Ethan Allen Interiors Inc. (ETD) on Q2 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good afternoon and welcome to the Ethan Allen Fiscal 2022, Second Quarter analyst conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode, a question-and-answer session will follow the presentation. Please note that this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Matt McNulty, Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer. Thank you. You may begin. Matt McNulty: Thank you, Diego. Good afternoon. And welcome to Ethan Allen 's Analyst Conference Call for our fiscal 2022. Second quarter ended December 31, 2021. Joining me today is Farooq Kathwari, our Chairman, President and CEO. Mr. Kathwari will open and close our prepared remarks, while I will speak the financials midway through. After our prepared remarks, we will then open the call for your questions. Before we begin, I'd like to remind the audience that this call is being recorded and webcast live on ethanallen.com, where you will find a copy of our press release, which contains reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures referred to in this release and on this call. A replay of today's call will also be made available via phone and on our website. As a reminder, our comments today will include forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. Please refer to our SEC filings for a complete review of those risks. The company assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking matters discussed during this call. With that, I'm pleased to now turn the call over to Mr. Kathwari. Farooq Kathwari: Thank you, Matt. And good afternoon. I'm pleased that you've joined. I'm happy to provide a brief overview of our results and focus as we move forward. As reported, we had strong results. Sales increased 16.4% to $208.1 million. Gross margins increased to 58.8% from 56.7%, and adjusted operating margin rose to 15.7%, resulting in adjusted earnings per share of $0.95 at 37.7% increase. We also maintained strong cash position of $105.2 million and no debt. Also as conveyed in our various communications, we are very pleased to celebrate 90 years of innovation and profitability. Off to Matt provides a brief overview of our financial results. I will review our initiatives to continue our growth in sales and earnings and also continued with strong dividends as we have done, as you know, Matt was recently promoted to CFO after serving as VP of Finance and Treasurer, Matt -- Matt has a strong public and private accounting and finance background. And I'm very, very pleased to have him to be part of the team with that, Matt. Matt McNulty: Thank you, Mr. Kathwari. As we celebrate 90 years of innovation throughout fiscal 2022, we saw acceleration in our net sales, with both wholesale and retail net sales reporting double-digit growth, as well as an operating margin and diluted EPS during the quarter. While our retail of written orders was flat for the second quarter last year, orders were up 45% from two years ago. Similarly, wholesale segment written orders were up 1.7% till last year, but up 30% compared to the second quarter of fiscal 2020. Our order backlog at December 31, are approximately 50% higher than a year ago, but becoming more current and we expect to get caught up during calendar 2022 Retail net sales were up 24% and wholesale net sales increased 14.2%. Consolidated net sales were up 16% from increased manufacturing production that led to higher deliveries combined with the prior year being negatively impacted by COVID-19 production delays. The increase production was partially offset by continued supply chain disruptions which negatively impacted raw material receipts and imported finished products. Consolidated gross margin increased 210 basis points to 58.8% primarily due to a change in the sales mix, benefits realized from the ongoing manufacturing and logistics optimization project, and a favorable product mix, partially offset by higher import in raw material cost. The retail sales mix grew to 86.3% of consolidated sales compared to 81% a year ago, which positively impacted our consolidated gross margin. While we were pleased with our consolidated gross margin of 58.8%, we expect our margins to return to approximately 57.5% in the near term due to the impact of rising raw material, labor and freight costs, combined with the return of our sales mix to more historical norms. Adjusted operating expenses were 43% of sales for the quarter, down from 43.8% last year due to our operational leverage, along with reductions in certain selling expenses, including advertising costs. We reduced our advertising and various mediums, including national TV and regional radio markets, thereby reducing our overall spend to 2% of net sales compared to 2.8% last year. For the rest of fiscal 2022, we expect advertising to be approximately 3% to 4%. Adjusted operating margin, which excludes restructuring initiatives and other corporate actions, increased from 13.1% last year to 15.7% in the current year, primarily due to the strong gross margins and cost containment measures. Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.95, an increase of 37.7% due to net sales growth, expanded retail, and consolidated gross margins, our ability to minimize operating expense growth and improved production and delivery of products, partially offset by higher raw material and freight costs. Now, turning to our liquidity and capital resources. We ended the quarter with a $105 million of cash on hand, an increase of $11.5 million in the last 3 months, primarily from $5.5 million of cash from operating activities in the sale of two properties for total cash proceeds of $8 million. Our board also increased our regular quarterly cash dividend by 16% in November 2021, reflecting the strength of our balance sheet and strong history of returning capital shareholders. In addition, just yesterday, we amended our credit -- existing credit agreement to provide the revolving credit line of a $125 million and extends the maturity of the facility to January 2027. The amended facility also provides the company with the transition of improved pricing on borrowings, and enhanced future flexibility over the next five years. With that, I will turn the call back over to Mr. Kathwari. Farooq Kathwari: Thank you, Matt. Our unique, vertically integrated structure, very focused on one brand, from constant of idea to design, to manufacture, to retail and logistics, has provided us with strong returns in a very challenging environment. Our focus continues on five areas of talent, service, marketing, technology, and social responsibility. In the area of talent, I'm pleased we continued to make great progress. Importantly, we have strengthened our Board of Directors, our newest member, Gina Casar, elected early this week, joined us with our directors on this call. I welcome Gina (ph). Gina (ph) has a strong background in management, finance, and ESG. During the last quarter, we strengthened our goals. And in addition to director John Duda, who is our lead director, and Taras Taken, we were joined by a number of new Directors since background in entrepreneurship and finance, Jon Clark, background in management and finance, and the President of our University here. David Sable, a background of a CEO and a strong marketing background. About John Dooner has a distinguished career, including as a CEO of a leading marketing advertising company, and Tara Stacom manages in the leading real estate enterprise. So very pleased to have a very strong board of directors. During the quarter we also promoted a number of our executives. I'd like to mention about Amy Franks, a veteran of 30 years -- 33 years in our enterprise as Executive Vice President of Retail and Business development. I mentioned about Matt McNulty being promoted to CFO. Corey Whitely after 33 years of dedicated service, decided to work for us as an advisor consultant. We thank him for his work throughout this period. The second area serves maintaining about 75% of manufacturing in North America, is an important part of our strategy to service and almost all of the 75% is custom made when orders are received from clients. We continue to invest in our manufacturing, including a strong workforce, addition to our plans and investing in technology. Our national and retail logistics delivers our products with white glove service at one cost nationally. This is a great, great advantage, which we started close to 30 years back. While we have been impacted with major freight increases internationally and domestically, we have enable to provide good service to our clients. Third area is strong and relevant marketing continues to convey our differences. We have utilized strong digital, print, and other mediums to help us reach a larger consumer base at lower costs. The fourth area is technology. Technology enhancements during last 12 years or so have been critical to help up sales and improve efficiency throughout our enterprise. And finally, we continue with strong focus on social responsibility which includes taking care of our associates, especially in these challenging times and maintaining strong focus on environmental programs. Now with this, I'm very pleased to open for any questions or comments. Operator: Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will be conducting our question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, a confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Brad Thomas with KeyBanc, please go ahead. Farooq Kathwari: Hello, Brad. Bradley Thomas: Hi, Farooq. Hi, Matt, how are you two doing? Farooq Kathwari: Very good Brad, and yourself? Bradley Thomas: I'm doing well and let me add my congratulations, Matt, for the record year on your promotions. Congratulations. Matt McNulty: Thank you very much. Bradley Thomas: Well, I've had a couple of questions I wanted to first ask a bit more about the cadence of the business. Still running from an order standpoint at really, really exciting levels from a company perspective and a historic perspective. But I was just curious, Farooq, what you've been seeing lately in orders? And how you plan the business for the quarters ahead and think about the outlook for the furniture industry. Farooq Kathwari: Yes, the last year was exceptional, Brad. That of course created its own opportunities and challenges with tremendous amount of backlogs that increase and this also resulted in increased -- substantial increase in our written sales as we have -- as we have declared, and of course it also resulted in a great impact on our profitability. Now, the impact on the -- while we had very, very strong retail orders, the impact really was on the delivery side, on the cost structure side, which we have -- which really impacted everybody in our industry and in fact everybody else. So we were able to manage it because of the high sales that we were able to deliver that took care of some of the major increases that we saw on the wholesale side. Our wholesales side margins are very impacted. If it wasn't the fact that we had a strong business in our retail, we really would have been -- if all our business was wholesale, I think we would have been severely impacted. I think that we have -- last year, and in fact, last -- this last quarter, as you can see, our ordered orders were pretty much somewhat flat compared to the previous year. But if you can be able to take a look at it, two years back, it was up how much there, Matt? Matt McNulty: 45%. Farooq Kathwari: 45% from the quarter of the previous year. So flat is good because we had very, very strong orders. I see as we move forward from an orders point of view, I think if we maintain flat or even a little bit lower, we still have a very substantial orders coming in, Brad. Bradley Thomas: That's great. Just on the question of capacity, you were able to deliver more than we would've expected to this quarter, some an encouraging execution on your part. Can you just share with us what the outlook is for capacity and how much do you think you could generate in the quarters ahead? Farooq Kathwari: Yes. The cause of the fact that to 75% of our products are made in our plants in North America, that has been a great help. Although Brad, we've been impacted by COVID, employees being out, we have an impacted by in some case -- by cost increases. So what we did was in North America, in the middle of last year, towards the fall, we decided -- I was actually visiting Vermont, our plans over there. And we saw that we had to get people. So we decided to increase our base wages and we started getting people in. But still, in our manufacturing, our -- while we have produced well, but it then impacted by COVID. So going forward, I believe that we have the opportunity to continue to increase our capacities in our manufacturing because we have invested a great deal in technology and we continue to. Technology in our wood manufacturing, technology in our upholstery with the newest technology. If we had not done that, on the manufacturing side, I'll talk a little bit about on the retail side too, but that has really helped us. I think we do not know where this COVID is heading. But at this stage, we have the opportunity to continue to increase our capacities and production. 25% of our products do come from offshore. And of course, as we know, they have our impacted issue of COVID and in a major -- major transportation costs. Fortunately, we have very, very strong partners. And the interesting thing is that we have a fairly large number of containers coming in. So our overseas is not too bad as well because we have only 25% of our -- which is still a bit large, but if we had 80%-- 90% of it as most folks do, it would -- I don't know. It really would be a major problem. Bradley Thomas: Very helpful. Congrats on the great quarter and thanks for taking my question. Farooq Kathwari: All right. Thanks, Brad. Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from Andrew Appoma with KeyBanc. Please say your question. Farooq Kathwari: Hello, Andrew. Andrew Appoma: Hi. Good afternoon, Farooq and Matt, thank you for taking my questions. I wanted to start off by following up on Brad's capacity question. You mentioned that you continue to plan for significant capacity increases in the quarters ahead. But at the same time, this quarter saw -- for the first time you saw delivered revenue outpaced written revenue. And so I'm just wondering a little bit more clarity. Do you expect to slow down the rate of capacity increases that you are doing or, how should we think about that for the coming quarter? And finally, how should we think about how that translates to delivered revenue? In this last quarter, for example, you saw about a pretty significant, about $26 million of delivered revenue growth on a sequential basis. Do you expect to see that level of magnitude in the quarters ahead, or do you expect that magnitude to slow down? Farooq Kathwari: There's two factors. First, Andrew, is that we do have still a strong backlog. So that backlog is going to enable us that way in this quarter and maybe into following quarter to be able to maintain strong shipments, provided of course, that we don't have any major issues on the supply side. I don't think so, but we always have to keep that perspective in mind. The capacities that we have increased and we plan to increase will cover the backlogs we have, and then of course, we also have very strong programs in products and in marketing to continue to grow our business so that any increase capacities should be there for us to grow our business. Andrew Appoma: Understood. And you mentioned that you're seeing a little bit more COVID disruption on the labor side, if I heard you correctly, and that makes sense given the heightened Omicron wave we're in currently. But wondered if you could give us a sense for how those -- if that increased COVID disruption may impact delivered revenue for the next quarter or so? Farooq Kathwari: Yes, it's good question Andrew. Right now, we do see some impact. However, I think that in some areas it's impacting more than others. That looks like they will be able to maintain fairly close to the production levels that we had in the second quarter. Andrew Appoma: Okay. That's very helpful. On written sales, I know that you gave some commentary, but I just wanted to follow up here. While written sales were flattish for the quarter, it was good to see the acceleration on a two-year basis, at least for the -- for the retail written orders. Could you talk about what drove that acceleration? Or if that was more because of the timing of the membership-model action you had about a few years ago? Just any color there would be great. Farooq Kathwari: You're talking about the increase from not the last quarter, but the previous year. And yes, it had the number of factors. Of course, first is that consumer interest in the home has continued to be strong. And that to me is the main factor. The second is that our competitive advantage of having about close to 1500 interior designers in our network who are -- who have been empowered with technology. I would tell you, Andrew that if we had not in the last eight and 12 years invested in technology with our designers, training them to be able to work virtually from home, from the design center, working with clients. We will not have the business we have. Today, combining the professional work of our designers, with technology is critical to not only what we have done, but critical to the future. And I think that will be very important as we move forward. Andrew Appoma: Understood. And I guess for my last question here. In your prepared remarks, you noted that you plan to take some additional selective price increases. The further counter, but rising costs you are seeing. I know that you have already implemented some price increases and some reduced discounts to offset the higher prices previously. But I was wondering if you could share, if you have it, if you could share how much higher your average prices are currently tracking versus pre -pandemic levels. And going forward, how much more do you expect to increase that to a fully offset the cost inflation impact. Farooq Kathwari: First of all, our values of our products are excellent because we really haven't taken the price increases to take care of all the increases, especially from a transportation to raw materials, to everything else. I would say that we have done it selectively, in the sense of many of our product programs coming into -- from offshore had to be increased first, and that's what we did. Those increases were fairly large. Anywhere from 15% to 25% based upon the cost of a container has gone from $2,000 to $24,000. I also mentioned, which is a very unique setup that we have, which really helps our retailers. Both our company operated, especially our independents, which is that we delivered our product at one cost of them. Whether you are in Seattle of Texas, or wherever. We have also had to absorb domestic cost increases in transportation, which while not being at the level of the international, still a bit high, maybe 8% or 10%. So we've absorbed that. That is why retail margins, in addition to the fact we have very high sales, but the face is their cost did not increase like any -- I would think any other retail in the country. So going forward, I think we'll be able to maintain this advantage that we have of our vertical integration. We will take some more selected price increases. But I would say that if you have to average it out, it's about a 10% price increase Andrew Appoma: Understood. That's helpful and great to hear. Thank you. Farooq Kathwari: Alright, Andrew. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Cristina Fernandez with Telsey Advisory Group. Please go ahead. Farooq Kathwari: Hello, Cristina. Cristina Fernandez: Hi. Good afternoon. Farooq and Matt, and congratulations on a good quarter as well. I have a couple of questions. I wanted to see if you could talk about -- as you've been able to increase manufacturing and deliver more goods, are customers seeing shorter order to delivery times or is it too early? Farooq Kathwari: Not for us. That's a good -- that's a really good comment because our advantage is the fact that our -- let us take upholstery, which represents about 50% of our total business. Our upholstery average upholstery delivery time. And this is custom, is about eight to 10 weeks. And I would think now because again, it might be a little bit larger if it goes to Seattle or it goes to some other bases because our upholstery is made in North Carolina and in Mexico, Silao Mexico. I would think that most folks have a much, much larger lead time. Same thing in our wood products, it's a little bit larger because of the backlog that we have. And keep in mind, almost a 100% of the products we made in North America is custom when we received the order. I would say that our delivery time in our Wood Products ranges from anywhere from 12 to 15 weeks, which is still much, much lower -- lower than what we have or the industry has. Cristina Fernandez: That's helpful. Then, with the supply chain going on, delays and your manufacturing capacity, are there any other product categories that you might consider bringing back to North America? Farooq Kathwari: Well, yes. It's a good question. We're looking at it, but keep in mind, we, against all odds, we maintain manufacturing in North America, both in the United States. But then we decided that we also had to go south of the border. And that was a very important move for us. Mexico, we went about 20 years or so, back. In Honduras, we went about of course 10 to 11 years back. So we've invested a great deal. I would say over a $100 million in those facilities to be where we are otherwise, we would not be. So we have the opportunity certainly in furniture, but we're also looking at opportunity on non-furniture products being more made in North America. Cristina Fernandez: Then last question I had, the SG&A had a step-up this quarter, maybe this more for Matt, to about $90 million. They have been trending lower. Is this more structural driven by higher wages and costs or is it just due to the higher sales? Maybe you can help us think about SG&A going forward. Farooq Kathwari: I will say that Matt can follow up, because Matt is pretty smart on this. But I tell you this, most of it is a good news. It is based upon the written sales in our retail. Our designers have done an excellent job and they have been rewarded with a fair amount of money. That's fairly most of it and some in transportation. Come one, Matt, go ahead. Matt McNulty: You're making my job a lot easier. By as a percentage of overall sales, our SG&A it's actually down a little bit right from 43, 8% to 43 flat. And most of -- the overall dollar increase though what's exactly what Mr. Kathwari said driven by increased sales, higher freight costs. So delivery fees are included in there, as well as compensation to our interior designers. So we want to see that designer comp going up means there's more written and more sales going on. So that is why you saw that come up to about $90 million. Cristina Fernandez: Thank you. Operator: Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the floor back to Mr. Kathwari for closing remarks. Farooq Kathwari: Well, thank you. I'm very gratified at the work that our people have done. Our teams have done an amazing job. We continue to maintain our focus, maintain to make sure that we focus on providing great quality, great service, and maintain and continue to improve our net retail network. Plus, also our manufacturing in North America. So again, thanks very much. Operator: Thank you. This concludes today's conference. All parties may disconnect. Have a great evening.
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