Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Keurig Dr Pepper's Earnings Call for the first quarter of 2022. This conference call is being recorded, and there will be a question and answer session at the end of the call. I would now like to introduce Keurig Dr Pepper's Vice President of Investor Relations, Mr. Steve Alexander. Mr. Alexander, please go ahead.
Thank you. Hello, everyone. Thanks for joining us. Earlier this morning, we issued our press release for the first quarter of 2022. If you need a copy, you can get one on our website in the investor section. Consistent with previous quarters, today we will be discussing our performance on an adjusted basis, excluding items affecting comparability. Beginning with this quarter, we will also exclude the impact of foreign currency translation from our adjusted results. Company believes that the adjusted basis provides investors with additional insight into our business and operating performance trends. While the exclusion of items affecting comparability is not in accordance with GAAP, we believe that the adjusted basis provides meaningful comparisons and an appropriate basis for discussion of our performance.
Details of the excluded items are provided in the reconciliation tables included in our press release and our 10-Q, which will be filed later today. Due to the inability to predict the amount and timing of certain impacts outside of the company's control, we do not reconcile our guidance. Here with us today to discuss our first quarter 2022 results are KDP Chairman and CEO Bob Gamgort, our CFO Ozan Dokmecioglu, and our Chief Corporate Affairs Officer Maria Sceppaguercio. Finally, our discussion this morning may include forward-looking statements which are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially, and the company undertakes no obligation to update these statements based on subsequent events.
A detailed discussion of these risks and uncertainties is contained in the company's filings with the SEC. With that, I'll hand it over to Bob.
Thanks, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Our Q1 results reflect different stories of challenges faced and progress achieved across our portfolio. One common thread, however, is the continued strong consumer demand for our brands, as demonstrated by consumption growth and share expansion. In coffee systems, the story is one of accelerated supply recovery to enable us to fuel the continued strong growth of the Keurig system following our addition of 6 million new households in the past two years. As discussed previously, the December-January Omicron wave caused widespread labor outages that resulted in supply shortfalls in coffee pods at a time when consumer demand was at a record high. As the first quarter progressed, we accelerated our efforts to rebuild pod manufacturing capacity, increase finished goods inventories, and improve service levels.
Our first coffee pricing actions intended to mitigate inflation also began hitting shelves in the quarter, with single-serve coffee pod pricing up more than 5% at retail during the quarter, with additional pricing still to come. Across our cold portfolio, it's a story of continued volume growth at the same time we're implementing meaningful pricing actions, with the combination leading to double-digit revenue growth in packaged beverages, beverage concentrates, and Latin America beverages. Given that we're still in the steep portion of the inflation curve, the timing of pricing is lagging inflation, which leads to pressure on margins. Looking forward, we believe there will be an inflection point in which high current costs begin to lap elevated year-ago costs, leading to lower year-over-year inflation comparisons. At the same time, pricing actions will have caught up, which we expect will lead to margin recovery.
As we look forward, we believe our cold beverage portfolio will continue to perform well throughout the balance of the year. We are confident that our coffee production output and inventory levels will have fully recovered by the end of Q2. Therefore, we have increased our 2022 full-year guidance for net sales from mid-single digits% to high single digits% while maintaining our EPS guidance at mid-single-digit% growth. Looking at Q1 earnings and EPS, Ozan will discuss the key drivers of results in the quarter. The biggest headlines are the relationship between inflation and pricing and the investments we've made in the business, particularly in coffee. Taken together, we delivered modest net earnings growth and adjusted EPS in line with year-ago.
During the quarter, inflation, which was significant across the board, particularly for inputs such as coffee, resins, aluminum and sweeteners, as well as transportation and labor, approached 15%, which is higher than we expected entering the year. Within our segments, packaged beverages again reported another standout quarter, with net sales advancing 13% on volume growth of 5% and pricing up 8%. In-market performance also remained very strong, with market share growth registered in almost 90% of our cold beverage portfolio, led by continued strength of CSDs along with seltzers, coconut waters, teas, apple juice, and fruit drinks. Performance of Snapple and Core continued to improve from the material availability issues faced in 2021, with both brands posting improved market share results in the quarter and upcoming innovation and marketing plans for this summer expected to accelerate this progress.
Bai continues to recover from supply issues last year, posting consumption growth for the past four consecutive quarters. Margins for packaged beverages were impacted by escalating inflation, which outpaced the timing of pricing, as well as ongoing transportation and labor challenges. We expect new pricing actions already announced to the trade to be in market late in the second quarter. In coffee systems, we undershipped consumption with negative KDP net sales for the quarter comparing to 3.6% K-Cup pod consumption growth as measured by IRI. You'll recall from our fourth quarter discussion that record consumer demand for K-Cup pods was challenged by production shortfalls as Omicron-related labor availability issues combined with the delayed startup of our new Spartanburg manufacturing facility pressured our capacity.
We prioritize our service recovery during the quarter to partners and customers at the expense of our owned and licensed brands to rebuild our internal inventory levels. While that was the right decision from a Keurig ecosystem perspective, it came at a significant cost to KDP in terms of both revenue and profit. We made significant progress during the quarter in restoring our coffee supply chain with K-Cup pod production, finished goods inventory, and customer service all improving by double digits. We now expect a full inventory recovery by the end of Q2, enabling coffee systems to return to normal service levels in the second half of this year. Supporting this recovery is new manufacturing equipment we expect to come online as the year progresses, which will ensure supply to meet strong consumer demand in the second half of this year and in 2023.
As we continue to work on coffee recovery and rebuild our finished goods inventory in the second quarter, we expect pod shipments to remain below consumption. That trend is expected to reverse in the second half of the year with shipments outpacing consumption as improved internal inventory positions will enable us to refill customer and partner inventories and return to driving our owned and licensed brands through marketing and promotion programs. This will result in a much improved top and bottom line performance for coffee systems in the second half of this year. Pricing in coffee has also increased to mitigate the impact of inflation. Single-serve coffee category pricing increased 5.4% in the quarter as pricing actions continued to flow through at retail. KDP manufactured brands pricing advanced 6.7% in the quarter.
Given the escalating inflationary pressures, we recently announced another round of pricing that will be in market late in the second quarter. While navigating through the well-discussed macro challenges over the past two years, we have also maintained our focus on driving long-term sustainable growth through innovation, renovation, and partnerships across the full KDP portfolio. Although these topics have received less airtime in our recent conversations, I'd like to take a few minutes to do so now, starting in coffee systems. You'll recall that in 2021, we debuted a new platform for Keurig with the launch of the K-Supreme Plus Smart Connected Brewer. This is the first of many new connected brewers to come, including the K-Café Smart later this year.
Consumer response to our connected brewer continues to be positive, and we believe that we will have more than 1 million connected households in the next few years. In 2021, we also launched our popular Brew Over Ice feature on one of our smallest footprint brewers, our K-Slim Plus Ice coffee maker, which debuted as a Target and keurig.com exclusive. More than half of K-Slim Plus Ice purchasers were households completely new to the Keurig system. We will be expanding retail availability of this model late this summer. Next week, we are launching the new K-Café Essentials model, our first brewer less than $100 that offers coffee, lattes, and cappuccinos through a built-in milk frother. This brewer has scored an average 4.8 out of five stars in our consumer and influencer review programs, and we look forward to its debut as a Walmart exclusive.
In terms of coffee innovation, in January, we launched a Snickers-flavored K-Cup pod under The Original Donut Shop brand as an expansion of our flavored platform. This new product is already a top-selling variety wherever distributed with a national rollout plan for later this year. Lastly, we are pleased to announce that Community Coffee, the largest family-owned retail coffee brand in the U.S., will be returning as a Keurig partner brand at the end of this year. The relaunch of our partnership after a five-year hiatus is a testament to the quality, innovation, service, and consumer insights the Keurig ecosystem can provide to coffee brands. We look forward to working together with the Community team to help accelerate their brand growth.
Shifting to cold beverages, we're excited to announce that we have agreed to make a minority equity investment in Tractor Beverage to expand innovation in the fountain and food service channels. Available nationally in Chipotle restaurants since 2020, Tractor offers the first and only certified organic non-GMO beverage solution specifically tailored to food service operators. To enable Tractor to achieve widespread distribution across multiple food service channels, we have also agreed to enter into an exclusive sales agreement with Tractor that leverages the strength of our fountain food service sales team. KDP cold beverage innovation and renovation continues to be robust, and we have recently launched Snapple Zero Sugar and Snapple Elements, a new line of teas and juice drinks inspired by the elements fire, rain, and air. Snapple Elements line is made from all natural ingredients with no artificial flavors or sweeteners and less sugar than traditional Snapple beverages.
Snapple Zero Sugar is a rebranding of Diet Snapple, similar to what we've done with several key CSD brands, resulting in increased velocity. During the quarter, we launched two new CSDs, Simple 7UP and a new 7UP line with clean, simple ingredients and reduced sugar, as well as Sunkist Mango Orange to expand our fast-growing Sunkist brand lineup. Finally, returning this summer as a limited time offer is a fan favorite Dr Pepper Dark Berry, including Zero Sugar variety. The launch will feature promotional packaging tied to this summer's release of Jurassic World Dominion. I'll now turn it over to Ozan to take you through more highlights of the quarter.
Thanks, Bob, and good morning, everyone. I will start with a brief review of our first quarter business and financial highlights, and then turn to our outlook for 2022. As usual, we will be discussing our performance on an adjusted basis. As Steve mentioned, beginning this quarter, our adjusted results now exclude the impact of foreign currency translation. As mentioned earlier, our top line was again quite strong for the quarter as packaged beverages advanced a significant 13%, along with very strong growth for beverage concentrates and Latin America beverages. As expected, Coffee Systems net sales declined in the quarter as the segment prioritized shipments to branded and private label partners and to rebuilding inventory, which improved sequentially in the quarter.
All in, net sales advanced 6.1% to $3.1 billion, with net price realization up 6.3% and volume mix down slightly. Excluding Coffee Systems, net sales advanced 12.8% and volume mix was up 4.6%. On a two-year basis, net sales for the first quarter increased 17.5% versus 2020, with all four segments growing. Adjusted gross profit was up 1% in the quarter, benefiting from the impacts of the significant pricing actions we put in place and productivity savings. Escalating inflationary pressures combined with ongoing supply chain disruption and labor constraints were significant offsets as the timing of pricing continues to lag inflation. As a result, adjusted gross margin declined 280 basis points versus year ago to 52.7%.
Adjusted operating income declined 1.2% in the quarter, reflecting the significant impact of inflation, including the ongoing impacts of macro supply chain and labor challenges, partially offset by our strategic asset investment and other benefits that enabled continued investment in the business. Adjusted operating margin declined 170 basis points to 23.8%. On a two-year basis, adjusted operating income increased 6.7% versus 2020. Despite the inflationary pressures, we maintained our investment in brand marketing. In fact, while we reduced spending in Coffee Systems due to supply limitations, we increased marketing spending in our cold beverage brands by 7%. During the quarter, we also made significant investments to accelerate coffee recovery and get us back to normalized inventory positions and service levels to realize our full growth potential in the second half of 2022.
Those investments were focused on additional labor, warehousing, and transportation capacity. As Bob mentioned, we prioritized partner and customer brands over our owned and licensed brands for the long-term benefit of the ecosystem, but with a short-term profit and revenue hit to us in the quarter. These incremental investments were paid for in part by a $38 million benefit in the quarter from our strategic asset investment program, along with a $28 million benefit in non-cash stock compensation expense and a $28 million benefit in legal fees. Adjusted net income in the quarter increased approximately 1%, primarily reflecting lower interest expense, partially offset by a higher adjusted tax rate.
Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.33 in the quarter, essentially even with year ago. Free cash flow for the quarter at $632 million continued to be strong, driving a free cash flow conversion ratio of over 133%. During the quarter, further strengthening our cash position, we received a $350 million settlement from the successful resolution of our litigation against BODYARMOR, which was used to reduce financial obligations. At the end of the quarter, unrestricted cash on hand totaled $592 million. As announced earlier this month, we completed a $3 billion strategic refinancing, given the current interest rate environment. Since the time of the merger nearly four years ago, we have generated significant cash flow and rapidly delevered.
This strategic refinancing further strengthens our balance sheet and liquidity profile with extended maturities and more favorable rates that will lower our interest expense. Turning now to our segment performance in the quarter. Packaged beverages, again, delivered double-digit net sales growth with the first quarter up more than 13%, driven by favorable net price realization and higher volume mix. The latter reflecting continued market share expansion and strong in-market execution across the portfolio. On a two-year basis, net sales increased an impressive 21% versus 2020. Adjusted operating income increased 16.9%, reflecting the strong net sales growth and productivity combined with the strategic asset investment program benefit of $38 million. These benefits were significantly offset by the unfavorable impacts of escalating inflation and macro supply chain disruption and labor constraints that drove higher than anticipated costs to serve the continued strong consumer demand we experienced.
Beverage concentrates also posted double-digit net sales growth approximating 10% in the quarter, led by favorable net price realization and higher volume mix. The volume mix performance was driven by higher fountain food service volume due to improving, but is still recovering consumer mobility in the restaurant and hospitality channels. On a two-year basis, net sales advanced almost 17% in the segment. Adjusted operating income increased 3.3% in the quarter, driven by the strong net sales growth, meaningfully offset by the impacts of escalating inflation and a significant increase in marketing investment. Latin America beverages also posted double-digit growth in net sales approximating 18%, essentially balanced between higher net price realization and increased volume mix. On a two-year basis, Latin America net sales increased an impressive 26% versus 2020.
Adjusted operating income increased 13%, reflecting the strong growth in net sales, partially offset by broad-based inflation and a significant increase in marketing investment. Finally, coffee systems net sales in the quarter declined 4.3%. This reflects the impact of rebuilding our internal inventory positions, combined with prioritizing shipments to branded and private label partners, for which we receive lower revenue recognition per pod than we do with our own and licensed brands. In addition, coffee systems faced a significant comparison to the first quarter last year, when net sales increased 17%. On a two-year basis, coffee systems net sales increased 12% versus 2020.
We achieved higher coffee systems net price realization of 3.2% in the quarter, which was driven by pricing actions taken primarily on our own and licensed pods in late 2021 and the first quarter of 2022, combined with sequentially lower retailer fines incurred in the first quarter. Lower volume mix in the quarter of 7.5% reflected comparison to the strong 19.5% growth in the year ago period, and the impact of our coffee recovery program. Consequently, pod and brewer shipment volume declined 5.2% versus year ago, versus the strong growth of 14% and 61% respectively in the year ago period. Adjusted operating income decreased 24% in the quarter. While this performance reflected the higher net price realization we achieved, it continued to lag inflation and the cost of our recovery plan.
This plan, which will continue through the second quarter, accelerated customer service recovery to partners and retail customers quickly. However, it added significant costs during the quarter. I would like to spend a moment discussing our expectations as the year unfolds in the context of the first quarter. We expected the first quarter to be our most challenging period this year due to the timing dynamic between inflation and pricing, and in comparison to quarter one last year before inflation spiked, coupled with our need to invest heavily in coffee supply. With the first quarter now behind us, we continue to believe it will prove to be the toughest this year. During the quarter, we delivered strong brand growth, implemented new pricing actions, and delivered significant improvements in coffee production, customer service levels, and inventory.
As we look ahead, we expect continued strong revenue growth driven by innovation, renovation, partnerships, and are pleased that we will be in the position to invest in marketing to restore full demand to our coffee business in the second half as inventories are rebuilt. As discussed this morning, accelerating coffee recovery and investing in our cold beverage marketing came at a cost in quarter one. However, we had the flexibility to leverage our strategic asset investment program and other one-time benefits to cover these investments. This puts us in position for accelerated revenue growth in second half, including unconstrained growth in coffee. Looking ahead, inflation still looms as the greatest challenge and has proven difficult to forecast even for the experts. We continue to lock in coverage on all items where possible, have implemented additional pricing, and are ready to add more pricing if required.
We have and will continue to protect our marketing investment as we believe brand strength and its ability to lessen pricing elasticity is a key competitive advantage for KDP. As discussed on the last call, we also see the strategic asset investment program as an ongoing effective tool to drive marketing investment in an environment marked by significant cost pressures. Our confidence in our top line led us to increase our guidance for full year net sales growth to the high single digit range, while reaffirming our full year guidance for adjusted diluted earnings per share growth in the mid-single digit range. Supporting this guidance, we continue to expect the following unchanged assumptions. Adjusted interest expense is expected to approximate $430 million, including the benefit of our recent strategic refinancing, which was planned earlier this year.
Adjusted effective tax rate is expected in the range of 20%-22.5%. Diluted weighted shares outstanding are estimated to be approximately 1.43 billion. Finally, while we don't provide quarterly guidance, given the current environment, I want to share that we expect the second quarter to show modest sequential adjusted earnings per share improvement versus the first quarter, with more meaningful improvement in the second half. Specifically, we continue to expect adjusted earnings per share to strengthen during the year, reaching the high single-digit range in the second half, which would put us on our long-term algorithm for the period, translating to mid-single digit growth for the full year. With that, let me hand it back to Bob for some closing remarks.
Before moving to Q&A, I want to recognize Steve Alexander for his recent promotion to Vice President of Investor Relations. Many of you on this call have had the opportunity to work with Steve during his 15 years with KDP and Dr Pepper Snapple Group and have benefited from his strong understanding of the beverage industry. Finally, earlier this month, we announced that I will be transitioning my CEO role to Ozan Dokmecioglu at the end of July, and I will remain Executive Chairman for the following two years. This transition was designed to ensure continuity of leadership and strategic direction for KDP, as well as to enable dedicated focus on the new and very significant inorganic value creation opportunity we have in front of us.
I have tremendous confidence in Ozan based on working side by side with him over the past six years, and I'm excited about the opportunity to continue to partner with him, the KDP executive team, and the KDP board of directors over the next few years. With that, I'll turn it back to the operator for Q&A.
Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Bryan Spillane with Bank of America. Your line's open.
Hey, thanks, operator. Good morning, everyone. You know, congratulations to Bob, to you, to Ozan and Steve on all your new roles.
Thanks, Bryan.
Thank you.
Thank you. I guess my question, I have a couple questions just around coffee systems. One is just you talked about, you know, new capacity coming online. Just want to make sure I'm clear about when that will be and what point in the year do you think that service levels will be, you know, optimized, right? Are we still six months out, a quarter, you know, a year out? Just where at what point do we think service levels will be normal?
Yeah. Again, good morning, Bryan. Thanks for the question. Let me start with your first question with regards to the coffee capacity and the production availability. As we announced starting actually mid of last year, we were expecting some slowdown ramping up our state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in the K-Cups in Spartanburg, slowing down. During our last call, we also announced that Spartanburg will be turned on primarily in 2023. That was our stance. In the meantime, we also went through a significant consumer demand coming from our consumers. As we always do, starting last year onwards, we actually acquired new production lines utilizing the existing technology that we have. We were commissioning them as part of our ramp-up plans.
Therefore, 2/3 of that capacity already went in, and 1/3 is also going to come online in the upcoming quarters. Therefore, we feel good where we are with regards to managing our overall coffee production capacity. Also, just to add, you also asked the question when we will be feeling good in terms of restoring the capacity that we will be requiring and needing. As we spoke during our prepared remarks, we have seen sequential monthly improvements of restoring our production capacity. That includes inventory, our service levels to our partners, to our retailers, as well as our owned and licensed. We expect actually to fully restore our capacity, including all those pieces, sometime in quarter two.
Therefore, we feel very good where we are, and it took few quarters to go back to the levels that we were requiring for.
Thanks, Ozan. Just one follow-up, just staying with coffee and pricing. You know, we fielded a lot of questions about, you know, consumers potentially trading down and demand elasticity. But maybe, Bob, could you talk a little bit about how you see pods as a relative value to coffee away from home? You know, is that really maybe the more sort of tangible comp, especially since coffee away from home, you know, the prices and the inflation there has been pretty meaningful. Just trying to understand if, you know, we should. When we're looking at elasticities and cross elasticities, is it really away from home more so than people maybe trading up and down within the coffee aisle?
I'll start, Bryan, with in-home, which we think is very relevant, and we can talk a little bit about away from home. You know, we put in this strategic pricing investment over the number of years, and we've had a lot of investor questions about this as well. If you go back to 2016 before we implemented it, the cost per cup, which is the relevant measure of K-Cup pods versus bag coffee, for example, was a $0.30 per cup premium. We lowered that to $0.20 per cup during that investment, and we saw tremendous consumer response. Now we're moving up in price, but the game, as you pointed out, is really a relative game. If you look at now the difference today between K-Cup pods and bags, it's still $0.20.
We're maintaining that $0.20 differential while we're taking our pricing up, which we think is the most relevant comparison. With regard to away from home, it's hard to come up with an exact number to be able to measure that against. We know that we're talking about an average price per pod or price per cup of $0.50 for a K-Cup versus $0.30 for bag coffee. You're talking about a multiple of that, somewhere between 5x-10x, depending on what you buy out at retail. That gap continues to get wider and wider. We see as people get concerned about pricing, clearly there's a trade-off from away from home to in-home, which benefits the entire category.
Our price gaps versus other forms of roast and ground coffee have stayed the same at that lower level that we got it to in 2018, 2019.
All right. Thank you.
Okay.
Your next question comes from the line of Bonnie Herzog with Goldman Sachs. Your line's open.
All right. Thank you, and congratulations from me as well for everyone.
Thanks, Bonnie.
I have a few questions this morning on your guidance. I guess, you know, first on the top line, your updated guide implies top line growth in the high single digit range, you know, for the remaining quarters this year, plus some. I guess, what gives you guys the confidence that your top line can accelerate, you know, especially since, you know, I'm thinking about your Q1 results, which were driven entirely by price realization. I'm asking about this in the context of the increasing pressures on consumers and kind of a little bit of what you just touched on as it relates to elasticities.
Then on the bottom line, I guess I'm trying to understand how you're factoring in some of the one-time items, such as benefits from a gain on litigation settlement that you called out, and you know, continued sales leasebacks. I guess, you know, seems like these did help to drive your slight EPS beat in the quarter. How should we think about these items for the rest of the year? You know, how many points of growth do you expect from, you know, one-time items in your EPS guide? Thank you.
Okay. I'll start with the top line, and then I'll ask Ozan to pick up the second part of your question there. With regard to the top line, you have to pull apart the quarterly results by coffee and all other. The all other businesses outside of coffee, so that's LAB, BC, and packaged beverages were up, all up double digits. They were up in terms of pricing, but also volume. In fact, volume was up fairly substantially across those. Our confidence is not that it's just all pricing driven, is we're seeing really strong growth in both. Our expectation is that that continues. We talk about more pricing being implemented. Of course, we built our model around elasticities and the kind of elasticities we've seen and we expect going forward.
That's where we get the confidence on the cold side. The coffee side of the business, which was a significant drag on growth in the quarter, we know will recover substantially in the second half of the year for a couple of reasons. One is we made substantial investment in the first quarter to accelerate our coffee recovery, and part of those one-time benefits you talk about were used to fund those investments, and Ozan will talk about that in a minute. That acceleration puts us in great shape because as Ozan just said, we believe our customer service levels will be back to normal by the end of the second quarter, which means that we can have unconstrained sales in the second half of the year. We've been pulling back on shipments.
We've also been pulling back on promotion and advertising in the first quarter. We can go back to unconstrained demand for coffee in the second half of the year. The other point on coffee is we're under-shipping consumption for the first half of the year. That flips around in the second half of the year, and we have the opportunity with the increased internal inventories to restock customers, partners, and then again, be able to turn on the promotion and marketing. The combination of all of those leads us to the confidence that the second half of the year will be in that high single-digit range that we guided. Ozan, you wanna talk about the
Yeah
the investment we made off of some of those discrete items.
Absolutely. Thanks for your best wishes as well, Bonnie. Let me start with the strategic asset investment program, which we also define as one-time benefits that we have incurred. First of all, as you would remember, we have been implementing this initiative since 2019, there is no new news or no new initiative for implementation with regards to that. Over time, we have leveraged, as I was saying, the strategic asset investment program to cover investment and the significant inflationary and macro challenges. This is important to understand the sources and the use cases.
We also had occasional benefits that we can utilize in exceptional times like this, allow us to continue to protect investment in the growth of our business, which is super important to us, so we can continue to innovate and support our brands, which is one of the reasons why our elasticities have held up to this point very nicely. Going forward, as opportunities arise, we expect to use the strategic asset investment program as an effective tool for the single factor to drive marketing and other investments when required. Exact timing of these transactions is not predictable because we take an overall holistic perspective and on an annual basis. That's the important part.
I'd like to take the opportunity to expand for a little, for 5 seconds on the other two one-times that you have mentioned, which one of them was the stock comp benefit. Now that we have almost four years of history as a public company, we have transitioned to estimating our restricted stock forfeitures rate as opposed to actual events, which is in line with industry practice. Both practices are 100% in line with the US GAAP, as well as how our peer group is treating these type of expenses. On the legal fees, over the past few years, we recognize as ongoing expense costs related to our litigation against BODYARMOR. With the settlement agreement in our favor, we simply recognize the return of our legal fees to ongoing results. That will be it.
Thank you.
All right. Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Lauren Lieberman with Barclays. Your line's open.
Great. Thanks. Thanks so much. I was curious to talk a little bit about the going forward in terms of the announced management changes. I mean, Bob, as you move into an executive chairman role, I'd love to hear a little bit about how you'll be spending your time. I know it was in the release talked about M&A, but just, you know, where your focus areas will be. We've talked about the big, you know, kind of checkbook that you as a company will have at your discretion. Curious about how you'll be focusing those efforts a little bit more.
Ozan, I mean, you and Bob have been partners since the start, but curious also, as you're thinking about the path forward, you know, things that you think you can add, where you can add value in a different way than you already have been in your current position. Thanks.
Sure. Bonnie, for me, first, there's really three areas of focus as we go forward. One is continuing to lead the board, as we've evolved at the board over time from being closely held to widely held. You know, that also will continue to evolve somewhat over time. That's an important part of my role. Second part of it is working with Ozan on the executive team to make sure that the transition is seamless. That we continue the great momentum that we have on the organic delivery of our business, and I have a ton of confidence in that. Then the third part is to give some time and space for me to work on the inorganic opportunities, in particular M&A.
Wouldn't be a surprise to anyone that the last two and a half years or so have been very intensely operationally focused, very much managing, it seems like, everybody in industry from one crisis to the next. While that's critically important, and is the right priority, it doesn't leave a lot of time to think about and work on the strategic aspects of the business that require a significant amount of time, investment, patience, even relationship building to be able to do that properly. I'm certainly looking forward to being able to have more space against that while always being available to Ozan and the team to jump in and help as needed over the next couple of years.
Yeah. Also, thanks to you as well, Lauren. I'm sure you all know that we have a robust strategic plan, as we have all taken you through back during our Investor Day, October first last year. Obviously, I have been one of the important architects of that plan, along with Bob, along with the executive leadership team, as well as our board. I'm 100% behind that strategic stance. When you do the double click, you would see that we have great growth opportunities in coffee systems, doubling our business over time. We're recruiting new households, as well as tapping into our innovation, both in the brewers as well as the coffee beverages side. We still have some white spaces that we can fill in.
When we look to the cold beverages, again, great growth trajectory in front of us, so be it via distribution, making our distribution more effective, more impactful, as well as efficient. As Bob was saying, we have quite a bit of still white spaces in select brand groups, that will get us to new consumption occasions. That includes perhaps some geographical dimensions. Bob was also saying M&A. Therefore, as you see, it's a full package in terms of the growth trajectory that we have in front of us, which makes us obviously very excited and motivated. Our job is continue to execute very successfully against this strategic planning stance and deliver the business goals that we put on us.
Great. Thanks so much.
Your next question comes from the line of Kevin Grundy with Jefferies. Your line's open.
Great. Thank you. Morning, everyone. I wanted to extend my congratulations as well. First, I think just a housekeeping maybe on Ozan's replacement at the CFO position. Maybe just are you looking internally for that? Are you looking externally for that? I suspect it is both. Maybe just comment on, you know, sort of what attributes you're looking for for that candidate and maybe timing. But the broader question I have is really around investment levels. I think this is to kind of pick up a little bit on what Bonnie was getting at before. Excuse me. Just how you're balancing that with EPS growth.
Cause, you know, Bob, you've been really clear about your commitment to how seriously you take the EPS growth targets, and the delivery has been very, very good since the merger in what's been a really volatile environment. You know, with the one-time items now providing some help, the question is really around balance and number one, like what's in the outlook for brand support now? And what's your willingness to sort of commit to those brand levels? Or is there some element that you're possibly willing to pull back if needed to hit the EPS growth targets? Just the question's really around balance, what's in the guidance and your willingness to pull back if needed to deliver against the EPS growth targets. Thanks for all that.
I know there's a lot there.
All right. Ozan, why don't you start off and I'll pick up the second part.
Yeah. Absolutely. Again, thank you very much, as well, Kevin. On the CFO search, as we announced publicly, the decision was to go outside and recruit a world-class CFO. For the fact that in order to deal with the complexity of our company, but also, and more importantly, to bring a CFO that will be able to navigate through the future growth plus the existing complexity of our company. That's what we are looking for. The search has already started, and we believe that we will manage the timelines that we have communicated previously in terms of being able to recruit.
Yeah. On your second question, I think the simple answer is we take all of our commitments seriously, and we put commitments out there in a balanced manner. Think about what we delivered over the first three years as a public company. We delivered a 15% EPS CAGR while we accelerated growth, so we beat our growth targets. At the same time, we were more competitive in the marketplace, as evidenced by all the share gains that we had across the board, as well as accelerated household penetration on the Keurig system. We put in place a foundation that's now scalable as we move into the future. All of those were delivered.
As you can imagine, when we put that commitment out there in 2018, the world looked very different than it has over the past three years. Yet we've been able to balance across all of those without optimizing one metric at the expense of the other. We were able to deliver balanced performance. That's exactly the way we look at it going forward. One thing I would point out is that early, back in October 2021, we saw a lot of challenges in the macro environment in 2022, and therefore, we said that we would be on mid-single-digit EPS growth in 2022. We're pleased that we did that given what has materialized since then. Now we're in this mode of balancing investment and growth. You can see we've taken our growth expectations up.
It's not just pricing driven, it's volume and pricing. We make investments in brands. We mentioned on our Q1 call, our cold business investment in marketing was up during the quarter. Even though it was an incredibly challenging quarter, we spent more. The one-timers you're talking about, I would suggest we not focus on any one quarter. You have to look at those. I put those mostly in the category of normal business, especially when you look at it over time. We're just incredibly transparent about those. Anytime they hit in one quarter, we tend to over-focus on those, and then we don't talk about them as a group when they're not, or it's an unfavorable comparison versus a year ago. We never get any questions about those.
Just look at it over the period of a year. The fact that we have some of these items to double down on investments in our brands as well as in accelerating our coffee recovery allows us to have the confidence in the balanced delivery that we've committed to.
Very good. Thank you both. Good luck.
Okay. All right. Thank you.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Chris Carey with Wells Fargo Securities. Your line's open.
Hi, good morning.
Morning.
Morning, Chris.
I just wanted to follow up quickly on the M&A commentary, Bob, with your new role, and then I'll ask a question on coffee. Just around, you know, M&A and priorities, you know, clearly the Tractor investment is on the smaller side, but potentially interesting over a long time period. Historically, you've talked about reticence for large scale M&A. Would we expect these types of deals to be more on your radar or are you open to, you know, larger deals if the category or geography fits? Kind of following up on the prior line of thinking there.
Just on the coffee side of the business, I think you said that your own, you know, portfolio pricing was in the 6% range, which is ahead of what you did in the quarter with coffee. Were there any, you know, service charges that impacted you in the quarter? Can you just expand on, you know, the partner brand pricing and when you would expect total coffee systems pricing to better approximate what you're doing from an owned perspective? Really what I'm trying to get at there is just if you're pricing and you're not, you know, expanding price gaps too much. Thanks so much.
Sure. First thing is our reticence, I think is the word they used on large deals, was not on large deals. Our reticence is on overpaying for large deals. It's not about the size, it's about the multiple. I think that we're in an environment now where we're seeing all kinds of valuations shift. Investors are more in favor of paying for cash flow and earnings than just a multiple of sales with no earnings potential in them. That may present some interesting opportunities. What I would point out is that the way we think about inorganic is across the range of partnerships, like we just announced with Community, which is a huge win for Community and a huge win for us to be working together again.
We don't need to own that business by any means to have the benefits of that. Likewise, by partnering with us, they win as well. We can make seed investments, as we announced today on Tractor Beverage, which is small today, but we will certainly accelerate it. It's in a unique channel, in fountain food service, which is one that we are incredibly strong, but yet haven't done a deal like this in that channel before. Then we're also looking at mid and larger scale M&A as well. I would say we have a consistent dialogue with a large number of potential partners.
Can't get into the details of that, but the fact that we are in this position when we talk about businesses like Community and Tractor is good evidence that how we think about being proactive and creative in our partnerships. With regard to coffee pricing, again, the category is up 5%, you know, or a little over 5%, and we were up a little bit more than that. Again, I wouldn't overreact to any one move in the quarter. Sometimes that's mixed. Actually, if you break it apart further, the area that has moved late is private label within pods. So premium brands have actually moved substantially. The mainstream brands, where we're a heavy participant in with our own and license, have all moved about the same level.
There was a late move in private label, but they can't avoid the price of coffee, and now you're seeing pricing coming up on that. We're not seeing any distortion in the gaps between private label, mainstream, and premium in pods sticking for any time period.
Thanks, Bob.
Okay.
Your next question comes from the line of Andrea Teixeira with J.P. Morgan. Your line's open.
Hi, good morning, everyone. I will echo all the congrats and best wishes to Bob, Ozan, and Steve. I wanted to just break down a bit on the new guidance in four. Isn't that conservative still, given that volumes will likely recover from here on the shipment comments in hot beverages and perhaps call it low single at this point? Your price mix should accelerate from the 6% that you posted so far. Isn't that potentially like an upside for that? We should be thinking in the high single and with the visibility that you have now in terms of costs, you're not ready to. It's too early in the year to call a little bit better EPS given that, you know, given the puts and takes ahead of you. Appreciate that.
Yeah. First of all, good morning, and thank you very much, Andrea. With regards to your top and you also touched on the bottom line as well, so let me try to break it up. You are right. We feel very bullish with regards to our top line as Bob explained the reasons, and on the basis of that we have increased our guidance from mid- to high-single-digit top line growth expectations. There are so many proof points with regards to that, and coffee will be one of the important determinants of especially second half kicking in, after we reinstate and put all the supply chain disruptions that we have had.
We are also planning to take a second round of pricing in most of our portfolio by early summer, which would be more or less in line with the peer group and the market players that we have all announced to the trade. Of course, there will be some different timings with regards to the implementation, but we feel very good with regards to our price expectations and what all those mean and translate to our top line growth. Having said that, there's a reason why everyone is taking pricing, which is the inflation factor that came in and continuing to come in higher than everyone's expectation.
For example, when we step back and look and just to remind our previous communications, 2021 approximately inflation came in, as we announced, around 7%. We also said during our Q4 2021 call, which was like a couple of months ago, that we expect 2022 inflation to trend around low teens. In reality, in Q1, we have faced approximately 15% inflationary pressure, which was higher than what we were expecting, and I'm sure you have heard what all other industry players have been saying, which is essentially in line with what I am articulating right now. Therefore, true, we are taking pricing.
True, at the same time, our volumes continue to increase, coupled with our very strong in-market execution, and you can see the proof point in our market share, which is around 80% of our LRV that we have either maintained or continued to gain market share. Therefore, really strong performance and delivery all around. Inflation is not stopping, and we are still seeing a lag in the relation of the pricing and the inflation. As you know, no one can take an anticipated inflation and pricing accordingly, which on a pure math basis, this means margins will continue to be under pressure, as well as there will be a lag.
We also believe that, towards quarter three and probably more in quarter four of this year, we expect, on the basis of our assumptions again, an inflection point in terms of the pricing catching up to cost. That's where the margin expansion actually will kick in, from a pure math and the algorithm perspective. Therefore, we believe that we have a good, robust algorithm that we put out there. Inflation is real. Inflation has been higher than what we were expecting. It's nothing to do with our coverages, whether we can cover or not, because there are some input cost elements that we cannot cover. No one can cover. For example, rPET.
For example, polypropylene that we use with regards to the material of the K-Cup pods and some parts of the transportation and labor. You see, it's not like one or two. Therefore, this is a continuous levers that we pull in order to run our business as well as deliver against our algorithm. And of course, if we do see some opportunities to do better, as you all know, we are not gonna hold back. We think we have a good algorithm right now, a balanced one that keeps us to continue to invest behind our brands and business.
Thank you, Ozan. That's fair.
Your next, and your last question comes from the line of Brett Cooper with Consumer Edge. Your line's open.
Thank you. Good morning. Congratulations to all. Two questions, if you don't mind. You've spoken about building the infrastructure to be a bigger company. I was hoping you could expand on the most important pillars that you've built or have in place that allows for that leverage. The second one is, you have a scale e-commerce business in coffee, both direct to consumer and third party. Just from the outside, we can't always see what's going on. I was hoping you can provide us an update on the progress you've made in preparing for the move in your cold beverage business to e-commerce and/or evolving the customer relationship to a more digital one. Thanks.
Sure. A couple things, Brett. First of all, on the scalability piece that you talk about, I think there are three big areas in which we've set up a business scale. I think one is just management structure. We've got a management team that has the bandwidth to take on more than they have today. Our focus on North America, I think, gives us a bit of an advantage here, having managed global businesses in my past, to be able to focus in on one region where you have common consumers, common customers, yet a significant amount of white space for expansion, is an advantage for management to be able to continue to take on more without being distracted. I think the second area where we've made significant investment in is in our distribution capabilities.
We talk about a wide range of them, but if you think about today, we announced expansion in our fountain food service business. We've talked about on a number of calls, Dr Pepper is the most available CSD in fountain food service. We've got a really strong team, but they've had a relatively small set of brands and businesses to sell.
Now we're equipping them with a new brand in partnership with Tractor, where they're able to get into new territory with GMO-free, organic, and some really unique products to be able to expand. It expands their toolkit. There's a good example of a great foundation that we can now scale. DSD is a very important area for us. We've made significant investment over the past three years, increased tools and capabilities, but also we've expanded our DSD breadth and depth by acquiring close to 25 independent distributors to be able to boost our system. Obviously, anything that you can scale within DSD improves both your effectiveness as well as your efficiency. As you touch on, e-com is a really interesting area.
When we put the two companies together and we showed how we were bringing the best of both to share across the business, one of the conversations was about e-com, but in 2018, e-com and beverage didn't seem like a big idea. Certainly, it was a very significant idea during COVID. It's one that on the cold side of the business will build over time, but it has to be through click and collect and regional delivery. Shipping, you know, liquids by UPS and FedEx is not a great business model over the long term, but we see that area rapidly evolving, and we're in a really good position.
Part of enabling us to do exactly that required us to go back and redefine and renegotiate a number of our distribution agreements that were not contemplated in an environment of e-com. We've been very successful in doing that over the past now four years to set ourselves up so that we have a win-win with our distribution partners, our independent partners, and yet we're able to drive e-com to the benefit of the consumer as well as us and our partners. With regard to our coffee business, you're 100% right. We have a scale business in e-com. We've been very agnostic in terms of where our brands are sold on e-com. We're very supportive of Amazon, of Walmart.com, on any type of retailer dot-com. We share our information with them. We try to make them better.
It's not that we're in competition with them at all. In fact, we know the consumers wanna go online, but they wanna buy it from their preferred retailer. We enable that by doing what I just said. With regard to Keurig.com, we have focused it on auto reorder or reorder, and that's its primary reason for being. Also it's a good place to find SKUs that are small, that are favorites of a small group of consumers who can't find them at normal retailers. We'll sell everything on there. Obviously, that's been a challenge during the supply recovery phase, but we'll get back to that again. That's a big part of it.
As you think about the one comment I made in my remarks about connected brewers and the fact that we believe that we'll have 1 million connected brewers in the next few years, that really adds additional power to an auto reorder business because you go from replenishing based on shipments to replenishment based on consumption. That is a whole different level of convenience for the consumer. That's why we're really bullish on that business over the long term as well. Great.
Thanks. Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. I'll hand the call back to Steve Alexander for any closing remarks.
Great. Thank you, operator. Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. Maria and I are around all day. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out. We'll get back to you. Thank you so much.
Thank you. That concludes today's conference. You may now disconnect.