Krispy Kreme, Inc. (NASDAQ:DNUT) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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Krispy Kreme, Inc. (NASDAQ:DNUT) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript May 9, 2024

Krispy Kreme, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-0.05059 EPS, expectations were $0.07. Krispy Kreme, Inc. isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).

Operator: Thanks for standing by. My name is Audra, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I’d like to welcome everyone to the Krispy Kreme First Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. I would now like to turn the call over to Alexandre Eldredge, Krispy Kreme Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Alexandre Eldredge: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Krispy Kreme’s first quarter 2024 earnings call. Thank you for joining us today. We will be referencing our earnings release and presentation during the call. These are available on our Investor Relations website at investors.krispykreme.com. Joining me on the call this morning are President and Chief Executive Officer, Josh Charlesworth; and Chief Financial Officer, Jeremiah Ashukian. After prepared remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that this call contains forward-looking statements made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities and Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements of expectations, future events, or future financial performance.

An employee of the grocery store happily decorating doughnuts with colorful icing.

Forward-looking statements involve a number of inherent risks and uncertainties, and we caution investors that these risks could cause actual results to differ materially than those contained in any forward-looking statements. These factors and other risks and uncertainties are described in detail in the company’s Form 10-K filed with the SEC for the year ended January 1, 2023, and in the other filings we make from time to time with the SEC. Forward-looking statements made today are only as of today. The company assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements except as may be required by law. Additionally, today’s call will include certain non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation between non-GAAP financial measures and their closest comparable GAAP measure can be found in our first quarter 2024 earnings press release and Form 8-K filed today with SEC and is also available at our investors.krispykreme.com website.

Jeremiah will take us through our financial performance in a moment, but first here’s Josh.

Josh Charlesworth: Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. We had a strong first quarter. Our strategy of making fresh Krispy Kreme doughnuts more available around the world is working. Excitement for our fresh Krispy Kreme doughnuts has never been higher. This further is from our recently opened the Hot Light Theater in France, where Parisians lined up some waiting overnight for their first ever hot original based doughnut fresh off the line. I was able to join our team members in Paris who are doing a great job spreading the joy that is Krispy Kreme, not just to eat, but to share and give to others. I wish to thank all our hardworking Krispy Kremers who get it done every day in now 39 countries around the world. Let me summarize today’s key messages.

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Q&A Session

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First quarter organic revenue growth exceeded expectations of 6.7% year-over-year with strong consumer demand and increased sales through digital channels fueling the results. We’re increasing the pace of expansion as we make our fresh doughnut more available around the world. In Q1, we grew our points of access for Krispy Kreme fresh doughnuts by 19.4% year-over-year. We recently launched in France and we’ve announced our expansion into Brazil and Germany. In the U.S., we expect to add 15,000 points of access by the end of 2026. We’re accelerating into more grocers and convenience stores. We’re excited about our national rollout with McDonald’s, which is expected to add more than 12,000 new points of access alone. And we’re reaffirming our guidance for the full year with 6% to 8% organic revenue growth expected to translate into adjusted EBITDA expansion of 8% to 11%.

This reflects our intent to drive increasingly profitable growth from our Hub and Spoke operating model. Let’s double click into each of these topics. In the first quarter, engagement with the brand hit all time highs. We had a record 17.6 billion media impressions, nearly triple the same quarter last year. We launched planned initiatives like our St. Patrick’s Day specialty doughnut collection and nimbly responded to spontaneous events such as the AT&T cell phone outage when we offered free doughnuts to those impacted. Krispy Kreme’s fresh and innovative doughnuts continue to resonate with our customers, especially on celebratory occasions. For example, our Valentine’s Day specialty doughnut collection available in 33 countries led to our biggest sales day ever.

Sales through digital channels, including for delivery and pickup increased by 26% in the quarter. And we’re excited about our recently launched new and improved loyalty program in the U.S., which has been very well received. So much so, at one point, our app became the number one download on the app store last week. Following our recent announcement to provide fresh doughnuts daily at McDonald’s restaurants in the U.S., we have raised our long-term global points of access goal from 75,000 to 100,000 to improve the quick service restaurant opportunity. Our pace of expansion is also accelerating. For the past 3 years, our global points of access grew by an average 19% per year to just over 14,000 by the end of 2023. Looking ahead, we expect fresh Krispy Kreme doughnuts to be available in 33,000 points of access already by the end of 2026.

We expect this growth to be driven by a combination of both existing and new customers as well as new market expansion. For example, our nationwide rollout to McDonald’s in the U.S. gives us the opportunity to add distribution at other major customers such as Walmart, which still only lists us in about 25% of their stores, and Target with whom we have already agreed to expand our presence. In new markets, our upcoming expansion into Germany, France, and Brazil provide opportunities for thousands more points of access and we expect to continue opening 3 to 5 new markets per year. Still, we do expect that the U.S. will be the biggest driver of our profitable expansion. The recently announced agreement with McDonald’s is expected to bring Krispy Kreme to more than 12,000 of their U.S. restaurants by the end of 2026.

We’ll provide three of our most popular doughnuts fresh every day. The iconic original glazed, chocolate ice with sprinkles, and chocolate ice cream filled. They will be available individually and in boxes of six. McDonald’s is making them available in restaurant, by drive through, and on their mobile app. This follows a successful test of more than a 160 McDonald’s restaurants in the Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky areas, where consumer excitement and demand exceeded expectations. We are partnering with McDonald’s on a phased rollout through to the end of 2026, which we expect to begin before the end of this year. We anticipate nearly tripling our U.S. points of access over the next 3 years from 7,775 today to more than 22,000 by the end of 2026.

Much of the national rollout can happen using existing capacity, but we will also invest in our business to increase production Hubs with Spokes. We expect to do this in a couple of ways. We’ll add approximately 30 new hubs, which will be optimized for the needs of our delivered fresh daily network. We’ll also convert about 20 existing hubs that do not currently have Spokes to make them able to fully support our DFD expansion. In all, we expect to have just over 200 hubs with folks by the end of 2026. This point of access expansion will allow increased utilization of our production hubs and increased distribution density on our delivery routes. This means that we expect to get more points of access from the same production hub. Currently, our 154 Hubs with Spokes each serve on average 47 points of access in the U.S. We expect this to increase to over 100 by 2026.

The impact is best explained with a couple of examples. In Philadelphia, the productivity benefits of a more mature Hub and Spoke model are expected to bring margin accretive growth. And in Minneapolis, where we don’t currently sell doughnuts, we have the chance to be fully optimized from the start. We have a tremendous opportunity ahead of us and I’m excited to partner with our teams to capitalize on this growth potential. Now, I will turn it over to Jeremiah to talk more about the US business expansion opportunity and our overall financial performance.

Jeremiah Ashukian: Thanks, Josh, and good morning, everyone. I wanted to start by illustrating the anticipated financial impact of adding up to 15,000 points of access to our U.S. business. What you see here on this chart is a range of increases on key financial metrics in the U.S. business on an annualized basis. From a growth perspective, we expect that the addition of 14,000 to 15,000 points of access would result in roughly $340 million to $430 million in annualized incremental revenue and $70 million to $100 million of additional adjusted EBITDA creating significant operating leverage on the existing business. Now, I’ll discuss our first quarter results. We outperformed expectations as organic revenue grew 6.7%, adjusted EBITDA increased 5.9% and we maintained positive operating leverage in the quarter, holding adjusted EBITDA margin steady at 13.1%.

Turning to our U.S. segment results, organic revenue increased 7.4% despite weather disruptions to the business in January. Additionally, we continue to see strong growth in availability as points of access increased 17.5%. We have also improved the quality of points of access by adding another 96 secondary display cabinets to high traffic grocery doors. This takes us to 303 total grocery cabinets across the U.S. We have seen these add up to 70% incremental sales to a DFD door. The slight decline in average revenue per door was driven by a mix impact of the customer base with smaller grocery customers such as Save Mart being added in the quarter, while underlying door performance remains healthy helped by the launch of Minis. In turn, this drove a 6.5% increase in sales per hub to $4.9 million, up from $4.6 million in the prior year.

This improvement drove increased utilization across the network, which was a key factor in delivering 70 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion year-over-year to 14.4%. The International segment now reflects all of the equity owned international markets as we move the company owned Canadian and Japanese businesses into the international segment from the market development segment. Organic revenue grew 9.8% with all markets in growth, driven by record points of access growth of nearly 24% alongside successful marketing activations. From an adjusted EBITDA perspective, we also saw all markets expand margins in the quarter outside of the UK market. Overall adjusted EBITDA increased 8.2%, resulting in a margin decline of 50 basis points to 16.5%.

We have a holistic intervention plan in place for the UK and have rationalized parts of our manufacturing network to improve utilization. Similar to the U.S. segment, average revenue per door was driven by mix of customers as we continue to expand into the convenience channel, including OXXO in Mexico and Tesco Express in the UK, which naturally has a lower revenue per door. Market development is now solely comprised of our franchise businesses, both domestically in U.S. and internationally. Within the segment, organic revenue declined 14.1%, which was driven by timing of equipment sales versus the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA in this segment expanded 900 basis points to 54.1%, again largely linked to lower equipment sales, which are lower margin revenues.

For the first quarter, we delivered $0.07 in adjusted earnings per share. The higher depreciation and amortization in the quarter reflects the investments associated with the expansion of our Hub and Spoke network. The negative cash flow from operations in the first quarter reflected our strategy to reduce the reuse of vendor financing. This is now largely complete. We are still aiming to be cash flow positive in 2024. We also continue to have a healthy balance sheet with access to liquidity to fuel our growth agenda. Today, we are reaffirming our full year outlook. We have good momentum heading into the second quarter, but are mindful of some consumer softness in the current market, which is impacting discretionary spend. While investing in our U.S. expansion, including start-up costs for the McDonald’s national rollout, we expect to deliver positive operating leverage.

Similarly, we anticipate incremental investments to open the new hubs Josh referenced earlier and expect to trend towards the high end of the range on capital expenditures in 2024. We anticipate this to continue in 2025 and 2026 before trending towards 6% thereafter. As it relates to the second quarter of 2024, we expect to deliver net revenue growth of 6% to 8% and adjusted EBITDA growth of 8% to 10%. We will continue to closely monitor and adapt to changes in the market and uncertainty in the consumer environment and remain confident in our ability to drive operating leverage consistently throughout 2024. With that, I will turn it over to Josh for his closing remarks.

Josh Charlesworth: Thanks, Jeremiah. In summary, we are expanding availability by adding high quality productive points of access, driving operating leverage through the efficiency of our operating model and maximizing capital return, both by leveraging existing capacity and making selective investments in geographies, which have limited access to Krispy Kreme today. All in, I look forward to us building a bigger and better Krispy Kreme in the years ahead. Operator, let’s now open it up to Q&A, please.

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] We’ll go first to Sara Senatore at Bank of America.

Sara Senatore : So I guess I wanted to, you mentioned, McDonald’s. I guess I wanted to dive in there a little bit. I have a few questions. So one is if you could just clarify what impact, if any, you’re including, from that partnership either on top-line or as I think about G&A, I think you’ve invested ahead of that partnership rolling out. How to think about that growth going forward or sort of the big upfront cost behind you or how many quarters perhaps should we expect to see sort of outsized G&A growth ahead of revenue growth? So, just that sort of broader view on the McDonald’s partnership implications for your P&L.

Jeremiah Ashukian: We are collaborating with McDonald’s to build detailed rollout plan and anticipate the launch to start in the tail end of 2024. So from a revenue impact, we do expect that to be fairly minimal this year. What I would say with respect to cost, we are, as you mentioned, in the investment phase now and are incurring start-up costs and SG&A and OpEx. We’re not disclosing exactly how much we’re spending on that, but we are pleased that we can reaffirm our guidance assuming those costs are in our business beginning in Q1.

Sara Senatore : And then just the follow-up question on that is I know some of the concerns or some of the questions around McDonald’s have to do with sort of overlap with your existing distribution, points of access. Can you maybe assuage some of those and talk about what, if anything, you saw during your test with respect to cannibalization? I know in the past, I think you said, that doesn’t seem to be really an issue, because you’re sort of underpenetrated. But anything that you saw, regarding your existing POAs, in Kentucky and what happened when you launched McDonald’s?

Jeremiah Ashukian: Yes. I mean, we’ve done a bit of work around the incrementality of this, and we believe, we expect to see strong incrementality of around 85%. That’s what you see in kind of the chart we presented this morning reflects that, which will be a mix of higher incrementality in brand new markets, but obviously a little bit lower incrementality in existing markets.

Operator: We’ll go next to John Ivankoe at JPMorgan.

John Ivankoe: Few questions if I may. At first, as you begin to kind of have plans for overall relatively national penetration. Are you beginning to have conversation with taking various major grocery and other types of national accounts on a national basis? In other words, as you begin to have the capacity to go into McDonald’s, do you expect it to have a number of different simultaneous agreements with other national type both larger and smaller format retailers?

Josh Charlesworth: Yes. By distributing to almost every McDonald’s in the country, this does indeed give us the opportunity to profitably add distribution with other major customers, both existing customers that we are under penetrated in and indeed new ones. And I think the conversations that we’ve had with them since the announcement have largely been positive, because they can see that we’re able to build out our operating model, on a national scale and therefore serve them, nationally. I mean, it’s going to be really exciting to bring, Krispy Kreme to Minneapolis, for example, the home of Target or to bring Krispy Kreme to Walmart in Arkansas. So, these are things we haven’t done up to now, and we’re really excited to do that. And so, yes, the data, that we shared today and our goal, of getting to 15,000 points of access in the U.S. by 2026, obviously includes expansion beyond, McDonald’s as a result.

John Ivankoe: And it does remind me that I actually have 2 more questions. As you guys kind of think about the overall size of the doughnut market or sweet treat market, I mean, you obviously have a lot of interesting insights both at your current employer and also previous employers. But how big of a prize, do you think the U.S. Krispy Kreme market really is? I mean, you can obviously, if you look at it as a percentage of doughnut sales, you could argue that Krispy Kreme share gets to be very, very high kind of in the out years, but is the price something materially, bigger than doughnut sales? How are you defining the overall TAM at this point?

Josh Charlesworth: Well, I think, today, we brought, a really good insight on the incremental revenue we expect out to 2026. Jeremiah shared $340 million to $430 million revenue reflecting 15,000 points of access goal. We actually following the announcement of McDonald’s that gave us insight on the QSR opportunity overall. We’ve continued to appreciate the opportunity to access these national accounts you referenced at the beginning of this discussion. So, we’ve said we believe we can get about 30,000 points of access in the long run. Regarding the share of market and what have you, we’re still actually a relatively small player with sharing the low-teens in grocery stores today. And so, there’s plenty of upside for us because we are the best donor in the market.

It’s an awesome experience. We’re constantly innovating, constantly bringing excitement to the brand and we’re fresh, fresh daily. It’s a really unique positioning. So, yes, absolutely. We want to take share from those who aren’t able to bring such an exciting brand and product to the consumer.

John Ivankoe: Did you address kind of the current test and experience with Ryder handling your last mile distribution? I think it’s in DC and LA, kind of positives and negatives, and I guess at this point, what would keep you to perhaps making that an overall system wide decision?

Josh Charlesworth: No. It’s a good question. Actually, I was just up with the Krispy Kremers and the Ryder team in DC myself riding the routes. And what I could see was that, the service level and the quality of the doughnuts is being maintained, which is the primary focus of the test right now, make sure those Krispy Kreme doughnuts show up in the way we would expect and the partnership with Ryder has been great so far. Really, we now, therefore need to move into more analyst analysis and understanding of what this could look like in terms of our economics, and how it could support the rollout. We are looking to add another city to the test. And indeed, we’re also talking to other providers. It’s really important that the doughnuts and the delivery show up as if it was Krispy Kreme, their dedicated trucks, the drivers were in Krispy Kreme uniforms, and presenting themselves in really positive way, and it looks really promising.

But we’ll provide updates as we know more about the opportunity to extend that as we support the rollout nationally towards this 15,000 goal by 2026.

Operator: We’ll move next to Aisling Grueninger at Piper Sandler.

Aisling Grueninger: You’ve mentioned in the past you’re focused around automating the doughnut production. Just wondering if you have any updates around this. I know in the international segment, some of your production facilities use automation. Just wondering about the opportunity this presents to the U.S. market and just how this could help with the rollout of McDonald’s?

Josh Charlesworth: We continue to work on the opportunity to modernize the making and indeed the moving of doughnuts to the earlier question. There are transformational improvements we can make and are making with automation. It’s still proportionately a relatively small percentage of the business that we’re applying this to largely are non-consumer facing doughnut factories. We have a line, a fully automated line running in our Bronx facility, for example, in New York, where we’re topping and filling and even picking the doughnuts off the line automatically. But at this stage, that’s still work that’s ongoing. We’re actually also finding ways to modernize production lines by improving yield and reducing waste by digitizing the lines, and monitoring those variables in that way as well.

So, it is an opportunity. We definitely think that this is an area that can help us scale and help us be more efficient. But with the acceleration of points of access growth, we also need to support capacity expansion, particularly across the U.S. So, we’re being thoughtful how we bring in new technology as we also expand.

Operator: Our next question comes from Bill Chappell at Truist Securities.

Bill Chappell: In your comments, you kind of talked about some recent softness around the category and kind of consumers pulling back. Just maybe a little more color on that. I mean, it’s not unique, but I think we’ve seen kind of slowing volumes throughout all of packaged food over the past few months and just anything more you can talk about that and if you think there are any other things that work impacting that?

Josh Charlesworth: Actually, Bill, although we’re mindful of the consumer environment, we actually see the brand being really healthy with people looking to Krispy Kreme as an affordable sweet treat for those special celebrate tree occasions. We mentioned earlier Valentine’s and being the biggest sales day in history of the company. I mean, earlier this month, even in April, we saw tremendous engagement with our total solar eclipse donor. And so, although we’re mindful of the consumer environment, particularly on the international side, the brand is really healthy, plenty of consumer engagement. I think it’s because of the unique role that, Krispy Kreme plays as an occasional sweet treat for special occasions and celebrations.

Bill Chappell: I’m sorry. So you’re not seeing any softness? I may have missed that comment. Sorry.

Jeremiah Ashukian: No, I think the softness we would have talked about would have been in January just due to weather in the United States, but not necessarily broader kind of consumer.

Bill Chappell: And then just to the McDonald’s, I guess, two questions that I hear most often. One, trying to understand kind of the level of commitment on McDonald’s of and the franchisees down the road. I mean, you say you’re going to, I think, 12,000 out of 13,000 doors. I mean, is there and you’re obviously spending a lot of money behind it. Is there any way McDonald’s can say a year, year and a half into this, this isn’t working or this doesn’t work for certain franchises and that changes that or is it full ahead, everybody’s fully committed to going to that 12,000 through 2026?

Josh Charlesworth: McDonald’s has been a great partner so far and we’ve really enjoyed the collaboration. The agreement last 1 year after the last rollout in 2026 and, of course, can be renewed after that. So, we’ve already announced our share partnership with McDonald’s and it is about rolling out through to the end of 2026 and the intent is more than 12,000 restaurants and that is the phased rollout plan that we’re working on with McDonald’s. We don’t expect it to start till the tail end of the year, but it’s really thoughtful. We’ll obviously naturally prioritize places where we at Krispy Kreme can provide availability faster. But the partnership is going really great so far after what was obviously a great Kentucky test and very thorough test that demonstrated the consumer demand outstripped both theirs and our expectations.

Bill Chappell: And then I’ll squeeze one more on the and this is kind of a follow-up from the earlier one on. The incrementality, just trying to understand, I understand how it maybe interacts with your stores, but how it does when there’s a Dunkin’ store next buy or a convenience store that sells doughnuts or stuff like that. Just trying to understand how it expands the overall doughnut market in the same way and kind of what your test showed from that standpoint?

Josh Charlesworth: Well, we know, that we create buzz and demand when we come to a new market. We’ve seen that again and again. When it comes to existing markets, obviously, had a prolonged period of time with the Kentucky test to see, the impact of that incrementality. But also bear in mind, we have many parts of the country where we already have good availability. I’ve taken Atlanta, take areas of the Carolinas, places where they may even be in a town, more of the others, doughnut shops you referenced, but they’re not really doughnut shops. They’re generally beverage focused, sandwich focused. We are the ones who offer a unique awesome fresh doughnut experience, Minis for Mom this week, constantly bringing excitement and headlines to the category. So, that doesn’t surprise us. But, yes, we’ve done the analysis and the numbers that the incrementality that Jeremiah shared today was based off a very thoughtful analysis.

Operator: We’ll take our next question from Andrew Wolf at C.L. King.

Andrew Wolf: I just had a couple of follow-ups. First on McDonald’s, do you expect the rollout just in terms of stores where it’s rolled into overtime to be kind of linear? Or is there an exponential build, or even a front end loaded build? I would think more exponential, but just sort of the timing between now and 2026.

Josh Charlesworth: I’d describe it as balanced. It’s balanced around, where we have availability today, balanced around where we can bring on new capacity quickly. And then, of course, there are parts of the country, where our development pipeline means it’s going to take a little while to launch. And Donald’s conversation has been fantastic as we share with them our development plans and they’ve taken through with us how they want to run it. And so it’ll be balanced and thought for over the period from the tail end of this year up to the end of 2026.

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