and meaningful enhancements to our U.S. and Canadian websites, improving conversion, add to cart rates and average order value. We also continue to invest in digital capabilities like our AI-driven shopping assistant Ranger. Ranger enhances consumer experience, improves conversion and scales efficiently as our assortment grows. We view it as a long-term capability, not a short-term tactic. We recently launched our TikTok shop and are approaching it deliberately as a channel for authentic storytelling and reaching younger consumers. We'll scale based on performance, repeat behavior and brand standards. While corporate sales was softer due to order timing and a slower global corporate environment, we are managing this channel pragmatically. It is attractive, but we will not chase volume at the expense of brand integrity or pricing discipline. The bottom line, the year-over-year performance in D2C was driven by corporate sales timing in a more cautious global corporate environment, not a change in consumer engagement with the brand. As we think about our P&L resilience and opportunity, the discipline with which we are executing is especially important in the current environment. As Scott will walk through in more detail, we're navigating peak tariff impact in the first half with second half gross margins recovering most of the year-over-year pressure. The structural margin drivers of mix, sourcing and pricing are counterbalancing cyclical inputs, including tariffs and costs related to global energy pricing. We believe these are known and transient headwinds, not long-term structural issues. Our diversified supply chain and pricing discipline gives us flexibility. And as we move through the year and lap some of these impacts, we expect margin performance to improve while continuing to invest behind the brand and innovation. Turning to why YETI's advantages are durable and defensible. We believe YETI's moat rests on 3 reinforcing pillars. First, brand trust and authenticity. YETI's not a logo. It's a broad reputation earned over time. As you may have seen in our recent 4-letter brand campaign and platform released last week. Consumers choose YETI because they believe it will perform, it will last and it will be designed with purpose. That trust drives consumer pull, supports premium positioning, increases repeat behavior and lowers marketing friction. It also makes innovation more efficient because consumers are willing to adopt what we build next. When a brand owns trust in its categories, it creates a durable advantage that is difficult to replicate. Second, scalable product platforms. We build platforms not one-off products. Platforms like drinkware and coolers and equipment allow us to reuse design DNA, supply chain expertise and brand credibility while expanding usage occasions and deepening consumer relationships. As we look at products launched in the last 24 months, these generally represent approximately 25% to 30% of sales in key categories as we continue to shorten development cycles and improve speed to market, driving innovation. While innovation plays a key role, this also displays the power and impact of legacy products as these continue to capture a long tail benefit, reinforcing the product development stacking effect. This is how we generate compounding returns, strong base, meaningful improvements, thoughtful extensions and new use cases that fit the brand and strengthen the ecosystem. Third, a disciplined global omnichannel model. Wholesale expands reach and discovery, owned DTC deepens engagement and loyalty. Marketplaces add access and convenience and corporate sales drives engagement. When managed with discipline, these channels reinforce each other and reduce the reliance on any single source of demand, increasing resilience across cycles. Overall, YETI's built for upside and for durability against positive brand momentum and global demand, we have a differentiated brand with loyal consumers, scalable product platforms that refresh demand, a diversified omnichannel model and a flexible, diversified supply chain. And we pair that with a fortress balance sheet, more than $425 million in liquidity and approximately $70 million in debt and a strong free cash flow with roughly $500 million returned to shareholders through share repurchases over the past 2 years, and an upsized $500 million share repurchase authorization, all while maintaining the ability to invest through cycles and allocate capital opportunistically. Let me close by being explicit about why we believe YETI can deliver sustained growth and compound value over time. First, brand power compounds as YETI shows up in more everyday moments, brand meaning deepens, supporting pricing integrity, repeat purchase and lifetime value. Second, platform scalability improves efficiency and reduces risk. Extending platforms allow us to grow with discipline while maintaining premium standards. Third, international runway is real and still early. Premium performance-oriented brands can travel when built with authenticity and executed with discipline. Fourth, omnichannel diversification increases resilience. Discovery, loyalty and access work together to reduce volatility. Fifth, operational discipline supports per share value creation. Strong cash generation funds innovation, expansion and disciplined capital returns. This is a company with durable advantages and a clear path to compounding across cycles. And taken together, these drivers support a long-term top line growth algorithm in the high single to low double-digit range, driven by core platform performance, new category adjacencies and international expansion. When combined with margin expansion and buybacks, we have a model with the potential to drive earnings and free cash flow faster than top line growth over time. Our guidance implies we'll be within that growth algorithm starting in 2026. We'll go deeper on our long-term growth algorithm, margin framework, innovation road map and capital allocation priorities at our Investor Day now targeted for September. Stepping back, YETI is not a single product story, a single channel story or a single geography story. We're a brand-led platform business with multiple engines driven by authentic consumer demand enabled by scalable innovation platforms and strengthened by a diversified global omnichannel model. In a market that continues to shift, whether due to consumer behavior, promotional intensity, tariffs or geopolitical uncertainty, durability is the point. We built YETI to endure, to protect brand equity and to play offense when opportunities present themselves. That mindset has guided us for more than 20 years, and it continues to shape how we run the business today. As we celebrate YETI's 20th anniversary this year, the first quarter reinforced our confidence in the strength of the brand the sustainability of demand and the operating system we've built. We are seeing continued momentum in Q2 and are excited about what's ahead as we continue to innovate, broaden the brand thoughtfully, and build a scalable global growth engine while maintaining discipline and compounding value over time. As always, I want to close with a thank you to our partners around the world and especially to the YETI team. Before I turn the call over to Scott, I'll close by acknowledging what a pleasure it has been to have Scott join us during this incredible moment in time for YETI. He's off and running, helping drive our strategy and support our execution against YETI's potential. With that, I'll turn the call over to Scott.