Lands' End, Inc. (LE) Earnings Call Transcript & Summary

March 16, 2023

NASDAQ US Consumer Discretionary Specialty Retail earnings 34 min

Earnings Call Speaker Segments

Operator

operator
#1

Good day, and welcome to the Land's End Fourth Quarter and Full Year Fiscal 2022 Results Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this call may be recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Bernard McCracken, Interim Chief Financial Officer. You may begin.

Bernard McCracken

executive
#2

Good morning, and thank you for joining the Lands' End earnings call for a discussion of our fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2022 results which we released this morning and can be found on our website, landsend.com. I'm Bernie McCracken, Interim Chief Financial Officer, and I'm pleased to join you today with Andrew McLean, our Chief Executive Officer. After the prepared remarks, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. Please also note that the information we're about to discuss includes forward-looking statements. Such statements involve risks and uncertainties. The company's actual results could differ materially from those discussed on this call. Factors that could contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to, those items noted and included in the company's SEC filings, including our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. The forward-looking information that is provided by the company on this call represents the company's outlook as of today and we do not undertake any obligations to update forward-looking statements made by us. Subsequent events and developments may cause the company's outlook to change. During this call, we'll be referring to non-GAAP measures. These non-GAAP measures are not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release. Issued earlier today, a copy of which is posted on the Investor Relations section of our website at landsend.com. With that, I will turn the call over to Andrew.

Andrew McLean

executive
#3

Thank you, Bernie. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. On today's call, we'll discuss Land's End's fourth quarter and full year 2022 results. We'll also discuss our strategy and the work we're doing to ensure Land's End effectively serves all of our stakeholders in the years ahead. I'll begin by saying just how excited I am to have joined Lands' End for the opportunity to lead this iconic American brand. Land's End has a fantastic 60-year history and thanks to the hard work of our talented and dedicated team with a strong platform for continued growth and profitability. We'll speak to our performance in the fourth quarter in a moment. But as this is my first earnings call addressing you as CEO I want to provide my perspective on the business and how we plan to build on all the progress made by Jerome Griffith and the entire Lands' End team over the past several years. At our core, Lands' End is in the business of providing products that solve life issues. We deliver consumers the high-quality product they're looking for, for themselves and their families. We plan to continue focusing on our successful franchises and product strengths while driving innovation across the enterprise and as always, placing the customer at the center of our decisions. The leadership team and I have spent the last few months refining our strategy, thinking about how we can best leverage our strengths to execute, and I'm pleased to share some more details today. To be clear, the evolution of our strategic value drivers builds on a strong foundation from which to drive enhanced growth and profitability, and we will prioritize execution and innovation to position Lands' End for long-term success. I mentioned it earlier but it's worth repeating, Lands' End is in the business of providing products that solve life's issues, whether for individuals, families, schools or businesses, we provide the high-quality products they're looking for, when they're looking for them. By simplifying the interaction we have with consumers, we can drive meaningful and sustainable value for all stakeholders. To continue to meet consumers' needs. We need to innovate our product strategy and put greater focus towards the categories that they are looking for most from us. Moving forward, we plan to sharpen our focus on the categories that drive outsized value creation and bring customers back time and time again, including swim and outerwear, some of our top performers. Within swim, we'll weight our marketing towards the vacation story, extending the reach of the category to include essentials, such as totes, towels, cover-ups, Sun protection and footwear. Within outerwear, we see great potential in layering, which endure throughout the seasons and complement heavy outerwear pieces for colder months. Through this product management strategy, we expect to drive sales and margin growth over the long term. We are confident this product focus will help us better serve the consumer by providing land and branded merchandise to consumers wherever they're looking for it, including on our website and third-party websites, in our catalogs and in our stores. It's worth noting that while we seek to meet customers where they are over 90% of our revenue comes from a click, so we will continue to emphasize digital channels for serving existing and new customers. At Lands' End, we're customer obsessed. The key to executing this product strategy is making sure we reach our customers in the right cadence with the right products at the right time, helping them to build their baskets across categories. In essence, we're going to take a page from our history and focus on engaging directly with our customers while encouraging them to shop across the preferred channel. Lands' End already has a robust [indiscernible] nearly 7 million strong and we are going to double down on our approach to understanding our customers, both current and potential and seek to grow our share of our addressable market by leveraging our proprietary data. Our focus will be on deepening relationships with existing customers while simultaneously bringing in new customers to the brand. This will involve qualitative and quantitative assessments that are just kicking off which will provide us with an even better understanding of our customers, including how they view our brands, what other products and product adjacencies they may be looking for and how we can best engage with them. We'll also use our proprietary data to better understand our own operations, providing our product teams the tools they need to make better design, sourcing and buying decisions. We'll work to better connect our merchants, planners and data teams to facilitate knowledge sharing and ensure we're always delivering what consumers want when they want it. The theme I hope you're hearing is that we are going to be innovative in every aspect of our business with decisions driven by our robust data and consumer demands. From how we engage with and deliver for our consumers to the way we operate on a daily basis, innovation will come to the forefront, and we're confident that this will help drive both top and bottom line growth over the long term. We'll share updates on our progress along the way. But let me just say that I am fully confident in our team's ability to execute. We'll strive to give our people the tools and structure to succeed our customers the products they want and our shareholders the growth and value they expect. Now turning to our fourth quarter results. We executed well in the face of continued economic headwinds, which are beginning to moderate. As we previewed on our last call, we entered the fourth quarter with a bit of carryover softness in consumer activity which normalized as we work through the quarter. We were pleased to see sequential improvement in each month in the quarter, including sales and margin performance. We are seeing some of those trends carry over into Q1, particularly in our core swim category. In the fourth quarter, our sales came in at the high end of our guidance range with $530 million in revenue, down 5% year-over-year. While we're pleased with the sales number, it's worth noting that like many other retailers, we introduced promotions earlier and ran them longer during the quarter. We previewed these promotions on our last call. And while strong consumer demands without promotions is always preferred, I'm proud of the way the team responded to ensure, we were serving our customers' needs throughout the all-important holiday season. Regarding inventory, sales throughout the quarter, particularly in some of our high-value categories, have helped us move closer to historical inventory levels. We expect to be back to normalized levels by the end of the first quarter. Consistent with our strategy, we're working to better manage inventory in a way that's consistent with the products our customers are looking for, when they're looking for them. We're confident that through our enhanced use of data and analytics our teams will be better able to predict and manage appropriate inventory levels, reducing that expense without impacting the customer experience. Similarly, global supply chains seem to be improving. So, while the efforts we took to ensure we had product for the 2022 holiday season were important, we expect to be more targeted moving forward. To that end, we expect our cost of goods sold in 2023 will continue to improve as we have more stability and predictability in the global supply chain. Altogether, we expect our actions to better manage inventory paired with more normalized supply chains will lead to enhanced gross margin moving forward. Looking at the products our customers were shopping for, we saw greater demand for women's swim and outerwear. With less demand for heavy outerwear as a result of the warmer than usual winter in the U.S. and Europe. We continue to see challenges across a few categories, including kids and hubs. So promotions through the quarter helped us to reduce the inventory in these and other areas. Sleep, which was largely overinvested in by retailers industry-wise performed below expectations in the quarter. However, it continues to be a positive category for us where we have carved a niche with sales growing over 60% from 2019 to 2022. As we discussed last quarter, we believe the trends in casualization and demand for hybrid life are here to stay, and we're well positioned in those areas. In line with the product strategy I discussed earlier, we're going to leverage data to refine our assortment and make sure we're making better product decisions based on what consumers are looking for. As it relates to our distribution channels, we saw strong engagement and performance from landsend.com and continue to be pleased with our third-party online partnerships, including Kohl's and Target, Walmart and Amazon. We're in the process of launching with Macy's and expect that will fully launch by the end of Q2. On marketing, we focused our efforts on engaging with our existing customer base, driven by our robust customer file and we will continue to leverage a multi-platform approach for that engagement. Whether through e-mail, search or catalog, we're working to convert sales and build further affinity for the brand, for example, our customers gravitate to our apparel collections, where they appreciate the look, set and prices, and we'll continue to factor those types of insights into our marketing. As I mentioned earlier, we'll have a lot more to share on those efforts over the coming months as we take a fresh look at our data and ways to best engage with consumer journeys. With that, I will turn it over to Bernie who has moved into the interim CFO role without missing a beat.

Bernard McCracken

executive
#4

Thank you, Andrew. For the fourth quarter, as Andrew mentioned, total revenue was at the high end of our guidance range at $530 million, a decrease of 5% compared to last year. Our global e-commerce sales decreased 6% from 2021 with our U.S. e-commerce business decreasing 2% from 2021. We our international business decreasing 31% in the quarter. Our international business continued to be impacted by inflation and geopolitical turmoil in Europe as well as the previously announced closure of the Japan e-commerce business. In our Outfitters business, sales decreased 2%, mostly from timing differences due to last year's supply chain disruption. In our business uniforms, we were favorable to last year for both the quarter and the full year. Within school uniforms, we're pleased with our overall performance for the year and maintained our overall share in the school segment. Revenue for our third-party business continues to be strong, increasing 8% as compared to the fourth quarter last year. This increase was largely driven by sales growth in the Kohl's marketplace, particularly within fleece and outerwear as well as growth in our other online marketplaces. Moving to our retail business. During the quarter, we delivered revenue of $15 million, with U.S. same-store sales decreasing approximately 4% from the fourth quarter of 2021. Gross margin in the fourth quarter decreased to 33%, approximately a 340 basis point decline from 2021. The margin pressure was driven by increased industry-wide promotional activity and a focused effort to move through less productive units, slightly offset by lower inbound transportation costs. As a percentage of sales, SG&A was 28%, a decrease of approximately 260 basis points from 2021, driven by continued expense controls across the entire business and lower digital marketing spend. Our performance led to a net loss for the quarter of $3.3 million or $0.10 per share compared to net income of $7.1 million or $0.21 per share in 2021. In addition to these GAAP measures, adjusted EBITDA is an important profitability measure that we use to manage our business internally. For the quarter, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of $24.2 million, which was at the higher end of our expectations. Looking at the balance sheet. Inventories at the end of the quarter were $426 million compared to $384 million a year ago. The 11% increase in inventory was primarily driven by early receipts of swim product for the spring and summer selling seasons as well as carryover full-price swim product driven by late receipts last year due to the supply chain challenges and excess inventory in our kids category. With reduced lead times, we've taken appropriate actions to execute more efficiently which we expect will enable us to normalize our inventory level by the end of the first quarter. Regarding our debt at the end of the fourth quarter, our term loan balance was $244 million and our $275 million ABL had $100 million of borrowings outstanding. To further drive shareholder value creation, we continue to explore opportunities to refinance our debt and are committed to doing so subject to favorable market conditions. During the fourth quarter, we repurchased $3.2 million worth of shares under the Board's previously announced $50 million share repurchase authorization, bringing the balance of the remaining authorization to $41.5 million as of the end of the fiscal year. Turning to our guidance for the first quarter. We expect net revenue to be between $295 million and $310 million. We expect a net loss of $5 million to $3 million and diluted loss per share to be between $0.15 and $0.09. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $13 million to $16 million. For the full year, we expect net revenue of $1.56 billion to $1.62 billion. We expect a net loss of $6 million to net income of $1 million and diluted loss per share of $0.18 to earnings per share of $0.03. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in a range of $72 million to $82 million, our guidance for the full year incorporates approximately $35 million in capital expenditures. With that, I will turn the call back over to Andrew.

Andrew McLean

executive
#5

Thank you, Bernie. As we close the book on 2022, and embark on the next phase of our strategy, I want to reiterate the confidence we have in our business. Lands' End is an iconic 60-year-old classic American lifestyle brand and with the foundation that Jerome and the team put in place we are well positioned to drive strong growth and profitability. This won't all happen overnight. We are taking aggressive achievable actions to simplify and refocus our efforts to ensure we are providing the high-quality products our customers' demand in the categories that they look for from us most and that we're engaging with them in whatever channel or venue they want. We've already announced a number of changes to our executive leadership team. and how we organize internally. And those changes are already having a positive effect. As a reminder, Peter Gray is now our Chief Commercial Officer. In this capacity, Peter is charged in driving revenue growth in existing businesses and developing new income streams. He overseas are e-commerce outfitters, B2B, third-party, retail and international businesses and will have responsibility for the company's license businesses and marketplace development. Angie Rieger is now our Chief Transformation Officer, where she will oversee the company's brand management and inventory planning functions. A long-time Lands' End leader, Angie is critical to ensuring a consistent flow of information across our operating groups, making sure its diverse constituents remain connected and that we move as an organization on 1 calendar. Industry veteran, [ Kim Mass ] recently joined the company as Senior Vice President, Product and Merchandising reporting to Angie. Kim is responsible for developing and implementing growth strategies in merchandising and brand management for the company as well as testing new strategies and concepts for future growth. Sarah Rasmusen has taken on the newly created role of Chief Innovation Officer and will be responsible for driving our innovation efforts across the enterprise while ensuring the customer is at the center of all decisions. Sarah's charge is to deliver innovative customer-centric connections, leveraging our data and driving it across the organization in ways that prioritize activities to grow our digitally native company. I'm confident these organizational changes better position us to be more product-driven and nimble as we deliver on our strategies. We'll look forward to providing additional updates on our strategy as we continue to make progress on our initiatives. In the meantime, my mantra is execute, execute, execute. And we'll continue working to do that so we can deliver for our customers, employees and shareholders. With that, we look forward to your questions.

Bernard McCracken

executive
#6

I think we have a question from Dana Telsey. Alex, are you available to ask a question? Operator, are you able to start the Q&A session, please? Alex, do you have a question?

Alex Fuhrman

analyst
#7

I sure do. Can you guys hear me?

Bernard McCracken

executive
#8

We can hear you.

Alex Fuhrman

analyst
#9

All right. That's terrific. Well, congratulations guys on a strong finish to the year and what sounds like a pretty good start to 2023. I wanted to ask about gross margins. It sounds like you're looking for that to be up nicely in '23. Can you give us a sense of how much of that is coming from lower costs that you have good visibility into and what your expectation is for promotions compared to last year, which sounds like was a little bit more than usual.

Bernard McCracken

executive
#10

Sure, Alex. I'll take the costs. We are already experiencing lower inbound transportation cost year-on-year, which we expect to continue throughout the year. And then from a promotional activity, we finished 2022 by getting our inventory in a very healthy position, which is going to allow us to optimize our promotional and markdown activity into 2023. And Andrew, did you want to add to that?

Andrew McLean

executive
#11

Yes. I mean I think -- I mean, just picking up on what Bernie said, we feel really good about the inventory and cleaning those up. That was important to us to get ourselves that we had seasonally appropriate merchandise that we could lean into for the customer as we look at it, and I think for those of you, and I know you do watch the site, we saw that by starting to win early, we were able to -- we built momentum with the customer in January and really use that as a springboard into the first quarter, and we'll do that through the year as we make that business into a year-round event. I think I'd also say on this, as we look at the 3 pockets of margin out there, obviously, we're going after the cost of the and we're working with our vendors on that. Bernie's mentioned that the transportation costs were fallen and then just having better merchandise, it's going to let us reduce the markdown levels that we're experiencing. So I think if you put all that together, there is a good margin tailwind here that we can get behind this year and start to look to get ourselves back to more historical levels of that business.

Alex Fuhrman

analyst
#12

Okay. That's really helpful. And then it sounds like you had a lot of swim inventory at the beginning of the quarter here and expect to have that work down throughout the quarter? Is it fair to assume that the early reads on your swing though season are pretty strong then?

Andrew McLean

executive
#13

Yes. I would say that we're having a good start to swim. We decided to engage with it in December. It's not something that we've necessarily done in the business before but we felt like it's a year-round business by data, and we have immeasurable probes of data here. I said that ICR is still continuing to be astonished by it, was telling us about the customer -- certain customer cohorts were leaning in heavily in swim and we followed that through catch-up to ICR about owning the vacation. That's not changed. It's not just about selling swim, it's about the merchandise, but we've gathered around it. So we're selling from slight slides on our fleet for the hat on our head, and that's working strongly for us. Having that inventory, which arrived late last year and was not sellable at the time we got it -- available to go visually helped to fuel us with that early start, and we're going to build into it. So we're already getting into a situation where we're having to chase some swim because we're working through the inventory very quickly.

Alex Fuhrman

analyst
#14

Well, that is exciting. And then kids, it sounds like kids have been down for you lately that historically has been a pretty strong category for Land. Do you have a sense of why that business has been weak? And are you expecting any improvement this year?

Andrew McLean

executive
#15

I think we've seen the weakness in the business because we've been in and out of it in a way. We had tried to license it going into the pandemic. we put that license back. We tried to run it ourselves and we've under-resourced it. And I think for us, it's a strategic decision about how we resource that appropriately going forward. We've talked about various ways to execute that business. We're not going to walk away from kids, should be the takeaway in this, but we will look for ways to improve it, make sure it's appropriately resourced and find its place in the family variety of Lands' End.

Operator

operator
#16

Our next question will be coming from the line of Dana Telsey with Healthy Group.

Dana Telsey

analyst
#17

I hope you can hear me now.

Andrew McLean

executive
#18

Yes, I could hear you now Dana.

Dana Telsey

analyst
#19

So Andrew, you mentioned throughout the call the focus on data, and it seems like that's one of the key elements that you're bringing to the Lands' End brands. As you think about the different channels, you also mentioned the additional marketplaces. How do you see whether it's outfitters, whether it's e-commerce, how do you see the channels penetration differing as we move forward? And what could that mean for margins? And then just in the near term, with the promotional environment, how are you planning in terms of margins to manage the promotional environment, whether by channel, whether by category? And then lastly, on cotton costs and raw material costs, what does that mean for your cost of goods as we move through the year? And 1 more thing, retail. I think you had thought about retail as being a potential opportunity, is it?

Andrew McLean

executive
#20

All right. Thanks for that point. Let's see. I'll start with retail. It's one of the list of things that we're evaluating, Dana. I would say this, as we continue to refine and look at the ROI of retail, we think there is other priorities that are going to be ahead of it. So I don't see it being a busier part of the strategy. You may see some experiments from us, but we're not going to lean into that specifically. Coming back to it, we do see a lot of data. We have an amazing amount of data. And the data, we stopped looking at the customer just in terms of a demographic, and we started looking at behavioral cohorts. And as we got further into those behavioral cohorts, we've seen that there are patterns in the customer that we can use to help them connect the dots across our categories. So whereas we have had cohorts for the customer tend to just shop 1 item outerwear. That might be the shopper that they are -- swim that might be the shopper that they are. We've looked for ways to connect them across our categories. The best example I can give you is, the mom who's shopping first school uniform for her kids. It's a great school uniform business for us. We see that she was leaning into our swim and by encouraging her, by advertising to her directly, marketing to her with our catalog, we've been able to engage her with our swim product. Once you get into the swim product, we see that the collection of goods that sit around that, as I mentioned earlier, which is going to move from slides on our feet that hat on her head and swim dresses in between. And I do want to call that out because I look at a business like swim dresses, which has been a nice business for us, but the opportunity to store into it as we see this pattern and how the customer shops and how we push to them, that become really important to us. And it actually helps in how we manage those promotions. We moved in the fourth quarter to an AI integrated system for e-mail. And within that system, we're able to look at these customer cohorts and look at the behaviors that they exhibit a market more specifically against them. So we're getting less and being more specific and accurate and thoughtful going forward. And that's a big effort for us as we sort of bring that into the business in general from how we approach search in the future to how we think about alternate digital channels that's going to remain really important to us. Now I want to get back to your next question, which was around the wholesalers. We largely derisked ourselves from any wholesale ups and downs. Over 70% of what we do in the wholesale channel with our marketplaces, it's digital. It's done with a click. So I come back to the comments that I made, over 90% of what we do is done with a click. And we focus greatly on making sure that, that business is optimized, and that's the lean in for us. So we only have a small exposure to inventory within the doors of these wholesalers, and we see tremendous energy. I can talk about some of them like Target has come online. It has been a phenomenal start. I think Macy's is going to go down the same path. That leans into our wheelhouse. And we're able to connect the dots with that data. We see a new customer coming in, and we're picking up low teens across -- we're picking up new customers from those orders to the tune of low teens. So I think there's opportunity to continue to grow that, and we find that with the data we're bringing to bear. The last question you had was around cotton prices. Bernie will take that.

Bernard McCracken

executive
#21

Yes, I'll take that, Dana. We will experience some headwinds in the first half around fabric cost but we expect that to dissipate in the back half. And then when you talked about the promotional environment, we -- each month in the fourth quarter, we got sequentially better, and we've seen that progress into the first quarter of this year of improvement, but it is still a promotional environment at this time.

Operator

operator
#22

I'm showing no further questions at this time. Thank you for participating. This concludes today's program. You may now disconnect.

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