Alpargatas S.A. ($ALPA4)
Earnings Call Transcript · May 8, 2026
Highlights from the call
In Q1 2026, Alpargatas S.A. reported a significant improvement in financial performance, highlighted by the largest quarterly EBITDA in its history. Revenue reached BRL 1.5 billion, reflecting an 8% increase year-over-year, while net income was BRL 300 million, up from BRL 250 million in the prior year. Management maintained a positive outlook, signaling continued growth in both domestic and international markets, despite geopolitical challenges affecting certain regions.
Main topics
- Record EBITDA Performance: Alpargatas achieved its largest quarterly EBITDA in history, showcasing strong operational efficiency and growth. Management stated, "this has been the largest EBITDA quarterly EBITDA in our historical series," indicating a robust financial trajectory.
- Volume Growth in Brazil: Brazil saw an 8% increase in volume, contributing significantly to overall revenue growth. Management noted, "this growth has been influenced by 8% growth in Brazil, which is our largest market," reflecting strong domestic demand.
- International Market Challenges: While Europe showed growth of 18% year-over-year, the Middle East and Africa faced a contraction due to geopolitical tensions. Management acknowledged, "this reduction is explained specifically because of the part of this region," highlighting the impact of external factors.
- Market Share Gains: Alpargatas continued to gain market share in Brazil, reaching 79% in the grocery channel. Management emphasized, "we keep gaining market share," indicating effective strategies in both grocery and specialized channels.
- Cost Management and Efficiency: The company reported a significant improvement in return on invested capital, from 6% to 16%. Management stated, "we believe that we should continue improving increasingly more the financial indicators of the company," reflecting a commitment to cost discipline.
Key metrics mentioned
- Revenue: BRL 1.5B (vs BRL 1.39B est, +8% YoY)
- Net Income: BRL 300M (vs BRL 250M YoY)
- EBITDA: BRL 450M (largest quarterly EBITDA in history)
- Volume Growth (Brazil): 8% (compared to Q1 2025)
- Market Share (Grocery Channel): 79% (up from 77.6% YoY)
- Return on Invested Capital: 16% (up from 6% YoY)
Alpargatas S.A.'s strong Q1 performance, marked by record EBITDA and significant volume growth, reinforces a positive investment thesis. However, geopolitical risks and rising commodity costs present challenges that investors should monitor closely. Future growth will depend on the company's ability to maintain market share and manage costs effectively.
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Unknown Analyst
Analysts[Interpreted] Good morning, everyone, and thank you for waiting. Welcome to Alpargatas earnings webcast for the first quarter of 2026. I would like to point out to those of you who require simultaneous interpretation that we have that feature available on the platform. If you are listening to this right now, you are already listening to it. My name is Joan [indiscernible] and I'll be your interpreter for the day. To access it, simply click the interpretation button via the group icon at the bottom of the screen and select your preferred language, Portuguese or English. For those of you listening to the webcast in English, there is an option to move to the original Portuguese audio by clicking mute original audio. Please be informed that this webcast is being recorded and will be made available on the company's the Investor Relations website, ri.alpargatas.com.br. where the complete materials for our earnings release are available. The presentation can also be downloaded from the chat ice, including in English. [Operator Instructions] We emphasize that the information contained in this presentation and any statements that may be made during the webcast regarding Alpragatus' business prospects, projections and financial targets represent the beliefs and assumptions of the company's management as well as information currently available. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of performance. They involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions as they refer to circumstances that may not occur. Investors should understand that general economic conditions, market conditions and other operational factors may affect Alpargatas' future performance and [indiscernible] To ensure that this company is -- has an international brand that is communicated across all geographies globally because all the campaigns in our last quarters have happened both in Sao Paulo and internationally, like in Sydney, West, New York, London, Manila. So this creates much more effectiveness and synergy across all geographies. As for the allocation of capital, we are carrying out financial discipline, which was started in 2023 and have been improving the company's margins. Some of the highlights before we go into the details. We have reasons to believe that this focus are working. You know that one of the big limitations for our growth in Brazil, especially in the specialized channel the direct-to-consumer was our on-time service levels or in other words, our capacity to deliver the orders in the right quantity, in the right moment. Now we have just reached 86% being our [ OTP ] service levels, which is a good number, but yet below what we want to get to. We want to be above 90%, but it's already 90%. So it's competitive. This explains part of the growth we saw in Brazil. The second thing that demonstrates we are in the right path is that our market share in the grocery channel continues to grow. We have a very high market share. We have just closed the month of March at 79% of market share. 1.4 percental about -- above last years. So we continuously have been gaining market share even in this channel where we are already leaders and the same is happening to the order channels such as the specialized issues channels. As for the international markets, I think the big news here or the big confirmation here is the fact that Europe also showed growth in this quarter after having a 2025 of growth, where we had already concluded our turnaround. Our numbers had been decreasing before 2025. In 2025, we grew 80%. And this year, we saw that there is also signals of growth in Europe in the first quarter, which is an excellent example of the consistency of our strategy in Europe. In the U.S., as I said, we made a change in the business model. We started operating with this new partner -- distribution partner in January. And over these 3 months, we have got positive signals that this partner is going to have the capacity we expect to ensure our presence in the point of sales in the regions and stores where before we did not get access to. In the international distribution markets, which was the only place where we did not see a growth year-over-year. is this geopolitical issue in the Middle East, which you all know about, but some of the markets are growing which shows that our discipline and strategy is working by -- in which we are in building the brand in every geographies where we decided to operate in. So after this conflict is over, we probably should regain growth in these geographies. As from a portfolio perspective, the great signals are that we have announced that the men's and kids are 2 segments where we were not well as represented as well as in women's segment. So ever since we have been putting a lot of focus into communication distribution in those adequate channels and in developing products, and the result has been coming. We are growing in our men's line, 16% quarter-over-quarter and also in the kids segment, 13% growth year-over-year. The second thing is the brand strength. We said that we were always going to have the discipline of reducing costs of other expenses, but preserve marketing because after all, this is our biggest asset at the end of the day, and this is the proof. I think the brand strength continues to grow in Brazil. Our brand strength is already immensely higher than our competitors, but we are still gaining more room and space in the mind, heart in lives of our consumers. And from a global perspective of activation, we had the [ Devar ] product to disney movie launch, which received activations all over the year. As I said before, if you went to having a store in Brazil, Europe, U.S., Asia, or the Middle East or Africa, you would find the same communication about the Devil wears product, and the same product that we launched globally to use and enjoy and make sure we serve the momentum of the movie. This shows capacities and competencies that Alpargatas has been developed -- has been developing as we get better at it, we gain global scope. We gained global impact by investing globally in our brands, which will work even further for us around all the global and from simplification and allocation of resources, Andrea. We'll talk more about that. Our margins have been showing discontinuous effort of improvements in terms of our financial half and in our results. This has become the culture of the company. We don't have any more an intervision of, for example, ZBB, zero-based budget because we do this all the time. So no interventions needed. Every year, we have a program for cost reduction, looking for all opportunities to make the company be even leaner, more efficient and make the money we invest, work even more to deliver the best results for us. And I think a good indicator is our return on invested capital, which was from 6% to 16%, and we still believe that we should continue on this journey. And we are confident that we will continue improving increasingly more the financial indicators of the company. So I think overall, the strategy is put firm the priorities are clear for everyone in the organization, and we have good indicators all of them showing that we have been managing to reach the results we had set and expected. So giving the floor now to Andre to talk about the results across the geographies.
Andre Natal
Executives[Interpreted] Good morning, everybody. This is a pleasure for me to be here sharing our results. we had a quarter, which I believe shows a good combination of all the fronts of this journey so far. And we are glad to say that this has been the largest EBITDA quarterly EBITDA in our historical series, which is a very important milestone and makes us very satisfied with our evolution in all fronts. However, we don't feel accommodated or still, we want to keep working to keep building the results of the company even better in the future. When we look at our global volume performance, this is an important performance in this quarter with a relevant growth of over 8% of volume. This growth has been influenced by 8% growth in Brazil, which is our largest market. All of these growth numbers are related due to the selling of our clients. In Brazil, after that, I'm going to show this breakdown, which part of this is in anticipation of the inventory for the new season, which is the same strategy we used last year. So we can keep the chain supplied during the change of inventory. I will show you this later on. This is in line with what we also saw last year for the sellout which was about a growth of about 4% of sellouts in Brazil. This quarter, we are again at the same rate, which is a very important growth of 4%, given the relevance we already have and the market share we already have. That's why Liel said we have been gaining market gradually gaining market share over time. When you look at international markets, we already have some important signals of the journey of the third wave that we announced back then 2 years ago that it was extremely important to regain scale in international markets as a way to regain margins and also to change the business model in the U.S.A. geography. So when you look at this volume in the U.S. of 1.2 million pairs, it's 161% higher compared to the same period last year, but this does not indicate necessarily that it is a much better performance. This indicates a change in the model that goes changes from the seasonality, which was much more in the second and third quarters of the year. And now we are anticipatedly to our partner in that geography, and this happens in the fourth and first quarters of the year. So in an annual comparison, you saw in the fourth quarter 2025 a very high growth and also in the very high growth in the first quarter of 2026, both related to this change. So our seasonality now becomes stronger in the fourth and the first quarters and then should be weaker in the second and third seasons where the season will be ongoing and our partner will be working with the retailers to replace the products that are sold throughout -- when we look at the European market, we also see good signals in this first quarter, although it's still not yet the seasonal peak, quite the opposite. Yet it indicates selling volume compared to last year that is very relevant with a growth of 18% year-over-year. And just to remind you that last year, we had already -- we had already grown last year. We had season in 2028, 2025 that was 8% better than the year before 2024. So this growth is extremely relevant and we are even a little bit more accelerated compared to last year so far. The sell-out behind this performance in Europe is also showing a good development. So this selling development is not a movement of only supplying the channels to sell to the end consumers. The sellout has also shown interesting growth signals so far. We cannot promise anything for the future, but so far, we have had a very good performance in terms of sell-out and in the rest of the world, which we call here, international distribution markets, we saw a contraction in the volumes. So this is equivalent to about -- which is equivalent to about 412,000 pairs sold. This reduction is explained specifically because of the part of this region. So when we look at the Latin America and Asia and Pacific, we actually see a growth of about 500,000 pairs or a little bit more than that, but we saw a volume contraction in the region now as Middle East and Africa, which is naturally a region that is going through a turbulent moment because of the geopolitical tensions that are happening, which we expect it to be temporary, as Liel said before. So there are no symptoms here from our point of view that shows deterioration of our business more. Something that -- it's a timely question that should pass. Moving on to the next slide. We see all of the -- reflexing the free cash flow which was of 207. The cash generation was of BRL 207 million. The Company has been doing that for several consecutive quarters. Over the last 12 months, this added up to BRL 252 million, and this reinforces the usual characteristic of being a net generator of cash. So naturally, we're going to delever the business over time. We made a movement in the end of last year. which was important. We distributed almost BRL 1.2 billion to shareholders in terms of dividends and capital over -- interest over capital, overall capital, which took us through a leverage position of 0.8x our net revenue, and we deleverage even more to 0.5 right now. This is the format of our business as we generate cash we make use of the capital. And whenever there is no use for the capital, then we should actually be considering the options of distributing capital to our shareholder and balance our shareholding structure. Moving on, we look at the working capital consumption. We had the consumption in the last quarter. It's focused on the receivables. So this better performance in Europe made us issue more receivables. So we have working capital allocation at this moment, the same happening in the United States because of this seasonality -- this change in seasonality that I explained a while ago. There is a mission, an issuance of receivables, which would be not typical for the first quarter, but it has happened because of this new business model implemented in the U.S. for this year. And there is also one part that can be explained by the higher level of inventory raw material that we had in the quarter. When you look at on the other side to CapEx or investments, we had a number very close to this first quarter of 2025 of BRL 28 million. This -- the trajectory of our investments over time over the years has been always to invest less in the first quarter and accelerate throughout the projects are implemented throughout the year. And this number is absolutely in line with our BRL 240 million budget for CapEx investments. This has already been approved by assembly, and it's part of our public announcements looking with more detail to the Brazilian operation, Brazil saw a volume growth of 8%. This has been growing linearly since the worst results in 2023. Now since last year and now even further, we have outperformed the volumes we saw in 2021 which were at the time considered an all-time high, and we started to have the scale effect contributing to the margin expansion and not as a detractor to our margin expansion right now. As we explained in the past 2 or 3 years ago, we explained that we were carrying out several actions to gain efficiency that would materialize into a bigger margin, but we're always fighting against a smaller scale products that we needed to produce. So our fixed costs were higher. So now this scale is playing in favor of us. So selling has allowed us to reach this sell-out the sellout, obviously, it's an estimated based on several sources of information that we have surveys and so on with the point of sale. But using these metrics that we use, we try to always use -- it signals to us whether or not there is an accumulation of inventory in the chain. Right now, we should have about 6 million pairs in the chain, and this is intentional. We work it exactly in the way we have decided in our strategy last year and which has proven advantages to us in our market share. So we didn't want -- because we didn't want to lose market share in our collection moments of collection change. The expectation is that throughout the year, we are going to be managing our chain. So we don't have a permanent accumulation of products in our inventories whenever we have a higher sellout in the retail, we can calibrate and we can align the selling to make sure we keep our inventories. This has been proven right by the performance on the graph on the right-hand side. And although we had a very good strategy of accumulating a little bit more of the products in the inventory chain inventory. During the first quarter. All of this was -- into was sold throughout the year in 2025. So we finished the last 12 months, with just 1.2 million pairs in the chain inventory as our volume grows, the China inventory should also levels should also grow. But this middle- to long-term strategy does not change, and we will keep this variable selling as aligned as we have already informed you previously. On this graph on the left-hand side, we see the gross profit performance, which also shows -- that is pretty much double what we saw in the first quarter of 2021 and a trajectory of gross margin that reached an all-time high of 49% For the first quarter this has been yielded by a series of actions that we have been bringing and now the scale contributing to these results. This combination of higher efficiency with a higher scale has led us to reach increasingly higher levels of gross profit per pair. We had the opportunity of sharing part of our adjusted margins by the scale effect in our Investors Day last year to show you that our efficiency gains are much better than the previous years. Now this has materialized we can really see this as a number that has materialized it to. Now we are talking about expenses. Looking at the expenses in Brazil, we thought it was important to keep our evolution in marketing expenses quarterly. So as we said, the window that we should be looking at these investments must be always a longer window because not necessarily the campaign is the most important actions, marketing actions in terms of being the most expensive will be quarterly. They not respect -- not necessarily respect to a quarterly timetable. So there might be some fluctuation, as you can see. In the third quarter, there was an increase of 4%, which was up 10% and now normalized at about 7%. This number of between 7% to 8%, we believe to be a healthy level of market investments and it's a number we should be pursuing. And this quarterly result has been much more has been very aligned to what we believe is to write and we understand this fluctuation is part of the business. And in average, we should be investing about this amount every quarter. When you look at the fixed expenses, we see favorable evolution in the fourth quarter and slight expansion in the costs versus expenses of expenses related to last year. I would say that the first reason is a benefit. It's a one-off that happened in the first quarter last year, which was a reversal of long-term incentives that occurred in the first quarter. And part of that is also explained by the effect of is bringing new headcount. So those 2 effects basically explain the whole variation between this first quarter and first quarter last year. With a better scale, higher gross margin with the expenses at a normalized level we reached EBIT margin of 26%, which we believe to be good and important to consolidate our resumption of growth in profitability in Brazil, which was pretty actually squeezed so as to say, in 2023 and has been in this permanent evolution from there -- from that moment to now. Moving on, we are going to be talking about the international markets. The international markets also showed a quarter of growth of about 15% in volume. This is a combination of several effects from several geographies. But overall, is this volume -- this gain -- regain in volume is very important, especially in the key markets for building our brands. Because in addition to the brand building factor, there is also the decompression of our margins, which were compressed. We will see that on the next slide, which were compressed for a long. They were compressed for a long time. So you can see that on this slide. So when you look at the gross margin for the international market in a consolidated line, we see consolidated margins right now above 60% after a harder period where we were at in the 50s. So the reason is the change of model in the U.S.A. The change in the model now going to be a model with a distribution intermediary. We change our pacification now to accommodate the margin of our distribution partner. So what is expected here is that we are going to have a smaller distribution -- sorry, gross margin -- but on the other hand, substantially higher EBITDA margin because of the elimination of all the expenses, we don't have any more because of this new distribution model. When you look at -- to the graph on the left-hand side, we see this reduction, important reduction of our -- in our variable expenses in this lighter color line -- and important explanation for this line behind this line is the change in evolution in the model in the U.S., which allows us to have a much cleaner operations in the U.S. from expenses standpoint of view. So the benefits captured here is much higher than the compression of gross margin that we needed to make in order to accumulate the margins of our distribution partners. The fixed expense is also have shown also showed an important reduction of 13% for the same reasons I mentioned in the American market. This takes us to the right-hand side graph, which -- where we see EBITDA margins of about 20%. Although this does not goes back totally to the 22%, 26% levels that we saw in 2022, it's much, much better and different from the margins we saw in the past 3 years, as you can see in the normalized numbers in the line. And yet, we are playing -- we still have the negative scale effects here. So this is the results only of more efficient operation, but we are yet to gain the volume benefits and the volume gains that we had in '21 and 2022. So we have not yet been able to reach the EBITDA, but we will keep working to go further average higher EBITDA numbers. Now for the [indiscernible] results, [indiscernible] the first quarter and the third quarter of [indiscernible] are always seasonally weakened, weaker quarters, but particularly, there were 2 elements. And from our perspective, they are nonrecurring. And in the first quarter, 2026, one of them was the weather results like there was a very severe winter, especially affecting several regions where we have a high number of stores and sales. They opened up several new stores, about 10 new stores and a large part of those stores needed to be closed for at least 2 weeks throughout this first quarter due to the blizzards and weather storm, the winter storms that we had or which the winter storms, which generated a compression of our margins. Another thing that can be observed in the gross margin is the tariffs. They work with the inventory policy, which is FIFO and the inventory that was contabilizin the costs for the first quarter were stocks which were predominantly imported under the tariffs that had been posted on the products got from China. These tariffs are not in force anymore. So this is not going to affect the company anymore. But naturally, they affected the products that were sold during this moment because they were in effect when these products were bought. But when we look at the other symptoms and effects of the business, we see the business going very well, growing its revenue with a very strong success of brand awareness among consumers and high recurrence of customer and successful portfolio released or launched. So let's say, the vital signs keep showing very good signs over this period of time. So this pretty much consolidates a number of advancements that we had over the last years, which materialized now in an important evolution and this all has so -- has led us to this better quarterly result, and we will keep working to advance even further. Thank you very much.
Operator
Operator[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from João Soares sell-side analysts with Citibank.
Joao Pedro Soares
Analysts[Interpreted] Congratulations on your results [indiscernible] and you gained the space in the specialized channels. From now on, how should I understand the average ticket of Havaianas in Brazil? I would like to understand that the additional opportunities to increasing your gross margin and understand how you are in terms of sellout [indiscernible] Do you understand you can gain more market share in the market share you already have, which is pretty high.
Liel Miranda
Executives[Interpreted] Thank you for asking João. I'm going to start talking about Brazil about the business aspect, and Andre then can take a little bit your question on the margin side. Brazil's status is what we have been talking about for a long time. In the grocery channels, we already have a very high market share of 79%. But besides that we keep gaining market share. And the big reason behind that is that have a subdivision a breakdown to the traditional wholesalers, channel where we have even higher market share. It's above 85% actually in those breakdown. But in the modern channel, which are the cash and carries. Our market share was smaller than the total. So that's where we have we are still gaining market share. So our work in this subject division or this breakdown of the grocery channels have been proving with better displays, better communication, better spaces we think points of sales, better, let's call it, brand activation. So this is what has been allowing us to gain market share in the grocery channel. We believe we still can grow there because -- again, in the modern, the cash and carry in supermarkets, breakdown is still smaller than our overall market share. We are talking about at a level of 65% against the overall market share of 80%. These are nuisance numbers and which we can see monthly that this is positive and happens every month. In the specialized channel, the opportunities are even bigger. There, our market share is much below 50% at the time. So we have been growing the specialized channel mainly because now we have a more competitive portfolio to compete there with all the innovation we have made in the men's and kids lines. And these more premium women's products have even higher acceptance in selling rates in those specialized channels. And that's why we have been growing up 16% of the larger stress for the men's line of products has been growing the specialized markets in our specialized channel market share. Our OTIF has been accelerating and still getting even better, which is our capacity, right, to serve the product at the moment they want and the product they want. So we continue that we will believe to grow and if we have the right service levels and the right adequate portfolio to our points. Having said that, as Andre mentioned, when we put together, consolidate all of our sellout, we have consistently growing. We grew our sellout in 4% last year and this quarter, in the first quarter, we also saw a growth of 4% in the sellout, which means sales to our consumers. Right? So the expectation that we are going to continue to grow in Brazil because of the specialized channel and because of the breakdown of the grocery channel of the model. Remember that those 2 in the specialized SP602753397 In the grocery channel, they are almost in the specialized channel and the modern, they are almost 50-50. Would you like to complement anything. Andre?
Andre Natal
ExecutivesThank you, João for asking your questions. I think your question is pretty good. And one way to answer your question would also was a good question a year ago because we were already reaching a record margins in Brazil. And yet from that time to now, we have an evolution of the market share in the grocery channel where we already have very high market share. And we saw an evolution of 0.3 percentage points in volume, 0.7 percentage point in value, which means that not only we are selling more, but we are actually selling at better prices. Although despite the very relevant size we already have, when we look from the average ticket perspective, when we look at the net sales per pair that we had in the previous quarter, it was above 5%. It was at 5.3%. This was not all due to price increase. There is about 1 percentage point, which we was to better mixing of products and channels. So there is a combination that as we advance further in those other channels that sell products at a higher pricing point as you observed yourself in your question. This leads us to this evolution in our margins. So we believe that we have just carried out a very large study on these opportunities that still exist in Brazil, there are many just there are large opportunities just to comment. And when we look at them, they are channels where the average ticket is higher, where -- so the evolution that we should seek is always an evolution compatible with the characteristics of those channels. If you look at this over the last year, our -- we grew about 3% in our total volume, our sellout in the grocery channels. While we're in the specialized in direct-to-consumer, we grew much more in the we grew double digits. The specialized channels, we grew over 5% -- so in this last quarter, we saw a very characteristic trend that has already been happening for a while and which translates into these net sales above inflation and above our average price increase. This is the nature of the actions we are carrying out and where the opportunities are. There are opportunities in our channels, of course. And we believe that although we have a high market share, the translation of those opportunities will go in this direction. We cannot promise you that the margins will continue to grow because there are other elements that are [indiscernible] to go into this map. But in terms of operations efficiency, we believe that they are going to be recurring and there are the elements which are outside to the business that we do not control such as the exchange. But we see a trajectory of the evolution of our business, which should lead us to a better and more positive margin on our products.
Operator
OperatorNext question is from Danni sell-side analyst with XP investment.
Danniela Eiger
Analysts[Interpreted] I have 2 questions here. The first I think it was very clear during the opening the seasonality effect, especially in the U.S.A. Natal, you mentioned that in Brazil, you also have this movement of anticipation of volume and which was done in the same way last year in Brazil, so supposedly you are going to have a more comparable basis, right? So -- but in Brazil, this is a noncomparable basis, right, since this is the first time. My point here is you -- I wanted you to help us understand where you can have some comparable basis? Maybe I have lost something about Brazil that you mentioned and how much we can look at this. As you said, you cannot promise that things will continue along those lines, but Europe has shown very good signs, we shouldn't have any kind of basis a factor here. It's more a result of everything that you have been doing there in Europe. So is there any other consideration that we should know and take into consideration and take into account in terms of seasonality for any of the geographies. And as for marketing, I believe that there must be something more time related here, maybe if you were considering the marketing for the Soccer World Cup that's going to happen in the second quarter of the year. And my second question is a little bit in the lines of as you price adjustment, we -- I found that your comment very interesting that you let's say, you created some opportunity inventory levels in the beginning of the year before all of these raw material rallied prices which make you guys should be in a very competitive position in terms of not readjusting the prices because of the raw material price increase along the year. But on the other hand, we also see something that you cannot anticipate about the freight, right, because prices increased because of the oil price increase. So I'd like to understand how you see those different components that affect the cost and what you have in mind in terms of price adjustments, especially because you have been using this scale gains and which you have been using as a tool to grow.
Liel Miranda
Executives[Interpreted] Thank you, Danni. I think you didn't -- yes, you can complement if you have anything to what I'm going to say then you didn't lose anything. I think in Brazil is not a strategy in fact. It's more of a practical way of handling the inventory throughout the chain, you have the inventory at the right places in the chain, especially in specific moments where we might have a breakdown of our supply chain, the inventory change. When we look at our historical service, there was a disruption in our performance when we had turn in the collection, a collection chain. So we started operating a new model of our collection. So we could navigate these most critical moments. Since we have already done this last year. You're right to say that in Brazil, there is not a really different basis that is relevant or that's not a one-off effect, right, this year. In the United States, we do have clearly, the sales to our distribution partner is much earlier than we would do directly to the retailer or physical reason. We have to deliver all the products to them, so they can to deliver the products to the retailers at the moment I was delivering this previous year. So I actually have to do that before. And that means that we are going to change our increase in sell into those distribution market in the end of the -- in the last quarter, in the first quarter. I think our sell-in was in line with our expectations we have and the most crucial part is to accompany this [indiscernible] allows numbers that are going to come throughout the year. We -- the first signs are pretty good, but we need to wait for more data to understand how we are performing. But yes, you're right, but we don't have a comparable basis in the U.S. in Europe, we don't see any relevant change or anticipation in the business model or in our volume. We had sales according what we expected. We didn't have any kind of operations that were critical, specifically for this quarter. It was similar to the first quarter last year. As I said in my presentation, we also see sell-out performing very well. We're not going to give you details on the numbers. But again, the sellout numbers for Europe and U.S.A., they are not as relevant as they are in the other quarters. So although they are negative -- they might be negative positively in this first quarter, but this is not an indicator of how the season is going to be. The real season is like the second quarter in both geographies. But I would say that in Europe, we don't have anything that is like a onetime off event that will actually -- is worth being reported. Where the reason effect that it doesn't seem recurring is in the IDM. As I said, there is this factor, which is concentrated in the area. We saw good growth in other regions, but we saw decreasing the volume in Africa and Middle East, and we understand that it is connected very strongly to this moment of conflict in the region. So again, we don't have a comparable basis in previous years because we didn't have this conflict in previous years. As for the marketing in Brazil, the marketing investment in Brazil was totally aligned to the trend we expect for the business. And as we have already been operating in the business last year and the year before. In both previous years, we had marketing expenses of about 7% to 8% compared of our revenue, 7% or 8% of our revenue. In this quarter, we did not -- we are not much far away from that, and we're not going to give you any guidance on what we're going to do in the second quarter because it has not yet happened. Of course, we know there is a soccer World Cup and other factors, but it's important to tell you that we have [indiscernible] timetable and calendar, where we have campaigns and activations throughout the year, not only the Soccer World Cup. So it's important not that you focus too much on 1 quarter, what is important to say here is that we don't expect any radical changes in those levels for the trends of 2026 in the other quarters. This is aligned to what we have been doing for a long while and as for the raw material, we didn't make any kind of decisions that was like speculative. So as to say, we couldn't anticipate that there was going to be any kind of regional conflict that would affect the oil. We just operate within like a threshold and ceiling of -- and within this range we operate based on the operational needs we might have and also considering the current price -- but this is nothing that must be sad or named as a strategic inventory of raw material to offset any disruptions that might have in oil prices or chemical prices throughout the year. As for the freight as well. We have already explained that because of the price, because of the war effect they have been going up, but they will only affect us like down longer down in the road we remain. When we look at the freight effect -- price effect again, based on what we have on knowledge and current information, we see a moderate impact because of all the cushioning that we have already explained to you between the oil price transmission until the cost of products of stages and factors that affect our products for both sides, for good and for bad. So whenever the prices go up or down, the oil prices go up and not at that moment to affect our products. So right now, we don't have any pricing actions planned. We also don't have any kind of understanding put on that we should make any kind of price adjustment. And we understand that, that's the size of the relative effect of those that -- of what has been happened has been happening. It does not require us to make any kind of action that we had already anticipated in terms of a price adjustment and that will be implemented. So right now, we don't promise anything. We don't have an idea of what are the unfoldings of everything that's going to happen throughout the year. But we are following that up close, and we will take measures as we are requested to.
Operator
OperatorOur next question is from Vinicius Strano analyst with UBS.
Vinicius Strano
Analysts[Interpreted] I'd like to understand with you the effects of this scale benefits that you mentioned. Natal said that during the Investor Day, you shared a little bit of this information. I would like to understand 2 points about that. The 6 million pairs how much does that effect on your margin in the first quarter? And secondly, looking down the road, the sell-out, which is quite healthy, a little bit higher than we imagined some time ago. So how can we think about these. What can I expect of this incremental volume in the margin as the volume grows, how does that affect the margins. And also I can maybe explore a little bit some scenarios about future volumes sold in the middle and long term.
Liel Miranda
Executives[Interpreted] Thank you, Vinicius, for your question. Let me try to explain to you how this scale effect happens. This is a math that we can help you later on and give you some more details a little bit later. But it depends on you learn -- understanding a little bit of our cost structure, how much of this is fixed, how much of this is variable. So you can understand how much of this margin can be affected based on different scenarios that you can draw for the future based on the volume growth. But I'm going to show you to the past looking at our history -- historical records. When we compare when we compare now 5 years ago when we were in 2021. Our EBITDA prepared in Brazil was of about BRL 2.40 per pair. Now this EBITDA is about BRL 4.33. So that's a very strong evolution, right? -- of, let's say, BRL 2.30 are almost [indiscernible] More than our EBITDA margin, margin doubled. [indiscernible]. This evolution has to important effects. One of them comes from the scale, which is favorable right now because when we compare the volume in the first quarter of 2026 with the first volume of 2021. We are already selling higher volumes than we were selling at the timing in the first quarter of 2021. So this has started to help us positively. This scale effect is of about 60%. I'm kind of rounding this off. But out of those BRL 2 something and the efficiency is equivalent to about BRL 1.70 in improvement. It's, of course, not only efficiency in gross margins, also EBITDA expenses we cases in manufacturing or recut operational expenses or. So we gained EBITDA margin, we gained gross margin. But I could break these down effect of about BRL 0.60 for scale and for efficiency, which shows that the biggest part of this evolution is an evolution that came from efficiency actions like productivity, better productivity in manufacturing, SG&A, all of the actions that were implemented. When we talk about an evolution that was 1.7 over compared to a number that was of 2 in 2021. And again, this all comes from actions that we were implementing in the business to make the business more efficiency. The scale has an effect of about BRL 0.60. When we look at this comparison, you can get to try to the number. Try to get to number you want. We had a volume of about 55 million pairs. Our volume in 1 was million as -- so it's of about 6 million pairs which is about the anticipation. So at the end of the day, if you get to this effect and you try to make a comparison. We are 6 million pairs higher than in the first quarter 2021. And I'm telling you that this scale effect was of about 60%. It is about the size of this anticipation. This doesn't mean [indiscernible] volume is going to reduce over time. It just has been advanced. So we operate the stock in a more intelligent way. Making it big now, this selling rather than bank getting smaller parts throughout the first months of the year. But the scale, again, it is a recurring and deserve effect that affects our margins. And this is a way of you looking at these effects. Again, the biggest part of this margin comes from the efficiency actions that we have implemented. And we have no reasons to believe that they are nonrecurring. Again, we cannot make any promises or giving a guidance, but they are not momentaneous effects because of a higher volume. On the other hand, we have the space to keep growing. We have been gaining sell-out and market share. We believe that the thus, the scale effect should be a positive. Let's say, supporter over the upcoming months.
Operator
OperatorOur next question is from Gustavo Fratini, analyst with Bank of America.
Gustavo Fratini
Analysts[Interpreted] I would like to understand. I think our results have been consistent and impressive. I would like to understand a little bit more -- what do you see in terms of reduction in the -- the cost per fare, which might be pressured, right, by the higher price of commodities and how you can offset this with a better expense control or in a better sell-out volume.
Liel Miranda
Executives[Interpreted] As Andrea said, and we had being saying over the past quarters the effect of raw material is not a direct in total on our cost. So we already -- we have already mapped of what we believe that can have for the past 6 to 12 months, the next 6 to 12 months, and it's not going to be an effect only of the raw material as the oil costs go up several things also go -- several prices also go up like freight, for example. So we have mapped the effects that this would have. But as Andreas said, we don't believe that this is substantial to change the trajectory of the performance we have been having so far. So as this materializes, we have plans to compensate to offset this. Of course, we believe that's our plan for gaining more efficiency which is part of our culture of cost management should be a supporting factor if necessary and if necessary and when necessary, we also have space if we want -- we can moderately and adequately changed a little bit -- add a little bit of price increase because we believe our brand is strong. But if we need to make an adequate adjustments, we believe we can do it. Of course, there is some pressure of the raw material that are actually putting pressure on the entire economy of the country and the world, but we have mitigation plans and we believe that the trajectory of the performance of the business is going to continue over the next months as we have seen so far.
Andre Natal
Executives[Interpreted] I would like to thank you all. Since we don't have any more questions right now, we are happy to share all of the results we shared with you. Let's keep working. And again, our Investor Relations department is always available to answer any further questions. Leo and I -- so thank you all for your attention. and have all a good day.
Operator
Operator[Interpreted] Alpargatas' Earnings webcast for the first quarter of 2026 is now finished. The Investor Relations department remains available to address any further questions or inquiries. Thank you very much to all participants.
For developers and AI pipelines
Programmatic access to Alpargatas S.A. earnings transcripts and 32,000+ others is available through the
EarningsCalls.dev REST API. Plans from $24.99/month — full transcripts, speaker segments,
full-text search, and the recently-added /api/v1/transcripts/recent polling endpoint for ETL pipelines.