The Chefs' Warehouse, Inc. (CHEF)
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Apr 30, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT - Market closed
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

Apr 29, 2026

Operator

Greetings. Welcome to The Chefs' Warehouse Q1 2026 Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Alex Aldous, General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, and Chief Government Relations Officer. Please go ahead, sir.

Alexandros Aldous
General Counsel, Corporate Secretary, and Chief Government Relations Officer, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone. With me on today's call are Chris Pappas, Founder, Chairman, and CEO, and James Leddy, our CFO. By now, you should have access to our Q1 2026 earnings press release. It can also be found at www.chefswarehouse.com under the Investor Relations section. Throughout this conference call, we will be presenting non-GAAP financial measures, including among others, historical and estimated EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA, as well as historical adjusted net income, adjusted earnings per share, adjusted operating expenses, adjusted operating expenses as a percentage of net sales and as a percentage of gross profit, net debt, net debt leverage, and free cash flow. These measures are not calculated in accordance with GAAP and may be calculated differently in similarly titled non-GAAP financial measures used by other companies.

Quantitative reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures appear in today's press release and Q1 2026 earnings presentation. Before we begin our formal remarks, I need to remind everyone that part of our discussion today will include forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our estimated financial performance. Such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, and therefore you should not put undue reliance on them. These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we expect. Some of these risks are mentioned in today's release. Others are discussed in our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, which are available on the SEC website. Today, we are going to provide a business update and go over our Q1 results in detail.

For a portion of our discussion this morning, we will refer to a few slides posted on The Chefs' Warehouse website under the Investor Relations section titled Q1 2026 Earnings Presentation. Please note that these slides are disclosed at this time for illustration purposes only. We will open up the calls for questions. With that, I will turn the call over to Chris Pappas. Chris.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you, Alex Aldous, and thank you all for joining our 1st quarter 2026 earnings call. 1st quarter 2026 business activity displayed typical seasonal cadence as revenue trends coming out of January increased steadily into February and March. Despite some volatility in business due to extreme weather events and the start of the conflict in the Middle East later in the quarter, our team's exceptional execution and the strength of our North American business allowed us to continue to grow market share, delivering strong year-over-year growth in volume, product penetration, unique customer growth, revenue growth, and profitability growth. Momentum continued into April, and we currently expect double-digit top-line growth to start the Q2 . Regarding the current situation in the Middle East, our teams and operations in the region, the immediate focus has been the safety and security of our people.

We have followed safety protocols instituted by governing bodies and are effectively navigating volatility in supply chains and customer demand. Our leadership and team members have done an amazing job managing both personally and professionally through the volatility and uncertainty, and we hope for a resolution to the conflict soon. Jim will provide more color on the financial impact in a few moments. I would like to thank all of The Chefs' Warehouse from sales and operations to all the supporting functions for delivering a great start to 2026. Our regional leadership and their teams continue to execute our strategy to leverage our investments and train the next generation of sales and operational talent.

They're accelerating our long-term plan as they grow deeper understanding of our customer base and become the ultimate specialty ingredient professionals marrying technology with industry know-how to become trusted advisors to the best chefs in the world. With that, please refer to slide three of the presentation. A few highlights from the Q1 include organic net sales grew 10.4%. Organic specialty sales were up 6.8% over the prior year, which was driven primarily by unique placement growth of 6.2%, specialty case growth of 5.7%, and price inflation. Unique customers grew 1.9% year-over-year. Reported unique customer growth was impacted by the attrition related to our transition out of non-core customer business in Texas. We fully lapped this impact starting in the Q2 this year.

Excluding this impact, Q1 year-over-year unique customer growth was approximately 4.3%. Pounds in center of the plate were approximately 6.2% higher than the prior year Q1. Gross profit margins increased approximately 53 basis points. Gross margin in the specialty category increased approximately 43 basis points as compared to the Q1 of 2025, while gross margin in the center of the plate category increased approximately 110 basis points year-over-year. Jim will provide more detail on gross profit and margins in a few moments. For an update on certain of our operating metrics, including continued improvement in year-over-year gross profit per route and adjusted EBITDA per employee. Please refer to the slide provided in the appendix of our Q1 2026 earnings presentation.

With that, I'll turn it over to Jim to discuss more detailed financial information for the quarter and an update on our liquidity. Jim?

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. I'll now provide a comparison of our current quarter operating results versus the prior year quarter and provide an update on our balance sheet and liquidity. Please refer to slide 4. Our net sales for the quarter ended March 27, 2026, increased approximately 11.4% to $1.059 billion, from $950.7 million in the Q1 of 2025. The growth in net sales was a result of an increase in organic sales of approximately 10.4% as well as the contribution of sales from acquisitions, which added approximately 1% to sales growth for the quarter. Given the start of the conflict in Iran occurred in the last month of the Q1, the impact to our Q1 aggregate year-over-year revenue growth was not material.

We estimate it reduced overall organic growth by approximately 50 basis points. Prior to the start of the conflict, our Middle East business grew approximately 11% in January and February versus the prior year. While there remains variability in demand and customer buying patterns week to week, these past few weeks, our business located in the region have been operating at approximately 75% of prior year. The primary impact has come from low occupancy in hotels and resorts. Our operations in Qatar and Oman are performing much closer to plan in prior year as they are less reliant on tourism than Dubai and Abu Dhabi. As I just discussed, our North American operations, which represent over 90% of The Chefs' Warehouse, continues to grow well above our guidance while generating operating leverage and compiling year-over-year adjusted EBITDA growth.

As the situation in the Middle East currently remains uncertain, we have run multiple scenarios of performance, in fact, in a range of possibilities as it relates to our forward guidance. At this time, we are keeping our full year guidance unchanged with the potential for upward revisions should the situation in the region normalize. Net inflation was 4.1% in the Q1, consisting of 1.5% inflation in our specialty category and 8.2% inflation in our center of the plate category versus the prior year quarter. Center of the plate inflation when adjusted for the impact of the Texas attrition, was approximately 4.5% versus the prior year quarter.

Gross profit increased 13.9% to $257.4 million for the Q1 of 2026 versus $226 million for the Q1 of 2025. Gross profit margins increased approximately 53 basis points to 24.3%. Selling general and administrative expenses increased approximately 10.5% to $224.1 million for the Q1 of 2026 from $202.8 million for the Q1 of 2025. The increase was primarily due to higher costs associated with compensation and benefits to support sales growth, higher depreciation driven by facility and fleet investments, and higher self-insurance related costs.

Adjusted operating expenses increased 10.5% versus the prior year Q1, and as a percentage of net sales, adjusted operating expenses were 18.6% for the Q1 of 2026. Operating income for the Q1 of 2026 was $33.1 million compared to $22.7 million for the Q1 of 2025. The increase in operating income was driven primarily by higher gross profit, partially offset by higher selling general and administrative expenses. Our GAAP net income was $17.4 million or $0.40 per diluted share for the Q1 of 2026 compared to net income of $10.3 million or $0.25 per diluted share for the Q1 of 2025.

On a non-GAAP basis, we had adjusted EBITDA of $60.1 million for the Q1 of 2026 compared to $47.5 million for the prior year Q1. Adjusted net income was $17.2 million or $0.40 per diluted share for the Q1 of 2026 compared to $10.2 million or $0.25 per diluted share for the prior year Q1. Turning to the balance sheet and an update on our liquidity. Please refer to slide 5. At the end of the Q1, we had total liquidity of $278.3 million, comprised of $122.7 million in cash and $155.6 million of availability under our ABL facility.

During the Q1, we made prepayments of $5 million on our term loan maturing in 2029 and purchased $10 million equivalent shares under our share repurchase program. As of March 27th, 2026, total net debt was approximately $522 million, inclusive of all cash and cash equivalents, and net debt to adjusted EBITDA was approximately 1.9 times. As noted earlier, we maintain our previously provided full year guidance for 2026 as follows: We estimate that net sales for the full year 2026 will be in the range of $4.35 billion-$4.45 billion. Gross profit to be between $1.053 billion and $1.076 billion. Adjusted EBITDA to be between $276 million and $286 million.

Please note for the full year 2026, we expect the convertible notes maturing in 2028 to be dilutive. Therefore, we expect the fully diluted share count to be between approximately 46 and 46.7 million shares. Thank you. At this point, we'll open it up to questions. Operator?

Operator

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we pull for questions. The first question is from Alex Slagle from Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Alex Slagle
Analyst, Jefferies

Hey, good morning. Congrats and thanks for the color on the call so far.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Morning, Alex.

Alex Slagle
Analyst, Jefferies

Yeah, I know, like, the Middle East, it's hard for us to figure out everything that's going on, so appreciate, you know, everything you provided. I guess, kind of curious, you know, you gave some color on the top line. What else can you tell us about sort of the profitability implications for the Middle East business specifically and kind of what's baked into the outlook? I guess sizing it up also, I guess it sounds like the top line is, you know, less than 10% and, you know, I'm not sure on the EBITDA side, if you could provide some color.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah, we don't, we don't necessarily disclose the percent of EBITDA that they contribute, but, you know, just to go back to what we said, it's less than 10% of our overall business. It's a very profitable company. You know, we've made some pretty significant investments, and we feel really good about the medium to long-term prospects of the market and our, and our business there. Obviously, there's a little bit of a short-term bump in the road right now. But as I mentioned in our prepared remarks, we haven't adjusted our top line or our adjusted EBITDA guidance as a result. Like I said, we've modeled in a bunch of different scenarios.

You know, we generally don't change guidance after the Q1. The Q1 was so strong and the trends are, you know, continuing that obviously if the Middle East thing wasn't happening, I believe we would have adjusted our guidance this quarter. I think given the uncertainty, we're just gonna wait a little longer and see how things play out.

Alex Slagle
Analyst, Jefferies

Okay. In terms of the scenario, is it sort of assume recent trends continue through the rest of the year or, you know, several months, or what's the kinda rough timeframe?

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

I'm sorry. Basically, we would adjust guidance as things materialize, but I think the key point that we made in our prepared remarks was that over 90% of our business is more than making up for the minimal impact that we're seeing so far, from the Middle East.

Alex Slagle
Analyst, Jefferies

Okay, thanks. Just a second question on expectations for the summer and maybe potential for more domestic travel. I don't know, maybe that'll be a positive tailwind for Chef and sort of how you're looking at that important time period as we get up to the, some of the celebration holidays and then the travel?

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. I mean, Alex, I mean, you know, it looks really strong, you know. You know, again, I mean, we didn't really see the war coming, but, you know, things start settling down in the Middle East. I mean, the, you know, I think all our investments, you know, for the last, you know, 15 years are starting to bear fruit, and we're getting that acceleration of sales and leverage with, you know, the massive investments we've made to build this thing. You know, a little up or down, you know, with travel or, you know, more people going out. We just see a very strong, you know, field ahead of us.

I think we're taking market share, and we're just continuing to mature as, you know, obviously the small public company in food service, you know, dominating really the good, better, best part of it. We don't see a slowdown.

Alex Slagle
Analyst, Jefferies

All right. Thanks. Thanks for the color.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thanks.

Operator

The next question is from Mark Carden from UBS. Please go ahead.

Mark Carden
Director of Equity Research, UBS

Good morning. Thanks so much for taking the questions. To start, just another follow-up in the Middle East. Glad to hear your team is holding up okay out there. For the 75% number, it sounds like that's stabilized over the course of the past few weeks. Is that correct? Just as you think about the course of March, does that build in a meaningful acceleration post-ceasefire?

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. I think the best way to put it, Mark, is, yeah, we mentioned that the last few weeks our business has been trending at about 75% of prior year. We factored that into, you know, multiple scenarios going forward, different levels of percentage should the bombing start to re-escalate, and they're sending drones into Dubai. You know, we understand that there might be a downward impact. There could be an upward impact if things settle down. I think we've, you know, we've modeled that in and decided to, you know, to leave the guidance unchanged. That's probably the best way to think about it.

Mark Carden
Director of Equity Research, UBS

Got it. That's helpful. Any shifts to how you're thinking about inflation over the course of the next few quarters, just on the back of some of the recent commodity price fluctuations, and then of course, changes in the price of oil?

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

You know, I think, our teams have done an incredible job, really the last couple of years, but especially, you know, with our team maturing and the collaboration between our sales and operations, procurement and pricing. The work that we've done with our, you know, diverse portfolio of suppliers. As Chris mentioned, a lot of that is just that maturity and training and experience is all coming to fruition. They've become very good at managing through, you know, in-inflationary and deflationary environments. I'll just go back to the diversity of our product portfolio.

You know, when you have 90,000 products flowing through your distribution center for, you know, centers for a company our size and our customer base that demands quality and diversity of product, sourced from all around the world, you become very good at managing through, you know, dairy is deflationary year-over-year, but sequentially, the prices in dairy and eggs and other dairy products have been within a range that's very manageable, that you can provide your customer with high-quality products at a good value and still manage the gross profit dollars to what we need to meet our targets. I think it's just, I'll go back to what Chris said.

The investments that we've made in talent, systems, technology, and infrastructure are all continuing to pay off and allowing us to manage through those type of price environments.

Mark Carden
Director of Equity Research, UBS

Great. Appreciate the color. Thanks so much. Good luck, guys.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Kelly Bania from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Kelly Bania
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, BMO Capital Markets

Good morning. Thanks for taking our questions. Just to follow up a little bit on the CME business. If I'm just doing the math right here, you said it was a 50 basis point drag on top line for Q1, and if I'm doing the math right, I think it's around a 200-300 basis point drag, you know, into April so far. For your sales team to be tracking at double-digit, I'm not sure if they've accelerated or stayed kind of steady in total. Obviously, your North America business is kind of more than offsetting that. Just can you just clarify that math for us? Just trying to make sure we're thinking about that right so far.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thanks, Kelly. Yeah, look, I think we're growing well above our guidance and actually double digits with the impact of in the Q1, both the two storm events as well as the one-month impact of the Middle East. Those, those three things combined, cost us about 150 basis points on the quarter. You know, you look at our organic growth at, you know, 10.5%, you have the 1% wrap of, mainly Italco, you could add 150 basis points to that if we didn't have those three events in the quarter. I don't know where you got the 200 or 300 basis points. That's not what is happening right now.

You know, I think about it, if they continue to operate at 75%, as we mentioned, in April, we're still growing double digits with the impact of the Middle East. Obviously, we didn't have any storms that hit us in April. I think you can just get from that our North American business is so strong. The team is executing at a very high level. I think, the, you know, you look at the Amex data that comes out, the high-end consumer is still spending. What's happening in the Middle East, we're overcoming, but obviously we're hoping that the conflict is resolved soon and they can get back to some sort of normality.

Kelly Bania
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, BMO Capital Markets

Okay. Very helpful, Jim. Can you also just elaborate a little bit more color on kind of your different markets, your more mature markets, and then some of the earlier, you know, stage growth markets, and if anything is changing on how they're contributing to the really strong North America top line, whether it be, you know, Florida or Texas or New York or California, just any color on kind of how that split is contributing to this strong North America growth?

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. I think, Kelly, we've been kind of consistent with, you know, our observations that, you know, all our markets are growing. I think the obvious are growing even faster, you know, new markets like Florida, which, you know, still we're pretty new here, but, you know, we built our new facility, I think it's three years ago, and, you know, that has been, you know, over 20%+ growth, and we expect that to continue for many years to come. You know, as we continue to add salespeople and, you know, expand throughout all of Florida and become more of a specialty broadliner. It'll start to mimic, you know, our classic business, which is New York.

You know, the West Coast continues to mature towards that New York model. We still think that it's gonna double

Even though we're getting to a pretty good size out there, you know, Texas, we think is gonna be a top three. That's starting to have great growth, you know, and becoming more of a Chefs' Warehouse. The same in New England. The smaller markets, even though, you know, they can grow 20%, 30%, 40% a year, they're still smaller markets. The big markets are still gonna drive, you know, our march towards, you know, our next goal is $10 billion. We see a lot of that coming from the major markets. You know, Texas, California, you know, all of New York, New England, Florida, you know, where the density of, obviously, the populations are.

Kelly Bania
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, BMO Capital Markets

Very helpful. Can I just add one more on just the gross margin? You touched on it a little bit, but I guess the center of the plate margin seemed quite strong in light of the magnitude of inflation. Maybe you can just help us understand what drove that, how you're thinking about that going forward. Just inflation overall, how your customers are, you know, handling that. Sounds like the sales force is managing that very well, but just any color that you're getting from your customers.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah, you know, look, I don't think I'll just go back to what I said to an earlier question. That the diversity of our product portfolio, the expertise of and maturity of our teams that are, you know, collaborating to manage through that, they've done an amazing job. I mean, you know, center of the plate year-over-year, you know, it had some inflationary. During the Q1, the sequential changes in prices are actually deflationary coming out of December, you know, into January, February, and March. This is just a seasonal impact that happens every year. That played out and is actually a little more pronounced.

I think, you know, the improvement in margin was really our teams, really managing very effectively, through that environment, through that sequential pricing environment. It's just a testament to, how they've been managing their business.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. Kelly, it's a little confusing just to look at margin, you know. You know, you get some deflation, you know, we expect margin to go up, you know, just because of the volatility. Usually, when, you know, prices really shoot up, you know, we're managing towards gross profit dollars versus margin. Because really, you know, our basic overhead is kind of fixed, so it's really the gross profit dollars we take to the bank. The mix starts to change. You know, this is why, you know, the way the protein team manages, again, is towards figuring out how they can hit the gross profit dollars they need to run their businesses and, you know, produce the profitability that we need.

It gets a little fuzzy because the mix starts to change a lot when you have a lot of inflation. You know, we always say people start to eat more premium hamburgers than steaks, maybe at, you know, the non-steakhouse kind of dining out. You know, you sell more chicken, you sell more sausage. It's a big mix of products. Again, you know, the demand for the premium products that we sell, you know, even to, you know, I don't wanna say to my surprise, but it kind of plays into what we're seeing with, you know, the higher end consumers are not gonna not order a great steak because it's $5 more.

I've always thought that, you know, that consumer base, I think it's my 41st year, I have not seen that trend change, right? You know, gas prices going up, you know, $0.30, $0.40, $0.50 a gallon doesn't change a lot of that behavior, and I think we're just consistently seeing that.

Kelly Bania
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, BMO Capital Markets

Thank you.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Peter Saleh from BTIG. Please go ahead.

Peter Saleh
Managing Director and Restaurants and Food Distributors Analyst, BTIG

Great. Hey, guys. Congrats on a great quarter. I did want to come back to the conversation around margin. You know, your EBITDA margin this quarter was exceptionally high and much higher than what we were modeling, highest on record. You know, I know you guys have talked about maybe, you know, 20 basis points or so of EBITDA margin expansion every year. You know, if you flow through these numbers for the year, you kind of get there without any more expansion. You know, can you help us out a little bit in terms of, do you think that that 20 basis point number is kind of still the good number going forward?

Have we hit kind of an inflection point where we should start to see a little bit more EBITDA margin flow through to the bottom line? Thank you.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. Thanks for the question, Peter Saleh. Yeah, look, I'll go back to what I said. If we didn't have the uncertainty in the Middle East right now, you know, I think we would, you know, we usually don't, this early in the year, update our guidance. I think we would have, if, you know, if we had some sort of certainty around what's gonna happen in the Middle East. Once again, it's less than 10% of our business, you know, we don't know how it could play out the rest of the year. If it, you know, if it stays where it is or gets better, I would imagine we would be adjusting up.

You know, 25 over 24, we delivered more than, you know, 20 or 25 basis points of EBITDA margin improvement. I think, you know, to what Chris mentioned earlier, we're really starting to see the operating leverage from all the investments that we've made. There's certainly a really strong possibility that we can deliver more. It's just early in the year, and the uncertainty around the Middle East is preventing us from adjusting that up right now.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah.

Peter Saleh
Managing Director and Restaurants and Food Distributors Analyst, BTIG

Yeah. Can I just ask on the capital structure and share repurchase. You guys repurchased $10 million in the Q1. Your leverage is, you know, just naturally de-levering. Should we expect more share repurchase as we go through the year? I mean, how do we think about that for the balance of 2026? Thanks.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

I think we haven't really changed our outlook. We wanna remain, you know, with some dry powder to take advantage of some, you know, potential acquired growth that may present itself that could be strategic and accretive, important for, you know, our growth plan. We wanna continue to repurchase some shares opportunistically. And we may continue to, you know, very gradually pay down some some debt. I think we're gonna continue kind of the way that we've been operating the last year or two. Don't see a major change, but we certainly could allocate more towards share repurchase should the opportunity present itself.

Peter Saleh
Managing Director and Restaurants and Food Distributors Analyst, BTIG

Great. Thank you very much.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Brian Harbour from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Hilary Lee
Equity Research Senior Associate, Morgan Stanley

Hi, this is Hilary Lee on for Brian Harbour. Congrats on the quarter, guys. Just wondering, you know, outside of the Middle East improving, do you guys see any other potential tailwinds for the consumer?

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

You know, we're really happy with what we're seeing at this point. I think, like, a real possibility uptick right now is what we're hearing with the World Cup, right, being in the United States and a lot of our major markets. You know, we don't build, you know, we don't build these things in, but I think with, I forget how many, you know, millions of people coming in for the cup in our major cities, I think it's gonna be really good for our customers.

You know, we think the consumer of, you know, the restaurants and hotels that we supply, you know, the spending what we, what we see is strong, and we have not heard of anything really changing. We think bookings are strong, and our customers are optimistic. You know, we like the way, you know, the year is, besides the Middle East, we're really enjoying, you know, what we have set up to supply for the next X amount of years really lining up in our favor.

Hilary Lee
Equity Research Senior Associate, Morgan Stanley

Got it. Kinda just to follow up on that, like, have you guys ever seen or are you able to quantify any impact that you've seen from any other major events like the Olympics a couple years ago?

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

We don't really quantify it. Obviously, when there are events, whether it's F1 or, you know, something like the World Cup or the Olympics or other types of events, we do see a, you know, a temporary bump, but it's not something we model in for the long term.

Hilary Lee
Equity Research Senior Associate, Morgan Stanley

Got it. All right. Thanks, guys. Congrats on the quarter again.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Todd Brooks from The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead.

Todd Brooks
Senior Analyst and Managing Director, The Benchmark Company

Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Obviously strong results in Q1 in the U.S. Chris, you talked to the typical seasonal acceleration. Jim, you pointed to kind of normalizing maybe kind of 12% organic growth if you take out weather and CME. You talked about double digits in April. I know we're also going into a strong period here with graduations, Mother's Day, return of outdoor dining, then you just pointed out the World Cup. Are we still accelerating as we go into Q2? Chris, when you're talking to clients, just what's their outlook on kind of the how the table's being set for them for the next couple of quarters here?

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Cautiously, very cautiously optimistic, Todd. You know, I mean, the Middle East obviously was, you know, not in our plans, you know, because I mean, the business is really strong, you know. You know, nobody has a crystal ball, but, you know, we don't really see a change in behavior. I think that, you know, we've invested for more market share and be the premier high-end, you know, partner for the world's greatest chefs.

You know, there's been a shift, and I don't see that shift of, you know, consumers, you know, willing to give others other things up, you know, except for their, you know, extremely affluent, that nothing really is gonna change their behavior as far as, you know, dining out and travel. I just think the acceleration is, I think more consumers are choosing to, you know, for the experience, you know, the, for the travel, for the dining out, you know, for those sports experiences versus other things in the past, maybe things they would have bought or spent more money on. I don't see that changing and I think our customers are benefiting for it.

You know, we see a consistent investment in more restaurants, more hotels opening, more, you know, more parties, you know, lots of catering and, you know, more people visiting the U.S. on the high end obviously plays in our favor.

Todd Brooks
Senior Analyst and Managing Director, The Benchmark Company

That's great. Jim, just a question for you. Peter was asking the question about the EBITDA margin expansion and the profitability of the business. How much of this now is kind of related to the existing facilities that you've stood up just putting more volume through those facilities, versus how much is due to the investments that you've made around technology and process and people that you guys highlighted at the investor day? If you were attributing the gains that we're seeing in EBITDA margin, how would you kind of parse it between the two? Thanks.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Goldilocks.

James Leddy
CFO, The Chefs' Warehouse

We don't, Todd, we don't necessarily put a dollar amount or % of our accretion of either adjusted EBITDA dollars or margin to a particular bucket. What I would just go back to kind of what Chris has talked about in his prepared remarks and also, you know, what we talked about earlier in the call, and that is all of these things coming together. I think the investment in training in our salespeople, especially in the nascent high growth markets that we've put infrastructure in to give them capacity and folded in acquisitions. Then you start off with a young, maturing sales force.

As they grow, you know, with the leadership team that we have regionally, very experienced leaders that have run distribution businesses, food distribution businesses themselves, before joining us and know every area of the business from sales, operations, to procurement, to pricing, they benefit from that. As Chris mentioned, just marrying technology with knowing our customers better. That together with, you know, the infrastructure investments and just the experience and growth of our teams that are managing pricing and procurement and operations, it's all coming together. There's not one thing that we would point out that says, "This is driving our EBITDA margin higher." I would say that, and I'd ask Chris to add anything that he might wanna add.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. I think, Todd, when I look back, I think it's, what are we? It's a 15th year being, you know, public. I thought it would be easier at that point, but I think lessons learned is that, you know, to build something like The Chefs' Warehouse, it, you know, just doesn't get built overnight. You, you could have all the technology in the world, and it, of course, it really helps, but it's just so much more complicated. Like, you know, as you just said, it takes the buildings, it takes the maturity. It takes years to develop a team, you know, to win the Super Bowl. You know, it's not put up overnight. Even though you might have the talent, it just takes that long. I think it's really Goldilocks.

If I ever wrote a book, it just takes a lot longer, you know, when, you know, every time we go on a new path to build a new territory, it always takes a lot longer. To master a new category, it takes a lot longer. I think what we're seeing, obviously the consumer is, you know, our customer's customer is able to spend, you know, for the better things in life, you know, that we sell. You know, we sell good, better, best, right? I think people are really appreciating, you know, the mastery of these great restaurants and their talented chefs that are putting the food together. I think it's like an orchestra, right?

It has to learn how to play together and just get better and better. I think, you know, the chef, you know, The Chefs' Warehouse, you know, complete business, you know, whether it's produce, whether it's groceries, whether it's dairy, protein, I think it's just getting better and better, and I think we're seeing the results.

Todd Brooks
Senior Analyst and Managing Director, The Benchmark Company

Thanks, congrats to you both and the whole team.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you, Todd.

Operator

As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one. The next question is from Margaret-May Binshtok from Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.

Margaret-May Binshtok
Vice President and Equity Research Analyst, Wolfe Research

Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to ask on the placement growth, the 6.2% you guys saw seems to be accelerating. I guess, which lever is doing the most work here, you know, from your sales force to new hires or, you know, digital penetration?

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

I think again, it's all the levers that are contributing. I think it's a little bit of everything. Getting leverage on the new facilities, right? The more volume, more profitable volume we pump in, you know, you get a bigger bottom line. The technology adding placements is giving us an uptick, you know, growing into facilities in new territories. We're getting leverage. It's a little bit from a lot of different parts of the business that is giving us that, you know, bigger bottom line at the end of the day.

Margaret-May Binshtok
Vice President and Equity Research Analyst, Wolfe Research

Super helpful. I just wanted to ask on the M&A environment, you know, given what we were seeing with the macro and some volatility, you know, has that changed valuations that you guys are seeing out there at all, or the pipeline or sellers more motivated?

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

You know, we, you know. The pipeline is frothy, but again, years ago, we had to do more M&A to get into the markets faster, you know, to build a national business and now an international business. You know, we're not in need of a lot of M&A, so we're just very patient and, you know, we've seen some multiples come down in some deals that have hit our table. You know, we think that, you know, at a certain point, you know, we'll have some good M&A to add to, you know, what we're building. We're just very, very patient at this point.

Margaret-May Binshtok
Vice President and Equity Research Analyst, Wolfe Research

Awesome. Thanks, Chris.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Thank you.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the floor back over to Christopher Pappas for closing comments.

Christopher Pappas
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, The Chefs' Warehouse

Yeah. Well, we'd like to thank everybody who joined the call today and take time to, you know, learn a little bit more about The Chefs' Warehouse, and we're really proud of the last quarter and what the team was able to accomplish. We remain very optimistic about the future, and hopefully, this conflict in the Middle East settles down. We look forward for everybody joining our next earnings call. Thank you.

Operator

This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

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