Greetings, and welcome to the Saputo Inc. fourth quarter and fiscal 2022 results conference call. During the presentation, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. Afterwards, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. At that time, if you have a question, please press one followed by four on your telephone. If at any time during the conference you need to reach an operator, please press star zero. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded on Thursday, June 9th, 2022. I would now like to turn the conference over to Nick. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Frank. Good afternoon, and welcome to our fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2022 earnings call. Our speakers today will be Lino Saputo, Chair of the Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer, and Maxime Therrien, Chief Financial Officer and Secretary. For the question-and-answer session, they will be supported by Carl Colizza, President and Chief Operating Officer, North America, and Leanne Cutts, President and Chief Operating Officer, International and Europe. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that this webcast and conference call are being recorded, and the webcast will be posted on our website, along with the fourth quarter investor presentation. Please also note that some of the statements provided during this call are forward-looking. Such statements are based on assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. We refer to our cautionary statements regarding forward-looking information in our annual report, press releases, and filings.
Please treat any forward-looking information with caution as our actual results could differ materially. We do not accept any obligation to update this information, except as required under securities legislation. I'll now hand it over to Lino.
Thank you, Nick, and good afternoon to you all. We appreciate everyone joining us here today. In fiscal 2022, we navigated a complex and volatile business environment, and once again, our team rose to the challenge. The care and passion that have always been a part of our DNA was evident, and I applaud all of our employees for their ongoing contributions. Throughout this difficult year, I witnessed a strong sense of cooperation, dedication, and creativity from our people, guided by our clear strategy and our highly engaged leadership team. We continued to adapt and evolve through one of the most challenging operating environments in our history. Input costs escalated at a pace well beyond historical levels. We also faced labor challenges as well as bottlenecks and shortages from materials to freight and more.
This limited our ability to fully meet growing consumer demand for our products and created inefficiencies that were difficult to plan for. We also kept our sights on the longer term. We embarked on a new journey to deliver accelerated organic growth with our global strategic plan, sharing with our stakeholders our roadmap and targets. While our overall financial results for fiscal 2022 were disappointing, we took decisive action to offset some of the challenges and to better position Saputo for the future. This included implementing pricing actions to offset higher costs, taking measures to improve our productivity and efficiency levels, and investing in capacity, innovation, and in our strong brands. In Canada, Argentina, and the U.K. all performed well and delivered results in line with our expectations. For its part, Australia had to contend with a declining milk pool, which significantly impacted efficiency and costs.
The platform where we faced the most adversity was the U.S., where challenges have been more acute in terms of labor, inflation, and supply chain. We also faced significant volatility in commodity markets, a factor beyond our control. We are confident that by increasing our branded retail offering and diversifying our product mix, we will be able to respond to the new market dynamics and ensuing opportunities for growth. In tandem, we're making headway on the labor front and finding new ways of working with our supply chain partners. Despite this backdrop, we've generated nearly CAD 700 million of net operating cash flows, a testament to our diversified foundations. Acquisitions continued to be at the core of our strategy in fiscal 2022.
We completed the integration of four recent acquisitions, which will reinforce our efforts to strengthen our core business, drive product innovation, and increase the value of our ingredients portfolio. We've also progressed on our ESG agenda, driven by our Saputo Promise, which underpins everything we do and serves to drive, enable, and sustain our growth. We completed our first three-year plan in fiscal 2022, and we're heading into the next phase with a firm dedication to delivering on our objectives. On the environmental front, we made further commitments to reduce the environmental impacts of our operations. Our near-term focus is executing on a series of projects to deliver on our climate, water, and waste targets.
We undertook 24 projects in fiscal 2022 that are going to bring productive wins with a further 32 projects slated for next fiscal year. Beyond the scope of our operations, we also believe we have a key role to play to ensure a sustainable and equitable food system, working in partnership with our farmers, suppliers, and industry partners to support the industry towards a transition to net zero by 2050. To that end, we launched and began executing on our supply chain pledges this past year, which include sourcing 100% of our principal ingredients sustainably. In addition, we signed on to Pathways to Dairy Net Zero alongside several industry players to stimulate climate efforts and drive action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across the dairy sector.
From a social perspective, we made great progress with our DE&I initiatives, with a focus on training and development and talent acquisition to promote an inclusive and diverse workforce. Our next three-year plan, which will be re-released in August, together with our upcoming Saputo Promise Report, will build on the momentum of the past few years with execution already underway. Turning now to our growth strategy. While the external environment has required a laser-focused short-term execution, this has not detracted us from advancing on our key initiatives. We are confident in our strategic plan target, and we continue to lay the groundwork for our next chapter of sustained growth. In fiscal 2022, we announced the first of a series of investments and consolidation activities that will optimize and enhance our manufacturing footprint.
This included a major capital investment plan towards the modernization and expansion of our cheese manufacturing facilities in Wisconsin and California, and to support our growth plan in the retail market. It also included several key streamlining initiatives in the U.S. and Australia to optimize and enhance our manufacturing footprint. In the U.K., the business undertook plans to outsource our Nuneaton facility warehouse and distribution activities to a long-term partner. We will close our Frome facility and centralize cheese packaging at Nuneaton over the next two years, creating a center of excellence and providing both operational and cost synergies while offering plenty of scope for growth. We're poised for a recovery in fiscal 2023, and we are well underway with the full-scale rollout of our growth, cost, and productivity initiatives.
Together, this should set the stage for accelerated growth in the back half of our strategic plan with a clear line of sight to our adjusted EBITDA target of CAD 2.125 billion by the end of fiscal 2025. We're aggressively working our plan, keeping a view on maximizing long-term value creation. I will now turn the call over to Max for the financial review before providing my final remarks. Max?
Thank you, Lino, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll start with our consolidated financial performance, and I will then move on to the sector review. Adjusted net earnings were CAD 0.26 per share in the fourth quarter compared to CAD 0.30 for the same quarter last fiscal. Consolidated revenues were CAD 3.96 billion, a 15% increase when compared to last year. Revenue increased due to higher domestic selling prices together with pricing initiatives implemented in all of our sector to mitigate increasing input costs as well as higher cheese and then dairy ingredient market prices in the U.S. and also in the export market in the international sector. Adjusted EBITDA amounted to CAD 260 million compared to CAD 303 million in the fourth quarter last year.
During the quarter, we recorded CAD 71 million of restructuring charges, which include a non-cash impairment charge of fixed assets of CAD 60 million. These charges were related to the previously announced capital investment and consolidation initiative in our U.S. and international sectors and our plans to outsource the Nuneaton facilities, warehouse, and distribution activities, allowing for network optimization. On a year-over-year basis, our results were negatively impacted by challenging market conditions, including labor shortages, supply chain disruption, and inflationary pressures, with the U.S. sector being the most impacted. U.S. market factor had a negative effect of CAD 19 million as compared to the same quarter last fiscal, mainly due to the effect of the negative spread. The fluctuation of the Canadian dollar versus the foreign currency negatively impacted adjusted EBITDA by CAD 12 million.
Depreciation and amortization for the fourth quarter totaled CAD 148 million, up CAD 13 million when compared to the same quarter last fiscal due to our capital expenditure program and the inclusion of our recent acquisition. Income tax recovery totaled CAD 12 million, which reflects the lower level of taxable earnings in the fourth quarter and the favorable effect of the tax adjustment for inflation in Argentina. Cash flow generated from operating activities amounted to CAD 184 million for the quarter, up CAD 33 million versus CAD 151 million last year. Turning to the review of our business sector, starting with Canada. Revenue for the fourth quarter increased 5%. Revenue increased due to higher selling prices in connection with the higher cost of milk and pricing initiatives implemented to mitigate higher input costs.
Sales volume were lower in the retail market segment, mainly due to fluid milk sales volume returning closer to their pre-pandemic level, partially offset by a rebound in sales volume in the food service market segment. Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter totaled CAD 117 million when compared to CAD 108 million for the same quarter last fiscal, as the business continued to build on the momentum from recent quarters. Pricing initiative and a favorable product mix were partially offset by higher input and logistical costs. In our U.S. sector, revenue were 25% higher. Revenue increased due to pricing initiative implemented to mitigate increasing input costs and due to the combined effect of higher average block market prices and the higher average butter market price.
Sales volume were stable in all of our market segments, while demand for mozzarella continued to be subject to competitive market conditions. Adjusted EBITDA in the U.S. totaled $42 million, a decrease of $51 million versus last year. We continued to be challenged in the quarter by inflationary pressures, which include an increase of $33 million related to freight and logistic costs, but also commodity market volatility as well as labor availability issues. In Q4, pricing initiatives undertaken were not sufficient to mitigate all of the impact of inflation on our costs. As a result, we announced to our customer additional pricing initiative in the current Q1.
The negative net impact of $19 million of U.S. market factor as compared to the same quarter last fiscal year was mostly the results of the unfavorable impact from the negative spread between the block price of cheese and the cost of milk as raw material. In the international sector, revenues for the fourth quarter increased by 12% when compared to last fiscal year. Revenue increased due to higher domestic selling prices in Argentina, as well as pricing initiative implemented in Australia in response to the higher cost of milk and input costs. Disrupted market condition and supply chain challenges due to container and vessel availability issues and port inefficiencies negatively impacted export sales volume. Adjusted EBITDA totaled CAD 62 million, which was in line with our results in the same quarter last year.
Pricing initiative undertaken in the domestic market were not sufficient to mitigate increased input costs, notably the increased farm gate milk price in Australia. However, in our export market, the relation between international cheese and dairy ingredient market prices and the cost of milk had a positive impact. In Europe, revenue were 12% higher when compared to the same quarter last year. Revenue increased due to pricing initiative implemented to mitigate higher input costs and the contribution of the Bute Island Foods and the Wensleydale Dairy Products acquisition. Sales volume were stable as compared to the same quarter last fiscal, although retail market segment sales volume decreased as they returned to historical level. Adjusted EBITDA for Q4 amounted to CAD 39 million, down CAD 1 million when compared to last year. The impact from lower retail market segment sales volume were partially offset by pricing initiatives.
This concludes my financial review, and with that, I'll turn the call back to Lino.
Thank you, Max. Let's take a closer look at the fourth quarter. As expected, Q4 was challenging, mostly due to transitory factors that impacted our margins, notably in the U.S. First, we had high rates of absenteeism, made even tougher by the Omicron surge, which disrupted production schedules and impacted service levels. Second, accelerated inflation following the escalation of the conflict in Ukraine added further downward pressure on margins. As we started to see this latest wave of inflation coming, we took action on pricing just as we did throughout the year, consistent with our objective for pricing to cover higher input costs. While we experience near-term pressure on our margins, we expect this new round of pricing actions to alleviate the impact of near-term inflation.
Finally, we continue to manage through supply chain challenges, especially in the U.S., due to labor shortages and a continuing gap between supply and demand of trucking capacity and containers. To offset these challenges, we continue to improve our manufacturing and warehousing capacity, prioritizing key SKUs and implementing new measures to support our employee retention. Our sales volumes were stable in the quarter despite an uneven recovery in the U.S. food service channel. Overall, consumer demand remained positive, especially in retail, as at-home food spending continues to trend well versus pre-pandemic levels. We are taking deliberate actions by sector to improve our volumes to better meet customer needs. Improving our shipment volumes will be key to getting back on track, with a large percentage of that coming from the U.S. sector. Now allow me to briefly comment on each of our four sectors before we get to your questions.
The Canadian sector delivered strong results driven by a balance of pricing momentum, good cost control, and steady volume recovery in certain channels, notably food service. In addition, some of the recently deployed automation projects drove efficiencies within our operations and supply chain, helping our facilities to minimize labor-related supply challenges. On the commercial side, we continue to expand and grow our most popular brands. Armstrong Cheese introduced new innovations in its high-growth value-added segments of shreds, snacks, and slices. We're already receiving recognition with our two newest Armstrong retail sliced products jointly winning the 2022 Best New Product Award in the sliced cheese category, according to BrandSpark. I'm also pleased to report for the fourth consecutive year, our Dairyland and Neilson fluid milk brands were voted by consumers as the most trusted milk brands in Western Canada and Ontario, respectively.
In the U.S., sales increased year-over-year due to higher prices and recently announced price increases. Our margins were negatively impacted by substantial commodity volatility, suboptimal output due to labor availability, and significant inflationary pressures. We have more work to do to deliver the growth that the business is capable of. These are clearly unprecedented transitory effects, and we're working our way out of that. In Europe, we saw strong sequential improvements as the business continued to benefit from higher international dairy ingredient market prices. Cathedral City maintained its position as the number one cheddar brand in the U.K., and we partnered with a major British grocery chain to launch a branded ready meal range with initial sales exceeding expectations.
During the quarter, the business also won several top-tier private label cheddar contracts with U.K. supermarkets, as well as new branded and private label wins in cheese spreads. These wins, the continued expansion of Cathedral City in North America, and the startup of a Hochland partnership in Germany, which began in January, should set the business up for strong growth in the upcoming year. Finally, the international sector performed well. In Argentina, the business benefited from a strong international cheese and dairy ingredient market price. In addition to plant efficiencies from higher milk intake and a recent mozzarella plant upgrade. International market prices continued to reflect strong market trends. However, Australia was negatively impacted by a substantial increase in farm gate milk price. Now, turning to our outlook.
Although inflation and supply chain disruptions are likely to persist, we nonetheless expect a recovery in fiscal 2023, and we see a clear path towards it. First, we've taken significant pricing actions throughout 2022 to offset inflation, and we expect these initiatives to be fully reflected in our results next year. We are continuously monitoring input costs and are preparing ourselves and our customers to possibly go for further pricing rounds should we need it. Critical to improving our profitability is maximizing our fixed cost leverage and being staffed to our usual levels to run our plants full, specifically in the U.S. We expect improved staffing levels in the U.S. in fiscal 2023 following our aggressive hiring and retention initiatives and assuming lower COVID-19 related absenteeism. This should translate into better output, improved productivity, and the beginning of a return to more normal sales volume levels.
As we begin to fully support demand for our products and recover volume, we expect to return to our historical order fill rates by year-end with a gradual step-up throughout the year. These are key points as we transition from supply cost recovery to now running the business effectively in what we believe will be more predictable conditions as we come into fiscal 2023. Accordingly, we expect a meaningful improvement in adjusted EBITDA and recovery in margins over time, and we remain confident in our plans and full-year outlook. In closing, our teams are laser-focused on addressing the short-term challenges while delivering on our long-term plan. We're continuing to face a dynamic environment. We're being thoughtful with actions to offset macro headwinds, balancing price, volume, and costs while we work to improve and expand our margins.
Our global strategic plan is in motion, and we expect the momentum to gradually build. Our performance-driven culture fuels our team every day, guided by our Saputo Promise to drive our growth and to deliver long-term shareholder value. On that note, I thank you for your time, and I will turn the call to Frank for your questions. Frank?
Thank you. If you would like to register a question, please press the one followed by the four on your telephone. You will hear a three-tone prompt to acknowledge your request. If your question has been answered and you would like to withdraw your registration, please press the one followed by the three. Once again, to register a question, please press the one followed by the four on your telephone. One moment please for the first question. Our first question comes from Patricia Baker with Scotiabank. Please proceed.
Yeah, good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for taking my question. You know, I just wanna follow up on that, discussion, that you just ended your session with, where you're talking about, that you see a clear path to recovery. Obviously the critical element here is getting those fill rates up, in the U.S., and, you know, if that doesn't happen, you won't be able to reach the target. You did say that you'd get back to normalized fill rates by the end of the year and a gradual step up throughout the year. Can you tell us where the fill rates are now, and did you have any progress of improvement in Q4 over Q3, or did Omicron, sort of, the variant, put a dent in that work?
Yeah. Thank you very much for the question, Patricia. I have the great pleasure this afternoon of being supported by Leanne Cutts, our COO of International, and Carl Colizza, COO of North America. Again, I am privileged to be with two individuals that are action-oriented people that are going to deliver results for our company. Before I pass it on to Carl to answer your specific question related to order fill rates, I feel very, very optimistic about this year. The mood, the tone, the focus, the understanding of where our business is at is so much more clear this year than it was last year as the economies were opening up.
If you recall last year when the economies were opening up, many companies were looking for labor, many companies had to get product to market in terms of supply chain and distribution, and it seems like everybody was looking for the same resources all at the same time, all the while demand was rampant and very, very strong. This year our sights are clear about our realistic headwinds, but also very clear about our mitigating factors and what we need to do to make sure that we have success. On that note, I'm gonna pass it on to Carl. He'll talk to you a little bit about maybe some of the success that we've had in getting up in terms of more respectable levels of order fill rates. Carl?
Thank you, Lino. So more specifically in the U.S., we've made some significant progress post Omicron, which was certainly a handicap for us in January and February. We've since rebounded. You know, the contributors to a positive fill rate and to continue on the momentum that we have right now really lies in a few factors. The first one is continuing to be successful with hiring and filling the vacancies that we have across our operations. We are making some progress in that space, both from attracting the talent as much as it is retaining the talent.
As that progresses, we will also see, with a reduced turnover, a greater proficiency, and then ultimately a better OEE, if you like, from our operating platform, which will contribute to continuing with our positive fill rate momentum. The other aspect I would also say is that the demand from the marketplace is beginning to stabilize, becoming a little bit more predictable in nature, and that has lots of positive effects in our planning. Makes planning more efficient for us and accordingly our operations. A combination of these factors and the continued momentum here, we are confident that our fill rates will, by year-end, get back to historical levels.
Patricia, I'm gonna add one other question that you didn't ask directly, but indirectly. Clear path to recovery also includes Australia. You know, if I look back at last year, Canada, Argentina, and U.K. performed relatively well. The two rough spots were USA, which Carl talked about. I'd like Leanne to talk about what our recovery plan for this fiscal year is specifically for Australia.
Thank you, Lino. Yes, for SDA, the key opportunity there is around managing our milk intake. The market for supplier milk, we know remains extremely competitive in Australia. We have set a strong opening milk price for the new 2022 and 2023 season, and we do expect competition to remain strong. At the same time, we recently announced streamlining our operations in two of our manufacturing facilities in Australia, and as part of our four-year plan, we'll continue to review that network to reflect the available milk supply and what we need over the next few years.
I hope we went above and beyond your question, Patricia, and satisfied your curiosity.
Absolutely. Thank you to all three of you. I'll get back in the queue.
Thank you very much.
Our next question comes from Michael Van Aelst with TD Cowen. Please proceed.
Hi, good afternoon. You talked about announcing price increases to your customer base, I guess it was over the course of fiscal 2022. The latest price increases that you expect to allow you to catch up to the cost inflation, can you go geography by geography and let us know when these are going to become effective?
Certainly we'll do that. We'll start off with Leanne in your geographies, and then we'll go to Carl with North America.
Yeah. We are often first to market with price increases in our industries in the U.K., Australia, and Argentina. Yes, we have seen increases in a number of our costs, both milk and non-milk. We have a process to recover those costs that's well understood by our key retailers. In Argentina, we are used to managing hyperinflation. In the U.K. and Australia, we do have a process. It's well understood, and we are in the process of recovering those input costs. We are seeing our retail customers do accept that principle of inflation. We are seeing a very rational response, and that's becoming business as usual for us to recover costs regularly.
The next round of increases, maybe more specifically, Leanne?
At the moment in the U.K., our price increase goes effective this week. In Australia, it will be in the second quarter.
Michael, what you're seeing is a little bit of a change from last fiscal year where we were playing defense. Now we're playing offense. We are progressive, and we're proactive at passing the increases that we need to pass, irrespective of what impact that might have on volume, but we don't suspect that volume will be impacted greatly. Maybe on that note, I'll pass it to Carl for Canada and the United States.
Thank you. Let's start with Canada. The last price increase was effective in February, in line with the annual CDC price increases. Currently, there is discussions about a mid-cycle increase in Canada on the milk front with the CDC. The likelihood of that is high and it would be effective in August, and we will absolutely be recovering costs from our milk price inputs. In the U.S., back in January, we had announced price increases that came into effect mid-April. We have materialized on those price increases. Inflation has continued to put lots of pressure on our overall costs of goods. We have announced early May, effective July 5th, another round of price increases in the U.S.
That has been communicated to our customer base, and we are taking pricing, and next pricing action will be July 5th.
You see, Michael, in Q1 of this year, we are seeing some of the benefit of those price increases we took in January. Starting into Q2, there is going to be further price action. Again, we're playing offense now.
Playing offense means you're looking ahead to the cost that you have coming, and you're passing that on now.
That is correct.
If you combine these price increases that have been announced and are and should become effective with the film rate improvement that you expect during the year, is that enough to get you back to, say, fiscal 2021 profitability?
That is the plan, yes. When we talk about a recovery year, it's getting back to plan to where we were. Setting our sights on fiscal 2024, where some of the capital expenditure will come to fruition in terms of equipment installation and then catapult us into achieving the numbers we need and we're expecting within the four-year track plan.
Okay, great. Thank you. I'll get back in the queue.
All right, Michael. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Irene Nattel with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Thanks, good afternoon, everyone. A couple of questions essentially on similar topics. If we look at the U.S., if I went back even a year and said, "You're gonna have a 2.4% EBITDA margin in the U.S.," I think you would say, "Well, I don't even see how that happens," or maybe not. What is reasonable to expect in terms of cadence of recovery? What do you think, I guess, a new normal EBITDA margin level would be in the U.S.?
Yeah. Irene, as we've mentioned in the past, the EBITDA margin is not apples to apples comparable, and I'll explain why, and you're probably very familiar with this. The higher the block price is, the lower the margin will be, only with the same amount of EBITDA cash generation. Our real focus is on EBITDA cash generation. To answer your questions under these markets and these block prices, I would say about a 9% EBITDA margin collective for the U.S. platform would be reasonable. That would be different from in different geographies because of the profile of our business, branding versus non-branding, retail versus food service and industrial. I would say if your question was specific to the U.S., under the current block market environment, I'd say about 9-ish% would be reasonable.
That's very helpful. Is that 9% the fiscal 2025 target? Like, how should we think about the path from here to there? Assuming the prices, the price increases that you've taken hold and assuming you can get your fill rates up, we won't hold you to this, but just trying to understand what the slope of that line looks like, Lino, 'cause obviously the U.S. is a big market, right? What is reasonable to expect in fiscal 2023?
For me, the focus that I have and what I'm pressing upon Carl and his team is the cash generation EBITDA, but I'll pass it on to Max to talk about the percentage allocation by fiscal 2025.
Okay. Good afternoon, Irene. When we look at the recovery year for FY 2023, we can look at it from three big buckets. The first bucket's around price increase, is something that we are looking to not be lagging on as of Q1. All the shortfall that we've seen in fiscal year 2022 is not gonna reoccur in FY 2023, and that's a big bucket that will help to bring us to those FY 2021 level. The other big bucket is around all of the efficiencies within our operation. It has to do with, you know, I would put that bucket around volume and stability of us supplying the market and that sort of thing.
We do see in that bucket an improvement from quarter to quarter, so not fully built into, you know, the Q1, but we see a ramp up. Other elements to factor in when we look at the fiscal 2023 elements around market. We do see international market remaining to the level that they are currently within the Q4 results. We don't see sign of a dip whatsoever. This will help us to get to the level of fiscal 2023 alongside with the contribution of our acquisition. We get into the year two within fiscal 2023. We expect an upside on that front.
Those would be the big buckets to bridge FY 2022 to FY 2023, with a gradual ramp up from quarter to quarter, specifically around operational improvement, fill rate, and labor-related issues.
That's really helpful. Thank you. If I could just come back to the whole notion of I guess demand inelasticity or elasticity. We've seen, you know, some pretty aggressive price here in Canada, you know, let's call it milk price CAD 8.5, retail prices, you know, that plus a little bit more. You said you're gonna take another round. Consumers are facing all kinds of, you know, personal cost increases. How confident are you that we won't start to see volume? What's the response been at food service, and in sort of the others, I guess, each of the three segments to the idea of cost increases?
Yeah. I'll take that question on a division by division basis. We'll start off with Carl.
Yes. I think, Irene, your question is specific to the U.S., so I'll start.
U.S. and Canada as well, because there might be another milk price increase as well in Canada.
Yeah. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, Canada as well.
I'll speak to the U.S. first. I would say that, you know, dairy still continues to be, you know, on a pound for pound basis of protein, still a value for the consumer. Accordingly, we do feel strongly that despite the pricing pressures and the general economy, dairy will continue to fare well, in this space. Dairy plays in a number of channels and in a number of occasions throughout the day. What we will likely see is a shift in where consumers are procuring their dairy, how they're procuring it throughout the day. The diversification of our portfolio, both in Canada and the U.S., will set us up well for that.
On an overall basis, I would say that specifically in the U.S. here from a pricing perspective, I don't see a demand destruction because of the current environment. In Canada, certainly dairy from a price point perspective is, and in a basket, more important than it is in the U.S., to the consumer. Once again, I'll say that, you know, the occasions for consuming dairy out of home and in home, we will likely see a shift occur. In Canada right now, I would say that from a food service perspective, there's still a bit of a honeymoon effect.
We're not seeing a slowdown in that space as we speak. I think that, as the summer rolls over, we might see changes to that as the continued inflation and economic pressures happen. A little bit like in the pandemic phase, we are ready to supply the retail markets as needed.
Now the rest of the world,
Sorry, Irene, did you have a follow-up question for Carl?
Yeah, I did. Okay, before we get to the rest of the world, and that is, you know, in previous periods where we've had a sharp increase in cheese pricing, has there been any pushback on volume from your food service partners in terms of maybe trying to use a little less cheese or anything like that?
Sorry, maybe Irene, I'll speak to North America because it's very similar.
Yes
In the service channels. There is some trading off that does happen at times, depending on price. You know, recipes can change. Customers may move over from higher cost or higher value cheeses, as an example, blue cheese to other products. We do see that kind of shift on a regular basis. Is it a potential as we move forward? The answer is yes. Again, our portfolio is quite broad, so we can continue to supply where the demand is.
Irene, we can go on to the other markets if you have no further questions for North America.
Yes.
Perfect. Great.
Yes, please. Thank you.
Thank you.
Irene, similarly, dairy remains an affordable source of protein in each of our key platforms in the U.K., Australia, and Argentina. In addition to that, you know, we haven't seen cheese category declines as we have put forward price increases. I think that's also because we have a very diverse portfolio of strong brands in these markets, and that enables us to provide value at different price points. For example, in the U.K., we have Cathedral City and now Wensleydale. In Australia, it's Devondale and CHEER. In Argentina, La Paulina. In addition to that, we're also successfully winning new private label contracts. What we're looking for in private label is value-added private label, where we offer distinctive and consistently high quality. It's not a me too, and it's very good margin.
We're able to operate this portfolio at different price points and provide different value for our consumers.
Irene, I'll add one more positive dynamic on a global dairy industry front. There is less milk being produced than there is demand growth. The markets have shifted to a very positive supply-demand ratio, where the dairy producing countries aren't producing quite as much milk coming off the farm, and yet demand continues to grow. That bodes well even on a pricing perspective and on a demand perspective and our ability to supply the world markets, not just the domestic markets. The arrows are pointed in the right direction for us right now.
That's great. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Peter Sklar with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Maxime and Lino, when you talk about the recovery you're expecting this year in the U.S. market, I'm surprised that you also, as part of that recovery, you don't need a turnaround in the cheese milk spread, you know, which has been significantly negative. I'm just wondering how you're seeing. If you agree with that statement, is that part of your assumption that we go back to a positive spread? How is that playing out? I think what's happening is, as you explained it in the past, is that, you know, the whey price is high, and so that's, you know, increasing the milk price in terms of the milk marketing orders. On the other hand, the cheese block hasn't moved up sufficiently to compensate for that.
If you can just talk a little bit about what your expectations are for the spread and how you see it unfolding this year?
Yeah, that's a very good question, Peter. If you think about the historical ranges in spread, and I'm talking pre-pandemic historical, we had seen, you know, upwards of, you know, $0.05 positive to $0.05- spread in a range probably within $0.10 there. What we saw in January and February, -$0.41 spread, that is unprecedented. In the current environment, we're looking at somewhere around -$0.20 spread, which is not great for our cheese businesses, but it still is better than what we saw in Q4. We're adjusting our expectations about spread moving forward relative to the new environment with the whey factor. I don't think that the historical levels will come back.
You know, the neutral spreads or the +$0.05 or -$0.05. It's not a hope that we have that we'll get back to that. What do we need to do to counterbalance that? Well, it's renegotiating some of the contracts that we have with some of our customers. Rethinking our pricing protocols, how we go to market, because it's a different reality today than it was even two years ago, three years ago. We're not hanging our hat to hit the strat plan for the spreads to come back to, you know, normalized levels of what we saw three years ago. We're expecting that there's going to be a negative spread. Now, -$0.20 spread still is painful. We suspect it's going to get better than that.
The indications of whey pricing is signaling that. You know, we've got to make sure that we're proactively looking at the things that we can control and omitting the things that we can't control. I think Max might wanna add a bit of color to that.
Yeah. Good afternoon, Peter. You know, from a spread perspective, looking at the current Q1, we're still within the range of the -$0.25, so we're still in negative territory. Our assumption is built around the fact that we would remain negative territory, but from a year-over-year, not to be as detrimental versus the prior year. During the course of the fiscal 2022, we were, let's say, on a regular basis, $0.25, $0.30 below the year before from a spread perspective. Now, just having some stability around, you know, a -$0.20, would provide us sufficient, not buffer, but sufficient room for us to be able to achieve our objective for FY 2023.
At the moment, when you look at Q1, we would be closing the quarter at CAD -0.25. If you compare to Q4, we'll be stable, CAD -0.25. It has some stability from a sequential Q4 to Q1. If you would be taking the Q1 this year versus the Q1 last year, we would still be negative. Last year was around CAD -0.16. Although that's stabilized, we're just looking for that stability that will certainly help us to achieve our targets. Hopefully that helps with.
Okay. No, those are good answers. Thanks. Then just one other question on a different topic. I guess it's for Leanne. Leanne, it just seems that Australia has been problematic for a number of years now because of the, you know, the inadequate supply of milk coming off the farm and the things you announced today, and the company's announced in the past, like co-packing and streamlining your operations and the more aggressive pricing. Like, it just seems to me that, like, you're just making the best of a challenging situation. I'm just wondering, ultimately, is this milk shortage going to be resolved in Australia? Is, you know, the agricultural element gonna come back and then farmers gonna produce more milk? Or down the road, are you gonna have to take more significant actions?
Because clearly, you know, I don't think Australia is generating the type of returns, you know, you anticipated when you initially bought those businesses. What's the long-term plan here?
Okay, I'll answer the back half of your question, and then I'll ask Leanne to give you some color on what she's seeing in the markets. For us, Peter, what we're looking at in terms of our Australian platform is not volume, it's value. I believe that there is a way with the amount of milk that we're processing or we expect to process to still drive very healthy profitability. If you recall, we had targets of about 2.7, 2.8 billion liters of milk to be processed. We're probably somewhere around 2.2 billion liters of milk. Still quite good amounts of volume. What is important for us is to make every single liter of those 2.2 billion to count for us.
The shift is going to happen, number one, at improving our manufacturing footprint to be as efficient as possible. Number two, to put those solids into categories of products that are gonna drive healthy profitability. It doesn't mean that we have to reduce our expectation for EBITDA generation because we have less milk. Now, let me ask Leanne to answer the first half of your question.
Peter, yes, as far as milk supply is concerned, we do see that being constrained. We don't see that coming back. The industry is down, and we don't foresee that coming back anytime soon. We do need to work with the milk supply that we have. Having said that, as Lino mentioned, we do have also a very diversified platform, not just for domestic retail, which is performing well, but also with food service and industrial, and also with our export business. With our export business, with the prices that we are seeing in the international markets, we are now locking in new contracts at better prices.
We believe it is a diversified platform that, yes, as we do, for example, around our cost price recovery, what we're doing there is being very, very intentional about recovering some of those cost increases, being more offensive, taking the offense around that and ensuring that we do get the right value for our products and our brands in the market.
Okay. Thank you. Thanks for your comments. Those are my questions.
Our next question comes from Vishal Shreedhar with National Bank Financial. Please proceed.
Hi, thanks for taking my questions. Just on, with respect to, some of the consumer changes that you're seeing, are you seeing increased demands for private label from your retailers? If so, is that impacting our margins or should we anticipate it to? Also the trade down from the more higher-end cheeses, is that a meaningful impact to margin?
Well, this is Carl Colizza. Hey, Vishal Shreedhar. I would say that in North America in particular, there are two things. One, we are already a private label supplier in many spaces. So we continue to have a healthy relationship there with our customers. I would say that we also have to be careful because for as much as potentially private label would be the go-to for some customers in tough economic times, it's also a question of supply. Right now, you know, as much as it is Saputo and/or other CPGs or food space, efficiency and, you know, SKU rationalization and all of the above are front and center for all of us.
Reintroducing, if you like, additional SKUs for private label space versus branded isn't top of mind and first on our priority list. Absolutely, we have a great customer base in the private label space that we continue to supply. I would say that overall, focusing on growing our private label offerings is not our first priority. Leanne, what about the other markets?
I'd focus here on the U.K., where we have a very successful retail branded business. What we are doing in addition to that is actually successfully winning new private label contracts. Now, when we talk about the private label in the U.K., what we are looking for specifically is value-added private label. As I mentioned before, where we can actually offer really distinctive and consistently high quality, and that's how we're managing to be able to win these contracts. Also, it's actually at very good margin. It's often at the high end of private label, it is difficult to copy. We are not going for a me too kind of private label. We've actually been very successful then to be able to optimize the full portfolio, both branded and private label in the U.K.
Okay. Thank you for that color. With respect to the U.S. segment, the U.S. sector, if you look at adjusted EBITDA, $42 million last year, $93 million, and $19 million of that gap is explained by market factors, some by FX. I know last quarter, Saputo was talking about improving labor fill rates, although it's a longer-term plan, and it talked about taking pricing, covering transportation pressure. I think at that time, you had said that pricing would cover inflation by the end of Q4 for what you saw at that period of time. I understand inflation has increased further. If you can maybe help me bridge, like, what...
Because there are so many moving parts, if you could help me bridge the delta of that, U.S. deterioration, which isn't explained by market factors, and maybe give me-
Yeah.
Some understanding of what the buckets are.
Vishal, this is Max. So there's CAD 19 million relative to the market factors. So that would help reducing the gap. The other two elements refers to the inflation that was not recovered, and it was in particular to the spike that the Ukraine and Russia conflict brought to the table. We were on our way to recover all of our costs, but that's a piece that ultimately that spike was not recovered. The other portion to bridge is around our overall efficiencies relative to our labor, the overtime that we have to absorb within our facility in the U.S. So if you remove the 19 or anything around FX, the remainder would be let's say half-half between price inflation and efficiencies.
Okay. That pressure related to labor, that's going to gradually improve through the maybe upcoming fiscal year?
Correct. Yeah.
Okay.
Specifically the U.S., where the biggest gap is with regards to the required FTEs, we are making headway here on a week-to-week basis with a variety of initiatives, both in recruiting and retention. Absolutely. I just wanna maybe call out that typically this is not a linear scale. You know, small improvements, small percentage improvements in labor can generate a much bigger return for us. It's part of the reason why we're confident in our fiscal 2023 objectives, 'cause we are pacing with where we need to be.
Was the comment that management is looking at where costs are going to go, and that's the pricing that it intends to take? Or should we anticipate if there's continued inflation, there'll be a constant lag effect as it takes several months to implement pricing to get caught up?
Well, what we've taken price action in April.
If the Ukraine war would not have impacted the supply of many goods, not just ingredients, but also packaging, we would have been caught up. As the quarter evolved, we realized that inflation was continuing, so we triggered immediately a price increase announcement for the month of July. Now inflation is not growing as quickly as it was, say at the beginning of the calendar year. So I think the increase in July will get us to an even level, I would say perhaps. If inflation continues, we reserve the right to go back to market and take more price.
Thank you for the color.
Thank you, Vishal.
Our next question comes from Mark Petrie with CIBC World Markets. Please proceed.
Yeah, thanks. Good afternoon. I just wanted to follow up again on the whole pricing discussion, and you know, specifically your comments with regards to expectations that the spread would remain sort of you know, materially negative and below sort of historic levels. Does that mean that you've sort of adjusted your pricing contracts such that you can make kind of historic levels of margin at lower spreads? Is it still priced? I think historically you've been kind of priced off the block. Is that still the case just with a wider buffer, or have the contracts actually changed in terms of that pricing mechanism?
Yeah. We are reopening all of our contracts, and maybe I'll have Carl give some color on that.
Yeah. Mark, we still have a material amount of our contracts and supply that is based off of block. The movers can be on a weekly basis, monthly, and/or quarterly, even annually in some cases. Ultimately, our pricing is still very much a function of that block price. Despite the negative spread is one of the elements that contributes to our overall COGS. We are looking at pricing somewhat differently, and some of that is in and around what it is we charge for the services around supply. There are a number of things that we're looking at. To further Lino's point on contracts, of course, the spirit and the intent of a contract tend to reflect the environment in which you're operating in.
A lot of those terms and conditions, for the most part, no longer apply. We are having healthy conversations with our customers about ensuring that we can have conditions that are sustainable for the two of us. A combination of those things make the spread, I'll say, more tenable for us. Nonetheless, we continue to focus on the most controllable aspects of our operations, which is our overall OEE and fill rate.
Yeah. Okay. Makes sense. Do those conversations or those adjustments, are they easier or more difficult in different channels? I guess specifically retail and food service.
They're never easy to start. Selling off the block is typically not a retail sort of pricing protocol. I'd say that it's more of an industrial channel and food service channel. You know, when you have a branded product, it tends to be more fixed price in nature. I guess the short answer is that they're tough conversations no matter who or what channel you're in.
Yeah. Okay. Understood. Also, I just wanted to follow up on the fill rate, or service level kind of conversation. In the last couple of quarters, you've sort of given us a sense of where you were. I think, you know, at Q3, you had said sort of now around 93%, 94% for U.S. fill rates. Is that kind of where you are or you're sort of, you know, I think adding a percent or maybe improving by a percent each quarter? Is that the idea or where are you at today?
Yeah, your recollection is correct, and we are slightly ahead of that, as we move forward, here in week eight of our fiscal 2023. We are making progress. The number is higher than the one you've quoted. We still see a clear path to making a material change here in our fill rates. It is embedded in us filling our vacancies, stabilization of the demand. Those factors will be key for us as well as maybe one item I didn't speak to earlier. On the supply chain front, so the logistics, the transportation, we are seeing availability of freight lanes and labor, so truck drivers or other, being.
Actually, I'll say even much more favorable than what we experienced all of last year and in the early part of this calendar year. Those three elements combined, we feel confident that our fill rates will be back to what our targeted expectations are.
Okay, thanks. I did just wanna ask one other question. Just with regards to your sort of fiscal 2025 earnings target, what kind of assumptions about the commodity market are sort of embedded into that? Can you give us a sense of the impact that, you know, between here and there in terms of dollars, that kind of normalized commodity environment, you know, if that is the assumption, what that would actually mean, you know, on a dollar basis between here and there? 'Cause I know you disclose market factors, but that's relative to past periods, and I just, you know, I just kind of wanted to get a sense of that from your perspective.
Yeah, you're correct. The market factors that we're disclosing is always compared to the prior year and so on. The assumption built into the model to bring us to the 2.125% is whatever relative to inflationary costs that we are recuperating. It is the same thing with regards to commodity mill cost whether it's in Australia or whether it's in the U.S. or Canada or any jurisdiction. That, that's the basis of the assumption for us and to achieve the 2.125% and not get behind whatsoever any of those margin generation in that regard.
It implies that the commodity is neutral effectively in terms of your profitability.
The impact of commodities is absolutely neutral because we would have mitigated through pricing adjustments accordingly.
Okay, I'll follow up. Thanks.
Nick, there are no further questions at this time.
Thank you, Frank. We thank you for taking part in the call and webcast. Please note that our first quarter fiscal 2023 results will be held on August 4th, 2022. Have a nice day.
That does conclude the conference call for today. We thank you for your participation and ask that you please disconnect your line. Thank you.