Good morning, and welcome to the 1847 Goedeker Q1 2022 Earnings Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. On the call today are Chief Executive Officer Albert Fouerti and Chief Financial Officer Maria Johnson. Please note that various remarks about future expectations, plans and prospects constitute forward-looking statements for the purposes of the Safe Harbor Provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The company cautions that these forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated, including risks described in the company's filings with the SEC.
Any forward-looking statements made on this conference call speak only as of today's date of 16th of May 2022, and the company assumes no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that occur after today. Second, we had a few special items in our Q1 results, which we excluded from our trends for non-GAAP purposes, and we will reference these non-GAAP results in our remarks today. Please see our press release from this morning and our investor relations website for more information and our cautionary statement which cover these topics in more detail. A replay of the conference call will be available on the 1847 Goedeker Investor Relations website this week. At this time, I'll turn the call over to Albert Fouerti for opening comments. Please go ahead, Mr. Fouerti.
Good morning, and thank you for joining today's call. I am excited to discuss our financial results for the Q1 , in addition to providing updates on key initiatives that we believe will drive long-term growth and value creation. I will begin by touching on our financials for the quarter, which Maria will discuss in further detail shortly. Despite widespread macroeconomic challenges, I am proud of the results our team has delivered at the start of the year. We achieved sales of $152.8 million, representing a more than 23% increase over combined pro forma sales for Q1 2021. A gross margin of 23.5% and a net income of $5.9 million and an adjusted EBITDA of $13.5 million.
In the Q1 of 2022, we also continued executing in key initiatives to strengthen our underlying business and its capital structure. The macroeconomics environment does not change the fact that we have tremendous opportunity in the home appliance market. We are going to lean into expertise, technology capabilities and scale to seize this opportunity. Here are a few key updates. First, I would like to provide an update on our rebranding process. I am excited to share that we have selected a new name, logo and brand ethos that we plan to announce in the coming weeks. As I noted on our last call in March, last year was very much a year of transition and transformation for our business. This rebrand marks an important milestone in our journey, bringing Legacy Goedeker and Appliances Connection under one single unified name and brand.
The name and ethos we've selected reflect our vision to be more than just a retailer, but to become a home and appliance platform that empowers customers throughout the entire purchasing journey, from inspiration to installation. It is important to note that continuity remains a top priority during this rebrand, as we are keenly aware of the name recognition we carry with Appliances Connection in particular. This is why our marketing and branding team will be working diligently over the next several months to build brand equity and ensure a smooth rollout of our new brand. Second, with respect to our B2B solution offering.
As we previously stated, we had approximately $20 million of new projects in the pipeline at the end of Q1, and we are already seeing some exciting projects in the pipeline for Q2, such as a new $1.2 million project for 859-unit residential building remodel that we have been recently awarded. We are pleased with the early progress we have made, and we are working to build on the pipeline throughout the remainder of the year with a similar pace we have seen in Q1. As previously noted, these are longer-term projects that may take 6-18 months to come to fruition. This said, we expect this pipeline will materialize into significant B2B revenue growth in 2023.
Third, we continue to be optimistic about bringing new warehouses online in the right location at the right time when pricing and supply chain becomes more normalized. Tight supply is a factor we must consider as we want to ensure that any new warehouses that we bring online can be stocked with the proper inventory at the right cost. We remain focused on identifying opportunity to expand our fulfillment network, including through affordable and targeted M&A. Before handing the call over to Maria, I would like to address our recently announced $140 million credit agreement with Bank of America. We appreciate the overwhelming positive feedback we have received from shareholders, and we are glad that you share the excitement for what this strategic capital means for our business. We view this credit agreement as a testament to the strength of our business and its long-term trajectory.
We secured this affordable non-dilutive capital to support our key strategic and corporate initiatives, including building out our B2B model through strategic partnership, expanding our fulfillment capabilities, and enhancing our technology stack. Additionally, we are well positioned to continue optimizing our capital structure, including by executing on our previously announced share repurchase program and any programs authorized in the future. I will now conclude my initial remarks and turn it over to Maria Johnson to provide an overview of financial performance.
Thanks, Albert. Good morning, everybody. Net product sales for the quarter were $152.8 million, compared to $142.7 million sales for the last quarter, and $123.7 million pro forma sales for the Q1 2021. Gross profit for the quarter was $35.9 million. While our gross margin has increased 60 basis points from the last quarter, from 22.9% to 23.5%, increased freight costs, due in part to higher energy costs, continued causing some margin compression, with Q1 shipping costs approximately 40 basis points higher than we saw throughout 2021 on a pro forma basis.
Operating expenses for the quarter were approximately $25.8 million, with the largest expense items being personnel costs of $7 million, reflecting our investment in top talent and $0.2 million severance costs. Bank and credit card fees of $6.2 million, general and administrative expenses of $5.6 million, reflecting a more normalized level, an almost 21% reduction versus Q4 2021, which was impacted by unpaid historical invoices and advertising expense of $4.3 million. Net income for the quarter was $5.9 million or $0.06 per diluted common share, compared to a loss of $3.5 million or $0.57 per diluted common share for the Q1 2021. Net income was up 56% versus last quarter.
Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $13.5 million, with a margin of 9%, compared to $11.3 million EBITDA with an 8% margin last quarter. As of the end of the Q1 , the company had working capital of $24.9 million and incurred negative cash flow from operations of $3.7 million, which reflected $8.2 million of additional investment in inventory during this quarter as we continue facing supply chain challenges. Additionally, the company had cash and cash equivalents of $25.8 million at the end of the quarter, roughly flat to the prior quarter. With respect to our outlook, we are reaffirming our previously articulated full year guidance provided on our Q4 earnings call.
We forecast high-teens to low-20s sales growth for the year compared to 2021 pro forma sales and gross margins and adjusted EBITDA margins relatively flat to our 2021 full year pro forma results, which were 23.3% and 9% respectively. While we continue to face uncertainty caused by sustained supply chain disruptions, significant inflation and geopolitical uncertainty, we hope to refine our outlook over the course of the year if those macroeconomic headwinds ease. Now I will hand the presentation back to Albert for closing comments. Albert.
Thank you, Maria. As you could see, our sales have continued to build steadily on a year-over-year basis and sequentially. Our margin continued to be impacted by supply chain challenges and other transitory factors. However, as we make progress on our fulfillment network expansion and the supply chain eases, we expect the benefits from lower shipping costs, which will help stabilize long-term margin. Additionally, we continue to build inventory to mitigate uncertainties related to the global supply chain, which we expect to help strengthen our ability to fill orders over the quarters to come. I told you in my first call as a CEO that we are in what I view as our foundation building phase. We have continued to make meaningful progress in our key priorities, which we believe will drive long-term growth for our business.
As I highlighted in my opening remarks, I am incredibly proud of the strides our talented team has made in the past quarter, particularly with our rebrand process, building out our B2B solution offering with the new partnerships, and identifying opportunities to expand our fulfillment network. I look forward to working with the rest of the Polished management team as we strive to capture additional market share and drive towards our goal of $1 billion in sales in the next few years. I'll conclude there and at this time ask the operator to open the call up for any questions.
We will now begin the Q&A session. To ask a question, you may press Star then one on your touchtone phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press Star then two. At this time, we'll pause momentarily to assemble a roster. Our first question comes from Ryan Meyers from Lake Street Capital Markets LLC . Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. First one for me. Now that you guys have the $140 million credit agreement shored up, and you do have some growth capital, what is at the top of the list as far as growth initiatives go?
Hey, good morning, Ryan. How are you?
Very well, thank you. How are you?
Good. Yeah. We have a lot of, as you can imagine, where we went and we restructured the debt, so we have a lot of pipeline in the mix. Obviously top of mind is our capital structure. We're gonna look at that. Second, we have to build out our inventory in certain locations, but move it around from one warehouse to another warehouse. We have our fulfillment centers that we are gonna be building out around the country. We are looking at building out our B2B offering and solutions. Obviously our ultimate goal is focus on the business and grow the business.
Great. That's helpful. Nice to have that done. You know, I just wondered if you could speak to what the order fill rates were during the quarter and if we have seen any sort of improvement there as we have progressed through 2022.
Unfortunately, I mean, it's almost holding steady to what it was in the past, I would say Q4 of 2021. We're looking anywhere from about 63.5%, 63% fill rate. We're still struggling with the same struggles that we had in the past. Hopefully, we're looking forward in the next Q2 or Q3 to get some type of relief in the supply chain.
Okay. When you look at your overall inventory levels right now, how do you stand and, you know, do you think inventory is in a good spot when you guys do wanna get a little bit more aggressive on the distribution centers, do you think that you'll be able to kind of sufficiently fill these with inventory?
That's really what has been the struggle in going out there and opening up to other fulfillment centers. Obviously we wanna be able to buy the right inventory at the right cost, and bring in the correct inventory to their correct location. Bringing it into New Jersey and distributing back out doesn't really help. What we're trying to do is making sure that our fulfillment centers, when we stand them up, we have the correct product with the right cost in the right locations. We're not bringing in extra inventory. We're just gonna distribute the inventory rather than having everything in New Jersey, try to distribute that throughout the country so we could service our customer much faster, which results obviously in better conversion, better shipping costs, and less touches, which hopefully reduces the amount of damages and cancellations.
Great. That's helpful. And then last one for me, and you kind of alluded to this a little bit on the call, but can you just sort of talk about, you know, what kind of macro environment you guys are baking into the full year guidance and sort of the guidance that you're giving right now is just kind of a continuation of the current environment that we're in right now. If we see some sort of improvement, whether it's in inflation, supply chain or, you know, shipping and logistics, we could potentially see some sort of upside to that.
Yep. We baked in similarly to what we've seen in Q4 and Q3 of 2021. What has happened in the past, I would say three months, is a lot of things going on from the war in Ukraine, inflation, fuel surcharges. We baked it in, and that's why we put in our guidance, you know, flat to what we showed in the past, you know, 2021, and we were forecasting high teens to low twenties in growth. We baked that in. We're baking into what we've seen in the past and what we're seeing right now in the current environment.
Just to add to that, hi, this is Maria. I think there is a possibility obviously that we might go back and reevaluate our guidance if the economic conditions improve in the future. At this point, there is just too much uncertainty to make any changes to the guidance.
Great. That's helpful. Thanks, guys.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Adam Wilk from GREYSTONE CAPITAL PARTNERS . Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Really strong quarter and was happy to see the results. Great job. I'm wondering. A lot of my questions were asked previously, so that's good. I'm wondering if you can help us break down sort of the mix between volume and pricing on the sales results this quarter.
Sure. Mix between sales. I'm sorry, I just missed the last piece. Mix between the sales and what? And pricing?
Yeah. Let me ask another way. I'm interested in hearing your commentary regarding pricing versus volume, and kind of how you see things, what happened in the quarter and how you see things shaking out for the year.
Yeah. If you're just referring to just pricing, a lot of the price increases that we've seen, they were already priced out and announced early quarter, Q4, the end of Q4 and the beginning of the year of Q1. We haven't seen any new price increases unless the ones they already announced in the past. There have been a new price increase that have just been announced, and it's starting to roll in in Q2, I would say April first of 2022. We haven't seen any new price increases. Some of the manufacturers announced some increases maybe coming up in June soon. The pricing is relatively similar to what we had in Q4.
Again, this uncertainty that's happening, the fuel surcharges, has not been taking a major effect yet in the marketplace from a pricing standpoint. We just have to wait and see how the manufacturers will apply, if they will apply any type of changes in the next quarter or after.
Okay, great. That's helpful. Thanks. And then your commentary about guidance somewhat indicates that there may be room to maybe update that or increase full year targets. I know you answered this a little bit a few minutes ago, but I'm interested in hearing maybe your commentary about things on the supply chain side, your expectations for the rest of the year. Some people are maybe calling for things to sort of normalize or ease a little bit in the back half of 2022. Are you kind of seeing the same or is it more business as usual? You know, headwinds might not abate till 2023. Any color there would be helpful. Thanks.
We're treating it the same way we've seen in the past. 2020, 2021, we're navigating the same type of issues that we had in 2021. We're not seeing any major relief. There's a lot of manufacturers still having back orders, some of them until 2023 or maybe mid-2023. We're still having a lot of challenges in the supply chain. Some of it, the product categories may see some type of relief earlier or faster than other categories. We're focused primarily on better and best particular product, not just the core appliances. I don't think we're gonna see any type of major change in the next quarter. Hopefully, we could see something in Q3 or Q4.
Okay, great. That's helpful. You answered some questions on this as well. I was really happy to see the new financing press release come through, especially given the lender and the terms. That's great. I wanna just kind of press a little bit on the capital allocation side. You know, if you take a look sort of across the landscape of your peers, whether that's consumer durables, hard line distributors, e-commerce businesses, the valuation gap is enormous between you guys and many others, despite your really strong execution and ability to basically weather this current environment, you know, of supply chain issues, higher input costs, inflation, you know, people are pointing to lessening demand. You've also confirmed full year guidance, margin targets, and really, I mean, don't seem to be slowing down at this point.
You might be one of, if not the only company selling appliances that's actually growing sales sequentially and year over year, you know, despite all this talk of consumer weakness, recession on the horizon, et cetera. I know it's early in terms of the merged business. I know you're still telling the story and sort of making sure investors understand the thesis here. If this keeps up and you guys, you know, continue to execute, you'll be trading at a valuation that implies basically that you're a distressed business, which clearly is not true. I guess I'd be interested in just kind of hearing your comments surrounding that and maybe what steps you're interested in taking to help sort of close that valuation gap, you know, how you feel about your buyback program, given the new financing, et cetera.
Anything would be helpful. Thank you.
Sure. So I just refer back a little bit about the buyback program. I'm not sure if you're aware or not, but we were in the blackout period probably into, you know, as you know, from the last announcement that we made until tomorrow is our first day of open period. I can't really speculate on what other stuff that we have in the pipeline or what we're willing to do. We totally understand. To your point, we are way undervalued, and we'll do what we have to do on our end, and we'll perform. We're gonna go focus on the business. We wanna make sure that the business is strong, it's healthy, and it's no way at any point in any distressed, you know.
Since I took office until now, as you can see, the strength of our business and the belief from BOA, they went out there and they gave us a $140 million loan. It's a testament to what we're doing and what we're trying to do as a company. Not only just as an appliance company, we are focused on an overall growth. We're a community. We're building out a structure and a foundation that we wanna own the appliance business online. We're creating a community for consumers to be able to be inspired, and we're gonna finish it with an installation that's far and better than anybody else that's out there on the market. That's really our sole focus right now.
We focus on the business, we focus on the company, we focus on the growth of the company and the health of the company.
Great. Well, I can appreciate that. Great job, and thank you for taking my questions. I appreciate it.
Absolutely.
Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. Our next question comes from Joseph Grunfeld from Private Investor. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Great quarter, guys. To be frank, my questions were fully answered. I guess one thing I would ask is the credit facility that Bank of America gave you was to the gentleman's point from Greystone earlier, was literally the entire market value of your company. Do you think people are now looking at that with a name like B of A in there and it's creating somewhat of a buzz? Are you seeing any incoming calls from other boutique shops or anything that are starting to take an interest in your company because again of the disparity that was just mentioned?
Thank you, Joe. Yeah, absolutely. To your point is Bank of America gave us a $140 million credit facility. It's almost the same amount of money of our market cap. We are definitely way undervalued, and we are seeing a lot more boutique shops, and we are seeing a lot more analysts picking up coverage, and they're communicating with us a lot more. The story hasn't been out there, hasn't been told in the past. Obviously, what other management has had in the past, I'm not sure they told the story of what we're all about. To your point is, yes, we are seeing more coverage.
We are hoping for more coverage, and we're doing everything that we can on our end to reach out to the analysts and reach out to a proper coverage to tell the story and put the story out there.
Thank you much.
Thank you.
There are no more questions in the queue. This concludes our Q&A session, and the conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.