Welcome to the Oxford Industries, Inc. second quarter fiscal 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Jevon Strasser. Thank you. You may begin.
Thank you and good afternoon. Before we begin, I would like to remind participants that certain statements made on today's call and in the Q&A session may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees, and actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual results of operations or our financial condition to differ are discussed in our press release issued earlier today and in documents filed by us with the SEC, including the risk factors contained in the Form 10-K. We undertake no duty to update any forward-looking statements. During this call, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. You can find a reconciliation of non-GAAP to GAAP financial measures in our press release issued earlier today, which is posted under the Investor Relations tab of our website.
Now I'd like to introduce today's call participants. With me today are Tom Chubb, Chairman and CEO, and Scott Grassmyer, CFO and COO. Thank you for your attention. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Tom Chubb.
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. We are pleased to be reporting an incredibly strong second quarter of fiscal 2022. I will provide some highlights of the quarter with more detailed commentary from Scott to follow. Outstanding results are not possible without outstanding people, and we have a team that is second to none. I would like to thank each and every member of our dedicated team for all of their hard work, which enabled us to deliver our sixth consecutive quarter of record earnings. During the quarter, the strength of our brands, our products, and our customer experiences fueled 14% comparable direct-to-consumer sales growth and expansion of our already healthy gross margin.
Favorable market conditions during the quarter included the continued return of the consumer to physical retail, the continued return to in-person work and social events, the continued growth in year-round population in many of our key markets, and the continued rebound in leisure travel. All of these factors, which play to the strength of our portfolio of brands, continue unabated and augur well for the balance of the year. On an adjusted basis, we recorded consolidated second quarter sales of $363 million and EPS of $3.61, which was an 11% increase over last year's record second quarter EPS of $3.24. Adjusted gross margin expanded 30 basis points to 64.6%, and adjusted operating profit increased 8% to $78 million or 21.5% of sales.
The biggest contributor to our record earnings was the performance of our largest brand, Tommy Bahama. Compared to last year, sales grew 17% versus 2021 to $244 million. Adjusted gross margin expanded to 64.3%, and adjusted operating margin increased by 150 basis points to an exceptional 24%. These results exceeded our expectations for the brand this quarter and at the risk of sounding immodest, are spectacular. The success starts with our powerful Live the Island Life brand message, which our team brings to life through beautiful, inspirational, creative messaging, differentiated products that are relevant to today's consumer and marketplace, then delivering all that through wonderful customer experiences on our website, in our stores, bars and restaurants, and through our carefully selected wholesale partners.
As noted a minute ago, market conditions are playing to the strength of our portfolio. The return to leisure and vacation travel and permanent migration of so many people to warmer climates are obvious advantages for us. What is possibly less obvious is how much we benefit from the return to in-person work and social events. While Tommy Bahama is famous in menswear for our colorful camp shirts, polos, tees, shorts, and swimwear, we also have a powerful assortment of long pants and long sleeve woven shirts that are appropriate for most post-pandemic workplaces and a wide variety of social events. A couple of our notable everyday go-to long sleeve shirts include the Sarasota Stretch and the San Lucio Stretch, both of which present a very polished look and also feature the luxurious fabrics and high degree of comfort that Tommy Bahama is famous for.
One of the most exciting merchandising developments in Tommy Bahama over the last couple of years has been the growth and strength of our men's pant business. It started with the Boracay Chino, which quickly gained popularity with our guests, and which we have extended into shorts, jeans, five pockets, and even women's. More recently, we have added the IslandZone performance pant, the Chip Shot performance five pocket, and the On Par performance flat front pant. All of these pants are examples of product that is on brand while being relevant to today's consumer and are resonating across all channels of distribution. They are a perfect pitch purchase for the guest who is getting out and about more, whether that is to go to the office or out to dinner. What we love about building a substantial pant business is that it tends to be a repeat business.
Once a guy finds a pant that he likes, he will tend to come back for it over and over again. Every time he does, we can refresh his pant inventory and have a chance to show him other products that he will love. At Lilly Pulitzer for the second quarter, we posted modest top-line growth and a very healthy 24% operating margin. The sales growth was driven by solid increases in both our wholesale and retail channels, which saw healthy comp store sales gains with some contraction in e-commerce. This contraction was due to some temporary challenges that we faced on the marketing front. A hallmark of the Lilly team has always been an incredible drive to improve in all areas of the business, even those where we already excel. Lilly has long been a leader in digital marketing.
Against the backdrop of a rapidly evolving digital marketplace and landscape, and in an effort to maintain and even increase our digital marketing edge, we implemented some new technology and changed some of our marketing agency partnerships. This transition created some temporary headwinds that we believe suppressed our second quarter results, keeping them somewhat below our expectation for the quarter. We felt the impact primarily in our e-commerce business as the digital marketing issues impacted our flow of new customers. Our team reacted quickly and has made appropriate adjustments to our marketing approach effective in August. We are already seeing the benefit of the changes, including a strong gift with purchase event over this past weekend. As there is some ramp-up period before the full impact is realized, we expect to see some benefit during the third quarter and should be in excellent shape for the fourth quarter.
Our consumer remains as excited about the Lilly Pulitzer brand and our product as ever, and with the changes we have made, we expect to finish the year strong. Our Emerging Brands Group posted an impressive 31% year-over-year sales gain during the second quarter with all three brands, Southern Tide, The Beaufort Bonnet Company, and Duck Head, delivering solid growth. The growth was driven in part by our efforts to enhance the EBG's digital and omni-channel capabilities. Gross margin for the EBG was suppressed during the quarter as the result of an inventory markdown that we took in this operating group to address an overbought position. We have taken an appropriate markdown to deal with the long inventory position and have worked with the emerging brand teams to fortify our inventory planning and buying processes.
We could not be more bullish about the future opportunity for Southern Tide, The Beaufort Bonnet Company, and Duck Head, and look forward to the outstanding results we expect them to deliver in the second half. Across the enterprise, we continue to make excellent progress towards our strategic pillars, growing our brands for the long term, enhancing our digital and omni-channel capabilities, operational excellence, managing our portfolio, capital allocation to drive long-term shareholder value, and developing our people and team. Our share repurchase program illustrates the continued execution of our objective to maximize long-term shareholder value.
Since initiating the plan in December 2021, we have used this vehicle to return $86 million to our shareholders, repurchasing at an average price of $89 per share, enhancing the already high returns from our stock performance and dividend payments of $32 million in the last 12 months. While we are aware of some of the macroeconomic headwinds, the momentum that we created in the first half of the year has continued into the early part of the third quarter. In addition, we are in a much healthier inventory position than we were a year ago. Our excellent results from the first half, healthier inventory position, and the outstanding plans we have for the second half should allow us to deliver double-digit top and bottom-line growth with some modest operating margin expansion for the year.
I'll now turn it over to Scott for more detail about second quarter results and our forecast for the remainder of the year. Scott?
Thank you, Tom. We executed well during the second quarter and once again delivered record performance, as Tom mentioned earlier. Our strong quarter was driven by sales growth across all distribution channels, and particularly notable sales growth in Tommy Bahama of 17%. In the second quarter of fiscal 2022, consolidated net sales are $363 million, an 11% increase over last year's second quarter net sales of $329 million. Excluding $8 million of sales from Lanier Clothes in the prior year period, sales increased 14% year-over-year. Our full-price e-commerce business grew significantly, up 13%. On the brick-and-mortar front, we generated full price retail comps of +14%. Performance of our food and beverage locations was healthy as well, with 6% growth over last year.
Our second quarter adjusted gross margin was 64.6% compared to 64.3% in fiscal 2021. This 30 basis point improvement was fueled by a shift in sales mix towards full-price direct-to-consumer channels and higher IMU, particularly in innovative new performance offerings. Higher freight costs of approximately 50 basis points and inventory markdowns within the emerging brands group offset some of the margin improvement. Our operating profit increased to $78 million on an adjusted basis, or 21.5% of net sales, with notable operating income growth in Tommy Bahama. This excellent operating margin was highlighted by 24% operating margins at both Tommy and Lilly. Our business is supported by our strong balance sheet. Here are some highlights.
Our inventory balance at the end of the quarter positions us well to execute on our sales plan for the second half of fiscal 2022, which calls for revenue growth in the high single- to low double-digit. Inventory increased $58 million on a LIFO basis and $71 million, or 53% on a FIFO basis compared to the end of the second quarter of fiscal 2021. Inventory balances at July 30, 2022 represent a more normalized level after inventory levels were lower than optimal throughout fiscal 2021, when a stronger than expected rebound in consumer demand outpaced inventory purchases. Also, inventory increases included early receipt of an incremental $27 million of fall inventory to mitigate supply chain delays or disruptions, inventory to support anticipated sales increases in the second half of fiscal 2022, and higher product cost.
Compared to the end of the second quarter of fiscal 2019, on a FIFO basis, inventory decreased by 3%, while the sales for the first half of fiscal 2022 were 23% higher than the first half of fiscal 2019. To crystallize where we are on inventory, our trailing 12-month FIFO inventory turns at the end of the second quarter of 2022 were 3 x, compared to 2.3 x in 2021 and 2.5 x in 2019. Our liquidity position is healthy with no debt and $186 million of cash and short-term investments at the end of the second quarter. Our sizable cash flow allowed us to invest in our businesses, return capital to shareholders via multiple approaches, and still have a significant amount of cash and short-term investments on our balance sheet.
To date, we have repurchased approximately 970,000 shares for $86 million, representing over 5% of our shares outstanding since the December announcement of our board's new share repurchase authorization. As Tom noted, we are very pleased with the results of our repurchasing program to date. We have further returned $32 million of capital to investors through dividends over the last 12 months. Looking forward, I am pleased to share that our board of directors declared a dividend of $0.55 per share for the third quarter. I'd now like to walk you through our projections for the remainder of 2022. After outstanding performance and EPS in the second quarter, we are raising our guidance for the year. We expect our e-commerce business to continue to expand.
Also, our physical locations are seeing encouraging comp sales as consumers continue to return to in-store shopping, and we continue to have a very robust broad order book in our wholesale channel for 2022. For the year, we still expect modest gross margin expansions as we continue to see the benefits of higher IMU, partially offset by what we expect to be a somewhat more promotional environment. For the year, we expect some modest SG&A leverage driven by significant leverage in Q1 despite inflationary cost pressures, including a challenging labor market. Putting together these dynamics, we expect to deliver double-digit top and bottom line growth with operating margin expansion for the full year.
Full year sales are now expected to increase to a range of $1.3 billion-$1.325 billion, compared to $1.142 billion in fiscal 2021, which included $25 million of Lanier Clothes sales. For the full fiscal year, we now expect adjusted EPS in the range of $9.85-$10.10, compared to $7.99 in fiscal 2021. Third quarter sales are expected to increase from $248 million last year, which included $4 million of Lanier Clothes, to a range of $270 million-$280 million, reflective of strong quarter-to-date results in our direct-to-consumer channels as well as substantial wholesale sales planned in the quarter.
On an adjusted basis, we expect EPS in a range of $0.90-$1.05 in the third quarter of fiscal 2022 compared to $1.19 last year. In the third quarter, similar to the first two quarters of the year, we anticipate some modest gross margin expansion. This expected gross margin expansion includes our expectation of lower freight costs and higher IMU in the third quarter, partially offset by a change in sales mix with an increased proportion of Lilly Pulitzer e-commerce flash clearance sales. As reminder, the third quarter is our smallest sales and earnings quarter of the year due to the seasonality of our brands.
Thus, as our business continues to expand, the higher SG&A associated with the growing business often results in deleveraging in the lower sales third quarter, but also allows for additional SG&A leverage and earnings growth in our higher sales quarters during the year. Our effective tax rate for fiscal 2022 is expected to be between 24% and 25%. Thank you for your time today, and we will now turn the call over for questions. Alex?
Thank you. At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Our first question comes from the line of Edward Yruma with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, good afternoon, guys, and thanks for taking the question and congrats on the quarter. A couple from me. I guess first, I know that some of your regions are performing strongly relative to others from a tourist perspective. I was wondering if you could kinda talk about some of the regions holistically and kinda where is New York, Hawaii, Las Vegas, etc , versus kind of previous peak. As a follow-up, I know you've had this strategy of raising AUR, adding more content to the products. How much more headroom do you think is still available? Are you seeing any signs of price resistance? Thank you.
Okay. Thank you, Ed. Great to have you on the call today, and I would comment on the regionality, and Scott, as always, may add some color to this. But really the only area that's still sort of lagging, if you will, is New York City itself, where, you know, we have the big Tommy Bahama store, bar, and restaurant. I suspect you've been into the city recently, and it's, you know, New York's just not fully back yet, not really even quite close to fully back. We are definitely seeing that in that store. Other than that, I think the all other regions of the country really performed well. There were a couple of small pockets in California that were kinda flattish for the quarter, but really no laggards at this point other than New York City.
In terms of raising AUR by increasing the sort of features in the product and you know the differentiation in the product, we continue to have great success with that. I think as long as the customer perceives that we're delivering additional value to them, I think we've got plenty of room to run on that. Scott, if you would, please add anything.
Yeah, we're really not seeing a resistance in the price increases we took, and then our AURs are up, and part of that is to, you know, price increases on existing items, but part is also just going out with more higher cost items that we do put more value into the product, and we're not seeing resistance to that either.
Thanks so much.
Thank you, Ed.
Our next question comes from the line of Steven Marotta with C.L. King & Associates. Please proceed with your question.
Good afternoon, everybody. Tom, I was wondering if so many other retailers are reporting that consumers kind of turned on a dime in late May and early June, particularly in traffic to brick-and-mortar locations. Did you experience anything like that? Was there any discernible change in consumer behavior during those months?
Not really. You know, I think, Steve, and you're a great student of the industry, you know this, there is a very real bifurcation going on. In the moderate and lower ends of the income spectrum, people are really getting squeezed hard by the increases in gasoline prices, food prices, housing costs, healthcare costs, all these things, and we're very empathetic to that. You know, from a bigger macro picture, you know, we've got our eye on that, and we're very sympathetic to those people. We recognize that people are feeling real pain, and they're cutting back their discretionary spending.
In the part of the market that we play in, which is really the top 20% or 25%, that group, their discretionary spending has not been impacted nearly as much by the very real inflation that's out there. They're getting out and about more, going to the office, maybe not all the time, but more than they were a year or two ago, going to more and more social events. Leisure travel continues to be very, very strong. All of these things really play to our strengths. You know, we really didn't see the pivot and really haven't seen one since the end of the quarter. You know, our August sales were very strong. We had a great comp in August and have started out September very strong.
I think it's, you know, part of it's the consumer we play to, and then a big part of it, of course, is the strength of our brands and our products. Last but not least, I would add the outstanding customer experience that we deliver. Just today, for example, we were named by a major news magazine as one of the top five retailers in the country for customer service in our Tommy Bahama stores. That's the second year in a row that we've been in there, and we are the only retailer to be in there two years in a row. I think that's part of our success, and that's part of why we're so proud of our teams, because they're the ones that deliver those great experiences.
Congratulations on that honor. Relatedly, have you looked at customer retention since the pandemic began? In other words, for the customers that were gained during the pandemic, are they acting any differently than customers that were active prior to the pandemic, either in average annual spend, frequency of spend, lifetime spend, anything like or churn, anything like that?
You know, I have to tell you, Steve, I don't know that we've separated that cohort out, the, you know, those added during the pandemic to see what their performance was versus people that came in in more normal times. I will tell you that as a general rule, all our customer KPIs have continued to improve, so we really haven't seen any degradation. I can't say that we've separated that cohort and looked at it. It's a good question, though. We might.
Sure thing.
The customer analytics team might have just gotten a new assignment.
Sure thing. I'll take the balance offline. Thank you again, and congratulations.
Okay. Thank you, Steve. Alex?
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. Our next question comes from the line of Noah Zatzkin with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Thanks for taking my question, and congrats on the quarter.
Thank you.
Strong performance from your emerging brands during the quarter. Hoping you could provide some color on the performance of Southern Tide during the quarter, as well as how you're thinking about the long-term opportunity for those brands. Thank you.
Southern Tide had a great quarter. We were very proud of their performance. They continue to perform well in the wholesale, which is sort of their heritage, but they've also done a great job through this year of growing the e-commerce business, which we've always believed was a tremendous opportunity for them. Not that they didn't have a great e-commerce business, but we just thought that there was so much more potential there, and they delivered well on that year- to- date. As we mentioned in the prepared comments, with what we've got going on the digital marketing front in the emerging brands group, we think there's just a lot that we're gonna realize there.
Finally, in their own company-owned retail stores, you know, we're still early in that experience, and we've got five open, six open now?
Five now.
Five now. Excuse me, I get mixed up sometimes, but five open now. Very happy with them. I think we're learning a lot every single day, and getting better at doing retail ourselves in Southern Tide. There's a lot of opportunity there. When you look at the brand and what it's offering is and the demographic that it's appealing to, I just think there's massive opportunity there. You know, we're not even at $100 million yet, and I think the idea that this brand, you know, longer term is multiple hundreds of millions of dollars doesn't stretch the imagination too far at all. I'm not giving you a timeline for that exactly at this point, but I think this brand can run a long, long way.
The other two emerging brands, The Beaufort Bonnet Company and Southern Tide, are still significantly smaller at this point and earlier in their trajectories, but we feel equally good about them. Duck Head does not yet have any of its own retail stores, but has a great and nicely growing wholesale business, and then a very strong and rapidly growing e-commerce business. We'll get to company-owned retail there in the foreseeable future. Beaufort Bonnet has a couple of retail stores open. We like what we're seeing there. Of course, they've got a terrific e-commerce business and a nice wholesale business. You know, we're actively looking for additional sites in Beaufort Bonnet as well as Southern Tide, so tons of potential.
The EBG as a operating segment did 31% growth in the first quarter. We think it, you know, it'll be our fastest growing segment, we would expect for, you know, for a good while to come.
Very helpful. Thank you very much.
Thank you, Noah.
Our next question comes from the line of Paul Lejuez with Citi. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, guys, this is Brandon Cheatham filling in for Paul. Just wondering if we could kind of expand on, you know, the promotional environment that you're expecting for the second half. You know, as you look at kind of the environment around you, it seems like there's kind of a glut of apparel out there. You know, just wondering what, like, guidance is expecting for the promotional environment. You know, do you think you're gonna be able to kind of separate yourself from some of the other apparel players that seem to be dealing with quite a bit of inventory at the moment?
Yeah. What I would say, Brandon, is I think you know, if you look at what's happening out there are a lot of retailers that are over-inventoried at this point, and that, you know, traditionally has led to a lot of promotion. You do have a few that are talking about hoteling product, as they call it, where they're just gonna, you know, put it in the warehouse and dust it off this time next year and put it out. That might take a little pressure off. I do think there'll be a lot of promotion going on in the marketplace. You know, that is not a complete non-issue for us. What I would tell you, Brandon, and you can look at our long history on this is we don't really play that game.
In the world, there are kind of two kinds of brands and retailers. There are those that compete on price and those that compete on brand and product, and we're in the latter group. Our proposition is not about, you know, competing with our peers to see who can offer the consumer the lowest price or the biggest discount. Our proposition is who offers the strongest brand message and has the product that backs that up, and that's what we've done very, very successfully for 20 years now. We do think we will be able to come through this environment. As we said, posted double-digit top and bottom line growth for the year and modest operating margin expansion. I'll give you an example, Brandon. You can see this in another industry if you want.
An example is if you're going out and buying a car, you can go to Ford and Chevrolet and a couple other places and negotiate price, spend your whole Saturday negotiating price, those guys will deal with you. You can get a significantly lower price if you're willing to work at it. You look at Tesla. They don't do that. The price you see is the price you pay. They've got the brand. They've got the product. The price is the price, and they're able to do business on that basis. I would tell you that we're in a similar position. We've got great brands. We've got great products. They're differentiated products. Our customers are very loyal to us.
We've got a, you know, a 20-year track record of navigating through, you know, tough markets and still being a full-price retailer. Now, I'll let Scott comment on what we've got baked into the guidance.
Yeah. You know, we mentioned we, you know, expect to expand gross margins, but that will be with some higher promotions. It's mainly because last year we were so lean on inventory, we just had very little product to promote. This year our inventories are, we feel, more appropriate type levels, but that does mean, you know, like, Lilly Pulitzer's flash sale later this month will be bigger than last year's. That's not a bad thing. It just means we've got, you know, more and more appropriate levels. We will, as we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we'll be a, you know, the market's a little more promotional, and we'll be a little more promotional mainly through just the clearance events.
It's really due to the comp we're going against with last year was extremely low from an end-of-season promotion standpoint.
Got it. Yeah, makes sense. One more, if I could. Just, you know, any update on kind of supply chain headwinds? It seems like some of your competitors are seeing that alleviate. You know, what did you see in the second quarter, and what are your expectations for the back half of the year? Thanks.
I do think it's getting a bit better, Brandon. You know, it's still not where we'd love to see it sort of pre-pandemic normal, but it is improving over time, both at the factory end and then in the whole, freight chain, if you will, from the foreign port all the way through to the warehouse in the US. From a freight cost standpoint, we've got some of that in our guidance. Scott, you might wanna tell Brandon what we've got there.
Yeah. We, you know, last year in the second half, we were, you know, close to 300 basis points of margin freight headwind. This year we've still got some freight, you know, headwinds, but it'll be considerably lower than last year. Another thing, you know, I think we maybe are having a little less disruption than many because we did adjust our merchandising calendars. We mentioned that, at the end of the second quarter, we had 27 million more fall inventory on our books than we did this time last year. A good part of that was due to the fact that we moved our merchandising calendars up 4-6 weeks, you know, so we were, you know, accepting product that much earlier to help alleviate some of that.
Not that we've been immune to those disruptions, but I think we've maybe navigated them a little more effectively than some in the market.
Got it. Helpful. Thanks and good luck.
Thank you.
Thank you, Brandon.
As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm seeing no further questions in the queue. I will now turn the call over to Tom Chubb for closing remarks.
Okay. Thank you, Alex, and thanks to everybody for your attention and your interest today. Stay safe, and we look forward to seeing you again in early December.
This concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day.