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spk06: call is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Rebecca Gardy, Chief Investor Relations Officer. Please go ahead.
spk00: Good morning, and welcome to Campbell's fourth quarter fiscal 2024 earnings conference call. I'm Rebecca Gardy, Chief Investor Relations Officer at Campbell's, and joining me today are Mark Klaus, Chief Executive Officer, and Carrie Anderson, Chief Financial Officer. Today's remarks have been pre-recorded. Once we conclude the prepared remarks, we will transition to a live webcast Q&A session. The slide deck and today's earnings press release have been posted to the investor relations section on our website, CampbellSoupCompany.com. Following the conclusion of the Q&A session, a replay of the webcast will be available at the same location, followed by a transcript of the call within 24 hours. On our call today, we will make forward-looking statements which reflect our current expectations. These statements rely on assumptions and estimates which could be inaccurate and are subject to risk. Please refer to slide three of our presentation or our SEC filing for a list of factors that could cause our actual results to vary materially from those anticipated in the forward-looking statements. Because we use non-GAAP measures, we have provided a reconciliation of each of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measure in the appendix of our presentation. Slide four outlines today's agenda. Mark will provide insights into our fourth quarter and full-year performance, as well as our in-market performance by division. Carrie will then discuss the financial results of the fourth quarter and full-year fiscal 24 in more detail and outline our guidance for the full fiscal year 2025, which we provided this morning. As a reminder, we completed the acquisition of Sovos Brands on March 12th. And as such, the full fiscal year 2024 financial results include a partial year contribution from Sovos Brands. And with that, I'm pleased to turn the call over to Mark.
spk03: Thanks, Rebecca. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter fiscal 24 earnings call. In Q4, we continued to successfully navigate the evolving consumer landscape and delivered solid results, including sequential volume improvement across both divisions, a second consecutive quarter of double-digit year-over-year adjusted EBIT growth and adjusted EPS growth, underpinned by sequentially improving margins on both businesses. It also marks the end of a dynamic year, during which we drove significant progress against our strategic plan. In addition, we continued to see momentum on the Sovos Brands business and advanced the integration of the best growth story in food into our meals and beverages business. In-market performance was still mixed. but improved for both divisions, with substantial volume-driven progress on meals and beverages and sequential improvement on snacks. While the snacks category recovery is unfolding at a somewhat slower pace than we'd like, it continues progressing in the right direction. Finally, we also introduced fiscal 25 guidance today, which reflects our expectation of steady progress and incorporates an appropriate level of pragmatism as we continue to navigate the recovery of snacks in the first half of the year. Kerry will provide more details in a moment. While we remain vigilant as we head into fiscal 25, we have also never been more confident in the strength and long-term trajectory of our business. We remain steadfast in our view that consumer behavior will continue to normalize and that we are uniquely positioned to deliver sustained and dependable growth with one of the best portfolios in all of food. We look forward to sharing more of this story at our Investor Day on September 10th in New York. Turning to slide 7, organic net sales in the fourth quarter declined 1% compared to the prior year. As we expected, volume improved sequentially, and both adjusted EBIT and adjusted EPS increased by double digits. The Sovos brand's acquisition was approximately neutral to adjusted EPS, which again exceeded our expectations. In-market consumption was essentially flat compared to the prior year, and the one point of difference in organic net sales versus consumption was primarily driven by headwinds from partner brands and some trade phasing, both of which were in our snacks business. On a full year basis, we were down slightly on top line while growing adjusted EBIT and adjusted EPS. I'd note that adjusted EPS at $3.08 for the full year put us roughly at the midpoint of our most recent guidance. As I mentioned, the trend of sequential volume and mix improvement we've experienced over the past two quarters continued in Q4. We were encouraged to see growth in meals and beverages of 2%, and snacks remained stable in the quarter. This trend continues to reflect the improving consumer dynamics, including total foods moved this quarter into positive territory for both dollars and units. Strong consumer metrics support this continued progress, including roughly 70% of edible categories growing household penetration, similar to Q3. And for the first time in a while, the recovery is beginning to extend to lower and middle income households. The one negative indicator was a modest reversal in consumer confidence in the fourth quarter, signaling the somewhat fragile state of the consumer and why being prudent on expectations still makes sense. However, overall, as we've said before, we continue to see the recovery of the consumer environment not as a question of if, but rather a question of when. On slide 9, I want to briefly expand upon the material benefit we're experiencing with the integration of Sovos. While our Q4 net sales declined 1% from the prior year on an organic basis, including the pro forma contribution from Sovos, total company growth would have increased 150 basis points. There's also 110 basis point benefit to volume and mix, resulting in an approximately 2% pro forma growth rate on volume and mix for the total company. This growth continues to pace ahead of our initial estimates and reflects the strength and the resilience of the Sovos business's growth, especially the Rayos brand. Moving to our meals and beverage division on slide 10, we achieved growth of 1% in organic net sales in the quarter compared to the prior year. More importantly, that growth was fueled by a 2% volume growth offset by a point of planned net pricing investment. On a pro forma combined basis with the addition of Sovos brands, Meals and beverages net sales grew 4%, also fueled by volume mix growth and consistent within market consumption. This is the second quarter of strong performance across our legacy meals and beverage businesses and Sovos brands, both fueled by volume growth, an important indicator that's building confidence in the improving potential of our meals and beverages division going forward. Moving to more good news on page 11, our soup business also strengthened in Q4, and is building even more momentum in the latest four weeks, with dollar consumption up 2% and 6%, respectively, as we head into soup season. Campbell's wet soup dollar consumption increased two points during the fourth quarter, surpassing the category average by approximately one point. Notably, we did experience robust share gains in our Swanson broth business as a major private label supplier was experiencing supply constraints. It's important to note that although our share was helped by this dynamic, The category trends are also very healthy, up double digits, creating a great opportunity for Swanson to add new households. Underlying category growth continues to benefit from the consumers pulling back on eating meals away from home in favor of home cooking. The one remaining area of focus on soup is ready to serve, where we're experiencing category pressure and some trading down. We expect both dynamics to improve as the weather changes and the role of ready-to-serve at lunch becomes more relevant. We're already seeing some stabilization and are confident about our robust pipeline of innovation and marketing across our Chunky, Pacific, and Reyes brands. Overall, this quarter we also answered a very important question about soup. Can soup grow volume mix after COVID and inflation? And it did, up nearly 2%. Turning to Italian sauces, slide 12 highlights two market-leading brands at the forefront of our billion-dollar sauces portfolio, Reos and Prego. I could not be happier with the continued strong growth of Reos within market consumption in the high teens range. Reos complements the steady performance of Prego, which was up 2% in market. This combination of brands that address different occasions and price points gives us a fantastic ability to grow overall share by meeting multiple consumer needs. We'll provide more details on our expectations for Reos at our investor day, but we remain very confident in our previously stated ongoing growth rate of mid-single digits, with a high single-digit growth expectation for fiscal 25. The team on Sobos has done an excellent job during the integration, not only maintaining the business, but advancing the growth and strategy across the portfolio. Slide 13 outlines a few reasons why we are confident in the continued growth of Reos. Despite ranking as the number one Italian sauce brand in terms of dollar share, Rayos has about 50% of the household penetration and 60% of the SKU assortment of Prego. There's also a significant opportunity to continue to build brand awareness as the team readies new marketing and innovation for fiscal 2025. Additionally, the brand is growing share across all economic demographics and is thriving amongst millennial consumers. In fact, Rayos is growing with millennials at a rate 2.8 times faster than the category. We are thrilled to see younger consumers embrace this ultra distinctive brand and believe this provides a strong foundation for us to build Rayos into a household staple in the future. Finally, on slide 14, just to remind everyone that our meals and beverages division also includes brands like Pace, Pacific, and V8 Energy. all of which represent great opportunities for additional growth as leading brands in their respective advantage categories or segments. Turning to our snacks business on slide 15, despite the 3% decline for the quarter, we saw many encouraging indicators. We were pleased to see continued improvement in vol mix as well as in market results compared to Q3. We did see some competitive pressure in salty snacks that we're addressing with targeted plans in place in Q1. It's important to note much of that share pressure is not a result of pricing or promotional activity, but rather new entrance into our elevated segments like kettle potato chips or organic better-for-you tortilla chips. Although we continue to see investment and promotion going forward, we expect levels to remain competitive and disciplined. It's important to remember that although managing price gaps is important, Growing our elevated snacks brands will be more influenced by the impact of our innovation and marketing efforts. Those plans are particularly robust for fiscal 2025, giving us even more confidence. On slide 16, I'd like to quickly provide some additional color on the bridge between the in-market 1% decline and our overall 3% decline in organic net sales. There were two key drivers. First, as we expected, there was approximately a 1% reduction driven by partner and contract brands, which I'll explain a bit more about in a moment. Second, we cycled about a point of favorable trade phasing in Q4 of fiscal 23 that created some additional pressure on pricing in the quarter. This is a one-time dynamic that we do not expect to repeat in fiscal 2025. Let me go a bit deeper now on the partner and contract brands headwind. As you will likely recall, we've discussed the role of these partner and contract brands in the past. Partner brands are brands Campbell's does not own that we agree to sell through IDPs to improve the scale of their routes. Contract brands are products that Campbell's manufactures to support the scale of our manufacturing plants and are shipped to another company or customer. Although these businesses play an important role, on average, they have approximately 50% lower variable contribution margin than our power brands and also, in many cases, support competitors' products. So, as we grow our power brands and optimize our DSD and manufacturing network, our reliance on these businesses has gone down. Although there is a top-line headwind in the near term, it is clearly the right strategic decision to focus more on our own brands and improve the mix of our business. We expect this trend to continue in fiscal 25, but as you can see, we've been working this number down and reduced it by more than a half. We'll provide a bit more detail on our destination for these businesses during Investor Day. In addition to the right sizing of partner and contract brands, and with a similar objective, we recently announced the sale of our Pop Secret business. Although a very strong brand in the microwave popcorn segment, we do not see the brand or the category as a core focus area for our snack business. While there will be a modest impact in net sales and EPS this year, we're confident that as we continue to refine our snacks portfolio, The continued focus will be a further enabler to faster and more profitable growth. As I mentioned earlier, we did experience some competitive pressure on our power brands in Q4, resulting in dollar consumption that was flat compared to the prior year. On a two-year basis, our power brands did grow 9.5%. Moreover, we continued to see meaningful progress in the quarter on key brands like Goldfish, which continued to drive in-market growth. We believe strongly in the accelerated growth of these brands within our snacks portfolio and are responding to the near-term pressure by delivering strong innovation, increasing our marketing efforts, and investing at sustainable and disciplined levels as we continue to make strides towards our long-term goals for the category. Another important focus area for fiscal 24 was delivering snacks margin improvement. And I'm pleased that despite the volatile environment, we were able to reach approximately 15% operating margin for the full year. This finish reflects 170 basis points of expansion over the last two years. We remain extremely confident in our savings and productivity roadmaps for snacks, but we'll always ensure that we're appropriately supporting our brands given our priority of growth. As you will hear from Kerry in a moment, we're being measured in our fiscal 25 guidance for snacks margin improvement until we fully cycle the consumer and category recoveries. To that end, although we do expect margin progress in fiscal 25 on snacks, we're targeting approximately 50 basis points of year-over-year improvement. Again, all savings initiatives remain on track, and this moderation from our originally planned 100 basis points increase simply reflects the acceleration of planned marketing investment into this year, reflecting the competitive environment. and a near-term moderate margin headwind from the pop secret divestiture. We remain confident in our stated longer-term goal of 17% margins for Stacks, and we'll talk more about that path during Investor Day. In summary, our fourth quarter performance was a solid close to fiscal 24, with steady progress across the business and against our strategic plan. We saw stabilizing trends in growth and volumes, compelling earnings with margin improvement, and continued progress integrating Sovos brands. I'd like to thank the entire Campbell's team for their hard work and commitment in finding ways to deliver in an ever-evolving consumer environment. I recognize that we're not fully through the consumer recovery yet, but I can clearly see the light at the end of the tunnel. This paired with the tremendous progress we've made in transforming Campbell's business is setting up what I believe will be a very exciting next chapter in our storied history. We look forward to laying out that chapter at our upcoming Investor Day on September 10th in New York. With that, let me turn it over to Terri.
spk01: Thanks, Mark, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin with an overview of our fourth quarter, including continued strong performance from the Sobos brand's acquisition. Fourth quarter reported net sales were up 11% driven by the contribution from Sobos. Organic net sales, excluding the impact of acquisitions, divestitures, and currency, decreased 1%, compared to the prior year to $2 billion. Importantly, as Mark mentioned earlier, we continue to show sequential volume improvement moving into positive territory. Similar to third quarter, both adjusted EBIT and adjusted earnings per share increased double digits in Q4 with expansion in both adjusted gross margin and adjusted EBIT margin. Adjusted EBIT increased 36%, primarily due to higher adjusted gross profit from the contribution of SOBOS and base business performance. Adjusted EPS increased 26% to 63 cents, with the impact of the acquisition approximately neutral in the quarter, which, as Mark mentioned, continued to exceed our expectations. Turning to slide 23 on a full-year basis, net sales were up 3%, including four and a half months of sales contribution from the SoBus acquisition. Organic net sales decreased 1% compared to the prior year, with unfavorable volume and mix partially offset by the benefit of net price realization. Our organic full-year net sales result was in line with the low end of our guidance range, and we have now delivered two consecutive quarters of stable or growing year-over-year volume and mix. Full-year adjusted EBIT increased 6%, driven by higher adjusted gross profit from the contribution of the acquisition and base business performance. Adjusted EBIT margin improved 50 basis points, driven primarily by an increase in adjusted gross margin. Full year adjusted EPS increased 3% to $3.08 with the impact of the acquisition approximately neutral during the fiscal year. Moving to slide 24, organic net sales declined slightly in the quarter as sequential improvement in volume and mix was more than offset by unfavorable net pricing. We did see volumes turn positive in the quarter within our meals and beverages division and neutral volumes in snacks. And both divisions saw volume improvement in the quarter compared to Q3. Looking ahead, we expect volume trends to continue to modestly improve as we move through fiscal 25. During the quarter, Sobos Brands added 12 percentage points to reported net sales growth, which exceeded our expectations. On slide 25, fourth quarter adjusted gross profit margin expanded 80 basis points to 31.4%, consistent with Q3 margins and in line with our expectations. Drivers of margin expansion included supply chain productivity, lower other supply chain costs, and favorable mix. These contributors more than offset unfavorable net price realization, moderate cost inflation, and the impact of the Sobos brand's acquisition, which has a lower margin profile than the base business. Core inflation in the quarter remained in the low single-digit range, consistent with rates we experienced throughout the year, and much lower than the 12% we reported for full-year fiscal 23. We anticipate core inflation to remain in the low single-digit range for fiscal 25, and we remain focused in areas of the portfolio where we still see higher year-over-year input costs, including olive oil, cocoa, and packaging costs, and other areas of persistent inflation, such as labor costs and warehousing costs. In fiscal 24, we delivered $60 million of enterprise cost savings, reaching a cumulative nine hundred and fifty million dollars of our one billion dollar multi-year cost savings program for the full year our total productivity initiatives and cost savings programs more than all set the impact of inflation turning to slide 26 q4 other operating items included adjusted marketing and selling expenses which decreased four percent to 187 million dollars the decrease was primarily driven by lower advertising and consumer expenses in the base business as we lapped significant spending in the prior year. Reductions in advertising and customer expenses on the base business were partially offset by the impact of the Sobos brand's acquisition. Fourth quarter adjusted administrative expenses modestly increased 1% to $165 million. The added adjusted administrative costs from the acquisition were partially mitigated by lower incentive compensation costs and approximately $7 million in cost synergy realization in the quarter from our SoBus integration plan. This brings our total SoBus integration synergy capture to $10 million for fiscal 24. As shown on slide 27, fourth quarter adjusted EBIT increased 36% and adjusted EBIT margin increased 260 basis points to 14.3%. This was primarily due to higher adjusted gross profit from the contribution of the acquisition and base business performance. Lower adjusted marketing and selling expenses were offset by the modest increase in adjusted administrative and R&D cost and an increase in adjusted other expenses, which were driven by higher amortization of intangible assets related to the acquisition and lower pension and post-retirement benefit income. On slide 28, adjusted EPS increased double digits to 63 cents, primarily reflecting higher adjusted EBIT, partially offset by higher net interest expense related to higher levels of debt to fund the acquisition. As we mentioned earlier, the acquisition was approximately neutral to adjusted EPS in Q4 and to the full year. In meals and beverages, fourth quarter net sales increased 28 percent, driven by the contribution of the Sobos brand's acquisition. Pro forma Q4 net sales growth for the division, as if we had owned Sovos for all of Q4 fiscal 23, would have been approximately 4%, driven by the respective pro forma Q4 growth of Sovos of 14%. Organic net sales increased 1%, driven by gains in U.S. soup, food service, and Prego pasta sauces, partially offset by declines in beverages. It was great to see year-over-year volume trends turn positive in the quarter for meals and beverages, with favorable volume and mix of 2%, partially offset by lower net price realization of 1%. In U.S. soup, net sales increased 2%, primarily due to an increase in broth, partially offset by decreases in ready-to-serve and condensed soups. Additionally, fourth quarter operating earnings increased 60%, primarily driven by the contribution of the Sobos brand's acquisition and higher gross profit in the base business. We were pleased with the Q4 meals and beverages operating margin of 17.6%, which improved 350 basis points as compared to the prior year, more than absorbing the impact of the recent acquisition, which, as I mentioned earlier, has a lower margin profile than the base business. For the full year, meals and beverages operating margins improved 30 basis points to 18.5%. Fourth quarter organic knit sales and snacks decreased 3%. Volume and mixed trends sequentially improved to flat in the quarter with roughly 1% growth in power brands and 1% reduction in partner brands. In addition, we saw slightly more than a 2% unfavorable net price realization, of which approximately half was a planned increase in net pricing investment and the balance reflecting the lapping of favorable trade phasing in Q4 of fiscal 23. Fourth quarter operating margin for snacks increased 50 basis points to 14.5%, and full year margin improved 40 basis points to end the year at 14.8%, generally aligned with our goal of reaching approximately 15% margins for the year as we navigated the ongoing consumer recovery. We remain on track with our network and route to market initiatives as part of our margin roadmap. Though as we think about fiscal 25, we will be a bit more conservative with a margin expectation modestly above 15% as volume trends continue to normalize and we absorb the near-term impact of the POP secret divestiture. This will give us some flexibility to remain competitive while supporting our brands and innovation launches this coming year, while staying focused on our long-term margin goal of 17%. Turning to slide 31, we generated strong cash flow from operations of nearly $1.2 billion in fiscal year 24. This result represented a 4% increase compared to the prior year, despite incurring one-time cash costs associated with the acquisition. Fiscal 24 capital expenditures were $517 million as we continue to prioritize key growth and capability building investments, including capital requirements related to SoBus Brands. We also remain committed to returning cash to our shareholders with $445 million of dividends paid and $67 million in anti-dilutive share repurchases during the fiscal year. Our net debt to adjusted EBITDA leverage at the end of the fourth quarter was 3.7 times as expected. We remain committed to investment grade ratings and our goal to return to our three times net leverage target by the end of year three post-close. At the end of Q4, we had approximately $108 million in cash and cash equivalents and ample liquidity under our revolving credit facility. Turning to slide 32, our full year fiscal 25 guidance reflects a balance between sequential progress while also reflecting a reasonable range as we continue to navigate the ongoing consumer recovery. As a reminder, we completed the sale of our pop secret business earlier this week. The divestiture is estimated to reduce net sales by approximately one percentage point and have a four cent earnings per share dilutive impact in fiscal 25 which is reflected in our full year guidance. Fiscal 25 comprises 53 weeks, one additional week compared to fiscal 24. The benefit of the 53rd week is included in our fiscal 25 guidance and it is estimated to be worth approximately two points of net sales and adjusted EBIT growth and approximately six cents of adjusted EPS. Full year reported net sales are expected to increase approximately nine to 11% which reflects a full 12 months of net sales contribution from Sobos Brands and the loss of 11 months of net sales from the divestiture of PopSecret. As a reminder, Sobos moves into our organic growth calculation starting March 12, 2025. We expect Sobos Brands' fiscal 25 pro forma net sales growth as if we had owned Sobos for all of fiscal 24 to be in the high single-digit range following a year of double-digit growth. Rails will lap its more significant distribution gains beginning in January. Moving forward, we still expect long-term SoBus Brands net sales growth to be in the mid single-digit range. Full-year organic net sales growth is expected in a range of approximately flat to up 2%, reflecting the variability in the pace of consumer recovery. Our organic net sales expectations reflect modest positive volume and mix for the year, In terms of phasing, we expect Q1 organic net sales growth to be relatively flat, a modest improvement from Q4. And for the balance of the year, we expect sequential improvement in the consumer environment. Importantly, for the second half, although we expect healthier category trends, we will be cycling the broad net sales benefit in fiscal 24 that was the result of private label supply constraints. We expect adjusted EBIT growth of 9% to 11%, including the operating income contribution of Sobos brands and the impact of the divestiture of PopSecret. As a reminder, the adjusted EBIT contribution of Sobos in our guidance includes stock-based compensation expense and acquisition-related depreciation and amortization expense. Whereas historically, when Sobos was a standalone company, these costs were not included in their adjusted results. Fiscal 25 transaction-related depreciation and amortization expense is expected to be approximately $18 million in line with our original expectations. We expect full-year core inflation in the low single-digit range, consistent with Fiscal 24. We also expect productivity improvements of approximately 3% and enterprise cost savings of approximately $70 million, inclusive of $10 million in cost synergies related to the integration of Sobos. Of the $70 million, roughly one-third will benefit gross profit and two-thirds to be realized in the marketing, selling, and general administrative expense categories. Additionally, in line with our continued commitment to brand investments, we expect adjusted marketing and selling expense as a percent of net sales to return to our targeted range of 9% to 10%. For Q1, we expect an increase in marketing and selling spend as compared to Q1 fiscal 24 with the addition of Sovos Brands expenses, as well as other targeted brand investments in the base business. Total company adjusted EBIT margin is expected to be similar to fiscal 24, with a modest improvement in adjusted gross margin, offset with the impact of the acquisition as it moves into our base for a full 12 months, as well as the normalization of incentive compensation and higher levels of marketing and selling costs for the base business. As mentioned earlier, SNAC's operating margin is expected to be modestly above fiscal 24. Meals and beverages operating margin is expected to be modestly lower, reflecting the mixed impact of Sovos, partially offset by a modest margin improvement in the base business. Adjusted earnings per share is expected to increase 1% to 4% and be in a range of $3.12 to $3.22, including the $0.04 impact of the divestiture of PopSecret. We expect Sovos to be approximately neutral to adjusted EPS in fiscal 25. To provide a bit more clarity about the phasing of the year, in Q1, we would expect adjusted EPS to be in the mid to high $0.80 range, reflecting modest dilution impacts from the SoGOS acquisition and PopSecret divestiture, as well as brand investments within our targeted 9% to 10% range. Full-year adjusted net interest expense is expected to be between $350 million and $355 million. Net interest expense is higher than fiscal 24, reflecting a full year of incremental debt related to the acquisition and higher expected interest expense associated with the refinancing of our March 2025 bond maturities with expected debt issuance timing driven by market conditions. As a wrap-up guidance, capital expenditures are expected to be approximately 5% of net sales. Our priorities for fiscal 2025 include key networking optimization initiatives across both divisions, capital related to the integration of Sogos, including IT investments, and completing our growth capacity investments in our snacks division for Goldfish and Kettle brand chips. We see great opportunity to reinvest into the business in support of growth and improved profitability. This remains very much aligned with our long-term algorithm and capital allocation priorities that we'll talk more about at our upcoming Investor Day. To wrap up, we were pleased with our fourth quarter results delivering double-digit growth in both adjusted EBIT and EPS, and margin expansion. As we head into fiscal 25, we remain encouraged by the continued expectation for improving volume trends in the business and sustaining the momentum following our first full quarter with Sobos Brands in our results. With that, let me turn it over to the operator to begin Q&A.
spk06: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star 1 in your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star 1 again. Your first question comes from the line of Andrew Lazar from Barclays. Your line is open.
spk04: Great. Good morning, everybody. Hi, Andrew. Hi there. Mark, I'm sure there will be plenty of questions on snacks, so maybe I'd like to focus a bit on meals and beverages to start. Organic sales rose one, right, 2% gain in volume, so momentum clearly improving here, even without Sovos being in the base. So I was hoping you could talk just a bit more about sort of the key drivers here. And I guess more importantly, the sustainability of these improved results, especially in the context of the industry supply and broth coming back later this calendar year.
spk03: Yeah. So I think the first thing I just would say is that when you think about the consumer landscape that we're in right now, you know, it's a good time to be in these categories. Meals and beverages fit very well. In a world where consumers are eating more in-home, as we continue to see those numbers extremely high, the behavior of cooking and driving value and affordability along with convenience, we really couldn't have a better fitting set of brands for that. And I think that underpins a lot of the reasons why growth is continuing. I do think it's important, though, that for a lot of investors that I've spoken to, I think one of the big questions was, are you going to be able to get volume in the right direction on soup without mortgaging, if you will, the margin? And I think this was a great quarter to demonstrate that. And even if you look into the latest four weeks as we go into Q1, the momentum on that business is really fairly broad-scaled, fairly universal. across all of our segments. A little bit more work to do on ready to serve. I think that will, you know, we continue to see consumers kind of, you know, choosing based on what the priority of the season is. And so I do expect ready to serve and chunky to have a stronger first half of the year. But the reality is, is those businesses are in strong footing. On share, there's no doubt that the broth dynamic with private label is helping. And we're seeing significant growth in broth, and we have now for a couple quarters. But I think what's interesting is even if I account for the fact that we're a bit higher priced than private label in the dollar growth of the category and the volume growth, the category still is very, very healthy. And all of that consumption is now happening with Swanson. So we feel really good about the trajectory of soup as we go into the season and into the holiday. I think, you know, as I pointed out, our sauce business has been good, right, was good, is good, and absolutely consistent belief that it will continue to do very well. It was great to see both Rayos and Prego growing together. because I think they are very complementary in nature. You've got a mainstream Prego business that was doing well in the quarter, and then, of course, Rayos just continues to be the driver that it's been. The total brand in the fourth quarter for Rayos was up 25%, and as we've talked a lot, we haven't even really started the marketing and the next wave of innovation on that business. And so... know our belief in that continuing to be a driver albeit moderated as we cycle you know got to remember this is almost a billion dollar business now uh growing at 25 percent is uh tough to imagine into perpetuity um but as we said in 25 we're expecting high single digit growth and longer term that mid-single um which will continue to contribute and solidify meals and beverage as a steady grower even if you've got some some normalization of meals and beverages as you get into the back half of the year, there's still enough going on in that business that gives us a lot of confidence. They can be a positive contributor, and I think that's kind of a new page, if you will, for meals and beverage. But as much as I love the Reyes growth continuing, I'd have to say the soup recovery and it being volume-driven was probably a more meaningful statement of belief in the division for the future.
spk04: And then maybe just super briefly, because I know we have a lot to get through, just You've been very steadfast for a long time now in the broader industry, kind of recovering is a more of a when, not if. And it's obviously been longer than most would have expected. I think a lot of investors are still maybe somewhat more skeptical in this recovery just because we haven't seen it really in a really perceptible way in the data, broadly speaking, not just Campbell specific. Maybe just really briefly, just the rationale behind your belief in that.
spk03: Yeah, I know a lot of doom and gloom. I'm not seeing it in the numbers, right? If anything, I know we'll talk about snacks, I'm sure, in a moment. But even where I had some pressure on snacks, it was far more share-driven than category-driven. A lot of the categories we're participating in, 75% of them, are back to growth. Now, is snacks all the way back to the historical growth level that I'm anxious for it to be at? No, not overall, but you had kettle potato chips in the quarter was up 7%. You had pretzels up 4%. Our organic and natural tortillas were up 5%. Cookies a little bit less, but still positive. And total snacking, even total salty was up 1%. I think the underlying metrics that I look at to determine what to expect coming forward continue to point to me to normalization. I always try to remind us that on the Campbell's business and Campbell's Snacks right now, we're still cycling near double-digit growth. I think 9% a year ago on Total Snacks, 9.5% on the Power Brand. Yes, I think there's been a little bit longer runway for this than I would have liked, but I really don't see any indication from the data other than a little bit of a walk back on consumer confidence, which, again, and I don't want to diminish how tough it is for a lot of consumers that are out there, but I feel like we've cycled enough of this that we're beginning to see the normalization. Again, you got soup up 6% in the latest four weeks. Pasta sauce continues to grow. Salsa is growing. Really, most of the core business is for us. So as I said, Andrew, last quarter, and continue to believe a lot of this matters about where you are, right? If you're in certain categories, I'm sure it still looks like recovery is a ways away. But I do think this is not going to be a linear journey, as we've said before. And I'm happy that many of our categories are probably a little bit on the upper edge of that curve and recovering. And even in a somewhat depressed recovery for snacking, our subsegments are doing quite well. Now, we've got some share and some new entrants into a couple different categories we need to address, but I'd rather have that fight than a structural concern around the growth of the category.
spk06: Thank you. Your next question comes from a line of Ken Goldman from JP Morgan. Your line is open.
spk05: Hi, thank you. I wanted to ask about snacks. Mark, I appreciate that it's not so much promo that's acting as a headwind as much as competition from new entrants. But I'm curious, isn't this also a bit of a worry? And the reason I'm asking is, you know, you're attacking the problem with innovation and marketing. It's great to see. But This is a problem across a number of food categories that we're seeing, which is that challenger brands are taking share and intensifying. And, you know, yes, would I rather have competition via innovation than discounting? Sure, but I guess maybe you could walk us through your confidence that your actions will be enough to offset this trend.
spk03: Yeah, so it's a great question, Ken. I think the – and I certainly wouldn't want to make this sound as if we're not – know extremely focused and and really um viewing this as an important um you know area to focus on as we get into 25 but you know the way i look at this is as i go across the the places where we're experiencing the pressure and it's really in salty right so you have you have a new entrant in pretzels you have a new entrant in kettle um and you have a new entrant in what i call better for you tortilla All of those are a concern, as you say. But as we look at what we have relative to the brands in the portfolio, so I look at pretzels and I say, OK, that one's been there for a while. I've got three brands that live in pretzels, right? I have Snyder's at Hanover. I have Snack Factory. And I've actually got Goldfish that plays a surprising large role in pretzel. I've got all three brands that I can bring to bear in the defense with innovation. And you're going to see when we get to Investor Day, By the way, for all three of these, we're going to really unpack for you the full kind of attack plan on how we see going after it, because it is important for us to do it. But that's an example of where I feel like the tools we've got. Now, if I'm completely honest, I do think we need to have more marketing support in the plan to support the innovation we're driving. And you see that in our outlook, in our guidance plan. as we go into next year. I think on Kettle, I would say it's a little bit more of a Me Too product. And I've got this great two brands, Kettle and Cape Cod, that I need to use more as a portfolio to drive winning in that category. And then on Tortilla, we've got a great story on late July. And so I think you hear me confidently really for three reasons. One, I think our brands are well positioned to defend. Two, I think the innovation and the marketing has not been at its peak while these have come in. So we've got to react and respond to that very well. And we're resourced for that and we've got the pipeline as we go into next year. And again, I would say that I do not see these as an attack or a fight on price, but I do think it's quite important that our promotional frequency and then our price gaps remain reasonable. And so you'll continue to see very modest, you know, under 100 basis points, but modest investment in some areas to ensure that we stay competitive. So that's, you know, again, I don't want to over-portray, you know, that we've got this thing completely solved, but I do think we're in a really good position to address it. And again, if I'm in a category that's growing 9%, as an example in Kettle, that's not a horrible place to be to fight this fight. So I'm happy that we're seeing the recovery in our elevated sub-segments of snacking. And look, we know how to, if this is a level playing field and opportunity for us to win and market, I'll always take that challenge.
spk05: And if I can just thank you for that, ask a very quick follow-up. You mentioned that certain parts of your guidance or maybe guidance in general is prudent. I won't go into that, but I did want to ask a specific question
spk03: um question which is that does your guidance assume a reversal in broad share next year in other words are you assuming that your share goes down it does okay thank you yeah the second in the second half of the year um we're anticipating um kind of a normalization of share um as you know now having said that we're going to fight like heck to keep all those households with swats but um i think from a prudent standpoint you know we've seen a little bit of this normalization before historically speaking. And so we're using that as our kind of guideline for what to plan. And then I know the team's aggressively going after beating that.
spk06: Thanks, Mark.
spk03: Thanks, Ken.
spk06: Your next question comes from Peter Galbo from Bank of America. Your line is open.
spk07: Hey, guys. Good morning. Hi, Peter. Um, Mark, maybe if, if we can actually, uh, hone in a bit more on, on snacks, I mean, your largest competitor has obviously talked about also just, just pressure that they're seeing, um, particularly in unseasoned, you know, or, or more plain, you know, potato chips, um, as well as tortilla chips and just kind of the interaction you're seeing amongst, you know, late July kettle and Cape Cod. And then maybe as a, as a part B to that question, you know, those three brands in particular, at least when I think about them tend to be, um,
spk03: a bigger presence maybe in club channels and just you know is there a store format difference that you're noticing between club and maybe some of the smaller format stores would be helpful yeah so um there's definitely a bit more of bifurcation between what i would call the more mainstream uh segments and then what i would call the more elevated segments so for example in q4 um I think potato chips is an overall subsegment grew by about 3%, which is not horrible, but about 3% and arguably with a bit more trade down pressure and a little bit more promotional focus. We do have, you know, Jaycott, which is our, we call them our allied brands. They're Jay's potato chips. So we see a little bit of that in a very, very small part of our business, but In the main power brand area, all of those are operating in a more elevated space. And those seem to have been, one, recovering much faster as they do tend to index to a little bit more middle to upper middle and higher income households, which have been a fair degree more resilient. So I think where you are playing on that front, it does tend to be more driven by by who's bringing the innovation, who's bringing the right marketing. Obviously, promotion plays a very important role, and I'm not diminishing that. But at the end of the day, the fight is quite different at those elevated segments than it is in what I'd call the more lower and mainstream segments, where we do see it a little bit more fight on price. We do see a little bit more traction in private label. You know, probably the category where we have a little bit more of that analog is on pretzels, where our base pretzel is, you know, we see a little bit more pressure there. But even there, I think Snyder's plays at a somewhat elevated level to that, and that helps our business or our portfolio, I think, you know, play in a little more constructive of a way.
spk07: Okay, no, that's helpful. And maybe just as a follow up to Ken's question, just to clarify on the organic sales guidance for the year, you know, the first quarter being flat, I'm assuming then, you know, we should kind of see a step down potentially in work sales, kind of through the middle parts of the year. And then again, maybe that ramp up just as you hit the 53rd week in 4Q, which I think you're including in the organic sales guidance. So maybe you could just clarify that. Thanks very much.
spk03: Yeah, so 53rd week is not in organic sales.
spk01: It's reported, but not in the organic.
spk03: Right, and maybe Carrie talked a little bit about the phasing of the year, but we do not see like a Q2 significant drop-off.
spk01: No, and certainly as we think about second quarter, you know, you've got your benefit of your holiday season, and a lot of our innovation starts to launch there. So, you know, I would say that you need to take that into consideration. And then as you move into the second half, I think the categories are still going to be healthy. So I still think you'll see that sequential improvement in category health. But what you are going to need to take into consideration, as Mark talked about on M&B, is the cycling of the broth as our share normalizes in broth. So you want to make sure that you're putting that into your model.
spk03: I think one of the ways to think about this is at the time that you're cycling, a little bit of a broth headwinds. I'm also expecting the snacks business to be returning a bit more to normality as far as categories. So I would plot your course for the year as a little bit more of a gradual improvement as we get into the second quarter and beyond, and then perhaps a little bit of a swap of who's kind of leading the drive. But in essence, kind of getting both businesses into what I would call a more normal trajectory.
spk06: Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Michael Lavery from Piper Standler. Your line is open.
spk02: Thank you. Good morning. Hi, Michael. Just to come back to the consumer thinking a little bit and maybe just try to understand how you balance some risks. I know on some of the macro teams across the street. There's a soft landing versus recession debate, and I'll leave all that to them. But it does seem like there's a bias towards some risk as opposed to improvement. And I know you said you're looking at the data, but to some extent that can also be trailing more than leading. So just curious maybe how you think about how you'd be positioned in a recession, or if one comes, and who even knows, of course. what that might look like exactly. But would you expect to benefit from switches to more food at home? Or, you know, you've got to now, especially with Sovos, a bit of a premium and, you know, some attractive value options for consumers balance in your portfolio. You know, how do you expect that to net out? Maybe just think about how, you know, how you've kind of covered those bases.
spk03: Yeah, so the first thing I would say is I think that although you hear a perhaps more bullish tone on the consumer landscape than maybe some others or even a bit contrarian to some of the points of view out there, more broadly speaking, I would tell you that we plan the year in a way where we're not expecting some radical change. you know, accelerated recovery. In fact, I would say that we're expecting a relatively slow bounce back as it relates to snacking, a more kind of normalized meals and beverage, and then a bit of a flip, as I said, in the back half where you'll see some headwinds from broth and perhaps a bit more normalized meals and beverage category and a more modest recovery on snacks. You see that in the zero to 2% um range how do i feel if if that environment gets a bit worse i think there's two things um that helped me kind of calibrate the plan the first is i certainly would not suggest that what we're going to be cycling is the same kind of um outsized growth and upside that we saw as we were cycling pricing and a variety of other positive, if you will, growth drivers where your baseline is a relatively muted baseline. So let's imagine this hangs around a little longer than we would expect, I think is not going to be perhaps as dramatic as the step down that we saw after cycling two or three years of just incredibly outsized growth. I think the second thing that I would point to is I do think, you know, this is a good time to have a portfolio like ours where you've got a variety of different, you know, not an endless, but a variety of different categories that really do match, you know, as we've seen over the last year, even now, right? Where soup and broth, as people are eating more at home, continue to benefit from that. And certainly pasta sauce has been fairly resilient in almost any economic environment. I think snacks, again, is historically speaking, notwithstanding a little bit of what we're normalizing through right now, but snacks has proven over time to be a bit more resilient in economic downturns. And so I think that the role that our brands play in the portfolio we have would set us up, even in a tougher environment, to be in a positive position. But I think that combination are both encouraging, but our plan does not assume that we're going to see this kind of more outsized recovery. That's kind of how, that's why we said, look, you know, I will say the consumer confidence to me is a very important metric, and that was negative in Q4. And, you know, my description of the consumer would be a little bit more
spk02: biased to positive but still fragile and so I I would not want to overestimate the the you know the certainty if you will um of what the underlying Dynamics may be pointing to that's great color and then I'll just wrap up with a clarification because I want to come back to the 53rd week I had felt that I understood it and I I think your answer just a second ago uh confused me because In the release, you say the benefit of the 53rd week is included in the fiscal 25 guidance below and is estimated to be worth approximately two points of growth to both reported and organic net sales and adjusted EBIT along with a sixth sense to EPS. In the EPS and organic growth numbers, where's the 53rd week?
spk01: Just to clarify, in the organic growth, the benefit of the 53rd week has been removed.
spk03: But in the EBIT and in the EPS.
spk01: It is in there. It is in there. It's just in the organic net sales growth, Michael, that it's been, that it's out.
spk03: We don't normally extract an organic EBIT or.
spk01: That's correct.
spk03: Or EPS. Okay. Thanks so much.
spk06: Your next question comes from the line of Jim Solera from Stevens. Your line is open.
spk08: Hi, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking our question. uh mark i wanted to drill down on something you said earlier you know talking about innovation in elevated segments and snacks which would speak to uh you know focus from your peers on middle to higher income consumer but then you also mentioned rayos has seen growth across all income segments and that's despite being you know a premium product do you think that's reflective of consumer trade down from food away from home so no matter what they're spending money on, if it's a brand like Rao's, they're still saving money compared to restaurants? Or are there particular categories that consumers are willing to pay more for if the quality delivers right and they'll cut back elsewhere in their shop?
spk03: Yeah, so I would say almost, yeah, you covered the front of that. I absolutely see Rao's, and I use this analogy a lot from prior life. I remember um, you know, launching, you know, DiGiorno pizza many, many years ago. And the reality was, is that the, although that at the time seemed like an incredibly expensive frozen pizza, as the frame of reference was expanded to include delivery, uh, pizza, it all of a sudden became a great value. I think that is very similar to the dynamic of Reyes, where you have this incredible quality that arguably at a much lower rate than a DoorDash order. that is a mediocre Italian meal that you're paying $30, $40 for, paying $8 to $9 for a jar of Reyes and hopefully a couple more for a package of Reyes pasta, you're having a terrific Italian meal at home. It's incredibly convenient and it is a better value. And I think that is why you are seeing um rayos experience growth across all of the all of the economic sectors and i think to your point maybe certainly true on rails but i'd say also true on snacking is you may be rationalizing some of your spend um and the the amount that you were buying on snacks but you also may decide that that as i do that i want to make sure that what I'm buying is something that I'm going to really enjoy. It might be a little bit more permissible, a little cleaner label. And so what we've seen is this dynamic where, you know, some of the higher end subsegments are more elevated, as we would describe them, to be more resilient. Now, it's not as prolific as RAOS extending into the lower income, but certainly as we think about mid income and high income, You know, categories like kettle potato chips and more natural and organic tortilla chips have, as a category, have held up very well in both of those.
spk08: That's great. Maybe if I could just sneak in one final question on that. How does that dynamic inform some of the marketing spend that you guys are going to be putting in in 2025 as we expect kind of a return to that 9% to 10% marketing and selling? Where's that incremental?
spk03: Yes. Yeah, so I think, as I said earlier, I do not want to diminish how tough it is out there for a lot of consumers. So I think you will continue to see value-centric communication and messaging in many categories. And even on our more premium, it may be a little bit more about value in a different way, right? I mean, again, I think... You know, a higher price does not preclude one from creating tremendous value. So I think you will see that continue to be part of it. But I also think as you think about where we're seeing pressure from new entrants or Me Too products that are putting some share pressure on businesses, I think what you're going to see is what you should see from us, which is really leading the consumer thinking and bringing new to the world flavors forms products while while continuing the market against what makes our brands like kettle and Cape Cod and late July so unique and differentiated so I think maybe whereas this year we went a little bit more all in on value I think what you're going to see us as we move into 25 is balancing that a bit between value but also know really in the in building getting back to um i think a a more focused effort on driving the equity um and the news and innovation behind the brands because in the long run you know in those elevated segments that's gonna that's gonna determine winning right i mean yes a new product coming into the category puts some near-term pressure on but as we cycle that distribution you know, I think we'll get a better impression of how we've done on ensuring that we really drive the equity in the news.
spk06: Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our question and answer session, and this does conclude today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
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