Good morning. My name is Sarah, and I will be your conference call facilitator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Lancaster Colony Corporation Fiscal Year 2022 Fo urth Quarter Conference Call. Conducting today's call will be Dave Ciesinski, President and CEO, and Tom Pigott, CFO. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers have completed their prepared remarks, there will be a question-and-answer period. If you'd like to ask a question during this time, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad, and questions will be taken in the order they are received. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Thank you. Now to begin the conference call, here is Dale Ganobsik, Vice President of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations for Lancaster Colony Corporation.
Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for Lancaster Colony's Fiscal Year 2022 Fourth Quarter Conference Call. 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 upon subsequent events. A detailed discussion of these risks and uncertainties is contained in the company's filings with the SEC. Also note that the audio replay of this call will be archived and available at our company's website, lancastercolony.com, later this afternoon. For today's call, Dave Ciesinski, our President and CEO, will begin with a business update and highlights for the quarter.
Tom Pigott, our CFO, will then provide an overview of the financial results. Dave will then share some comments regarding our current strategy and outlook. At the conclusion of our prepared remarks, we'll be happy to respond to any of your questions. Once again, we appreciate your participation this morning. I'll now turn the call over to Lancaster Colony's President and CEO, Dave Ciesinski. Dave?
Thanks, Dale, and good morning, everyone. It's a pleasure to be here with you today as we review our fourth quarter results for fiscal year 2022 and look forward to fiscal year 2023. Before I cover our results, I'd like to provide you with a brief update on our ERP initiative, Project Ascent. As planned on July first, we executed the first wave of Project Ascent, the implementation of our new SAP S/4HANA ERP system. I'm happy to share that the cutover went very well and in line with our expectations. For context, wave one was the most complex wave of Project Ascent, encompassing all financial transactions and all customer and supplier-facing business processes. This included order to cash, trade promotion management, procure to pay, the general ledger, and an EDI replatform.
Wave one also converted two manufacturing plants, one large distribution center, and all of our third-party warehouses onto the new ERP system. Customer fulfillment levels remained strong before and after the system cutover, with no unplanned disruptions in receiving orders, producing products, shipping orders, or receiving payments. I'd like to extend my sincere thanks to our teammates who put forth a tremendous effort to reach this important project and company milestone. I'll have more to say about the strategic importance of this later in my comments. Moving on to our financial results for our fiscal fourth quarter ended June 30. We were pleased to report record sales and gross profit despite the difficult operating environment. Consolidated net sales increased 17.3% to $452 million, while consolidated gross profit improved 1.8% to $98.4 million.
Retail segment net sales grew 8.8% in the quarter, driven by our pricing actions and incremental sales attributed to advance ordering by our customers near the end of Q4 ahead of our ERP go-live. From a brand perspective, New York Bakery, Sister Schubert's, and Olive Garden all reported solid growth in the quarter. Retail sales volumes measured in pounds declined 2%, which comps to solid volume growth of 9% in last year's Q4. This was in line with our expectations based on pricing actions and product rationalization decisions that we have executed during the past year. IRI data for our fourth quarter showed share gains for Sister Schubert dinner rolls with a pickup of 300 basis points, which pushed our leading share in frozen rolls up to 54.2%.
Our Marzetti refrigerated dressings posted a share gain of 140 basis points, growing our share to a category-leading 24.8%. In summary, Q4 top-line results for our retail segment were driven by our pricing actions, advance ordering ahead of our July first ERP go-live, and solid sales volume gains on New York Bakery, Sister Schubert's, and Olive Garden dressings. In our food service segment, net sales grew over 28%, with pricing accounting for over 24% of the sales increase. Select customers in our mix of national accounts and higher demand for our branded food service items were also noted contributors to this sales growth.
Food service sales volumes measured in pounds increased 2% in the quarter, which was in line with our expectations and compares to significant growth of 29% in last year's Q4. During Q4, we continued to experience high levels of inflation for raw materials, packaging, and freight. That said, we were encouraged by our progress at improving our PNOC, pricing net of commodities. This progress is reflected in our Q4 gross margin, which showed sequential improvement of 480 basis points versus our fiscal third quarter. We also acknowledge there's more work to be done. We remain focused upon improving our financial performance through productivity gains in our supply chain and revenue growth management. Overall, I'm pleased with the improvement in our financial performance in our fiscal fourth quarter as we completed a fiscal year characterized by record inflation and a challenging operating environment.
I'm also delighted to have started fiscal year 2023 with a successful go live on ERP. I'll now turn the call over to Tom Pigott, our CFO, for his commentary on our fourth quarter results.
Thanks, Dave. Overall, the results for the quarter reflected strong top-line growth and improvements in our gross margin performance. Our successfully implemented pricing actions have begun to offset the unprecedented levels of inflation impacting our business. Fourth quarter consolidated net sales increased by 17.3% to $452.4 million. The growth was driven by pricing actions taken in both segments and the customer pull forward of shipments in advance of our ERP go live. Customers increased their orders for deliveries near the end of the quarter to ensure they had adequate inventory prior to our SAP implementation on July first. We estimate these shipments contributed $25 million in incremental sales to the fourth quarter results. Decomposing our 17.3% revenue growth, 15.1 percentage points were driven by pricing.
The customer pull forward of shipments accounted for 6.5 percentage points. A volume decline that was in line with our expectations accounted for the balance. Consolidated gross profit increased by $1.7 million to $98.4 million. Gross profit margin declined by 330 basis points. The increase in our gross profit reflected the pricing actions implemented in both segments. In addition, we estimate the gross profit benefited from an incremental $5 million due to advanced sales prior to our ERP go live. These items were offset by the unprecedented inflation and increased supply chain costs. Inflation for commodities and packaging materials was up nearly 30%. The majority of the commodities we utilize were priced at or near ten-year highs.
Our significant exposure to soybean oil, which was up notably, drove our inflationary impact higher than many of our peers. The increase in our supply chain costs resulted from a number of factors. First, we experienced a high level of inflation on our factory labor and other manufacturing costs. Second, our manufacturing costs were up due to operating challenges in this environment. Our cost savings program has been hampered by efforts to react to external supply and demand volatility at our facilities. Third, we had higher freight and warehousing costs due to wage and fuel inflation. We continue to work to improve our operations with initiatives focused on increasing productivity, including a new value engineering program. Selling, general, and administrative expenses decreased 2.8% or $1.6 million. This decrease was due to reductions in consumer spending and incentive compensation costs.
Expenditures for Project Ascent, our ERP initiative, totaled $11 million in the current year quarter versus $10.3 million in the prior year quarter. Restructuring impairment charges of $10.5 million primarily reflect the unfavorable impact of an $8.8 million non-cash impairment charge related to the Angelic Bakehouse business. Consolidated operating income declined $7.2 million- $33.7 million due to the restructuring and impairment charges, partially offset by the benefit from the advanced sales ahead of our ERP go live and the underlying performance of the business. Our tax rate for the quarter of 14.4% reflected the benefit from a lower state tax rate due to the impact of non-recurring adjustments. We estimate our fiscal year 2023 tax rate to be 24%.
Fourth quarter diluted earnings per share decreased 9 cents to $1.06. The decrease was driven by the restructuring impairment charge, partially offset by the benefit from the advanced sales ahead of our ERP go live, the lower tax rate, and the underlying performance of the business. The EPS impact of the restructuring and impairment was 29 cents per share. The benefit from the advanced sales was 15 cents per share, and the lower tax rate added 10 cents per share. Costs related to Project Ascent reduced EPS by 31 cents per share this quarter versus 28 cents per share in the prior year quarter. With regard to capital expenditures, full year payments for property additions totaled $132 million. This result was below our previous expectations, primarily due to timing of payments for our Horse Cave capacity expansion.
Spending for the Horse Cave project totaled $72 million in fiscal year 2022. For fiscal year 2023, we are forecasting total capital expenditures of approximately $100 million. This forecasting includes approximately $50 million that remain for the completion of the Horse Cave expansion project. In addition to investing in our business, we also returned funds to shareholders. Our quarterly cash dividend of $0.80 per share paid on June 30 represented a 7% increase from the prior year amount. Our enduring streak of annual dividend increases currently stands at 59 years. Our financial position remains very strong as we finish the year debt-free with $60 million of cash on the balance sheet. To wrap up my commentary, our fourth quarter results reflected strong pricing driven revenue growth offsetting significant commodity inflation.
The revenue and gross profit performance also benefited from the advanced customer ship purchases prior to our SAP go live. In the coming year, we'll continue to address the inflationary cost increases with our revenue growth management program and are implementing plans to improve our supply chain performance. I will now turn it back over to Dave for his closing remarks. Thank you.
Thanks, Tom. In fiscal year 2023, we expect to continue to deliver industry-leading sales growth. In retail, we expect strong sales growth from pricing, in addition to some incremental volume on new items such as the launch of a new larger size of Chick-fil-A sauce, a national distribution of Chick-fil-A Barbeque and sweet and spicy Sriracha sauces, a new Olive Garden Caesar dressing flavor, and the addition of Arby's Horsey Sauce and Arby's Sauce. Just for reference, we are also planning a very limited regional test for Chick-fil-A refrigerated salad dressings during our fiscal second quarter. Consumer demand elasticity and the impact of product rationalization initiatives we implemented in fiscal year 2022 will pose a headwind to volume gains in fiscal year 2023.
In food service, we anticipate sales growth fueled by pricing and momentum at select QSR customers will be partially offset by a slowing economy and any potential diminution in consumer sentiment. Note that our first quarter sales will be unfavorably impacted by the ERP advance ordering, which pulled an estimated $25 million of sales into the fiscal fourth quarter of fiscal year 2022, as Tom mentioned in his comments. In fiscal year 2023, we're forecasting another year of significant inflation. In late Q4 of fiscal year 2022, we implemented another round of list price increases on retail dressings and sauces. These increases became effective in early August and are already reflected on the shelf. In our food service segment, we will continue to realize offsets to increase commodity and freight costs through contractual based inflationary pricing.
Our cost savings programs and ongoing initiatives in revenue growth management will also offset the unfavorable impacts of inflation in the year ahead. Turning to our supply chain strategy, our significant expansion at our dressing and sauce facility in Horse Cave, Kentucky is progressing as planned. Production is scheduled to begin later this fall. With regard to Project Ascent, the implementation phase will continue throughout fiscal year 2023 as we add additional plants and warehouses to our new ERP network. Stepping back and placing this in context, Project Ascent and our Horse Cave expansion represent capstone initiatives in a major strategic transition. Lancaster Colony Corporation was founded over 60 years ago, and our evolution today can be organized into two distinct phases. Our first phase, Lancaster Colony 1.0, began with our founding in 1961.
The five decades that followed were characterized by numerous acquisitions and rapid growth as a conglomerate consisting of three segments, glass and candles, automotive, and food. In January of 2014, Lancaster Colony sold the last of our non-food assets. The sale of the candle business in 2014 marked the end of Lancaster Colony 1.0 and the beginning of the next phase of our evolution as a food pure play, Lancaster Colony 2.0. Notable highlights of Lancaster Colony 2.0 have included the development and implementation of our Better Food Company growth plan, which is focused on three simple pillars, accelerating core business growth, simplifying our supply chain to reduce our cost and grow our margins, and expanding our core with focused M&A and strategic licensing.
During Lancaster Colony 2.0, the company has also invested in the assets and capabilities to grow and support the next phase of our future. These investments have included, but not been limited to, constructing a new innovation center, consolidating several older office locations into a new headquarters, and numerous plant-level automation initiatives. The capstone investments of Lancaster Colony 2.0 have been the Horse Cave expansion and the implementation of SAP S/4HANA, a scalable ERP platform that will enable us to pursue existing and new pathways to growth. During the quarters ahead, we will complete the construction at Horse Cave and the implementation of Project Ascent. This will mark the end of Lancaster Colony 2.0 and the beginning of Lancaster Colony 3.0.
Whereas the focus in Lancaster Colony 2.0 has been on growth and rebuilding critical infrastructure, the focus of Lancaster Colony 3.0 will be on leveraging our new scalable infrastructure to pursue existing and new organic and inorganic pathways to growth. Bringing things closer in, I'd once again like to thank the entire Lancaster Colony team for all their resilience, hard work, and ongoing commitment to our business during fiscal year 2022 and helping us with completing this strategic transition. I look forward to working together with everyone in the coming year as we continue our journey to be the better food company. This concludes our prepared remarks for today, and we'd be happy to answer any questions that you might have. Operator, over to you.
Thank you. At this time, I would like to remind everyone in order to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from Brian Holland with Cowen. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. Good morning. I guess if I could start off with just kind of thinking about the puts and takes into fiscal 2023. You know, nice sequential gross margin improvement. Just trying to think about, you know, magnitude going forward. You know, can we expect that kind of sequential lift as we look into the first half of the year? Are we kind of range bound with Q4? And maybe just looking out to fiscal 2023 gross margin full year, you know, obviously if we go back to 2021, you had a 26% gross margin, you know, somewhere in that mid-20s range. How much of that do you think you can get back in fiscal 2023?
Is that a viable kind of year-end range for you as we think about pricing catching up?
Well, we covered a lot of ground there. Maybe I'll start with the basics. We feel really good about, you know, the top line of our algorithm in driving sales growth. The way we're gonna get there, Brian, is gonna be a little bit different than, let's say, several years ago, where it was all driven by volume. Now, what you're gonna see, and we tried to outline that in the press release and our prepared comments, is that obviously we're pushing through a lot of pricing. On PNOC, which really kind of gets into that margin question, we feel like we're turning a corner, right? Particularly in our retail business. We mentioned the fact that in Q4, we had half of a quarter of pricing on our frozen business, the frozen bakery business.
We took another price increase that just became effective in early August on our dressings and sauces. You know, what I would tell you is we feel good about PNOC, that we're turning a corner. As you look at sort of sequentially as we go through the quarters, you're gonna see a little bit of noise and as we go forward, bearing in mind that we had the shift in timing of some of that volume, and we also had plants down for the first five days of the month of July because of this cutover. You know, as you might expect, we literally shut things down, do a physical inventory, we port all the data from the old systems into the new systems, and then we start things back up.
To your broader question then, how do we feel about fiscal year 2023 as a whole? I think what you're gonna see is continued improvement, but I'm gonna offer a caveat that if you look at between fiscal year 2022 and 2023 and the magnitude of pricing that we're taking, you are gonna see some diminution on margin just because of that spread, right? We pass on price for the cost, not the margin percentages. So you're gonna see some weight against, you know, overall margin recovery. What you should see is improvement in gross profit as we continue to push forward. What I would tell you is, unlike in years past, you know, the external situation, and I'm gonna touch wood here, seems to be stabilizing in terms of supply.
The pandemic is dying down, and that's allowing us to put greater focus in areas of productivity. We're also adding value engineering as another important initiative. As you think about what's our pathway to get margins back to historical levels, it's first and foremost PNOC. Like I said, we're turning the corner on that. Then it's gonna be focusing on productivity initiatives and value engineering over the course of time, not just to be, you know, restoring gross profit growth and profitability, but building those margins back to where you and we want them to be. Tom, I don't know if you'd want to offer anything else into that.
Yeah. Yeah, no. Brian, as you model it, I think, you know, the key focus for us is PNOC, but as you do your model, you know, we're looking at similar levels of inflation in pricing in fiscal 2023 as we had in fiscal 2022. In fiscal 2022, where we looked at, you know, slightly over 200 basis points of dilution going into it, we're looking at it in a similar way in terms of the percentage dilution. From a PNOC perspective, as Dave indicated, we feel like we've turned the corner and we're starting to go positive.
Okay, that's great. I appreciate the color. Maybe speaking to the gross profit versus gross margin question, at least relative to my model, I think where clearly in retrospect, I mismodeled was the magnitude of pricing coming through still on the food service side. I would imagine you start to lap a little bit heavier, more of that pricing as we get deeper into the first half of 2023. Is that the right way to think about it, or do we just have other rounds of pricing such that that could support that level of increase? I'm just trying to make sure I understand order of magnitude on pricing and food service.
Right. You know, what I would offer, Brian, is that is how I would think about it with maybe a caveat. We aren't seeing prices necessarily fall back. What we're seeing is the rate of increase in our inflation is slowing down. So there's a little bit of nuance there. We would need to see a more dramatic pullback in order for us to actually see, you know, for the pricing that we put in to start to unwind.
Yeah.
We can go into some of those categories if you want, but Tom?
Yeah. In food service, you're looking at pricing in the first half of mid-20s%, and then it gets into the mid-teens% in the second half based on our current outlook. You're right in terms of your projections.
Okay, perfect. The last one for me, I guess a two-parter. One, do we have a sense how much the licensed sauces contributed in the quarter? I didn't see anything that would allow me to back into it, but I may have missed it. Obviously, what we saw in the quarter was a slowdown in the growth rate. I know that we've talked about, you know, some of the merchandising that was done at the launch. Just a sense of how that's building. Obviously, in the most recent data out earlier this week, that licensed portfolio looks like back up in the low double-digit range. Looks like it's getting back on track.
You know, I guess in an inflationary environment and a lot of heavy pricing, what we're hearing from a lot of companies is, you know, pulling back on some of the media spend, where we're not really gonna get the return, we're focused on the pricing. This is something where you're obviously trying to drive visibility towards. Just help us think about the investment that's gonna go into that category, you know, mindful of the current environment we're in.
Maybe first I'll start with the contribution of those brands. I'll give you the IRI numbers here. You know, directionally, if you look at Chick-fil-A sauce, it was about $34 million in retail scanner sales. Olive Garden was about $36 million of scanner sales. BWW was about $12 million in scanner sales of what we had. On the net sales line, give me a second here. You know, it's probably more like pushing $70, somewhere in that range is where we were on those. That's just total sales, not necessarily incremental, but total sales on those items in the quarter.
You know, as we think about sort of how we're focusing on driving the business, you know, we went back and we looked at our marketing spend, and we've done a couple of things. A leader of our retail team and the marketers that he works with stepped back and looked at one, the size of the spend, but also how we're spending. We've elected to make a bit of a strategic shift, and that we're moving away from traditional and we're starting to double down more in digital. We're also focusing more on in-store and point of purchase where we feel like we get better leverage. You know, in the aggregate, we've reduced it modestly, but we haven't historically been a big advertiser like some of the others.
I think the other thing that may be worth consideration, Brian, is, you know, given the growth that we've had in licensed businesses and given the marketing spend that those organizations like Olive Garden and Buffalo Wild Wings and Chick-fil-A spend on their own marketing, it doesn't necessitate the same level of spending that it would on one of our traditional brands. So as you look at our marketing spend as a percentage of our total sales over time, don't be surprised if you see that moderate slightly. What we're doing essentially is looking at the level of spend by brand, and our view is on a licensed brand, you know, because we're paying a license, we shouldn't have to spend as much.
That's great. I can leave it there. I appreciate all the color. Best of luck.
Thanks, Brian.
Thank you, Brian.
Your next question comes from Todd Brooks with The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, guys, and congrats on the gross profit improvement in the quarter. Nicely done.
Thank you, Todd.
Thank you, Todd.
Quick question. Dave Ciesinski, you outlined a bunch of incremental product opportunities that you're looking at for fiscal 2023, on the licensed branded product side. Is there a way to dimensionalize either if you're thinking across the total roster of opportunities or if you wanted to break it into Chick-fil-A large size versus the incremental flavors? Just, is there a way you can dimensionalize the incremental benefit from licensed product introductions that you're expecting in 2023?
Well, let's see. First, maybe I would put it in some context. If you go back and you just look at Chick-fil-A sauce, for example, in retail sales over the course of a little more than a year, it's become a business that does about $135 million, $140 million in sales or thereabouts, right? If you look at what we've done with licensing just in the last eighteen months, there's been a pretty big step up in our sales. What I wanna share is, you know, don't expect necessarily to see something like that.
You know, as we look at the items that we have there in the portfolio, I think it's reasonable to assume that we might be able to achieve something more in the, you know, one-third of that kind of range, right? It's gonna be mixed coming across the large size. It's gonna be in Arby's sauces, and then the new variants like Chick-fil-A Barbeque and the Sweet & Spicy Sriracha, and then the Olive Garden Caesar. That sort of is your thinking in the current year. Now bear in mind that these items, the earliest shipment for select customers is gonna be in October, but the majority of these customers aren't gonna begin to take these items more until the spring when they start to do their shelf resets.
You know, the early adopters will cut it in. Before you really see all these items in grocery stores everywhere in the country, it's gonna be more on the other side of calendar year 2023. That's why, you know, in response to maybe Brian's question earlier and your question now, as you look at our overall algorithm, we continue to have confidence. We feel like we're teamed up with winning food service operators, and we really cherish their partnership and we feel like between our own brands and then what we're doing in licensing, we're set up to continue to deliver really solid, if not industry-leading, top-line growth.
That's great. That's helpful. Thanks, Dave. If we can talk about obviously, the pass-through nature of the pricing that you've gotten in food service, and Tom talked about maybe the cadence of how you see that playing out first half versus second half. Can you remind us, with the August increase, what we're running for kind of blended price increase now on the retail side of the business? And maybe just what the tenor of those discussions were around the August increase. And do you expect that you still have the ability to get further increases if needed, or do we need to start to think about some of these increases rolling off as we anniversary them?
Sure. If you go back, Todd, and you look at the last couple of years, most of our portfolio now with this latest round of price increases is up probably 15%-20% across the two price increases that we've taken. Behind that, again, 15, the lower end would be a little bit lower. In the most recent August price increases we took on dressing, sauces, and dips, that range was 9%-11%, just to give you an idea. If you don't have any other questions on that, I'll go into your question about sort of the discussion and how things went.
If you remember, I think we came out the last call we had, we shared that we were in the process of taking a price increase, and that was on the heels of some tough earnings coming out with some of the big merchants, Target and Walmart. As you might have imagined, those discussions were probably a little bit tougher than they had been before. What I would tell you is that, you know, they were fact-based before and they were fact-based now. Their concerns are our concerns, and we were able to work our way through it.
You know, now we're pressing forward. I think it also helps with the fact that we continue to bring new news to the category. In many cases, they're viewing us as sort of the innovation leader in dressings and sauces because of what we've been able to do. At some level, that helps also.
Great. A final one for me, and I know you've talked about it increasingly the last couple quarters, just the SKU rationalization journey that you've started. As you're looking out to fiscal 2023, are you looking to further rationalize the portfolio? Is there anything that we should think about as kind of a put on revenue growth related to further rationalizing the SKU base? Thanks.
Not really. You know, it's ironic that you picked that. I was going through and looking at things and comparing to fiscal 2020 to fiscal 2022. To give you an idea, we started that journey with about 1,400 little more than 1,400 SKUs between retail and food service, and we're down to a little more than 1,100 on that right now to give you a magnitude. So that's, you're talking, you know, on the order of 25% of a reduction. So no, we don't expect big pruning. A lot of this pruning, Todd, was all geared towards getting us ready for an SAP cutover. We felt like we needed to simplify our business and really focus on our core if we wanted to ensure that this cutover was going to be successful.
As we got deeper and deeper into inflation, and we had to focus on, you know, optimizing the use of our capacity and making sure that we could service our customers, that really sort of was a secondary driver for us to go back and look at some of the slower moving SKUs that we had and go back and rationalize. You know, sort of where we sit today looking forward, SKU rationalization activity just isn't gonna be a big area of focus. We'll prune as we have to. Tom, I don't know if you have anything else you wanna add.
Yeah, Todd, I'll just give you a couple of numbers for your model. As we look at the retail segment and the exit of Mamma Bella and Produce Packers, that was about $7 million this quarter and is expected to be about the same level next quarter. Then it declines to $2 million-$4 million for the remainder of the fiscal.
Okay, great. Thanks, Tom. Congrats again.
Thank you.
Thanks, Todd.
Your next question comes from Andrew Wolf with C.L. King. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning.
Morning, Andrew.
Wanted to ask, like, a follow-up on pricing. Kind of a simple question, but do you feel like, you know, I think, you know, most economists and so on or ag economists and so on, and people in the trade are looking for some kind of disinflation at some point, right? Maybe later in 2023. If that doesn't happen, and you need more pricing, in a real basic sense and the economy is slowing, do you think you're gonna experience pushback from not Lancaster, you know, not Lancaster as a company, more the industry. Do you have a sense from some of the bigger retailers that, they'll accept more pricing, or would you anticipate some pushback if future pricing is needed?
You know, it's a great question and one that we're spending a lot of time thinking about. You know, what I would share with you, Andrew, is, you know, on weekends, I spend time at grocery stores. I do some of our own family shopping and just make it a point sometimes with my kids to go through the stores. I walk most of the aisles, and what I would tell you is, I mean, just beyond our categories, what surprises me is just the magnitude of the prices that you see on some of the items. You know, I haven't worked on Heinz Ketchup.
Years ago, I always, you know, sort of look at where they are and, you know, I can remember where we used to promote it at 10 for 10, and now the item is on the shelf, you know, for more than $3.50. They have sizes that are on there for more than $8. You could see that same thing in a range of different areas. Let's start maybe and just say, like you can't help but be, you know, surprised at the prices on the shelf. At the same time, when you look at the magnitude of the input cost increases that we've seen, it. You know, none of our peers in the food space are building margins through this.
If anything, we're just passing along what we're seeing out into the trade. You know, generally, I think that the trade remains constructive in the conversations. Consumers are continuing to spend, albeit they're making trade-offs. I think they're pulling back in things like apparel and other hard lines. They're spending on food, selectively. I think what we're starting to see the early signs of are shifts. The shopping behavior of lower income consumers are starting to show maybe more erosion than middle consumers or more affluent consumers. I think merchants know this, and I think what you can expect to see is, I think we're all realistic as the input cost, if they do continue to climb, there's gonna be a need to pass them on.
I think what you're gonna see is, depending on the demographic segment, probably different areas of focus to create value. I don't see if costs go up. I think we're just gonna be in the same loop we're in right now. This is probably a long answer to a short question you're asking as I think my way through it, but I think what you're gonna find is we'll just continue to move forward as is.
Yeah. You know, I'll add a little bit of color. As we think about it, one of the key initiatives we're working on is our value engineering program to look at ways to optimize our products, maintaining a high level of quality, but being able to somewhat offset what we're seeing in terms of this commodity inflation, as well as some productivity projects at our factories to reduce our costs. We're all focused on trying to mitigate those increases. You know, broadly in this business, historically, as you get into more of a recessionary environment, if we get there, we have seen tailwinds in our higher margin retail business, which is to our benefit, but certainly some headwinds on the food service side.
Well, thank you. That was really thoughtful. I appreciate it. I wanted also to ask about the volume outlook, you know, sort of a sense of the cadence, not to ask you to tell me, "Hey, Q1's this, that." You know, whether it's gonna, you know, it sounds like it's, well, I'd like to get your sense of the cadence. I mean, the quarter you just had was down a little in retail, and you had, obviously, a tough compare and the lingering SKU rationalization, which you mentioned. As you look forward, you know, you talked about the SKU rationalization. I don't know about the compares. Maybe you can help us with that. On, you know, what you think about elasticities. You know, what are you seeing now?
You know, what do you kind of anticipate, you know, in your model, you know, in your budget?
Sure. Maybe I'll start, Tom, and then you can.
Yeah. Sure. Sure.
What I would tell you is if you look into Q1, the first thing I would tell you is you're gonna have to take into consideration the volume that shifted between, you know, Q1 into Q4 as retailers pulled forward orders to get on the other side of ERP, right? So that's gonna be an overarching, you know, volume adjustment, and you can sort of do the math on that. To your point on the fact that we've rationalized and exited a couple of businesses, we've provided you that. That needs to be taken into consideration. Then there's the elasticities that we shared with you.
You know, what we still feel confident of is we're gonna continue to provide, you know, solid, if not industry-leading top line growth, but getting there by way of pricing, but with volume on the softer side. You know, that's probably how I would think about working the math. You're gonna see, you know, some diminution on volume and pricing driving the algorithm. Now, as we get deeper into the quarters two and three, obviously the pull forward becomes a non-event. That's. That works its way out, and even the rationalizations work their way out. The only thing that's gonna be left is some of the, you know, the reduction in volume due to consumer elasticities.
I think you'll sort of see it stabilize from, you know, second, third, fourth quarter or late second quarter, you know, third quarter, fourth quarter.
Okay. The reference to what you're talking about on timing, that's because the impact of the pricing you've put in kind of recently will flow into the market, and you'll see what the elasticities are. Is that how we should think about it?
Yeah. We track it every week and, you know, so far, those elasticities are performing in alignment with our modeling. So, I think the timing things that I would focus on would be just making sure you're capturing the shift between Q4 and Q1 that Tom outlined in his comments, and the fact that we did exit a couple of businesses last year that we've talked about as well, and making sure first and foremost, you're adjusting for that, and then the elasticity, you can use your judgment.
Okay. Well, thank you. Appreciate it.
Of course.
Thanks, Andrew.
Your next question comes from Connor Rattigan with Consumer Edge Research. Please go ahead.
Good morning, guys. Thanks for squeezing me in. I appreciate it.
Of course.
Good morning, Connor.
Yeah, just one quick one here at the end of the call, just to wrap up, on the commodity front. Can you guys maybe remind us about any hedging policies or contracts you have in place? Just given that soybean oil is about 20% off its high, it seems like we should expect some relief on the inflationary front heading into fiscal 2023. In the release, it looks like you're expecting commodities to actually increase over the fiscal 2023. Can you maybe help us sort of understand what's driving that expected step up?
Yeah. It's a really good question. What we're seeing actually, even though there's a couple things to think about. There's the board price for soybean oil, which has started to moderate, but then there's a basis cost, which you don't see, which is increasing. We don't get to see that full benefit of the savings. Then the second aspect of it is we had some good coverage on soybean oil in fiscal 2022, below market price. As you go into fiscal 2023, we also have good coverage. When you look at the deltas, we are looking at an increase in soybean oil year over year, despite what you're seeing on the board.
Again, you know, that's all factored into our PNOC and how we're managing our pricing relative to those costs.
Okay. All right. Got it. Thank you so much. That's all. That's it for me.
Thanks, Connor.
Connor, the only other thing maybe I'd add just quickly on that is the other new news besides oil with commodities was just the avian flu that hit later in the year, and it created a subsequent headwind. We use, you know, egg in a range of our dressings and dips, and it's also included as an ingredient in some of our baked items.
Our next question is a follow-up from Brian Holland with Cowen. Please go ahead.
Hey, thanks for letting me hop back on here. Dave, you mentioned in your prepared remarks about, you know, kind of thinking about the Lancaster Colony 3.0 model as, you know, a vehicle to leverage, you know, organic and inorganic opportunities. I'm curious, you know, how the inorganic opportunities have evolved, right? Because, you know, I would have thought about that in the context three years ago of going out and doing more acquisitions, you know, similar to what you've done historically, but maybe you could do them larger in scale, for a number of reasons, you know, including, you know, more human capital at your disposal to run such businesses.
You know, more recently, the success of the licensing program and some of the commentary you provided around that would suggest that maybe that's the inorganic opportunity, if indeed you would define it that way, i.e., bringing on a new partner, as a source of inorganic growth. Can you just help us think about the evolution of inorganic catalysts as you learn more about the license business? The reason I ask is because that seems like a less risky sort of, or it seems that there would be less execution risk about continuing that formula, than maybe going in and buying a new asset, but would love to get your perspective.
You know, maybe first just providing you a little context, you know, with our old ERP system that was installed in 1994- 1995, you know, it was such that we really struggled with any acquisition to be able to generate cost synergies. As we looked at acquisitions, ordinarily, we were more inclined to focus on growth synergies. As we've gone on to this, you know, SAP S/4HANA, which is an all cloud-based system, it's going to allow us the option, you know, obviously not mandate, but allow us the option to think about bigger acquisitions should we choose and justify those with cost synergies.
The other thing that it's gonna allow us to do is to think about international as a component of growth, whereas in the past, it would have been difficult because of the limitations of some of our systems and processes. Now, I'm gonna take a big step and a half back from that and say, you know, we agree with you that we have been able to enjoy a fair amount of growth with licensing, and we have no intention of backing away from that. As we think about, you know, one-point-oh and two-point-oh and three-point-oh, part of what we're trying to do is to create a platform really for the long term, you know, just not the next year or two years or three years.
You know, we view both Horse Cave and that SAP system as generational investments that we're gonna be able to grow on. Where we sit right now, you know, this summer, I would tell you know, Brian, we feel like we have near-term opportunities to continue to grow and intermediate-term opportunities to grow, driving our existing strategy, and we feel good about that. We also feel like we could, you know, take baby steps and follow some of our food service operators to places like Canada and execute that, you know, far more efficiently than we might have been able to do that in the past. This isn't, you know, not that these aren't big, risky moves. As far as acquisitions are concerned, you know, our view is, we agree with you on the risk.
In the past, you know, it's been difficult to think about how we might even be able to take on something bigger. Now, whether, you know, it's several years from now or longer, we feel like at least the machine is set up to take on things like that and to do it well. The last thing we want to do is leave you with the impression that somehow we're gonna make a bold pivot away from what we've done. This is all about, you know, generational investments to strengthen the platform so that we can continue to grow efficiently and, you know, meet your needs and others that are out there.
Got it, Dave. I'll leave it there. I appreciate all that color.
Absolutely. Thanks for asking.
Thanks, Brian.
If there are no further questions, we will now turn the call back to Mr. Ciesinski for his closing comments.
Well, thank you. Thank you everyone for participating this morning. We look forward to sharing our fiscal first quarter results with you in early November. Hope you have a great rest of the summer, and we'll look forward to catching up with you then.
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.