8/1/2025

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Good morning and welcome to the Kimberly-Clark Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Question and Answer Session. I will now hand over to Chris Jakubik, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

speaker
Chris Jakubik
Vice President, Investor Relations

Good morning. This is Chris Jakubik, Head of Investor Relations at Kimberly-Clark, and thank you for joining us. I would like to remind everyone that during our comments today, we will make some forward-looking statements that are based on how we see things today. Actual results may differ due to risks and uncertainties, and these are discussed in our earnings release and our filings with the SEC. We will also discuss some non-GAAP financial measures during these remarks. These non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered a replacement for and should be read together with GAAP results, and you can find the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations within our earnings release and the supplemental materials posted at investor.kimberly-clark.com. With that, I will hand it over to Mike for a few opening comments.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Okay, thank you, Chris. The second quarter was one of the strongest and most active in our recent history. Our results are indicative of the excellent progress we're making executing power and care. We accelerated momentum on the top line and delivered solid organic sales growth fueled by our strongest volume quarter in the last five years. On a global basis, we gained weighted share and made significant share gains in several key categories in our largest markets. Now, regarding our top line momentum, I'd like to emphasize three points. First, we're energized by our progress in China and the early returns on how our playbook is being applied globally. Second, we believe it's important to meet consumers where they need us. Our strategy to deliver exceptional brand propositions across the value spectrum is paying off. Consumers seeking better value are trading within our portfolio, and we're delighted to retain them within our brand franchises as you can see in the U.S. scanner data. Third, our performance is driven by excellent commercial execution, superior innovation, and strong investment to differentiate our brands. We delivered another quarter of industry-leading productivity, enabling us to reinvest when and where we see opportunity to support profitable growth. Our organizational rewiring is enhancing our agility. We're bringing the best of Kimberly-Clark to the world faster with better consumer solutions and lower product costs. We also took decisive action to focus our portfolio. We're confident our joint venture with Susana will unlock the full potential of international family care and professional. For Kimberly-Clark, it enables laser focus on our higher growth, higher margin North America and international personal care businesses. As we enter the second half of the year, we expect to continue performing while transforming. We're realizing the vision of a refreshed and refocused Kimberly-Clark. We're confident in our ability to deliver consistent top-tier growth. We have great opportunity ahead of us. We will continue to enhance our capability to provide better care for a better world and create value for our shareholders. So with that, I'd like to open up the line for questions.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Certainly. Everyone at this time will be conducting a question and answer session. If you have any questions or comments, please press star 1 on your phone at this time. We do ask that while posing your question, please pick up your handset if you're listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press star 1 on your phone. Your first question is coming from Nick Mody from RBC Capital. Your line is live.

speaker
Nick Mody
Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Yeah, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Morning, Nick. Good morning. Good morning. Maybe you could just talk about, obviously, a very strong quarter within the context of what's been going on pretty broadly across the space. So just kind of two questions, like any more specifics in terms of really what drove this level of outperformance. But more importantly, given everyone is kind of moderating their expectations for the back half of the year, and you guys obviously are are suggesting otherwise, you know, what gives us the reasons to believe on why we should feel comfortable with kind of the outlook in the back half? Thanks.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Okay, thanks, Nick. Great question. There's a lot to unpack in there. You know, maybe I'll start with, hey, how do we see the state of the consumer? You know, one, you could see in our approach overall, you know, that we've been talking about for a few quarters now, you know, our approach is to meet consumers where they need us, right? And so that's kind of our starting point. I'll talk about maybe how we're seeing it and maybe with a tilt toward North America, but I do see purchasing power under pressure for consumers. Frankly, we don't really see a catalyst for that dynamic to change in the near to medium term. For us, that does affect the categories. You know, I'll say the other thing that we've talked to you about our categories is they are essential. There's not a whole lot of substitutes for our products. And so because of that, demand remains resilient and the categories continue to demonstrate durable growth, right? And that's kind of a big deal for us. And I think that sets our categories apart from maybe what you're seeing in some of the other categories. If I just click through a couple areas, you know, I'd say definitely North America would exhibit durable growth. You know, we're seeing penetration and frequency stable. Obviously, the bifurcation trends are continuing. But I think, you know, your question about, hey, why did you perform better than maybe what some expected is, you know, we took on this approach, you know, I think we started doing this last year, which is, hey, we want to have a great value proposition in every tier of the good, better, best ladder. And so we've been cascading consistently. some of our best kind of product features to our value tiers. And I would say if you looked in the quarter, what's driving our demand is the innovation. So I think we feel good about that. I'd say in international markets, you know, we have seen some frequency declines, notably in, I would say, more informal economies where pay is less stable. Like in Latin America, we've seen that occur. But in international and our larger developed markets, we are seeing demand continue to be fairly stable. So we feel good about our progress through the first half. And then therefore, I think your question about the second half, what gives us confidence, I think we feel great about our pipeline. Again, I think the vast majority of the growth we've delivered in the first half has been driven by innovation. I think I said in the script, in the prepared remarks, 85 percent of organic sales is driven by innovation, right? And so, and a lot of that is just hitting in the second quarter. And so, you know, we expect, you know, to continue to perform as we go through the balance of the year because we have great innovation, you know, at the premium tiers and at the mid-tiers to serve our consumers well. So, you know, again, you know, we expect, you know, continued strong performance through the balance of the year.

speaker
Nick Mody
Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Great. I'll pass it on.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Okay. Thanks, Zach. Thank you. Your next question is coming from Lauren Lieberman from Barclays. Your line is live.

speaker
Lauren Lieberman
Analyst, Barclays

Great. Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to just talk for a second, honing in in particular on North America. Performance was so strong there this quarter and really was quite different than what we saw in Scanner. And I had actually expected the – professional business to be a drag on performance, so kind of going the other way versus Skinner, so I was wondering if you could kind of square that for us a bit. And then also, I know you just spoke to Nick about confidence for the balance of the year, but I was curious about pacing. There was a bit of noisiness in the second half last year, so just anything you can share on phasing in the back half would be great. Thanks.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, maybe, Norton, I'm going to pass it over to Nelson, but my overall is on pacing, when you're thinking about comps, there's a lot of noise in the year ago, and there's noise this year, too. So when you think about comps, there's just a lot of choppiness going on in the numbers.

speaker
Nelson
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Right. And I'll seek to unpack that, Loren. So a few things, and I'll hone in on North America. In both scanner and reported results, I mean, we're seeing building momentum from a strong pipeline of activations and innovations that are winning with consumers across all the value tiers. In Q2 in particular, shipments in North America consumer were about 100 basis points ahead of consumption, which was at 4.5% branded consumption. This was driven by a tailwind in retailer inventory shifts, which are made up of two things. One, we're lapping prior year D stock that we saw in Q2, and then we had a little bit of pipeline bill this year related to some of the innovation that we've been putting into the marketplace and Mike just talked about. This amounted to about 110 basis points at the enterprise and about 170 basis points for North America. This was partly offset by lower private label shipments outside of the private label diaper contract that we exited in Q1 of this year. And what this is driving is about 60 basis points of impact to total company and to North America about a point in the quarter. Now, as we think about the first half, shipments actually lagged consumption. And that was about 60 basis points when we think of the enterprise. Firstly, you know, we're facing lower year-on-year North America private label shipments outside of the private label diaper contract that we exited. And we've been highlighting over the last couple quarters. And this was, again, about 60 basis points of impact to the total company organic sales in the first half and about a point to North America. Secondly, this year there's one less day of shipments for the first half, whereas scanner data is apples to apples in terms of days, weeks, versus the prior year. And this represents about 50 basis points of impact to organic sales at both Enterprise and whatnot in North America. And then this was partially offset by the tailwind from retailer inventory ships in North America, which was about 50 basis points on the Enterprise and 80 basis points for North America. In terms of what to expect or how to think about the balance of the year, a couple of things on building on what Mike said. We have a strong slate of new product and go-to-market activations and innovations that has been ramping up as of Q2, and we expect to have that continue into the second half. And that'll not just be in North America, but across, you know, our different markets, international personal care. And this will be helping us drive or sustain a volume mixed lead growth in the balance of the year. Consistent with our long-term algorithm, we were continuing to target a growth for the balance of the year that will be volume mixed lead. Currently, our categories, when we think of North America and international personal care, are growing at a weighted average of around 2%. And that's consistent with what we saw back in April. But remember, in April, when we talked about 1.5% to 2%, that included our discontinued operations. So, this is solely for the North America and IPC combined. From a quarterly perspective, year on year, the third quarter and the fourth quarter will be driven by the year-ago comparison as much as anything else. Q3 will be the easiest of COBS versus prior year. There's about 30 basis points of tailwind at the enterprise level and 50 basis points of tailwind in North America from the hurricane impacts on our shipments at the very end of September of last year, which were recovered in Q4 as we spoke in January. Then as we think of the fourth quarter, last year we also saw the benefit from panic buying due to the port strikes, which was about 40 basis points of benefit in the quarter for the enterprise and 60 basis points of benefit for North America. The combined impact of the hurricane and the panic buying will result in about a 70 basis point headwind to Q4. But overall, we're expecting to maintain a solid volume mix driven organic growth in the second half and for the full year leading category growth. But as you can see, as Mike pointed out, there's a little bit of noise and wanted to unpack that so you can have the details.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Did you get all that, Lauren? Sorry, we're throwing a lot at you. Can I just lob in the one? I'll go back to it. Sorry. Nelson's loaded for bear here. Here's where you started. Strong performance in North America. Underlying driver, great innovation. I think really strong improvement in our marketing. And then I would say the customer plans are as good as the innovation. You know, and I think, you know, we're top rated and advantaged. I think we're working exceptionally well with customers. And so that's kind of what's driving it. And I don't see what data you're looking at. And, you know, I should probably try to reconcile that. But North America, as Nelson mentioned, consumption in the second quarter was up 4.5%. The range of our categories was from, I would say, you know, low single digit, you know, and that would be like, you know, bat tissue around 4% low single digit to up to near double digit in adult care. So I think consumption remains robust in our categories, or as I said earlier to Nick, you know, the consumption is very durable in our categories, and that's really driven by, I think, you know, excellent innovation and excellent execution.

speaker
Lauren Lieberman
Analyst, Barclays

Thanks so much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Your next question is coming from Steve Powers from Deutsche Bank. Your line is live.

speaker
Steve Powers
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

All right. Good morning, everybody. Thank you. You know, Nelson talked about, you know, volume mix led growth in the back half. So I wanted to kind of talk a little bit about the pricing environment and your pricing outlook. On the one hand, you know, if we think about what we've heard year to date and through the second quarter, I think we've heard and we've seen pockets of increasing promotion and competitive activity in certain areas, particularly in the U.S. On the other hand, you know, obviously there are inflationary pressures building and indications that we should see some kind of pricing rolling through as we move through the back half into next year. So I guess in that context, just your overall assessment of competition, your pricing outlook for the balance of the year, and any expectations or considerations you have just for customer and consumer acceptance of that incremental pricing if it's to come. Thank you.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I'll start Steve with, you know, I'll say our overall kind of philosophy on this is, you know, right now we're really focused on driving volume and mix but we have to maintain, you know, PNOC or pricing net of commodity, you know, we have to have discipline on that, right? And so our approach is that PNOC, pricing net of commodities, has to be zero or greater, right? And so that's kind of what we're trying to, you know, that's kind of our overall approach. And so we've, you know, continuously deployed I would say targeted revenue management actions across the board. And so in some cases we have taken pricing earlier this year in some categories. And then in some categories we have adjusted, you know, downwards, particularly in opening price point packs and also some large count sizes. But, you know, that's kind of our overall approach year to year. You know, in terms of the promotional environment, Again, philosophically, we view promotion as a tactical lever to drive trial of great innovation. I'm not a fan of using it to try to drive growth because in our categories where consumption is, you know, more, you know, fixed, you know, it doesn't – promotion does not expand our categories, not these. And so, again, we, you know, we use it, you know, if you look at us, you know, our promotion intensity – is I would say below what the category average is and remains that and a little bit below what it was pre-COVID time period back in 2019. And so that's kind of our overall approach because we feel great about the other levers that we are applying, which is great innovation, great marketing, great customer plans. So I don't know if that answers everything you're asking about.

speaker
Steve Powers
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Yeah, I guess in summation, just I guess I'm gleaning from what you're saying is where you need it, Where you see opportunities, you feel good about your pricing power and not overly concerned about the competitive environment. Is that a fair summation?

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, well, yes. Well, yeah, I think, again, I think our approach is, you know, we have to offset commodities and to be able to expand margins over time. And so that's just a discipline that we have to employ. And we're not using, you know, pricing as a growth driver because, again, of the category dynamics of promotion. Understood.

speaker
Steve Powers
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Okay. All right.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Your next question is coming from Michael Lavery from Piper Sandler. Your line is live.

speaker
Michael Lavery
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Thank you. Good morning. Morning, Michael. Just wanted to unpack the outlook update a little bit. There's some constants, but obviously also some changes with tariffs or some of the impact on the portfolio reshaping. And you gave some details in the prepared remarks, but maybe just bridge the changes for us and put the breadcrumbs together. And it feels like there's a good number of moving parts from three months till now, three months ago till now. Sure.

speaker
Nelson
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure, Michael. There's obviously been a lot going on in the last 90 days, and we'd expect more to come. But a few things as I unpack the outlook and bridge it to April. Our outlook is reflecting the momentum that we have in the business, which is grounded in sustainable actions, strong innovation, and the execution plans that our teams in the field are carrying out. We're focusing on winning where it matters, and that's with consumers through our superior product offerings. On the top line, we're well positioned right now to deliver sustainable growth ahead of the categories and through a volume and mix-led growth. Our organic growth is now based on our business in North America and IPC, where weighted average category growth is, as I said before, around 2 percent compared to the 1.5 to 2 percent growth that we had back in April, which included ISP, so we're excluding that. That's why you see category growth weighted a little bit higher, but still at the same levels that we had back then implied. And we plan to continue to gain share as happened this quarter where we had around 10 basis points of share gains on a weighted basis. As we look at operating profit, we're supporting a significant step up in new product activations and launches across key markets. And gross productivity will continue to be a very strong driver of our ability to do that. As of the second quarter, we delivered on the first half about 5.5% of gross productivity as a percent of total cost of goods. And for the second quarter, it's actually 5.8%. We are aiming to be at the top end of the 5% to 6%. range in gross productivity, and that's unchanged versus what we laid out in April. The other bid is that we are making very strong progress on the SG&A overhead savings, the $200 million that we had planned as part of power and care last year. And as we said back then, this would ramp up in 2025 and 2026. And we're seeing that play out in the first half, and that will continue through the second half based on our plans. So that, again, is unchanged versus April. As we look at adjusted operating profit growth, this will be based on the performance, again, of North America and IPC, because now IFP is below OP as discontinued operations. And one of the elements is negative overhead growth this year. That's built into the plan. And right now, we, at the midpoint, we expect to deliver low single-digit growth on a constant currency basis with a range that's in the low to mid. in terms of operating profit. The change in our operating profit growth rate from flat to positive to low to mid single digit is reflecting a combination of the lower expected net tariff impact, as I laid out in the prepared remarks. Right now, we expect a gross tariff impact of around $170 million, which is $130 million lower than the $300 million that we had estimated back in April. And we expect to offset around a third or $50 million of that $170 million. And then on adjusted earnings per share, we've had favorability on three areas. One is the net tariff impact, which I just spoke, and that's built into the outlook. We're seeing some favorable currency as we laid out. It's about half of what we expected in April all in. And then we're pausing depreciation and amortization on our discontinued operations of IFP. And that in and of itself represents about 16 cents of EPS for the full year. We saw 2 cents flow in the second quarter, and about 14 cents would flow in the back half. So overall, you know, we will Keep investing. We expect our advertising and brand support to step up in the back half of the year to around 7% versus a 6.4, 6.5 that we've seen in the first half. And that's something that, again, if we see the opportunity, we will invest more to be able to sustain the vol mix momentum that we've seen in the first half of the year.

speaker
Michael Lavery
Analyst, Piper Sandler

Just making a quick follow-up on the brand spend, you also called out some of the awards at Cannes and just how much improved that performance is. What's driving the better execution? Is it just a bit more spend? Is it better capabilities? Or is there a pivot there in how you approach it?

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, great question, Michael. I'm glad you picked up on that. You know, I would say it's – all about better capability and I would say more focus from the company. I'd say the focus part is, again, historically, and this comes with our rewiring of our organization, our marketing was very decentralized. We had a lot of agencies and a lot of individual markets made individual decisions, all those kinds of things. While they still have a lot of say and control over the marketing, You know, I think this new organization for us under Patricia Corsi's leadership, our new chief growth officer, she's not new anymore, but our chief growth officer, you know, is really bringing a different philosophy, right? And so, and I think the opportunity that she pointed out is that what we really had to invest more effort in is developing an emotional connection to our brands. We've always been great at bringing technical features and differentiation to the product. We're okay, we are historically okay at demonstrating Those technical features through demos, but really what we're focusing more on is building that brand love or the emotional connection. And so maybe the operative word that I will tell you that's leading to our improved performance is in-house. You know, we're bringing a lot of capability in-house. We still use agencies with consolidated to a few great ones, but a lot of the stuff we're doing in-house, for example, You know, in China, we're making a lot, you know, many, many, many, maybe, you know, hundreds of ads a day that are AI-fueled, but those are in-house generated, right, and then in-house deployed, you know, to media. And that's a different capability that is newer to us just over the past few years. And that's, you know, we feel like, you know, in that instance, you know, this in-house capability brings us speed of execution plus improved creative quality. The other part of in-house for us is Patricia's brought in some fantastic team members to lead our creative development. And these are some of the most awarded creative directors in advertising over the last decade. And they're now in-house with us working with our brand teams locally, but also working with the creative agencies directly to kind of inspire the creative that we need. And if you looked at the slide deck that we presented, earlier, you know, there's this one with the poop poncho, you know, which I said is kind of a tongue-in-cheek thing. But if you look at that ad and you just thought about that idea, it could have gone really gross or it could have been really flat or really boring or stupid. But, you know, I think the creative came out great and is doing everything we want to do because I think the creative team took exceptional care in all the details of the execution of that ad. And so that's kind of what's going on. It's a new us. As I mentioned, I think we doubled our award total from the prior five years just this year at Khan, and so I think we're heading in the right direction. Very helpful. Thanks so much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Okay. Thank you. Your next question is coming from Bonnie Herzog from Goldman Sachs. Your line is live.

speaker
Bonnie Herzog
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Morning, Bonnie. Hi, Bonnie. Good morning. Good morning. I had a quick question on your JV deal with Susano. You know, with the IFP out of the base business, how should we think about the organic sales growth and margin EPS accretion to your long-term algo? And then you touched on this a bit, but volume in the quarter was strong and broad-based. But I guess I just wanted to verify there wasn't any pull forward. I mean, you highlighted some benefits given changes in retail inventories, so maybe hoping for just a little bit more color on that. and how you're thinking about that in the second half. Ultimately, should we assume volume growth in 2H? Thanks.

speaker
Mike Hsu
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Hey, Bon, let me just start on the volume. Here's the thing for us, and where I'm pleased with the performance is our consumption globally was strong. And it all starts with consumption. And actually, we tend to manage on consumption. And then we recognize there's inventory changes, but we don't overly try to manage the retail inventory changes. Because in the long run, shipments must equal consumption. And that's kind of what I tend to focus on. And so, as I just mentioned, North America, 4.5% consumption growth on our brands kind of in the second quarter. And then, again, the range. pretty good performance internationally as well on that front. And so we feel good about that. There was a little bit of inventory build for the reasons that I think Nelson articulated, but there was also some retail inventory takeout in the first quarter, which we didn't really talk about either. So I think overall we feel good about that. I think with regard to IFP, maybe a couple of points. I would say we remain committed to our long-term algorithm that we presented at the Investor Day last year. I would say that this transaction should improve our ability or reliability to be able to deliver consistent top-tier growth over time. So our algorithm on organic was predicated on growing ahead of our categories, and the personal care categories globally you know, are, you know, for us a little bit margin accretive and also more consistently growing. And so, you know, we expect our growth profile to continue to improve over time and, you know, as a function of, you know, the innovation that we have, the marketing and the activation. On the bottom line, again, you know, I think we're making very, very good progress on the margins. We have great visibility to our 40% gross margin and 18 to 20% OPROS aspirations by 2030. I did want to point out those are milestones, not targets, right? And so we're not trying to get there. We're trying to get beyond there. We just put out an interim milestone. I do think, and Nelson, you may want to comment. The IFP transaction does create a one-time impact, so it's going to accelerate us a little bit further on the margin side. But, you know, we'll update you on what that's going to be when we get closer to the close.

speaker
Nelson
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Right, and just building on that, I mean, Bonnie, two things as we think about IFP, and I talked about it earlier. What's happening is when we strip out IFP, we are seeing underlying category growth that's a tad higher than what we had before. And this buttresses, you know, our, you know, thinking around the fact that we have a North America and international personal care business that's growing faster. that has a higher gross margin. And overall, you know, we expect to continue to grow through volume and mix in the foreseeable future ahead of the categories. And that's really what this is as we think about, you know, the milestone that Mike talked about, It's, you know, we are on pace to get to that 40%, at least 40% gross margin and at least the 18 to 20. And if anything, it would be faster than 2030 because of the move that we've made.

speaker
Bonnie Herzog
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Okay. Thank you. Very helpful. I'll pass it on.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Great. We've reached the allotted time for Q&A. I'll now hand the conference back to Chris Jakubik for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

speaker
Chris Jakubik
Vice President, Investor Relations

Well, thanks, everybody, for joining us. We know there are multiple calls today that you need to get to, so do appreciate your attention today. If you have any follow-up questions, we'll be around to take them for the remainder of the day. Thanks again, and have a great one.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. Everyone, this concludes today's event. You may disconnect at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.

Disclaimer

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