J.T. Rieck - Flowers Foods, Inc. Allen L. Shiver - Flowers Foods, Inc. A. Ryals McMullian - Flowers Foods, Inc. R. Steve Kinsey - Flowers Foods, Inc..
Farha Aslam - Stephens, Inc. Amit Sharma - BMO Capital Markets (United States) Akshay Jagdale - Jefferies LLC William B. Chappell - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc. Brett Hundley - The Vertical Trading Group LLC Timothy S. Ramey - Pivotal Research Group LLC Brian P. Holland - Consumer Edge Research LLC.
Welcome to the Flowers Foods Second Quarter 2018 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Paulette, and I will be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to J.T.
Rieck, Treasurer and Vice President of Investor Relations. You may begin..
Allen Shiver, our Chief Executive Officer; Steve Kinsey, our Chief Financial Officer; and Ryals McMullian, Chief Operating Officer. Allen, I'll turn the call over to you..
Thank you, J.T. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'll get us started this morning with an update on our operations and results for the quarter. Ryals will then share the opportunities he sees to accelerate our transformation under Project Centennial.
And Steve will wrap up with a financial review and our outlook for the remainder of the year. We'll then open the call for your questions. Let's turn to the business review. Top line performance in the second quarter was solid. Total sales grew 1.6%.
Our branded retail business contributed more than half of this growth, driven by share gains from Dave's Killer Bread, Wonder and Nature's Own. For the eighth quarter in a row, our market share increased, driven by healthy growth in our base sales. Overall, consumer trends in the fresh packaged bread category are encouraging.
Branded products continue to gain share within the category, with consumers showing a growing preference for organic products and indulgent white breads. The fact that these branded products carry higher price points is encouraging.
Our recent introduction of Dave's Killer Bread and Nature's Own Perfectly Crafted products are right in line with these consumer trends. The commercial cake category was down slightly, but our snack cake share has remained stable for the past four quarters. Our cake team continues to focus on improved profitability.
Our product assortment is being streamlined through SKU rationalization, allowing manufacturing to improve capacity utilization. While we are pleased with our top line performance this quarter, we are not satisfied with the results, as gross margins were down. There were several factors that pressured gross margins this quarter.
And because of them, we have reduced our financial outlook for the year. First, planned point-of-sale investments, these marketing activities, like couponing and consumer promotions, are expected to accelerate the growth of our key brands. And during the quarter, they did.
They drove trial of new Nature's Own Perfectly Crafted, Dave's Killer Bread and Cobblestone Bread Company products. A special consumer promotion also drove sales of Wonder Bread and Buns. Another factor impacting margins this quarter was a business disruption caused by inferior yeast received from an ingredient supplier.
This disruption occurred right before the July 4 holiday, a holiday which drives a significant portion of our bun sales each year. Once we determined the issue with the ingredient, our team worked around the clock to resolve the problem as quickly as possible.
Affected product was removed from retail and foodservice accounts and replaced with product made with alternative yeast. This response required an extraordinary effort from manufacturing, distribution, sales and procurement. I am proud of how our team managed this situation, and our operations are back to normal.
I want to thank the team again for their tireless efforts. That said, we are continuing to evaluate the financial impact of the yeast event and our options with regards to being made whole by the supplier.
Finally, like other food companies, our margins were impacted by inflationary pressures from higher transportation cost, a tight labor market, and increasingly volatile commodity markets. To address these inflationary pressures, we are aggressively working to capture greater efficiencies and cost reductions within our business.
This increased focus on operations can be seen in the appointment of Ryals McMullian as Chief Operating Officer. We have aligned our business units, sales and supply chain functions under Ryals. Our objective is to make all areas of our company more effective and accountable for delivering against our strategic priorities.
Throughout his 15-year tenure at Flowers, Ryals has developed a deep understanding of our business and operations. He played an important role in shaping Project Centennial. Over the last two years, Ryals has helped direct the company's transformation under this important initiative.
This makes him uniquely qualified to lead our operations as we execute on our growth objectives and cost savings initiatives.
Ryals, will you please share your perspective on the opportunities in operations?.
Thank you, Allen. Good morning, everybody. I really appreciate the time to make a few brief comments to you this morning. We really are going under a transformation at Flowers. We've got a lot of opportunity ahead of us, and we have a talented team eager to work together to achieve great things. And we call Centennial a transformation.
We do not use that word lightly. We have made massive changes to a 99-year-old company with a deeply rooted culture and established ways of working. Moving from where we were in 2017 to where we are today has been a monumental undertaking, and our team members have worked extremely hard to get us here.
I am tremendously proud of the progress we've made and how we've positioned ourselves for the future, but, at the same time, all of us are keenly aware that we have not yet realized the full value promise of Project Centennial. We've only been operating under our new org structure for about seven months. And overall, it's worked quite well.
Just as a few examples, our business units have helped deliver exciting new product innovations. Our more focused sales organization has translated those innovations into higher sales.
Our new marketing group is actively developing a promising pipeline of innovation to help us truly differentiate our products and brands, and our PG&S team has delivered meaningful savings.
But because it's still relatively new to us, we are constantly monitoring the structure for improvement opportunities, because it's so vital to have the right leadership in place. In fact, we've recently tweaked a few reporting lines in a way that, we expect, will make us more effective from an operational standpoint.
However, despite overall savings goals that are on target, we have not yet translated those savings into improved bottom-line performance. To be sure, additional cost headwinds and operational disruptions, some of which Allen mentioned a moment ago, are partly to blame. But we also have more work to do to reduce our cost.
So, my immediate focus will be on generating additional cost savings, primarily by addressing inefficiencies in our supply chain. Working closely with Allen and the leadership team, we intend to take decisive action to further improve our efficiency and profitability. Look, our business is changing.
And we have to ensure that we have the right capabilities, from a supply chain standpoint and otherwise, to answer for those changes. We are working plant by plant, making certain that we're optimized for today's business realities and tomorrow's. As I did while leading Project Centennial, I am comfortable challenging old ways of thinking.
And I do intend to push our team to be creative about solving business challenges and capitalizing on new opportunities. We'll each take full ownership for our areas of responsibility, and there will be increased accountability and transparency around our results and how we track to our KPIs.
As a matter of fact, we're already tracking our efforts internally with a rigor never before seen at Flowers, and I fully expect this disciplined approach to bear fruit. Despite the fact that we are navigating some near-term challenges, I hope you can tell how energized I am about where we're headed. And, more importantly, our team is energized, too.
We have so much untapped potential. Opportunities abound for Flowers, from additional growth from our already strong brands to a robust M&A pipeline to help us achieve margin accretive growth in adjacent categories. We do understand the urgency and our team knows what to do.
I'm confident that working together, our team can deliver the results that our shareholders expect and that we most certainly expect of ourselves. Thank you very much for your time today. And I'll turn it back to Allen..
Thank you, Ryals. Accelerating the cost savings initiatives that we have in place, that is our top priority. With the fresh perspective and accountability that Ryals brings to operations, our focus on margins and efficiencies has never been greater. Now, I'll ask Steve to review the financials and provide our outlook for the rest of the year.
Steve?.
voluntary pension contributions year-to-date of $40 million associated with our pension de-risking strategy; Project Centennial and VSIP-related payments of $27.2 million; $17.5 million of MEPP withdrawal payments; and $8.9 million of legal settle payments year-to-date.
We were able to meaningfully offset these cash uses with the cash generated from our payment terms extension initiative under Project Centennial and a lower effective tax rate. Capital expenditures were $49.5 million year-to-date as compared to $31.9 million a year ago.
Dividends paid year-to-date total $74.3 million, a 6.7% increase over the first two quarters of last year. We ended the quarter with $796.3 million in net debt. At quarter end, our net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA was 1.8 times. Our financial position is strong.
As of quarter end, we had approximately $677 million of liquidity available on our credit facilities. Now, let's take a look at guidance. For 2018, we continue to expect sales to be in the range of flat to up 1.6%. We are now expecting adjusted EPS to be in the range of $1 to $1.07 per share.
This reduction in full-year guidance is being driven primarily by the Q2 margin factors described earlier, as well as expectations that we'll continue to see overall inflation in workforce and transportation. Though our sales forecast is strong, we do also expect that mix will continue to impact overall margins.
For the back half, we are expecting sales growth to be slightly below trends year-to-date, primarily because we are lapping prior-year weather events in our core markets that may not repeat in the current year.
We continue to expect the top line to be driven primarily by incremental volumes from DKB, which is offsetting softer volumes for our core branded items. We expect approximately $40 million of input cost inflation in 2018, which we have partially addressed through pricing action and continued focus on improving manufacturing efficiencies.
What we did not anticipate is the level of tightness in the labor market, which continues to cause increased turnover at the bakeries and contributes to lower manufacturing efficiencies. In addition, the effects of the driver shortage are also increasing logistics costs.
These, along with the brand investments we planned, have offset the $38 million to $48 million in gross savings from Project Centennial we targeted this year. For 2018, we continue to expect a full-year tax rate of approximately 25% to 26% before one-time cost.
We believe our revised EPS guidance range appropriately balances the factors we are seeing in the marketplace, the disruptions related to the yeast issue, and the progression of Project Centennial.
The upper end of the range assumes a rational, competitive environment, steady growth from DKB, and solid performance from our new product introductions for the remainder of the year. The lower end incorporates continued softness in core brands, a competitive marketplace and rising inflationary cost pressures. Now, I'll pass the call back to Allen..
Thank you, Steve. I'm encouraged with our sales results in the second quarter and the strength of our brand performance in the marketplace. Our transformation is well underway, and never in our history have we had this degree of change. The magnitude of this change is impacting every aspect of the business.
We've built a hardworking team, and we're evolving our strong culture to become more proactive and more aggressive. This is essential. As I said at the start of the call, we have work to do on margins, and we are focused on addressing our challenges head-on. At the start of the third quarter, we began a range of additional cost reduction actions.
And we are working with urgency to execute on these throughout the balance of the year. Thank you for your attention today. And we'll now open the line for questions..
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. And our first question comes from Farha Aslam from Stephens. Please go ahead..
Hi. Good morning..
Good morning, Farha..
A question on Project Centennial, could you just share with us how much of that $38 million to $48 million savings you've already realized, how much is in the second half, and how much into 2019 we should expect?.
I mean, that's our projections for the full year. We wouldn't disclose where we are to-date, but we are on track to hit the $38 million to $48 million..
And your anticipation for 2019 savings?.
I mean, at this point, Farha, I don't think we're ready to talk about 2019. I mean, we still believe in the 250-basis-point margin improvement by 2021. So, we're still focused on making sure we hit the targets that we've laid out from that perspective..
Okay.
And then, could you just talk about your pricing and total inflation? Was that $40 million that you highlighted, Steve, just input cost inflation or is that the total inflation basket you're seeing?.
The $40 million was total input cost inflation. So, there have been other inflationary pressures, primarily around labor, as well as transportation costs..
So, as a percentage of cost of goods sold, are you seeing about 4% inflation, just any color you can provide there? And then, how much pricing can be put in to offset that inflation?.
I mean, when you look basically at the pricing in place – and you can see this somewhat in IRI data, it is basically offsetting a majority of the input cost inflation, so the remainder of margin has to be driven by cost savings in other areas..
Okay. Thank you very much..
Thank you, Farha..
Our next question comes from Amit Sharma from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead..
Hi. Good morning, everyone..
Good morning, Amit..
Allen, the yeast recall, I appreciate your comments about you're still evaluating the impact of it.
Would you expect that to be a bigger impact in Q3 versus Q4 related to disruption and demand maybe?.
Amit, I feel like that the majority of the disruption, the majority of the cost impact was in the current quarter. We are evaluating continued costs that may be still out there, but, overall, the bulk of the cost is going to be within the quarter that we're talking about here today.
But we continue to monitor concerns about our brands which were impacted during this period of time and also some of our foodservice business. But all of that we feel like is being addressed within the quarter. And there may be some carry forward and we'll identify that as we get further down the road..
Got it. And then, you talk about elevated promotional spending.
Was it largely driven internally, like you just wanted to do it, or did you see something in the marketplace that made you increase that a little bit more than you might have planned going into the year?.
Yeah, the bulk of the promotional activity was on our new Nature's Own Perfectly Crafted. A lot of excitement about that new item and it's really, even though it's in our Nature's Own brand, it's a product that was new and unique to our product line, so we did a good job of introducing it to the marketplace. It is now doing extremely well.
We've generated a lot of consumer trial and that was really the reason behind the increase in the quarter. It was really focused on introducing that new item..
So, you would expect that spend to trend down from which it goes in Q2?.
Yes, absolutely..
Okay. And then, just final one for me, Steve, look, I see that you did revise guidance for the full year, I mean, you still have a ton to make up in the back half, right? I mean, even with the gross margin expansion all the way down to EPS now looking to grow by 20-plus percent.
What gives you confidence that given the first-half performance and all this conversation about inflation still a factor, that we can grow that much in the back half?.
Yeah, when you look currently, Amit, we have a number of initiatives in place. I mean, we're still working on our supply chain initiative. Obviously, we need to get our production footprint in line with our overall volume and tonnage. So there continues to be a lot of work around that.
We should expect to begin seeing some of that come to fruition in the back half. As we said, the elevated marketing expenses are primarily Q2 and Q3. The reality is Q2 is probably stronger than Q3 will actually end up being as well, because, now, a lot of the promotion spend behind Perfectly Crafted is behind us.
And that was basically a 50 to 100 basis point hit to margin, gross margin, the fact that it's netted against the top line. So we will not have that necessarily, that headwind, in the back half as well. So just a combination of all the initiatives and strong focus on driving some of the cost savings. We know there are some headwinds on the top line.
We know there are some fourth quarter headwinds because we did begin to implement some of the Project Centennial savings initiatives in Q4. But we feel like the initiatives we have identified will help us overcome that in the back half..
Got it. Thank you so much..
Thank you, Amit..
Our next question comes from Akshay Jagdale from Jefferies. Please go ahead..
Hi. Can you hear me? Sorry..
Yeah. Yes, we can, Akshay..
Okay. Thank you. Thanks for the question. So, I just wanted to follow up on Amit's question a bit. So, the second half, specifically on my math, implies a 70 basis point or so margin expansion. And so far in the year, you've had a 70 basis point decline in EBIT margin.
So, it's a pretty big turnaround and it looks like the top line trends aren't going to materially change, so something on the cost side would have to be materially different, right? So, clearly, we had this yeast issue that looks like it's behind us, but is that the main factor that's different first half versus second half or are there other factors that will allow the performance to be materially different from the first half from a margin perspective?.
I mean, again, in Q2, the two biggest items impacting the gross margin were the elevated promotional activity, which, again, was about 50 to 100 basis points. We also had lower efficiencies, which could be some of the fallout from the disruption around yeast. Also, the labor issue was roughly 30 to 40 basis points.
So, you can see those two items alone, basically if you had not had that, you would have had roughly flat margins in Q2. So, we believe that we have the initiatives in place to address the efficiency issues in the back half.
And then also, you should see the overall marketing impact come down materially in the back half with regard to the impact on gross margin. I mean, realistically, what it was, it was a lot of couponing activity. That gets netted against sales.
So that net top line saw the cost in production impacted your overall gross margin, so that will be subsiding somewhat in the back half..
Got it. And then one question just on the overall operations piece. So we appreciate the new position created and the comments made, but you guys have been known to be the best-in-class operators with a local model.
So, I know you're going to a more sort of consolidated model, but what's the main goal of this new position? I mean, are you structurally changing how the bakeries are being operated or this is just an enabler to Project Centennial? Thank you..
Akshay, the adjustments that we've made as far as organizational structure is not just the naming of a Chief Operating Officer. It really goes down into the organization, providing more accountability at the lowest level. And, really, it's an enhancement to the organizational structure that we initiated seven or eight months ago.
I'm excited because it's putting more decision-making authority and more responsibility, pushing it down to the lowest levels. And that is really the strength of our company. I mean, we have got the best team in the industry.
And some of the adjustments we're making from an organizational structure is going to push that accountability down to lower levels. Again, also very excited about the naming of Ryals as Chief Operating Officer. Ryals' first position, first responsibility is to make sure that we achieve the cost reductions that we have projected.
And we said in our earlier comments that we're not where we'd like to be from a cost standpoint and the impact on gross margin. Ryals will have a lot of responsibilities, but top on the list is making sure we capture the cost reductions that we have identified in Project Centennial.
So, I am really excited about the changes that have been made and Ryals, as well as the changes that are being made in the field, are going to be very important to take us to the next level..
Great. And just one last one on promotional, the promotional issue that you had, but it's more a broader question. I know you were in the process of implementing some new tools, et cetera, to manage the pricing strategy better.
Can you give us a sense of where you are with that and how that might play a role in better execution on promotional programs going forward? Thank you..
Our TPM project is developing in a very positive manner. Looking back on this quarter, the way that we introduced Nature's Own Perfectly Crafted utilizing the coupon approach with an individual retailer, we had never done that before. And to be very honest, the redemption rate was extremely higher than what we had projected.
So, again, this is the first time we have participated in that type of an introduction. The good news is we generated a lot of trial with consumers with a new loaf of bread that is unique to our product line. So, now that the promotional activity is over, we've gotten our Nature's Own Perfectly Crafted back to what we will consider everyday price.
We've generated a lot of consumer loyalty in that process. But we will be very careful in pulling that trigger again with the same type of promotional activity..
Akshay, with regard to TPM specifically, it is implemented and we continue to add customers to the software tool. So, we are beginning to use that as we manage our overall trade promotion spend..
Okay. I'll pass it on. Thank you..
Thank you..
Our next question comes from Bill Chappell from SunTrust. Please go ahead..
Hi. Good morning..
Good morning, Bill..
Hey, Allen and Steve, could you just, I guess, give me a little more explanation on just kind of the promotional environment? And I say that I would think as we go especially into the back half, with rising costs and commodities affecting you and your competitors, I mean that will be the time where the market gets a little more rational and especially as we go into next year.
Is that the right way to look at it or are we seeing kind of, I guess, less rational promotional levels in this space and it probably doesn't expect to change anytime soon?.
Yeah. Bill, if you look at the marketplace conditions, again, it is very different from one market to the next. You're aware that we took pricing earlier in the quarter. In many markets, that is doing well. There are isolated situations where we're having to take a look at our current everyday price.
I do feel and, again, can't guesstimate on what is happening in the future, but with the commodity increases, the transportation increases, the other cost increases that are impacting the total category, you would expect pricing, in general, to improve as you go forward.
Again, if you look at IRI data, you can see that we're the price leader in just about every market that we compete in. And that strategy, we will continue. That's the way that we've always approached pricing.
But with the category basically showing interest in products with a unique point of difference, whether it's Dave's Killer Bread or Nature's Own Perfectly Crafted, the point of difference that those products provide also provides a nice platform for improved pricing in the entire category.
So, again, we're encouraged with where we are from a product development standpoint, and we continue to focus on pricing every day..
But just, again, going back to the promotion, you're not seeing anything from the competitors that looks more rational at this point. I understand you're taking pricing and trying to do the right things, but it doesn't sound like the competitive landscape has changed in terms of promotional levels..
Bill, it's very much of a market-by-market story..
Okay.
And in terms of transportation costs – and we've just heard from others – didn't know if there's especially for the Warehouse business, if there are some incremental costs there just because of the availability of trucks or refrigerated trucks or anything from that standpoint that makes it a little more pressured? Just trying to understand the transportation kind of inflation you're expecting over the next few months..
Sure. I mean, we actually, Bill, are seeing cost increases in both the DSD and the Warehouse Segment. As you know, the DSD Segment is what we call a little more of a closed-loop system. But we are starting to see the driver shortage impact our carriers within that segment. The Warehouse Segment actually typically has to buy more on the spot market.
So, they are also being impacted by the transportation cost increases going forward as well..
Got it. All right. Thanks so much..
Thank you, Bill. Our next question comes from Brett Hundley from Vertical [Trading] Group. Please go ahead..
Hey, good morning, guys. Thank you so much..
Good morning..
Just as a point of clarification, as you guys respond to cost challenges in the marketplace, Allen, did I hear you correctly say that you are accelerating your cost savings program or that you're going after additional supply chain savings?.
Yeah. The cost savings initiatives that we've identified in Project Centennial, we're accelerating our commitment to generate those cost savings now. And there's tremendous urgency with our entire leadership team to capture the cost savings that is of critical parts of our Project Centennial.
Again, other cost savings initiatives are throughout the organization looking at individual manufacturing situations, looking at markets that may be new markets that have not contributed to our profitability. So, looking at the entire organization in terms of what additional cost savings are there.
But again, there's an urgency commitment specifically on the cost savings that we've identified in Project Centennial. So, it's a little bit of both..
Okay. That makes sense. And then, I just wanted to ask you guys, Steve, you're usually the resident expert on this. I just wanted to ask you about the wheat market here at your hedges, just given what's happening across the world right now from a supply standpoint.
Can you talk about your wheat hedges, your expectations into 2019? It feels like, at this point, we're setting up for another pretty material cost headwind into 2019, but I just wanted to get your thoughts on what that market looks like and your ability to continue to offset that..
Sure. I mean, generally, for just 2018, we are covered. We typically hedge four to seven months and we're on the low end of that most of the time. So for 2018, and we feel good about the costs that we said are there. Looking out for 2019, it does appear, based on what's happening really in the U.S.
and across the world, we're anticipating generally higher prices in 2019. Typically, higher prices will bring more planting acres. So that will remain to be seen in the U.S. as well. But right now, our expectations are that for 2019, you will see higher overall wheat prices. (40:55)..
Okay. And then just my last question, I just had a question on Project Centennial and maybe Ryals can kick in on this, just given how important he's been in shaping the program itself, but when I think about your margin targets, you've had EBITDA margin targets of 12% to 13% for 2017 and 2018. It appears that 2018 is going to fall shy of that target.
And again, to the point that Ryals brought up, there's been some extraneous factors that have come up this year, but I would also expect that the management team there would leave some headroom in your margin targets for challenges that arise year-to-year.
And so, can you just talk about your comfort or confidence in leaving EBITDA margin targets of 13% to 14% out there for fiscal 2019 and beyond, just given some of the labor challenges, transport, raw materials that we just talked about, wheat, et cetera? Thank you..
Sure. Brett, this is Steve. I mean, when you look at the project, it was a five-year project. And from a time perspective, we are only in year two.
So, we still feel like there's time to mitigate and make changes to the overall cost structure where we need to, to stay on track to hit our 2021 margin target of 13% to 14%, which is basically another $100 million of EBITDA. Also built into that target is M&A.
And we've had a pretty dry run here, with the exception of the organic businesses from an M&A perspective. We do expect to see M&A in the next three to four years as well. So, we still feel comfortable with the target that we have out there from that perspective..
And, Brett, just to follow up, this is Ryals, yeah, there's a cadence of savings initiatives that were always planned under Centennial. And I think we mentioned last quarter, the initial focus was largely on SD&A and now turns to supply chain. So, we feel really good about where we are. We know what we need to do.
The initiatives that we have under way in supply chain, we expect to yield incremental savings opportunities for us. And, as Allen said, we are actually accelerating those efforts as well. So, all of those things combined give us confidence that we can still reach our long-term targets..
Thank you..
Our next question comes from Tim Ramey from Pivotal Research Group. Please go ahead..
Good morning. Thanks for the question..
Hello, Tim..
Good morning..
Ryals, I think this is your first call and welcome. And I'd love to hear a little bit more about the kind of the macro shape of Project Centennial. To-date, we've really heard you talk about incremental cost savings.
I guess I had in the back of my mind that there would be some more profound structural changes, maybe volume shifting out of DSD into warehouse delivery, some things like that.
And do you think you've basically got the go-to-market strategy set right now or should we still expect more change?.
Thanks, Tim. Yeah. I mean, look, we're always looking at the best way to get our products to market most efficiently. And those were some initiatives that were targeted under Centennial.
From a macro standpoint, our focus has been on pivoting our company to be more consumer-focused, more brand-oriented, and that, in and of itself, has resulted in some significant changes in the organizational structure.
I mean, if you look at a lot of the capabilities we've stood up from marketing to innovation and some of those things, you're starting to see those bear fruit now, is a testament to the project itself.
Over the longer-term, as we look at our operating model, where we make products, how we get those products to market, that is something that we continue to look at and continue to try to optimize..
So, would it be a reasonable expectation that those changes are incremental or perhaps more revolutionary? Let's look out three years, something like that..
Yeah, Tim. Go ahead, Steve..
Yeah. I mean, I would say it's really more incremental, Tim. I mean, when you look at our business, obviously today, the vast majority of our business is DSD. We still believe, with this category, DSD is the best way, due to the freshness and the number of turns. So, I don't see us changing from our traditional go-to-market strategy with regard to DSD.
There may be more products that come online that could fit in a warehouse, but the fresh products still fit very nicely from a DSD perspective..
And, Tim, when you think about adjacent categories, we talk about M&A a lot. We talk about investing in adjacent categories. Some of those things may or may not fit within a DSD model. But with regard to fresh packaged bread and the high turn and the perishability of it, DSD will continue to be a core part of our business going forward.
We believe that the merchandising we provide to the retailers and that brand support that the retailers enjoys is vital for our brands in that segment..
Tim, our overall organizational structure, we are very confident that it's a solid structure. The urgency that you're hearing today is really a valuation of cost components and the commitments we've made to reduce costs in Project Centennial. Those are the commitments that have to be accelerated. And that is what this team is committed to do..
Thanks for that. Steve, didn't look like share repurchase was much, if anything, in the 2Q, maybe not year-to-date, I have to think back. And you've historically been pretty aggressive there. Is there something that is holding you back on capital allocation process? Certainly not cash or cash flow, I wouldn't think..
No, I mean, again, cash flow continues to be strong. Our philosophy on share repurchases has been to do that more opportunistic, unless there were other uses of cash. So again, you can see there's a slightly heightened investment from a CapEx perspective, and then we believe there may be other opportunities coming out of Project Centennial.
So, it's not that we've changed philosophically on how we look at share repurchase. It's just it's typically done more opportunistically..
Perfect. Thanks for your help..
Thank you..
Our next question comes from Brian Holland from Consumer Edge Research. Please go ahead..
Yeah. Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to try to unpack the guidance revision a little bit more, if I could. You mentioned a number of catalysts. The cost inflation pressures are fairly well understood and certainly not specific just to Flowers.
And certainly, this earnings season, we're learning, as a lot of folks are having to react to that, that that's become an incremental headwind.
But I guess to the extent that you've referenced the yeast issue and also the price promotion component, I guess, the yeast issue – and you guys can correct me or maybe steer me in how you did this, but it looks like you pulled yeast out of operating results, so that doesn't feel like that should be an operating non-GAAP headwind, and not sure how that would factor into guidance.
And then also, again, as you guys have said, you've talked about increasing the promotion, et cetera behind new product launches and you said last quarter Q2 and Q3.
So, I guess I'm trying to get a sense for is this largely just the cost inflationary pressures that are impacting your guidance? And if it's the other parts, how did they come into the play or how did they become a bigger impact than you were anticipating?.
Sure. I mean, obviously, a big part of it is the cost inflation and the transportation and the workforce that we've talked about.
But when you look at the yeast issue, the costs we identified were kind of what you could call hard costs that we were able to actually tie to this specific event, but there was a lot of disruption across our DSD bakery network, impacting the majority of our DSD bakeries.
So, there was also some missed opportunity in the quarter from that perspective. And that, as we said earlier, we'll continue to assess and monitor the impact that may have on our brands or our customers going forward. So, from that perspective, we did miss a significant part of the July 4 bun season, and that did impact us.
So there are some soft costs that we couldn't capture. So, we were not able to currently add those back, but that did impact the operations for four or five weeks. So, there was some missed opportunity during that time period. So, we do feel like that does impact us from a guidance perspective..
Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Interesting point with the 4th of July, you know, certainly, my channel checks, you know, around the Memorial Day holiday and given the weather-related issues suggested that it was a pretty soft Memorial Day. If I'm right about that, that should typically be a pretty meaningful impact.
So, was the offset that you guys experienced, from what I presume was a soft Memorial Day, is that promotion around the 4th of July, et cetera, to get it back, or do you think that's actually an offset to particularly strong volume strength in reaction to the new product launches that you talked about in Q2?.
The majority of our promotional activity or the most impact came from the new product launches. I mean, we did have promotional activity related to buns specifically because of Memorial Day, July 4 and also because of Labor Day. So, you typically see that within that segment, and that tends to subside once you get through the Labor Day holiday.
But the biggest impact for us in the quarter from a promotion standpoint was new product launches..
Okay. And then last one for me, you talked about the pricing. And obviously, there is a lot of moving parts in there with the promotion, the mix, all of which you've laid out. But I'm just curious about pure underlying price and the pricing that you've been able to take thus far.
Because clearly, that is one of your biggest tools to offset the cost inflation and any other pressures from a cost standpoint.
How is that holding up so far? Is any of that promotion tied to having to promote against list price to support volume or is price holding up and all the other stuff is just mix in promotion that's just getting away of us being able to see the list price flow through? Thanks..
Again, and just in general terms, the pricing that we took earlier in the quarter in the majority of markets, that pricing is holding. Again, there are selected markets where we've had to be more aggressive from a promotion standpoint, simply to be competitive.
But overall, I'm encouraged that the pricing that we took within the quarter overall is holding. And as we look forward with the cost increases that we've discussed this morning, we'll continue to evaluate price, as we always do. But at this point, we're encouraged with the pricing that is holding in the market..
That concludes the Q&A session. I'll now turn the call back to Allen Shiver for closing remarks..
Great, thank you for joining our call today. We look forward to our next update on the work we're doing to drive growth, as well as taking cost out of the organization, becoming more efficient. Thank you for your time. This ends our call..
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating and you may now disconnect..