Good morning, welcome to the Q1 2026 financial results of Żabka Group. After the speaker's remarks, there'll be a question and answer session. This webcast will be recorded and an archive of the webcast will be posted on the company website. By participating in the Zoom call, you are agreeing that recordings made during this event may be shared by Żabka Group. For those of you who are joining us via Zoom, if you wish to ask a question during the Q&A, we ask that you please use the raised hand function at the bottom of your Zoom screen, or if you've dialed in, please press star nine. If you already have a question, please do this now. Once it's your turn, the moderator will introduce you. Please then unmute yourself and ask your question. I'd now like to turn the call over to Filip Paszke.
Thank you very much, hello everyone, and welcome to our Q1 2026 earnings call. My name is Filip Paszke, I'm a director responsible for corporate development and investor relations. We have an about 25 minute presentation, followed by a Q&A session. I'd like to hand over now to Mr. Tomasz Suchański, CEO of Żabka Group. Thank you.
Thank you, Filip. Good morning or good afternoon. My name is Tomasz Suchański. I'm CEO of Żabka Group, and as usually, I'm joined today with two of my colleagues from the board, Marta Wrochna-Łastowska, the Group CFO, and Tomasz Blicharski, the Group Chief Strategy & Development Officer. Let's start with the headline numbers for the first quarter of 2026. Żabka recorded another quarter of growth, supported by both sales development and strong operating performance. Sales to end customers reached PLN 7.4 billion, up 12% year-on-year. Like-for-like growth was 3.2%. We also continue to expand the network, the main pillar of our strategy. As of the end of March, we operated 12,750 stores in Poland and in Romania, which is 1,393 more than a year ago. Profitability remained resilient.
Adjusted EBITDA increased to PLN 674 million, up 13.1% year-on-year, and the adjusted EBITDA margin improved to 9.1%, up 0.1 percentage points. Finally, we further maintain a strong balance sheet. Net debt to adjusted EBITDA stood at 1.1 times, improving by 0.4 times versus March 31 last year. Overall, we delivered solid top line growth, continued network expansion, and stable profitability. Quick word on how the first quarter fits into our strategic priorities. The external backdrop at the start of 2026, as was the case throughout 2025 as well, has been mixed. Consumer sentiment has remained broadly neutral, with some mixed signals linked to geopolitical situation. However, from our perspective, the key swing factor in Q1 was the weather.
January and February brought unusually low temperatures and heavy snowfall, which had an adverse impact on footfall. In March, the performance has been fully on track. Against that backdrop, we continued to execute on our growth pillars. First, network expansion remained very strong. We remain on track to deliver our ambition of 1,300+ stores openings per year in Poland and Romania. Second, like-for-like performance improved as the quarter progressed, with the underlying trajectory consistent with our full year ambition of mid to high single-digit like-for-like growth. Third, we continue to develop our New Growth Engines. In Romania, we reached 204 stores at the end of March with very satisfactory performance and expansion into two new cities.
In DCIO, we continue to introduce new services and solutions that strengthen our ecosystem, that Tomasz will give you more information in just a few moments. Overall, we continue to move forward across expansion, like-for-like initiatives, and New Growth Engines. With that, I will hand over to Tomasz, who will take you through the market environment and our strategic execution in more detail. Thank you.
Thanks, Tomasz. Hi everyone. Starting with the environment. In Q1 of this year, the broader environment remained broadly supportive to the growth, especially in terms of household financial situation assessment, continued positive real wages growth, and other matrixes. Having said that, at the end of the quarter, there is some increased uncertainty coming from the situation in the Middle East, which impacted the customer confidence, and also the energy price increase resulted in a slight uptick of inflation. Having said that, the theme for Q1 was what Tomasz mentioned, I also mentioned during the last last call for the annual call, was the weather.
The weather contributed to lowering of the entire market growth, with Q1 growth of 2.5% as compared to the 5% more or less recorded in the last year, as per the Nielsen data. On that backdrop, we continued to be the strongest growing channel and one of the strongest growing players. Our market share, similarly to all prior quarters, have continued to increase this time to close to 11% at the end of the quarter. We decided, given the kind of weather impact, to share a bit more data on like-for-like during the quarter, as you can see here.
Those for you who do not live in Poland, the first roughly 45 days in the month, sorry, in the quarter, were effectively what can be described as a winter of the century with very low temperatures, snowfall, ice, et cetera. That resulted in the traffic on the streets, foot traffic on the streets, and had a negative impact on our sales, as you can see here. Once the weather materialized, as normalized, we have seen the return of people in the street and our sales returned on track, as you can see here in March. We see that when the weather is comparable to prior quarter, prior periods, the sales dynamics is in line with our expectations.
Having said that, for the Q1 of this year, 70% of the days had materially lower temperature compared to last year, which had an overall impact in terms of the like-for-like sales. It is worth remembering, though, that the first quarter is typically the slowest, the lowest sales quarter in the year with on average 21% of sales coming in that quarter. Moving back to assessment of our growth, we continued to our strong expansion of network in the quarter. For the last 12 months in Poland, we opened close to 1,300 stores, one of the record periods ever, if not the record one. Similarly, we accelerated our growth in Romania with 121 stores opened in last 12 months.
We also expanded to new geographies beyond Bucharest and beyond existing cities, which shows that we are on track to increasing the scale there. Overall, our network for the at the end of the quarter was close to 13,000 stores. For the entire 12 months ending in March, we opened close to 1,400 stores. We remain one of the fastest growing retailer in, not only in Poland and in the region, but also in Europe. In terms of like-for-like, I mentioned about the overall weather impact, but obviously we also continued with our strategic initiatives and QMS is one of the strategic category for us.
This quarter, we launched a very successful campaign, promoting lunch meals sales on Thursday. In that day, during this period, the sales of lunch meals have grown to more than 500,000 units per day. The customers were not only coming during that day for these products, but also returning in other days and after the promotion was over. QMS was one the fastest growing category that we have observed in Q1. In new businesses, we opened a test of new sales channel, a smart vending solution. We installed first 40-plus machines, vending machines, which in many markets, vending machine is a complementary format to convenience.
For us, it's a first phase of test. The machines that we have sell QMS and beverages. They have a big screen and are integrated with our app. You can earn żappsy there. We are observing how what's gonna be the customer reaction to it. We're fine-tuning the operations model for this. We'll come back to you with a update on, you know, how material this can be in the coming periods. In our existing businesses, we have had a very good growth of Lite e-commerce both for Jush and Delio in the quarter. 9 million deliveries in the so far.
Lite e-commerce remains the fastest, percentage-wise at least, or one of the fastest growing companies within the group. Finally, in terms of Maczfit performance, so direct to consumer businesses, we have initiated at the end of the quarter a long-term strategic cooperation with Jamie Oliver, which is a well-known cook globally, he, who became a co-author of the meals. We use this long-term strategic partnership to leverage and increase the growth of the business forward. With that, in terms of results, I'm gonna pass the word to Marta to go through financials. Thank you.
Thank you, Tomasz. I will start with the key financial highlights for the first quarter of 2026. We delivered solid top-line performance, as both my colleagues already shared with you. Sales to end customers reached PLN 7.4 billion, up 12% year-on-year. Like-for-like growth was 3.2% for the quarter. As Tomasz already outlined, performance strengthened as the quarter progressed, positioning us well to deliver against our near-term like-for-like growth guidance.
We opened 435 new stores in Poland and Romania in the quarter, supporting our annual ambition over 1,300 openings, with a steady pipeline of newly recruited franchisees. Moving to profitability, adjusted EBITDA reached PLN 674 million, up more than 13% year-on-year, with the margin improving to 9.1% from 9.0% last year. Reported EBITDA was PLN 648 million, up 19%, and it includes PLN 26 million non-cash recognition related to the Long-Term Incentive Plan. As expected, for the first quarter, reflecting our seasonality, the group recorded a net loss. The adjusted net results amount minus PLN 51 million, an improvement of PLN 26 million year-on-year. This was driven by continued improvement in operating performance and a more efficient financing structure, resulting in lower financial costs versus the prior year.
Turning to cash flow and leverage. We generated positive free cash flow of PLN 28 million, supported by disciplined capital expenditure execution and effective cost management, despite unfavorable working capital movements related to store pre-stocking. Net debt to EBITDA stood at 1.1 times EBITDA as at the end of March, demonstrating the usual seasonal pattern, with first quarter affected by the repayment of year-end liabilities, changes in store assortment, and the inventory buildup ahead of the spring and Easter season. Now, key points to highlight in terms of our financial metrics. We opened 403 stores in Poland and 32 stores in Romania, putting us at 204 stores in this new market. For those of you who know Romania, we are now in Craiova and Brasov. We are happy with the performance of stores in Romania.
As we have already informed you, the number of tickets in this country has already reached the level we observe in Poland and is still growing. We are also particularly pleased with the performance of office location. As you may imagine, we are consistently fine-tuning our offer to best serve our customers in Romania. When you look on the table, the franchisee margin was 50 basis points higher than in the previous year, and that's a result of two factors. First of all, provisions for future payments related to inventory in the stores, and also our support to the franchisees in seasonally lowest first quarter. The improvement in gross margin, gross profit margin, was supported by, among other factors, strong logistics execution and disciplined cost management, driven primarily by lean transportation practices and continued optimization of order processes.
Another factor was improvement of energy efficiency in stores, which allowed for lower usage of energy as well as lower energy rates. Adjusted EBITDA margin was up 10 basis points, the solid performance of our business allowed us to absorb investment into promo campaigns, such as Thursday lunches that Tomasz described. We are pleased to see the benefits of our improved financing structure starting to materialize. Following the refinancing last year, lower debt margins have translated into a meaningful reduction in financing costs. It is visible in the profit interests. Interest expenses on our debt declined by more than 30%, excluding store lease interests, falling from almost PLN 150 million last year to PLN 104 million this year. Now moving to the EBITDA bridge.
Our EBITDA profitability held up well despite a challenging environment, as you've heard in the first quarter. Main factor taking the EBITDA up were sales growth, adding PLN 95 million, and a gross margin effect of approximately PLN 40 million, reflecting stronger profitability in Poland. The cost increase you see on this slide is a natural consequence of business growth, contemplated by some phasing effects between the reporting periods. The New Growth Engine result of minus PLN 32 million reflects an investment phase into Romania. Below adjusted EBITDA, reported EBITDA, as you see, was PLN 648 million, mainly due to PLN 26 million of non-cash long-term incentive plan costs. Those costs are lower in the first quarter this year compared to the first quarter last year.
Considering the IFRS recognition of LTIP costs, we expect to see those costs lower also over the following quarters of 2026. Moving to cash flow. On cash flow, we delivered positive free cash flow in the first quarter. Working capital was the main year-on-year swing factor, with a new net outflow of PLN 48 million in first quarter this year versus an inflow last year. The difference was driven by higher promotional activity this year and a deliberate buildup of inventory in the Żabka stores ahead of the Easter season, which this year was in the first days of April.
Due to timing of Easter, the inventory buildup in 2025 took place only in the beginning of second quarter, instead of end of first quarter, as was the case this year. This had, as you may imagine, an impact on our net working capital result. Looking at the table, free cash flow reached PLN 28 million, compared to PLN 91 million a year ago. In terms of balance sheet strength, we continue to support further deleveraging year-on-year. Net leverage excluding leases improved materially over the last 12 months. It moved from 1.6 times, that's at the end of March 2025, to 1.1 time as at the end of first quarter 2026. The slight step up versus year-end is consistent with the typical pattern, quarterly pattern.
Last year, the leverage increased similarly, as you remember, in the beginning of the year. We expect it will continue to improve in the following quarters given the expected cash flow generation in the main season, in summer. Finally, to summarize, let me reaffirm our medium-term expectations. On network expansion, we aim to open over 1,300 new stores in 2026, and we continue targeting more than 1,300 openings per year in the medium term across Poland and Romania. On like-for-like, we anticipate mid to high single-digit growth for the full year 2026, with normal variability between quarters and the same range in the medium terms. On margins, our expectations are unchanged. We expect stable adjusted EBITDA margin development at the top end of the 12%-13% range in the near term and in the medium term.
On the bottom line, we continue to expect a gradual improvement in adjusted net income margin towards our medium-term target of around 4.5%, with a stable near-term outlook following the step-up delivered last year. Now I will pass on to Tomasz.
Thank you, Marta. To sum up, the past quarter demonstrates the strength of our business and give us confidence as we look ahead to the coming months. With this, we end our presentation. We are ready to take your questions.
If you wish to ask a question, we ask that you please use the raise hand function at the bottom of your Zoom screen. If you've dialed in, please press star nine. Our first question will come from Michał Potyra from UBS. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Hi, good morning. Congrats on the strong results. Thank you for the opportunity to ask questions. I have three questions, please. The first one, maybe you could provide more colors. What were the main factors behind the gross margin improvement this quarter? The second question is again, I know you commented, but perhaps you can provide a little bit more detail on the increase in inventory per store this quarter, and should we expect that to reverse in the following quarters? Then perhaps the last question is on the New Growth Engines. The losses have increased according to the segment reporting.
I'm just wondering if you could provide some commentary or on what level of peak losses should we expect in this segment and when does the management anticipate a shift towards a positive momentum in that segment? Yeah. Actually, any color on Romania, like, you know, forward EBITDA on the store level would be highly appreciated at this stage. Thank you.
Thank you, Michał. I will start with the gross margin. As I commented during the presentation, the main drivers of the margin increase in the first quarter were efficiency gains. We have seen better efficiency in terms of logistics, our process improvements, as well as energy. It is also important that there was also some savings, like in some phasing between the quarters in terms of costs. Given that, I would like to reaffirm our guidance in terms of the profitability for the whole year.
We expect that the EBITDA margin for the whole year will be stable, in line what we on the top end of 12%-13% range, in line what we have seen last year. In terms of inventory, there may be movements in the inventory at our stores between quarters, and this results primarily from. It may happen especially before holiday or long weekends. As you may expect, the franchisees needs to prepare themselves for higher sales during the holidays and therefore they increased inventory. It is ordinary course of business, usual practice, and this may this will not change the trajectory of our results, like from the longer term.
You've seen probably last year that from the longer term perspective, the dynamics of both revenue and sales to end customers is similar.
Yeah, maybe a few words. You know, obviously, we are at the relatively early stage of development in Romania, right? We have 200 stores and we're kind of still building our presence and building out the functions and the required backbone to serve the growing operations in Romania. Obviously we're also very much focused not only on the growth, and we mentioned about the sales development, but also on building a profitable business, right? It is imperative for us, it's always our mindset to look at, you know, at the growth in the context of building the business that is profitable. Last year, as we have shared, the mature, more mature stores have reached and crossed the store positive contribution.
We see the positive momentum in other stores as well. Having said that, to get to full profitability on a kind of consolidated basis, including the headquarters marketing, et cetera, it will take some time for us, as we have mentioned in the past. That doesn't mean that the losses will continue to materially grow. That's I think important to mention, right? Because overall I think we are triangulating towards more stores, higher proportion of mature or more mature stores in the mix of the stores that we operate that, them, and gradual buildup of the backbone.
You know, from that perspective, I think you can draw some conclusions as to the trajectory. At the same time, in the NGE, we also have digital businesses that grow as well, and that there are different characteristics in these businesses. Overall, this format as we have kind of pointed out earlier, this part of the segment is a profitable segment and will continue to grow in terms of profitability.
There are kind of a little bit of a complicated tendencies there, but we do not expect this to be a material burden to, you know, to our results and therefore we can, we continue to maintain our midterm forecast as to the overall profitability of the group on a EBITDA level in terms of margin.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Elena Zhuravleva with JP Morgan. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Hello. Thank you for the opportunity to ask a few questions. I have a few, if I may, please. Let's start with like-for-like and pricing. We understand the weather effects and everything else, but you would have had some positive contribution to your like-for-like from the increasing share of the QMS category. Can you comment about what could have been the positive impact on like-for-like or what your like-for-like would have been without the effect of increasing share of QMS category?
Yeah. I think the QMS continues to be a very strong growth driver for us. I mentioned that it was the fastest growing category overall in Q1 and obviously, difficult to kind of get into more details given our reporting. We can say that in almost all the quarters that we have seen, if not all the quarters in the last few periods, that what I said now for Q1 was also the case, right? It doesn't mean that the QMS is a complete product, so to say, i.e., that, you know, the growth is, you know, finalized there. No.
We still kind of continue to improve our offering, both in terms of the hot food as we have discussed in many other quarters, but also in terms of the food, ready to heat type of foods that I describe now. What we forecast now is that this higher growth rate for this category will continue to be the case in the coming periods as well.
Thank you. I think what I'm trying to allude to is that you probably have pretty negative like-for-like in some other categories, and do you think that your pricing in general is adequate? Because if I try to square that with the very strong improvement in your gross margin, it's, if we take your franchisee gross margin and your own gross margin, it's like 31.8, meaning a 120 basis points increase year-on-year. Do you think that you're probably not investing enough in pricing in the stores, or your price checks suggest that it's all, it's all good?
No. I mean, we don't see a challenge with respect to the pricing positioning that we have and our strategy with respect to the pricing. We obviously, you know, the convenience channel is very much differentiated versus all other channels, including the discounters. There's only a 30% of overlap of SKUs between us and the others. We're very sophisticated in the way we price. We're using different methodologies, including differentiated pricing depending on the kind of stores, different promo mechanisms, and all of that suggests that we're on a good track.
Bear in mind that this quarter, you know, when there is minus 15 or minus 20 Celsius degrees on the streets, there is no kind of price that would you know, bring people on the street. I mean, this is the nature of the convenience business, right? A big part of the sales is related to impulse, right? To people being on the street and walking and being hungry or thirsty, you know, and popping in for small purchases and it's not completely unplanned. You know, this part of shopping missions is, I would say, impossible to kind of come back if the weather is very unfavorable, as we have kind of had during this Q1.
That is really a big difference compared to the big basket shopping where, you know, with the planned shopping, you know, it is a kind of, as we many times discuss, it's a different business.
No, that's fair. Thank you for clarifying. Again on your like-for-like, you've shown us the bars for January, February, March without specifying the numbers, but at least qualitatively, is April trending similar to March so far on the like-for-like?
Look, I think when we see when the weather is normalized compared to the last year, we see similar trends to what we have seen in March, and that gives us the confidence for the full year.
Mm-hmm. Yes. Good. Thank you. I wanted to clarify the question that Michał was asking before. We have seen that the contribution of your other revenue to total revenue, which is basically the inventory you have at the franchisee level, which hasn't been sold to the end customers yet, it increased significantly to, like, 6% of total revenue. We understand that it has been related to Easter. Is it logical to assume that in Q2 we're gonna see a significant reversal so that your revenue growth is likely to be below the sales to end customers?
Yeah, Elena, I think that it is very hard, you know, to predict the revenue, the value of stocks, like, which is held by the franchisee at stores. When you look from the longer term perspective, usually what we see given our expansion is that we have similar trends in terms of revenue and sales to end customers. There is also, like, inflation, which impacts the, especially the revenue. We do not expect that there will be a significant difference, but there may be some difference. Given that we had, like, higher growth in revenue this time, we may have a slightly lower growth next quarter.
As I mentioned already, we are confident in terms of delivering the guidance, in terms of, like both, sales and especially, EBITDA, which is important from this perspective.
Yes. Thank you, Marta. Just 2 more questions to you, please. Reverse factoring.
Mm-hmm
... as % of sales to end customers, have you changed anything there? I think the cost of reverse factoring was unusually low. Maybe you started using that less.
No, I think, Elena , that so you may assume that we have increased sales, so we will increase the lines of reverse factoring as well. It was in line with the past trends. You may see lower cost because we have the margin related to reverse factoring, which is based on WIBOR, so the Polish reference rate. We continue to work on the margin and try to make it as low as possible. Yeah, therefore those may be the reasons why the cost of reverse factorings were lower this year.
Um-
The strategy is the same.
All right. With regards to cost inflation you're seeing in Q2, can you please comment, so far, have you been seeing increased transportation costs or anything coming from your suppliers about price increases, obviously considering the geopolitical situation elsewhere?
Yeah. Elena , for us, the most important, like, taking into account our cost structure, energy is the most important. As I mentioned during the last call, the majority of the energy cost is hedged. In terms of other cost lines, we do not see very significant impact, which may have impact on our profitability. As we have seen historically, given the nature of the business, nature of the retail business in general, we are usually able to pass through the price in the cost increase into the final customers. When we see that, we will continue to do that as we have done historically.
Yeah, just maybe to add, there is the government introduced.
Mm-hmm
... in the last few weeks, some control over the prices of the fuel in Poland, so the impact on overall economy is kind of buffered by the government actions compared to other countries.
Yeah.
Thank you so much.
Our next question comes from Jakub Krawczyk with Oddo BHF. Please unmute your line and ask your question.
Yeah. Hi. Hopefully, can you confirm whether you can hear me?
Yes. Yes, Jakub, we can hear you well.
Congrats on the figures. Quite a nice print. I think you partially addressed my first vision, my first question, can you please give some color on the promotions, and how does the very competitive environment in Poland affect your corner of the market? I know you're trying to make the point or you're making the point, of course, you only share 30% of the SKUs with other formats. Is this on this 30% that you have this increased promotions, I presume they are perhaps related to the Easter season. I'm just wondering about, you know, whether the perhaps price elasticity of the consumer is changing and maybe the premium you're charging, somehow getting diminished or the willingness to pay a premium perhaps is getting diminished by some very active other formats.
Yeah. I mean, we kind of started answering your question earlier on, maybe to go get a bit deeper. You know, we have a very sophisticated, quote unquote, "machinery" that we use and know how to price because, you know, obviously the situation with respect to the Polish market hasn't really changed in the last quarter. I mean, it's been a, in a bigger format, so the big box format has been a competitive market for, you know, last 28 years, right? Since the company started to exist. Obviously the differentiation game that we mentioned has been developed in the context of this market situation, right?
We have different prices, we have different promotion types, we have many different mechanisms that we use to effectively be able to attract and retain the customers. One thing that is, you know, that the way we do it is actually to in some products which are kind of important for the customers, we maintain the some distance to the market price market leaders. That's one of the tools. We have not seen material change of the customer behavior in the last quarter or few quarters. Certainly not recently. That doesn't say that we...
It doesn't mean that we don't develop new kind of ways of, of promoting both in store but increasingly so using the app and different promotional mechanisms within the app, which are targeting the customer segments or, or even the individual, like, micro segments of the customers, right. We still kind of spend a lot of our effort and energy to do that.
Okay. Thank you for this color. That's very helpful indeed. Okay, just a second one quick. Do you see any effect in Romania of a weaker, you know, the macro, the sort of political challenges and maybe the slightly less confident consumer? Are you seeing this? Of course, it's very early days to look, talk about any like-for-likes, but are you seeing anything maybe on the newer stores, maybe very ramping up slower than the earlier vintage, the earlier, you know, expansion initiatives?
I mean, we're. I mean, even though we're I think the fastest growing retailer in Romania now with, especially with respect to the expansion, you know, we're relatively relatively small compared to Poland business there and, also we're relatively new. Most of our stores are, or if not all of our stores are still kind of on a ramp up phase. Even those that were opened a year and a half ago or close to 2 years ago when we opened the first stores, they are still growing considerably ahead of what would the mature kind of growth be for these kind of stores.
This is because we continue to significantly improve the commercial model there in Romania, improve the assortment, improve our pricing tactics, as well as we add services and many other factors, right? We see strong momentum. You know, of course it's difficult to talk about the like-for-likes, but what I can tell you that for these stores which are open more than a year ago, so the oldest one, the like-for-like is very strong and, you know, strongly double-digit. We don't...
In a word, kind of, we don't see it, but of course it's early days for our business in Romania, so it's more difficult to kind of grasp, you know, full kind of impact of what's going on there, because the growth path is very steep, right? Mm-hmm.
Okay. It's clear. Thank you very much. That's it for me. Thank you.
Thanks.
There are no further questions. This concludes today's call. Thank you everyone for joining. You may now disconnect.