4/24/2024

speaker
Operator

Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Helen and Troy's fourth quarter fiscal 2024 earnings conference call. The agenda for the call this morning is as follows. I'll begin with a brief discussion of forward-looking statements. Ms. Noelle Chaflois, the company's CEO, will comment on business performance and key accomplishments and then provide some perspective as we begin the new fiscal year. Then, Mr. Brian Grass, the company's CFO, will review the financials in more detail and comment about current trends and expectations for the upcoming fiscal year. Following this, we will take questions you have for us today. This conference call may contain certain forward-looking statements that are based on management's current expectation with respect to future events or financial performance. Generally, the words anticipates, believes, expects, and other words similar are words identifying forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties It could cause anticipated results to differ materially from the actual results. This conference call may also include information that may be considered non-GAAP financial information. These non-GAAP measures are not an alternative to GAAP financial information and may be calculated differently than the non-GAAP financial information disclosed by other parties. The company cautions listeners not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements or non-GAAP information. Before I turn the call over to Minister Falk, I would like to inform all interested parties that a copy of today's earnings release has been posted to the investor relations section of the company's website at www.HelenofTroy.com. The earnings release contains tables that reconcile non-GAAP financial measures to their corresponding GAAP-based measures. The release can be obtained by selecting the investor relations tab on the company's homepage and then the press releases tab. I will now turn the conference call over to Ms. Shafwa.

speaker
Shafwa

Thank you, Jack. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Today marks my first public remarks as Helen of Troy's CEO. I'm honored to lead this great organization with an inspiring purpose of elevating lives in moments that matter everywhere, every day, and I'm optimistic and energized by what lies ahead for the company. Today, we reported fourth quarter results that came in ahead of our expectations. We exceeded the full year fiscal 24 consolidated net sales and adjusted EPS outlook we provided in January. During the fiscal year, we expanded gross profit margin by 390 basis points and increased adjusted operating margin by 50 basis points, even as we used fuel generated by Project Pegasus to make incremental strategic investments in our business. We generated $269 million in free cash flow, and strengthened our durable balance sheet by reducing our total debt by $269 million to $665.7 million. I am pleased with the continued execution and consistency of our results, particularly in light of an ongoing difficult macroeconomic environment and the changes that our organization is navigating. Today's results reflect the strength of our brand portfolio, the progress of our strategic initiatives, and the talent and dedication of our associates. all of which provides us with a strong platform to build upon in fiscal 25 and beyond. During the past fiscal year, we made significant progress on the goals we set for ourselves. I am pleased with the passion and engagement of the entire Helen of Troy team as we continue to embrace our new structure as a true global operating company. This structure includes next level centralization of shared services to leverage our functional expertise, our first ever centralized marketing center of excellence to bring new capability and scale, business units that are even more focused on brand building and consumer-centric innovation, and our newly formed North American Regional Market Organization, or NARMO, which mirrors our international RMO, to drive excellence in market execution. Despite fiscal 24 being one of the tougher macroeconomic years for discretionary consumer goods, We found a way to deliver our plan while navigating a number of challenges, including inflationary pressures coupled with continued predictions of recession, lengthy COVID hangover effects impacting some of our categories, shifts in shopping patterns between brick and mortar and online, changes in the retailer landscape as they adjusted to consumer spending and shopping dynamics, and the effects of geopolitical events. We braced for the impacts of these challenges and responded by lowering inventories, reducing costs, leveraging our scale to find new growth opportunities, and keeping a laser focus on ROI with the investment fuel generated by Project Pegasus. Last October, we unveiled Elevate for Growth, our exciting six-year strategic plan that represents an important pivot for the company. The plan emphasizes increased growth investment and a new portfolio management approach with defined criteria to make sharper resource allocation choices based on growth potential and return on investment. We also doubled down on delighting consumers with next level brand building and innovation. We are striving for consumer obsession in all that we do. We committed to upgrading our data insight and analytic capabilities to solve business issues better and faster to enhance our productivity. Our new state of the art distribution center in Galloway, Tennessee that opened in fiscal 24 is a great example of that. We did all this while still preserving the company's strong foundation, balance sheet and long-term investments that we believe will deliver a bright future for all Helen of Troy stakeholders. Before turning to our fourth quarter results, I want to highlight four foundational elements of Elevate for Growth that I spoke about during October's Investor Day. These four elements excite me and give me confidence that we will emerge in a stronger position, even as we navigate an environment where we expect consumers will continue to face tough choices when it comes to discretionary spending. First, We have a diversified and well-recognized family of trusted brands with an enviable reputation as a leader across multiple categories and geographies. Our brands continue to be highly rated by consumers and receive awards and recognition from prestigious periodicals and industry organizations such as Consumer Reports, Wired, Red Dot, Good Housekeeping, Beauty Publications, Food Network, and Forbes. We believe our strong brands have many opportunities to stretch into attractive adjacent spaces to further excite existing consumers and attract new ones. We identified new opportunities to expand distribution of our brands into incremental channels and customers, and those efforts paid off in fiscal 24 as we surpassed the internal goals we set for ourselves. For example, at one of our key mask customers, we secured higher than expected incremental distribution of our OXO outdoor grilling line and key Revlon hair appliances. We expect to further benefit from a full fiscal year of this new distribution in addition to even more opportunities in fiscal 25. Second, we are generating fuel from Project Pegasus to incrementally invest in growth opportunities and capabilities. This will enable us to strategically invest in our brands with precision marketing and further product and commercial innovation. Third, we are advantageously positioned to fully leverage our operational and organizational scale and assets. I am delighted that our team is embracing our new global operating model to enable greater focus and centralized expertise. I am also excited to fully leverage our new state-of-the-art Tennessee distribution center to bring significant new scale and service capabilities that will set us up for years to come. Finally, and most importantly, I am energized as I continue partnering with our talented and exceptional associates to further build on our strong culture. I am proud of our ability to attract, develop, and retain a diverse team. I believe our culture is a competitive advantage that delivers benefits to all our stakeholders by bringing new perspectives, experiences, and expertise, resulting in great brands that elevate consumers' lives with thoughtful and effective solutions. Turning now to fourth quarter business results. Consolidated net sales increased 1% as we benefited from growth in online, international, club channel sales in home and outdoor, and prestige hair care. These factors were partially offset by declines in air purifiers, fans, and heaters driven by our skew rationalization efforts and softer consumer demand, and a decline in humidification reflecting cough, cold, flu illness below the prior year and pre-COVID historical averages. Adjusted diluted EPS was $2.45, or a 21.9% increase over the same period last year, and also slightly ahead of our expectations. Overall, macro trends in the quarter reflected a consumer who remained cautious with their money and increasingly prioritized their discretionary spending on travel and other entertainment experiences over tangible goods. As we move into fiscal 25, we are seeing these trends intensify. Turning now to our segments, home and outdoor nut sales increased 5.4% over the prior year period due to growth in the home category, insulated beverage wear, packs and travel, and international. OXO remains the number one branded line in the kitchen utensils and canister food storage categories and gained share in kitchen utensils over the last 12-month period. The brand achieved strong results driven by distribution gains in the mass channel, the timing of club promotional programs, as well as strength and new distribution in grocery. International was also a highlight in the quarter. Be and Win Were the Shopper Shops is one of our Elevate for Growth strategic choices. I'm pleased to share that our NARMO and home and outdoor teams have collaborated to secure exciting OXO distribution wins. At Walmart, our OXO Softworks kitchen gadgets have expanded, we added our grilling line, and we are pleased to gain additional placement for OXO in other key categories later in fiscal 25. This is notable as 90% of the U.S. population lives within 10 miles of a Walmart store. Hydroflask performed well online, driven by continued positive reception to our new travel tumbler, seasonal colors and promotions, as well as post-holiday replenishment. We are excited about where we are heading on this key brand. Being consumer obsessed with Hydroflask means launching on-trend color, design, style, customization, and personalization options. In addition, we need to offer different container and cap configurations to meet the needs of various consumer usage occasions whether in the car, at the gym, in the park, around the house, or at school. We are also evolving our marketing content and targeting with support of our new marketing center of excellence, allowing us to better connect with our Hydroflask consumer with the right message in the right place at the right time. You'll see us expand on these concepts with new product offerings, such as the new Sugar Crush Limited Edition available in bottles and travel tumblers, featuring a beautiful waterfall of pastel colors, and the new insulated shaker bottle designed with an internal whisk ball perfect for mixing a smoothie or protein shake. You will also see us further expand distribution of Hydro Flask in fiscal 25. Osprey sales showed strength internationally with growth in EMEA and APAC on strong demand for travel packs. In North America, we made further inroads in key sporting goods retailers. For fiscal 24, overall US brand share strengthened for luggage, and we extended our number one position in technical packs. 2024 marks Osprey's 50 year anniversary, and we were honored to be recognized in Outside Magazine. Osprey's focus remains on making the world's best pack suited for a wide range of activities, featuring our unique and superior design, craftsmanship, and commitment to sustainability all backed by our almighty guarantee. Our new collection continues to build on the brand's strengths and heritage, including new designs for different occasions like biking, day packs, and inclusive sizes so everyone can experience the outdoors with the very best gear. Perfect examples are three new additions to Osprey's extended fit line of packs, which became available this spring and are already garnering positive consumer response on social media. Osprey's Farpoint 55 Travel Pack has also been a hit, achieving 4.6 stars on Amazon out of over 1,300 reviews. We believe Osprey has a bright future ahead, building on its strengths, continuing to extend into new adjacencies, and leveraging the Helen of Troy operational and organizational scale. Switching gears now to our beauty and wellness segment, net sales declined 2.5%, primarily driven by air purifiers, fans, and heaters, reflecting softer consumer demand and our skew rationalization efforts. We also saw a decline in humidification, reflecting a cumulative cough, cold, and flu season illness incidence below the prior year and pre-COVID historical averages. These factors were partially offset by growth in hair appliances and thermometry, which helped drive overall international sales and growth in prestige hair care. We also benefited from an incremental seven weeks of CurlSmith sales compared to the prior period as we acquired CurlSmith in April 2022. In beauty, online sales for our volumizers strengthened in the quarter, and we also benefited from incremental doors and distribution in the mass channel across our hair tool portfolio. Drybar and CurlSmith Prestige continued their momentum driven by their innovation pipeline and marketing support. As one example, our Dry Bar Hot Roller Club rollers arrived at our key retailers in early February and quickly became a consumer sought after innovation, making it our best selling tool in those retailers within weeks. In wellness, the cough, cold, and flu season was below the prior year in pre-COVID historical averages for both our quarter and the fiscal year. This impacted sales of our products designed to help relieve cough, cold, and congestion symptoms such as humidifiers, inhalants, and related consumables. As mentioned during our January call, we saw a softer start to the season. As the quarter progressed, influenza-like illnesses increased some, and retailers were able to meet this consumer demand with their existing inventory. Therefore, we have not seen incremental replenishment orders so far in Q1 of fiscal 25. International was a standout in the quarter, posting double-digit growth as we benefited from more focused strategic choices on must-win brands and markets, strengthened distribution and distributor partnerships, and implemented a more integrated organizational structure of our EMEA team. Growth was driven by performance in EMEA with strong demand for both Braun and Revlon. Hydroflask benefited from our new strategic outdoor sports, lifestyle, and travel initiatives in Europe while leveraging Osprey's European distribution footprint to accelerate growth. We will continue to prioritize international growth, leveraging the must-win brand and market choices selected in Elevate for Growth. Looking ahead, as we face what we believe will be a tough environment of increasingly soft consumer discretionary spending, I am confident that our strategic plan and efforts position us to achieve our fiscal 25 objectives, which Brian will take you through shortly. In the current business environment, we believe it is imperative that we remain agile, invest incrementally to further strengthen our brand, leverage our organizational structure and scale, and control our controllables. Elevate for Growth and Project Pegasus are about leveraging our organization to unleash its full potential and ensuring that the framework and our associates are fully equipped to keep up with the pace of change. Just last month, I was delighted to attend our new unified NARMO annual sales meeting. The enthusiasm and power of this event was inspiring. You could feel the optimism, teamwork and focus towards elevating our brands to deliver our growth goals. Globally, we have an outstanding worldwide organization that is motivated by our purpose and values and excited for our future. Our purpose and values set a high bar, and this will remain the most important element of Helen of Troy. Elevating lives and moments that matter everywhere, every day is something that matters to all our stakeholders and importantly, can stand the test of time. I am excited and feel incredibly fortunate to have an exceptional team of determined associates whose dedication and passion will help further elevate our company in this next era. I am confident that the best is yet to come. Before turning the call over to Brian, I would also like to let the investment community know that at the end of May, Jack Jansen, Senior Vice President of Corporate Business Development, will be retiring after 40 years in the consumer products industry, 20 of them at Helen of Troy. Many of you know Jack from the various events and meetings over the past 10 years. He has been instrumental to increasing Helen of Troy's visibility within the financial community and leading our M&A activities. We are so grateful for his many years of service and contributions and would like to extend our warmest congratulations and best wishes for his future endeavors. I would also like to welcome Sabrina Key, our new Senior Vice President, Business Development and Investor Relations, who joined us on April 1st. She brings a wealth of experience and fresh perspective to our team. Many of you also know Ann Rakunas, our Director of External Communications and Investor Relations, who will remain the main point of contact for all investor inquiries. Now I will pass the call over to Brian.

speaker
Brian

Thank you, Noelle. I'm pleased to report fourth quarter results that again exceeded our expectations. We delivered net sales and adjusted EPS ahead of our outlook. We expanded gross profit and adjusted EBITDA margins and our business continued to generate strong pre-cash flow. As Noelle mentioned, fourth quarter consolidated net sales increased 1% despite unfavorable impacts from skew rationalization and the bankruptcy of Bed Bath & Beyond, driven by growth from OXO, Hydro Flask, Osprey, Drybar, Braun, Revlon, and Curlsmith. Growth was partially offset by declines in Honeywell, VIX, pure, and hot tools. Gross profit margin improved 570 basis points to 49% compared to 43.3% in the same period last year, just slightly above our expectations for the quarter. Year-over-year improvement was due to lower inbound freight and commodity costs, a decrease in inventory reserve expense, lower trade discount and promotional program expense, and a more favorable product mix within beauty and wellness including the benefits of skew rationalization. These factors were partially offset by a less favorable customer and product mix within home and outdoor. GAAP operating margin for the quarter was 13.5% compared to 11.1% in the same period last year. On an adjusted basis, operating margin increased 320 basis points to 17%. The increase was driven by the gross profit improvement I just referred to, partially offset by increased marketing investment, higher annual incentive compensation expense, and higher expense associated with the ramp-up of our Tennessee distribution facility. On a segment basis, home and outdoor adjusted operating margin increased 160 basis points to 18.7%, driven by lower commodity and inbound freight costs, lower trade discount and promotional program expense, and a decrease in inventory reserve expense. These factors were partially offset by higher expense associated with the ramp-up of our Tennessee distribution facility, an increase in annual incentive compensation expense, and a less favorable customer and product mix. Adjusted operating margin for beauty and wellness increased 440 basis points to 15.6%, driven by lower inbound freight, a decrease in inventory reserve expense, lower trade discount promotional program expense, decreased distribution expense, and a more favorable product mix, including the benefits of skew rationalization. These factors were partially offset by an increase in marketing investment and higher annual incentive compensation expense. Net income was $42.7 million, or $1.79 per diluted share. Non-GAAP adjusted diluted EPS grew 21.9% to $2.45 per share, primarily due to higher adjusted operating income in both segments, lower interest expense, higher interest income, and lower shares outstanding, partially offset by an increase in the adjusted effective tax rate. We continue to generate strong cash flow with cash from operations of $73.6 million in the fourth quarter in line with our expectations. We ended the quarter with total debt of $666 million, a decrease of $269 million compared to fiscal 23. Our net leverage ratio was two times compared to 2.8 times at the same time last year. Stepping back to look at the full fiscal year, I'm pleased with the consistency of our financial performance and our ability to meet or exceed our full year outlook commitments, including net sales, adjusted EBITDA margin, interest expense, adjusted EPS, free cash flow, and ending net leverage ratio. I'm also pleased with the improved performance in year-over-year sales and other key measures throughout the course of the year. While full-year consolidated sales declined 3.3%, this included the year-over-year declines from SKU rationalization and the Bed Bath & Beyond bankruptcy of approximately 3.4% combined and was slightly ahead of our full-year outlook. We improved gross margin by 390 basis points driven by lower inbound freight, skew rationalization, lower inventory reserve expense, and the favorable comparative impact of EPA compliance costs incurred in the prior year. We improved adjusted EBITDA margin by 100 basis points despite structural headwinds and lower operating leverage, even as we increased our marketing investment $10 million beyond our original target. We generated free cash flow of $269.4 million, reaching the high end of our outlook, which helped us beat our original interest expense expectations, make $50 million of share repurchase not included in our original outlook, and still end the year with leverage in line with expectations. Finally, we made progress in our effort to optimize our brand portfolio through a potential divestiture and are actively engaged in a process that we hope to complete in the second quarter of fiscal 25. The likelihood, timing, and potential impact of the divestiture cannot be reasonably estimated at this time, and therefore is not included in our outlook. We will make an announcement when we have more to share, and if the divestiture does occur, we will update our outlook at that time. Fiscal 25 begins our Elevate for Growth era, which provides our strategic roadmap through Fiscal 30. We intend to further leverage our operational scale and assets, including our state-of-the-art Tennessee Distribution Center, improved go-to-market structure with the North America RMO, and our expanded shared service capabilities to grow organic sales, further expand margins, and deploy capital through strategic acquisitions, share repurchases, and capital structure management. Turning to our full-year outlook for fiscal 25, we have factored in a number of variables, including our view of lingering inflation, interest rates that are higher for longer, lower growth expectations from certain retailers, a softer consumer that is further prioritizing their more limited discretionary spend on experiences and services, and a cough cold flu season in line with pre-COVID historical averages. In terms of retail inventory, while we see pockets of higher leaks on hand in some of our categories, we believe retail inventory is healthy overall, and we generally expect sell-in to closely match sell-through. With the fuel from Pegasus, the operational improvements we've made, and our Elevate for Growth strategies, we believe we are well positioned to navigate what we expect will be a softer consumer spending environment. We expect net sales between $1.965 billion and $2.025 billion in fiscal 25, which implies a decline of 2% to growth of 1%. In terms of our net sales outlook by segment, we expect home and outdoor growth of 1% to 4%, and a beauty and wellness decline of 4.5% to 1.5%, which includes a year-over-year headwind of approximately 1% related to the expiration of an outlicensed relationship of one of our wellness brands. We expect gap diluted EPS of $6.68 to $7.45 for the full year, and non-GAAP adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $8.70 to $9.20, which implies an adjusted diluted EPS decline of 2.4% to growth of 3.3%. We expect adjusted EBITDA margins to decline roughly 40 basis points as benefits from Pegasus and other gross profit improvements are reinvested for growth. We see the current softness in the environment as an opportunity to further invest in the health of our brands and grow our market share. As such, our outlook reflects a year-over-year increase in growth investment spending of roughly 100 basis points on top of an increase of 100 basis points in fiscal 24. Our adjusted EBITDA outlook also includes a year-over-year headwind of approximately 50 basis points from the expiration of the outlicense relationship I referred to earlier. and some expected margin compression from enterprise technology initiatives included in the Elevate for Growth Strategic Plan that are beginning in fiscal 25. In terms of Project Pegasus, we have updated our expectations to reflect the choices we are making to maximize the benefits of these initiatives while minimizing the transitional risk. We are maintaining the total estimated savings of $75 to $85 million over the duration of the plan but have revised the cadence of estimated savings recognition, now extending into fiscal 27. After achieving our fiscal 24 Pegasus targets, we now expect the savings in fiscal 25 to be approximately 35% of the total and the balance of savings to fall across fiscal 26 and 27. We are also lowering the total estimated restructuring charges by $10 million. We now expect one-time pre-tax restructuring charges of approximately $50 to $55 million over the duration of the plan, compared to our previous estimate of $60 to $65 million. We continue to expect restructuring charges to be completed during fiscal 25. We expect a GAAP-effective tax rate range of 19 to 21 percent for the full fiscal year, and a non-GAAP-adjusted tax rate range of 17.2 to 18.3 percent. We expect capital and intangible asset expenditures of between $30 and $35 million for fiscal 25, which includes remaining equipment and technology of approximately $8 million associated with our new Tennessee distribution facility and initial capital expenditures related to the first phase of enterprise technology initiatives I referred to earlier. We expect free cash flow in the range of $255 to $275 million and adjusted EBITDA of $324 to $331 million. Net leverage ratio, as defined in our credit agreement, is expected to be between 1.25 times and 1 times by the end of fiscal 25. In terms of quarterly cadence of sales, we expect a decline of approximately 7 to 5 percent in the first quarter of fiscal 25 and a range of flat to 3 percent growth for each of the remaining quarters. We expect a slight decline in adjusted EPS for the first half of fiscal 25 with the decline of approximately 15 to 20% in the first quarter and nearly offsetting growth in the second quarter. We expect adjusted EPS in the range of flat to 5% growth in the second half of fiscal 25. In summary, we're pleased to provide an outlook with both net sales and adjusted EPS growth at the high end of our range. further implied gross margin expansion, a significant increase in growth investment, strong free cash flow, further balance sheet productivity, and capital deployment optionality. Our free cash flow outlook at the high end of the range implies a forward free cash flow yield of 11.6% using Monday's market capitalization. Our adjusted EBIT outlook at the high end of the range implies an EB to forward EBIT a multiple of 9.1 times using Monday's market capitalization and our outstanding debt at the end of fiscal 24. We believe these are compelling metrics with strong underlying business fundamentals that compare favorably with our peer set and the market overall. And finally, I want to close by recognizing and congratulating Jack Jansen on his retirement after a distinguished career. I've been fortunate to work with Jack for almost 20 years now and have long admired his wisdom, leadership, charm, and sense of humor. His contributions to Helena Troy are immeasurable, and he will be missed, but I'm happy for him and all the boats he will soon meet. Jack, I can only hope that you're better at retirement than I was. And with that, I'll turn it back to the operator for questions.

speaker
Jack

Thank you. We will now be conducting our question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Peter Grum with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Peter Grum

Thanks, operator. Good morning, everyone. Maybe just to start, Jack, thank you so much for all the help over the years, and we wish you nothing but the best of luck moving forward. Maybe just turning to the questions here, and I guess a couple questions about the 25 outlook, just in the context of what was outlined at the Investor Day. And I totally understand that this was never supposed to be or never considered to be guidance. But just going back to that slide that shows the tailwinds or the building lots of growth, there was a lot that was really expected to break your way this year. So can you maybe just help us understand what's really changed versus October? And then just maybe a follow-up to that, you know, just kind of we'd love some perspective on the degree of comfort you have in the guidance at this point, right? It's not lost on many of those listening that oftentimes with the management transition, sometimes the Outlook can embed a bit more flexibility. So just in the context of the phasing that seems to imply an improvement following a challenging 1Q, can you maybe just discuss your comfort or visibility that Outlook is achievable, just kind of given the operating backdrop? Thanks.

speaker
Brian

Okay, Peter, it's Brian, and I'm going to start, and Noel can build. I'd say, look, let's take this in sequence. Let's start with Q1, and then we can talk about the whole year and the factors that are there the whole year, and then I'll go into, you know, what gives us confidence that we can hit that outlook. With respect to Q1, You know, we now know how the cough, cold, flu season played out. We did not know that when we had Investor Day in October. And based on the way it's played out, we are expecting reduced replenishment orders in Q1. And that's what we've seen so far versus the same period last year when there was a stronger season and it drove solid replenishment in Q1 of last year. We've also seen pockets of higher inventory in the outdoor channel, both domestically and internationally. And so it will take a period of time to work through that inventory. And then we have seen some speed bumps in shipments during Q1, resulting from the system integration of Pearlsmith and certain other DTC platform enhancements. But we believe we're largely past those speed bumps now. And then some additional factors that impact the full year, again, a lot of these we were not aware of in October. You know, we've shared and other manufacturers and retailers have also cited an increasingly soft consumer environment. That was really a bit of a change versus what we saw in October. And hopefully you've also seen lower growth expectations from certain retailers like Ulta, Amazon, Target, which have all come out with recent reports. We also... had an expiration of an out-licensed relationship on one of our brands that we licensed a trademark to in exchange for royalty income. And that has a meaningful impact on revenue and earnings. It effectively dropped straight to the bottom line with respect to earnings. And again, that is not something... We had complete visibility on when we gave Investor Day long-term guidance. I'm glad you pointed out it was long-term and not fiscal 25 long-term guidance in October. And then lastly, what gives us confidence in improvement in kind of the last three quarters of the year? We know we have incremental distribution that will layer in throughout the year and will actually build. So it's kind of building layers of distribution throughout the year. In terms of absolute marketing spend, Q1 is our lowest level of spend. And so we anticipate the benefit of that incremental investment will accelerate over the course of the year. So there will be more spend over the course of the year, which will drive, we believe, more volumes. We're doing repositioning on key brands like Hydro Flask and Drybar, but that is still early on and it will take time to build momentum behind those efforts. And then we have new product innovation and refreshes weighted to quarters two through four. So those are later in, later in the quarter. And then again, we saw speed bumps and shipments in Q1 as a result of system work that we were doing that we don't expect in the later quarters. So that's kind of the high-level summary of our entire fiscal 25 outlook with a little bit of comparison to, you know, what we saw in October versus what we're seeing now.

speaker
Peter Grum

That's really helpful. I'll pass it on. Oh, sorry. Go ahead.

speaker
Shafwa

No, I was just going to say, I think Brian covered it well. I think, you know, I feel... especially in the last few letters that Brian pointed out on why better the rest of the year, I feel a good degree of confidence on the incremental distribution in particular. You know, those are areas where you have ongoing customer retailer conversations. You look at their planogram timings, et cetera. So, you know, things can change as the year goes along, but visibility to those things are solid. in my view.

speaker
Peter Grum

Great. Thank you so much. I'll pass it on. Thank you.

speaker
Jack

Our next question comes from the line of Rupesh Parikh with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Brian

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. And also, Jack, congrats and best wishes on retirement. So just starting out with the, I guess, the competitive promotional backdrop, we'd just love to hear the latest you guys are seeing on the competitive promotional front and then your expectations this year just on the promotional backdrop.

speaker
Brian

Yeah, I could start again. I mean, Q4, we actually had less promotional expense. But, you know, going into next year with the softer consumer, yes, I think it's reasonable to expect that you could have pressure, you know, in terms of promotion and how will the competitive dynamic play out. I mean, I think at this point in time, we feel comfortable with how we're positioned and we've made some adjustments, honestly, to position ourselves well. and don't see a significant headwind, but again, that's one where the customer competitive dynamics could change during the year, and we'll have to adjust. I don't know if you want to add.

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, I don't see major shifts right now. We continue to watch. We continue to pay attention to what's out there. As Brian mentioned, we made a few select adjustments on some of our hydro flask items as we looked across our assortment and some of the competitive assortment and found a few places that we thought, you know, we could be a bit sharper. But I don't see major other changes unless dynamics kind of evolve over the course of the year.

speaker
Brian

And then I guess my follow-up question, you know, this year, this past fiscal year, very strong gross margin improvement. Is there any color you can just share in terms of gross margin expectations and the key puts and takes we should be thinking about in the gross margin line?

speaker
Brian

Yeah, I can give you some color. We're trying not to guide to specific gross profit guidance for fiscal 25, but implied in our outlook is gross margin expansion. And you can understand the extent of it if you consider that we have a drag of 100 basis points related to We called out in the earnings release how we have the drags of 100 basis points on increased marketing investment or growth investment. And then we have a 50 basis point compression coming from the loss of the outlicense relationship. And then overall, our adjusted EBITDA margin is contracting only 40 basis points. So at least we're having at least expansion of you know, 110 basis points implied through those comments. Again, we're not doing specifics with respect to gross margin, but hopefully you get some idea of the dimensionality of the gross margin expansion for fiscal 25.

speaker
Brian

Great. Thank you, Apostle.

speaker
Jack

Our next question comes from the line of Robert Lerick with CJS Securities. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Robert Lerick

Hi. This is Justin for CJS. Robert, so going back to the analyst, one of the messages or key messages in our view was your ability to ratchet investment spending up and down depending on the macro environment and other factors to achieve a steady bottom line growth. So given the revenue outlook that you've laid out this morning, why do you think fiscal 25 is the right time to ramp up growth investment spending by 100 bps in addition to the incremental spend included in your Elevate for Growth plans?

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, I think, you know, as we looked at our brands and the need to be, you know, top of mind aware, you know, build top of mind awareness, be available where our key shoppers are shopping, we needed to put some investment. I mean, now, in my view, now's the time in these kind of trough consumer environments. These are the moments when you need to really invest in the strength of your brands. And so, you know, the 100 basis point investment is, is, comes out of the fuel from Project Pegasus. And we will use the portfolio, the new portfolio strategy that we laid out. So we'll lean into those brands and invest in the areas that we think the ROI is very good. We'll adjust throughout the year based on how the return on investment is playing out, how the responsiveness of the brands are playing out. But we believe this is the right time to invest in the strength and the health of our brands.

speaker
Brian

The other thing I would add is that there are less Pegasus savings expected for fiscal 25 that did factor into kind of the algorithm. And with less savings, there's more compression. But I agree with Noel, now is the right time to do it. So we get a little leakage in terms of EPS, but again, the right thing to do. And we have no concerns about our ability to ultimately achieve the Pegasus savings. We'll just come a little bit later, and it's really tied to a piece of technology development that is taking a little bit longer to get that developed and in place, but we're comfortable that we're going to get there.

speaker
Robert Lerick

I appreciate the additional color there, and then one more follow-up. Your guidance calls for healthy cash flow generation and your target leverage of one and a quarter to one at the end of the year i assume you know that's exclusive of any potential buybacks and then you know along those lines could talk about your willingness to be opportunistic and aggressive repurchasing shares you know particularly in light of this modest leverage and you know possible share price weakness this morning yes that's correct that our outlook does not include the impact of any chair repurchase

speaker
Brian

But I would say our mindset is that we're open to buy with respect to capital deployment, which would include share repurchase. And we're looking at acquisitions as well. So I think we are in a position, balance sheet-wise, where we're interested in deploying capital.

speaker
Robert Lerick

I appreciate you taking the questions. Thank you.

speaker
Jack

Our next question comes from the line of Linda Boltenweiser with DA Davidson. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Linda Boltenweiser

Yes. Hi. Um, so, um, can you talk about, um, just the beauty area? Um, I think you said that, um, hot tools was down in FY 24 and yet you had the consumables launch that would have helped that brand. So can you talk about that a little bit more? And is the consumables now ending the exclusivity at Ulta? So will you be expanding it? And then I thought you said beauty was up in the fourth quarter. So kind of what were the roots of the beauty being up in the fourth quarter, if I caught that correctly? Thank you.

speaker
Brian

Hi, Linda. It's Brian. I want to start because I want to clarify. We called out hot tools being down in the quarter, but it was up for the full fiscal year. So I just want to get that clear.

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, and I think – driven by, as you pointed out, Linda, the launch of the liquids in addition to the tools drove Hot Tools up for the year. In terms of that line, it does continue to be at Alta. We did continue to work with them to expand some of the end caps that are on the Hot Tools liquids, and we are now looking to expand that further into other retail customers. In terms of broader hair tools, I think I maintain a consumer-centric innovation across our portfolio of brands. We have Revlon, Hot Tools, Drybar, and now Curlsmith. So we really hit that good, better, best, which is a great position to be in in a world of kind of the current consumer environment. We can meet the full range of consumer needs. Revlon offers consumers that great value. Our Revlon volumizer is still the number one hot air styling tool in the market. It's a price point that's much more accessible. Plus, we have a whole range of other appliances that have done well for us in mass retailers in particular. And then on the higher end, I mentioned in my remarks, one of our newest innovations, the Drybar Roller Club, the hot rollers, have done well for us. We just launched them in February, and it's already become our top-selling tool in some of the beauty retailers. So it's a good example of how when you meet the range of needs with the range of brands that you have, you can cover the market and start to get the right momentum going.

speaker
Linda Boltenweiser

Thanks. And then in terms of you referred to some speed bumps that affected shipping in the fiscal first quarter, it sounds like they were very specific things. Is there any way to quantify the speed bump impact on revenue in the first quarter of 25? And then is any of that revenue just delayed revenue or is it completely lost due to these speed bumps that you had in shipments in first quarter?

speaker
Brian

Yeah, Linda, I mean, we still work through system things. I don't think it would make a lot of sense to try and be so precise in terms of quantification. But yes, we were specific and it was isolated to two or three areas where in CurlSmith, we are integrating that business into our ERP system and are effectively done with that integration. We're working out the kinks right now. But as we went through that, we did get some speed bumps in terms of shipments. And I would say at this point in time, our view is that we probably won't recapture those shipments. So I would say retailers will buy buy back what they need, but they're not going to overbuy and kind of recoup what we weren't able to ship in the first quarter. And then in the DTC, you probably are aware of the brands where we have the highest DTC presence. We upgraded the platform in one of our businesses, and again, working through things there. and likely won't recoup lost volume there. And then the other business was really just instituting changes and enhancements. It wasn't really a platform upgrade, but as we continue to evolve and put new features in, constant maintenance and attention is required, and we saw some declines there. So hopefully that gives you what you need. It's a combination that probably goes across three different brands, and not something that we expect to recoup, but we expect robust volume from our DTC platforms going forward. That's why we do the enhancements. And so maybe there's a little bit of lift later because we have those in place now, but not a recoupment of the shipments we lost specifically in the first quarter.

speaker
Linda Boltenweiser

Thanks. And then finally, you know, In terms of the, you seem very excited about the distribution expansions that you are getting in FY25. Can you quantify how much of the revenue growth you're guiding to is pipeline fill? And then, you know, how do you comp that in FY26? I know this is looking at a long time, but

speaker
Shafwa

you know if the pipeline fill is a significant contributor do you expect to get more shelf space games going out and do you have visibility on that thanks yeah you know i would say you know going after as you probably remember from the ambassador going after white space distribution opportunities has been a key priority as we formed the north american rmo we were pleased with some progress that we made in 24 we kind of set an internal goal for ourselves as this was a new organization and exceeded that. Some of the comments that I made in the remarks around OXO software gadgets and OXO grilling in Walmart are two nice examples there. So we got some in 24. We've got positive outlook for some additional opportunities in fiscal 25. And I think it'll be an ongoing area that we continue to go after year in and year out. That's part of the beauty of a North American RMO where that becomes their focus. If it's not getting a whole new brand into distribution, sometimes it's just getting the right assortment in there. You're looking at A SKUs, B SKUs, and really making sure you've got your highest velocity, high turning SKUs in the best retailers at the best time. So I don't think it's we get it and then it all goes away. I think in my experience, That's an ongoing activity that the North American RMO will be going after year in and year out.

speaker
Brian

I agree with everything Noelle said, but I think it does, when it does layer in the first time, like in the second, third, and fourth quarters, will cause some lumpiness compared to the first quarter, which is part of the reason why we have the cadence that we do with respect to sales and fiscal 25. But what we've seen with our new distribution that we had in fiscal 24 is strong replenishment, strong results. So we don't see it as a kind of you fill it in and then don't get the repeat business. We've been able to, in some cases, expand the business where we've added these layers of distribution. So we think it's a good, sustainable, long-term growth strategy we plan to continue to use. And then just on your last point, I think it'd be premature to talk about the visibility and the drivers of this in fiscal year 26. We're really not to the point where we do that. Now, obviously, if we get the sell-through, we get the benefits of everything we do in fiscal 25, but I think it's premature to talk about 26.

speaker
Linda Boltenweiser

Okay, and then my final question is on M&A. You're talking about looking at a potential acquisition. It just seems like with Curlsmith integration issues and all the moving parts going on and other integration or other execution issues, it just seems not wise to me to be adding more onto the plate with another acquisition. And I think before you had said you might actually do an acquisition before the divestiture. Is that still the case? Ian, are you seeing the M&A valuation so attractive that that's what's making you, you know, seem like very agreeable to doing another deal? Thanks.

speaker
Brian

Yep. First, let me say M&A processes evolve. And so you can have a point of view at one period of time. that completely changes the next period of time. And we're not going to lock ourselves into an acquisition that doesn't make sense just because we talked about being in the market for acquisitions. So yes, we did talk about one before. Things change and we have to adjust. Yes, I think valuations are at a good point. We see this as an opportunity to buy attractive assets at reasonable valuations. And so we think it makes sense. And then with respect to Curlsmiths, We called it out because it had an impact on shipments, but I think you have to have the perspective of when people do systems integrations, there can often be very big problems. These were not very big problems. These were minor hiccups in the ability to ship, and it's very complicated integrations that have to occur. This I actually would view as a success. It has a slight impact on Q1, but our integration of CurlSmith was largely successful, and so I would not see it as a reason to not do further acquisition.

speaker
Linda Boltenweiser

Okay. Thank you very much. I appreciate it.

speaker
Jack

Our next question comes from the line of Olivia Tong with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Raymond James

Great. Thank you, and congrats, Jack, on your retirement. Best of luck with everything and great working with you. I wanted to focus my questions more on your Q2 to Q4 expectations. I'm hoping you can provide additional color on the building blocks to drive the improvement in revenue, because we obviously hear all the debate around consumer slowdown and seeing increasing signs of that. So what would be driving retailers to increase your distribution if the macros are not in favor? And let me leave it there, and then I'll ask my next question.

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, I think, you know, the drivers that we see the first and you just touched on, Olivia, is the further incremental distribution later in the year. And I think in the case of some of the opportunities we have, you know, we have some really strong brands with strong consumer appeal that aren't in, you know, some retailers and they're excited and anxious to get our brands on their shelves and in distribution. And so, you know, we feel good about it. I think, you know, the one that we shared is OXO Softworks and Walmart. I mean, that's one where Walmart's really pleased to have, I think, you know, the brand on the shelf. It's a leading brand and one that their shoppers were looking for. So I feel confident and very good about those opportunities. The other one we talked about is the incremental marketing investment. We talked about building kind of the first ever marketing center of excellence within Helen of Troy. That team is now partnering with our business unit brand teams to upgrade our creative, upgrade our full funnel experience plans and investing incrementally behind it so that we can drive even more interest awareness, desire for our brands. And then I think the repositioning on a few of the key brands is also important to point out. If you look at Hydro Flask, and I talked quite a bit about that in the prepared remarks, some of the new items like the Sugar Crush that just came out, getting a lot of positive traction for new innovation like that that's very appealing and investing behind that so that we get the word out of some of these new items that are very desirable. Hot The dry bar hot rollers is another example of that. So when you put those innovations out, you've got to spend the marketing behind them to drive that awareness, the desire, the purchase of those items. So those are the areas that we're excited about in the back half. They are a little bit more quarter two through four weighted than quarter one, as Brian and I shared. And those are the things that give me strong confidence for us in that year to go.

speaker
Raymond James

Donna, thanks. Maybe I can ask a little bit about any divergence you're seeing between performance in the more premium end of your portfolio versus the mid-price, specifically more around beauty appliances. Obviously, we've heard some commentary out of a key retailer. Are you seeing a similar divergence in terms of performance, or is your outlook more reflective of what they're saying and an expectation that that's going to happen, even if you haven't seen it so far.

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, you know, what I would say in Hair Tools is, again, what I really like about our portfolio is that we cover the range. We have that good, better, best Revlon, Hot Tools, Dry Barn, Curlsmith at the high end. So wherever the consumer is, we have an opportunity to, you know, to be there with the right kind of assortment, price point, retailer channel, et cetera, to meet those needs. So I would say, you know, we had good performance at sort of the Revlon entry point end with some new broadened distribution in mass of kind of those opening price point hair dryers, straighteners. You know, there's a perfect match essential hair dryer, for example, at more of a $25 price point that's doing well, the Drymax hair dryer. at a below $40 price point, those sorts of tools that are resonating well when the consumer's pinched. But by the same token, as I mentioned, we're also seeing at the high end really strong uptake on the dry bar hot rollers that are a higher price point. So there's pockets of the market that's doing well if the innovation is appealing and the innovation draws them to it. I would say Prestige Liquids continues to grow. We continue to see that as a strong category. As we've heard with some of the retailers, it's slowing a little bit versus where it was in the most recent few months. But that's an area that we continue to feel strongly about. It's an area that we continue to launch new innovation, whether it's on Curlsmith with a new volume line, new items in Drybar, et cetera. So I think the key here, to sum it up, is really to have strong innovation across all of the different price points and all of the different channels to meet the various consumers where they are. That's going to be key in this environment.

speaker
Jack

Understood. Thanks so much. Our next question comes from the line of Susan Anderson with Canaccord Genuity. Please proceed with your question.

speaker
Susan Anderson

Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I want to send my congrats to Jack as well and your retirement. You'll definitely be missed. It was great working with you while you're at Helena Troy. I guess maybe just to start out on just the outdoor category, I think you mentioned some pockets of higher retail inventory there. Are you seeing that also in some other categories and then in outdoor? I was just curious, is the weakness just across the packs or are you seeing weakness and maybe higher inventory in other areas as well?

speaker
Shafwa

Thanks, Susan. Yeah, you know, I would say, you know, retailer inventory is always a function of, you know, what's happening from a consumer standpoint. So, you know, you can see different adjustments that they make based on how the consumer is purchasing. But the one we called out was in outdoor. And as we looked across both domestically and internationally, we saw a little bit more elevated inventory, not necessarily in our areas per se, but kind of across their entire store inventory, which then reduces their open to buy in our areas and in other areas that they're kind of managing their total inventory levels. Tech packs for us on Osprey is obviously kind of the core of the business. We have a very strong number one position. We extended that number one position over the last year, but the category has slowed versus where it was. We do see growth. in some of the other adjacent categories that Osprey's gone into. So some of the areas like duffels and travel packs and lifestyle packs, et cetera, show a little bit more growth. But we called out kind of the pocket of inventory in outdoor because we were seeing it both domestically and internationally.

speaker
Susan Anderson

Got it. Okay, great. Thanks. And then I guess maybe just talk about AXO a little bit. It's obviously done very well. with a lot of new innovation. I'm curious to hear about what you have coming out this year. And then also just the timeline of the Walmart rollout in stores, like how should we expect that to flow throughout the year?

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, you know, OXO remains number one in kitchen utensils, canister food storage, some really nice adjacent categories like in coffee, kind of our baby and toddler feeding area. Lots of new products constantly coming out on OXO. It's one of the hallmarks of the brand. In terms of Walmart in particular, the kitchen utensil set has already happened. That's already in market. You can see that as is grilling. The expansion happened right towards the end of our fiscal 24. So that's out in stores now. And as I mentioned in my remarks, there's some other OXO categories that we anticipate expanding over the course of 25.

speaker
Susan Anderson

Okay, great. And then just one last question. So on Hydro Flask, so it sounds like obviously tumblers continue to do well. I'm curious just if you see any other, I guess, bottle formats coming out for fiscal 25 or if you expect kind of the tumblers to be the hot format and I guess maybe more of the newness coming from colorways or types of accessories to go with those.

speaker
Shafwa

Yeah, I would say on Hydroflask, you know, tumblers do continue to be, you know, where a lot of the growth and where a lot of the energy is as we think about kind of the Gen Z female target that, you know, looks at these not only for the functionality but also great design to match their personal style. I do think As a result of what I just said, the colors like Sugar Crush that we did a limited launch on DTC that moved very, very quickly. We've also got some customer exclusive. There's a blossom colorway that we've got in partnership with a sporting goods partner of ours. We've got another pastel design in one of our major prestige food stores. Partners, so these sorts of things are very interesting to this consumer, right? They're very willing to purchase multiples if it's a color or design or a special edition that they have to have. And so I think that's going to continue to be an important area. Configurations of shapes, caps. et cetera, is also going to be important. One of the other ones I mentioned that we launched that is off to a nice start is the insulated shaker bottle. So really, you know, great for smoothies or protein shakes, et cetera. You know, that's a new shape that's coming. And I think you can expect to see more configurations and more, you know, different formats as we go across the year to meet those different occasions as we've done more work to understand our target, as well as distribution opportunities. You know, this is a brand, as we expand the target consumer, where we need to be where those shoppers are shopping. So that's, you know, another opportunity. And then the personalization customizations, that's also a big part of of this category and our new capability in our facility in Tennessee will only make us better at that. So as I said in my remarks, I'm excited about some of the pivots that we're making, both in the product innovation, the design, the marketing, as we move forward on Hydro Flask. It's one of the other areas I'm excited and confident about in the rest of fiscal 25.

speaker
Susan Anderson

Great. That sounds exciting. Thanks so much. Great. Good luck for the rest of the year.

speaker
Shafwa

All right. Thanks so much, everyone. Thank you for your interest and support, and we really look forward to speaking with many of you over the coming days and weeks. Thanks for joining us.

speaker
Jack

Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day.

Disclaimer

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