The Simply Good Foods Company (SMPL)
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Earnings Call: Q1 2022

Jan 5, 2022

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to The Simply Good Foods Company fiscal Q1 2022 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. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. Mark Pogharian. Thank you. You may begin.

Mark Pogharian
VP of Investor Relations, Treasury, and Business Development, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you, operator. Good morning. I'm pleased to welcome you to The Simply Good Foods Company earnings call for the Q1 ended November 27th, 2021. Joe Scalzo, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Todd Cunfer, Chief Financial Officer, will provide you with an overview of results, which will then be followed by a Q&A session. The company issued its earnings release this morning at approximately 7 A.M. Eastern Time. A copy of the release and accompanying presentation are available under the investor section of the company's website at www.thesimplygoodfoodcompany.com. This call is being webcast, and an archive of today's remarks will also be available. During the course of today's call, management will make forward-looking statements that are subject to various risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially. The company undertakes no obligation to update these statements based on subsequent events.

A detailed listing of such risks and uncertainties can be found in today's press release in the company's SEC filings. Note that on today's call, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe will provide useful information for investors. Due to the company's asset-light strong cash flow business model, we evaluate our performance on an adjusted basis as it relates to EBITDA and diluted EPS. We have included a detailed reconciliation from GAAP to adjusted items in today's press release. We believe these adjusted measures are a key indicator of the underlying performance of the business. The presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Please refer to today's press release for a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP.

With that, I'll now turn the call over to Joe Scalzo, President and Chief Executive Officer.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you, Mark. Good morning, and thank you for joining us. Today, I'll recap Simply Good Foods Q1 results and provide you with some details on the performance of our brands. Then Todd will discuss our financial results in a bit more detail before we wrap it up with a discussion of our outlook and your questions. We had a good start to the fiscal year as our Q1 results continued our strong business momentum. Q1 net sales, gross profit, and adjusted EBITDA all increased double digits on a percentage basis versus last year and were slightly better than our expectations. Net sales increased 21.7%, driven primarily by volume. Additionally, we estimate that our September 15th price increase was about a mid-single digit percentage point benefit to the total net sales growth.

Year-over-year increase in net sales benefited from improvements in consumer mobility and shopper traffic versus last year's COVID-19 restrictions. This resulted in retail takeaway slightly greater than our estimates due to growing household penetration from our marketing investments, improved distribution, and new product innovation. Note that the impact of pricing is expected to be greater contribution to growth over the remainder of the year. Total Simply Good Foods Q1 retail takeaway increased 18.7% in the U.S. measured channels of IRI, Nielsen, and convenience stores. Q1 net sales growth was slightly greater than consumption due to the timing of shipments at the end of last quarter and the typical seasonal inventory build related to distribution gains and New Year's retail programming.

Adjusted EBITDA in the Q1 increased 34.7% to $65.6 million, primarily due to the solid sales growth, Quest acquisition synergies, and G&A leverage. This more than offset higher marketing investment. Gross margin increased 70 basis points versus the year ago period. As expected, supply chain costs were a headwind, but were more than offset by our price increase and favorable mix. Additionally, we experienced steady improvement in customer service performance during the quarter. As we stated in previous conference calls, we expected supply chain costs to be a significant headwind in fiscal 2022, largely offset by our price increase. However, our supply chain costs over the remainder of the year are now projected to be higher than our previous outlook, driven mostly by ingredient costs. Therefore, the full year gross margin impact is greater than our prior estimates.

We'll discuss this in greater detail in just a moment. That said, we are confident in our strong top-line growth and our ability to manage these higher costs, and are increasing our full year net sales and adjusted EBITDA outlook. We are focused on driving sales and earnings growth and competing effectively while navigating a challenging supply chain environment. We'll continue to execute against our strategies and believe we are well-positioned to continue to deliver net sales and earnings growth that we expect will create value for all shareholders while doing the right things over the long term for our business, our customers, and our consumers. Simply Good Foods retail takeaway in measured channels increased 18.7% in the quarter. Importantly, as has been the case throughout the pandemic, both our brands have outperformed their respective sub-segments of weight management and active nutrition.

In the quarter, Weight Management segment was up 4.4% and Atkins outperformed this segment with retail takeaway of 7.7% over the same period of time. Total Quest retail takeaway in measured channels in the quarter was up 36.2% and outpaced the Active Nutrition segment growth of 30.3%. Our e-commerce business continues to perform well as POS growth was similar to measured channels even as we anniversary strong year-ago comparables. Atkins Q1 U.S. retail takeaway in measured channels increased 7.7%. Year-over-year increase benefited from improvements in consumer mobility and shopper traffic, particularly in the mass channel versus last year's COVID restrictions, as well as continued total buyer growth. In the quarter, consumption of bars increased 3.3% and was in line with recent trends.

Bar buy rate remains below historic levels as there is a high correlation of bar consumption to being at work. Atkins Shakes in the quarter retail takeaway was up 12.9% and sequentially improved versus the Q4 of last year. Performance was particularly strong in the mass channel, up about 20%. Atkins all other product forms continue to show strong growth. These include confections and cookies, as well as the just launched Atkins protein chips. In Q1, Atkins all other retail takeaway increased about 9%, driven by cookies, which contributed about 2 percentage points to total Atkins brand retail takeaway growth. Confections were up modestly as we lapped last year's successful dessert bar launch. Q1 POS growth increased across all channels and was particularly strong in mass, up about 10%, driven by increased traffic. We're pleased with Atkins e-commerce performance.

Amazon, Atkins' second-largest customer, Q1 retail takeaway increased low teens% on a percentage basis versus the year-ago period. Total Atkins e-commerce POS growth in the quarter was similar to measured channels. Atkins' growth of total buyers remains strong. Buy rate remains mid-single digits below historic levels due to the high correlation between consumption of bars in the workplace. Therefore, the improvement in Atkins buy rate remains an opportunity for the brand. Let me now turn to Quest. Our Q1 retail takeaway increased 36.2% in the measured IRI Nielsen C-store universe and outpaced the active nutrition segment. Growth versus the year-ago period was driven by the increase in household penetration, improving shopper traffic, a rebound in bars, and success of new product forms. Quest bars Q1 retail takeaway in measured channel increased 22.8%.

Recall Quest bars are nearly 60% of total Quest measured channel retail sales. The snackier portion of Quest products, about 40% of U.S. retail sales, continued to do well and increased 106% in the quarter, driven by strong performance of chips, cookies, and confections. We continue to see robust chips demand and are on track for incremental supply to come online as the year progresses. We had another good quarter of growth across all key retail channels. Increased foot traffic in the mass channel and convenience stores was solid. Q1 POS growth in these channels were up about 50% and 40% respectively. Quest e-commerce takeaway increased about 22% versus last year. As expected, due to strong performance in the year-ago period, the growth rate moderated somewhat. Our business at Amazon remained strong and growth was solid across all major forms.

In summary, we're pleased with our Q1 results that were better than what we expected. That said, retail takeaway growth in the H1 of the year will be stronger than the H2 of the year as comparables become significantly more challenging. We have a good balance of innovation as well as consumer and customer programming in place that we believe will drive solid retail takeaway and net sales growth throughout the year. Our customer service levels have improved during the quarter, and we are approaching more normal performance. We expect that supply chain costs will be a significant headwind during the fiscal year. Pricing and cost savings initiatives are in place to mitigate the impact of inflation. However, as I mentioned earlier, supply chain costs remain high and we now expect them to linger at elevated levels throughout this fiscal year and into the fiscal 2023.

Therefore, we are updating our previous view and expect total fiscal year 2022 gross margins to decline about 250 basis points versus last year. As we have stated on numerous occasions, we believe our gross margin and overhead cost structure offer us the ability to invest in the future growth of our brands and organization. As we assess the impact of lingering supply chain cost inflation over the balance of this fiscal year and into fiscal 2023, we will consider all options available to us to protect our cost structure, including further pricing action. As we move into Q2, we expect retail takeaway growth to be similar to Q1. That said, we remain cautious about consumer seasonal participation and return to work trends due to the recent surge in COVID-19 cases from the Omicron variant.

We're executing well against our plans, and we believe we're in position to deliver another year of solid net sales and adjusted EBITDA growth as a path to increasing shareholder value. I'll now turn the call over to Todd, who will provide you with some greater financial details. I'll then end our prepared remarks with details and assumptions related to our revised outlook.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you, Joe, and good morning, everyone. I will begin with a review of our net sales. Total Simply Good Foods Q1 net sales increased 21.7% to $281 million. North American net sales increased 24.5% and was primarily driven by volume. As Joe stated, due to the timing and implementation of the previously announced price increase, we estimate pricing was a mid-single-digit percentage point benefit to total net sales growth. Therefore, pricing will be a greater contribution to sales growth over the remainder of the year. The international business declined 27.3% due to the European business exit. Core international net sales growth was 3%, and the European business exit was a 1.6 percentage point headwind to total company sales growth. Moving on to other P&L items.

Gross profit was $116.6 million, an increase of 23.9%. Gross margin of 41.4% increased 70 basis points versus the year ago period. As expected, supply chain cost inflation was a headwind this quarter. However, it was more than offset by the previously mentioned price increase, lower trade promotion, favorable product and customer channel mix, and carryover coverage of select raw materials. As Joe mentioned, we anticipate significant supply chain inflation in fiscal 2022 due to higher costs related to raw materials, packaging, and logistics. Pricing and cost savings programs are in place to help offset these costs. Adjusted EBITDA increased 34.7% to $65.6 million due to the higher sales and G&A leverage.

Selling and marketing expense increased 21.2% to $30.5 million, driven by higher brand building initiatives on both brands. Due to a large ramp-up of marketing expense in the H2 of fiscal 2021, the majority of the increase in the fiscal 2022 marketing accrual will occur in the H1 of the year. G&A expense, excluding Quest integration costs, restructuring expenses, stock-based compensation, and other costs, were about the same as the year-ago period. Higher incentive compensation was offset by lower corporate expense and integration synergies. We anticipate solid G&A leverage this year and expect leverage will be greater in the H2 of the year due to the timing of when we began to accrue incentive compensation in fiscal 2021. Moving to other items in the P&L.

Interest expense declined $2 million to $6.4 million due to the pay down of the term loan. In the Q1 of fiscal 2022, the non-cash charge related to the remeasurement of our private warrant liabilities was $17.3 million. In the year ago period, we recorded a non-cash $20.5 million gain related to the warrants. Our statutory tax rate in Q1, excluding the charge related to the warrant liability, was about 25%. We continue to anticipate that our full year tax rate will be approximately 27%. Net income in Q1 was $21.2 million versus $43 million in the year ago period. Turning to EPS. Q1 reported EPS was 22 cents per share diluted compared to 23 cents per share diluted for the comparable period of 2021.

In addition to the previously mentioned warrant liability impact, depreciation and amortization expense was $4.7 million and similar to the year ago period. Stock-based compensation of $2.6 million increased $1.5 million versus last year, and costs associated with Quest integration and restructuring was $0.1 million versus $3.8 million last year. Adjusted diluted EPS, which excludes these items, was $0.43, an increase of $0.14 versus the year ago period. Note that we calculated adjusted diluted EPS as adjusted EBITDA, less interest income, interest expense, and income taxes. Additionally, the calculation of adjusted diluted EPS in Q1 assumes fully diluted shares outstanding of 102.5 million versus 97.9 million under GAAP.

The difference versus GAAP is due to the exclusion of the private warrants in fully diluted shares outstanding under GAAP due to the private warrants being classified as a liability on our balance sheet. Please refer to today's press release for an explanation and reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures. Moving to the balance sheet and cash flow. In November 2021, the company paid down $25 million of its term loan, and at the end of the Q1 , the outstanding principal balance was $431.5 million. In the Q1 , the net cash used in operating activities was $7.3 million. Note that this was affected by the timing of working capital, tax payments, and an increase in incentive compensation payments versus the prior year.

The company continues to anticipate full-year fiscal 2022 cash flow from operations will be greater than last year. As of November 27th, 2021, the company had cash of $35.4 million, and the trailing 12-month net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 1.8x . Capital expenditures in the Q1 were $2.7 million. Full-year CapEx is expected to be about $5 million-$6 million. We anticipate GAAP interest expense to be about $25 million, including non-cash amortization expense related to the deferred financing fees. I would like to turn the call back to Joe for closing remarks.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thanks, Todd. Our strong Q1 results are a good start to the year. Our retail takeaway trends remain solid, and we have marketing, customer programming, and new product plans in place to continue to drive growth. This gives us confidence to increase our full-year net sales and adjusted EBITDA outlook versus our previous estimate. Note that our forecast does not assume any meaningful changes in workplace mobility. Looking at the key metrics of our updated full-year fiscal 2022 outlook, we expect net sales to increase 12%-14% versus last year, and this includes a 1 percentage point headwind related to the European business exit.

As I stated earlier, higher supply chain costs versus our previous outlook, driven mostly by ingredients, remains a headwind in 2022 and will result in full-year gross margin contraction of about 250 basis points, with the biggest impact in the second and Q3 . Adjusted EBITDA is anticipated to increase slightly less than the net sales growth rate. We continue to expect that marketing expense will increase versus last year, although at a lower rate than the net sales increase. Additionally, we anticipate benefiting from significant SG&A leverage. The decline in interest expense should result in an increase of adjusted diluted EPS greater than the adjusted EBITDA growth rate. We anticipate the net sales growth in the H1 of the year will be stronger than the H2 as the year-over-year comparisons are significantly more difficult as we proceed through the year.

Additionally, we expect our retail takeaway growth rate in the Q2 of fiscal 2022 to be similar to the Q1 . Due to higher costs, we expect Q2 adjusted EBITDA growth will be less than the net sales growth rate. We're excited about the growth opportunities that exist within our business and this category. We're executing against our strategies and increasing household penetration that is resulting in solid sales and earnings growth. Our strong balance sheet and cash flow generation enable us to invest in our business and evaluate M&A opportunities as a path to increasing shareholder value. We appreciate everyone's interest in our company, and we're now available to take your questions.

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we'll 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'd 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. In the interest of time, we ask that you each keep to one question and one follow-up. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Chris Growe with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.

Chris Growe
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Stifel

Hi, good morning, guys.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Morning, Chris.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Morning, Chris.

Chris Growe
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Stifel

Good morning. I just had a question for you know, and it's been kind of a popular topic on, you know, on many companies' calls. You know, inflation just seems to keep going and you took pricing and as a result it's not totally offsetting the cost inflation. At least there's gonna be some gross margin effect from that. I wonder if you could give me or if you could talk about the level of inflation you now expect. Then I guess we're not looking for forward prospects here for pricing, but just in a world where you look to utilize the gross margin to reinvest back in the business, are you limited in that regard this year because of the gross margin outlook you have for the business now?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. I'll take that one, Chris. First of all, just to be clear, we are very comfortable with our ability to navigate the P&L even with this incremental supply chain cost. As you heard, we raised both our top and bottom-line guidance. We feel terrific about that. You know, regarding levels of inflation, you know, going into the year, we kind of you know, there was significant inflation with a significant price increase, and the inflation that we were seeing was probably high single digits. It's now increased to kind of low double digits for our total business. That's the, you know, new outlook for commodity costs. It is significant. You know, we love the shape of our P&L. We love our ability to invest in our business.

You can count on us to increase marketing in this year. It may not be at the same level of growth rate that we've done in the previous years. As you know, we've increased marketing substantially well ahead of net sales over the last several years. We're close to 10% of net sales from a marketing investment, which we feel great about. We'll increase it. It may not be at the level and the growth rate we've done in the past, but you can expect us to continue to invest in our business.

Chris Growe
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Stifel

Just to be clear on that, Todd, is do you have better visibility in those input costs now? Do you have more coverage, I guess, is the question that would-

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah.

Chris Growe
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Stifel

allow you to have the comfort in that?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. We're about 75% covered for this year. We do have a little bit of exposure, a little bit of risk to the rest of the year. Again, we do have levers in our P&L to manage that. We're very comfortable. Obviously, if this thing continues to linger, you know, we will not hesitate to take some additional pricing action.

Chris Growe
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Stifel

Okay. I had just one quick follow-up on the Atkins brand. It sounds like buy rate is mostly unchanged, it's just more buyers. Was there any measurable change in that sequentially from the Q4 ?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

No. Chris, we're still seeing what we've been experiencing, which is strong interest in the brand, evidenced by the number of buyers participating. We continue to see growth in buyers. The bar form, in particular for Atkins, the number of snacking occasions of bars is being impacted negatively by people not being back at work. Now, the good news is, as we mentioned in our prepared comments, our kind of all other forms, non-shake, non-bar business is doing really well. Those are incremental consumption occasions, highly less correlated to being at work, and that's starting to pick up some of the slack from a buy rate standpoint.

Chris Growe
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Stifel

Okay. Thanks so much for your time.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jason English with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.

Jason English
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Hey, good morning, folks. A couple of quick questions. First, quick back of the envelope math, it looks like you're cutting your gross profit forecast for the full year by around 2%. A, is this correct? And B, with EBITDA actually moving higher in context of gross profit moving lower, where are the offsets?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. I think your math is generally correct. First of all, we have significant G&A leverage in our P&L. You know, the good news is when you're taking the volume up, not only do you get obviously incremental profit from the volume, but from a percentage basis, from a margin perspective, you get a nice kicker at the EBITDA margin line with, you know, G&A, you know, flat to growing very modestly for the year. Then as I, you know, as I talked about, with Chris Growe's question, look, we're going to increase marketing. We have the ability to toggle that back, as, you know, depending on where we see the gross margin come in.

It'll be an increase this year, but we're still at a very healthy level of marketing, so we have the ability to have some more modest increases in marketing if necessary.

Jason English
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

To put a finer point on your answer, Todd, it sounds like you're planning to spend less marketing than you initially planned coming into the year. Did I hear that correctly?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Probably a little bit, depending on how the year plays out. Yeah, you know, our initial guidance when we were having, you know, 8%-10% net sales growth, was for that to be basically in line, so implying kind of a high single-digit growth initially. It's probably gonna be a bit lower than that.

Jason English
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. You sounded so confident on your gross margin outlook last year. Now here we are a few months later, and it looks back of the envelope, like you're raising your ingredient forecast by 15% or so for the full year. We on the outside are looking at spot markets that look like a little up, a little down, but kind of just moving sideways. What's really caught you off guard? What changed so much over the last three months?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. This is Joe. Our original view of the marketplace was that it would not stay at the sustained high levels that we were experiencing as we moved into the year. Our view of it now is, looks like it's gonna linger longer than what we expected. It's not a matter of costs are going up. They're just not abating as what we expected. Frankly, that view is a pretty recent view. We're starting to.

We're just starting the process of stepping back and say, "Okay, if this is gonna linger a while." In our prepared comments, we said kind of the H2 of the year, we expect them to linger into the next fiscal year, "what are our options, and what are we gonna do about it?" We've been pretty clear with the market from the very beginning. We think the shape of our P&L is a competitive advantage. Gross margin's over 40%, marketing investment around 10%, EBITDA as a percent of sales around 20%, right? If these costs seem to be lingering, you can expect us to act in order to maintain our margin structure.

Jason English
Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Understood. Congrats on the strong demand momentum, by the way. I'll pass it on. Thank you.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you, Jason.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Wendy Nicholson with Citi. Please proceed with your question.

Wendy Nicholson
Equity Research Analyst, Citi

Hi. My first question is just on the supply chain, in terms of your availability on the labor side, in terms of the work you have with the co-manufacturers. Are you seeing any challenges? I know you talked about strength in the Atkins shake business. Obviously, that's off a very low base because it's a new product. Can you talk about bars versus shakes, if you're seeing any specific challenges in getting product in the door?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, Wendy. Good question. As we said in our prepared comments, our performance improved during the quarter. We were below our expectations on customer service. Frankly, it was not one thing. Throughout the supply chain, we've run into challenges from ability to get access to customers' docks, to the ability to get products from co-man, the ability to get ingredients to get products from co-man. Pretty much you're playing supply chain whack-a-mole on a daily basis. That said, our supply chain team has done a particularly outstanding job in the Q1 of addressing those challenges and improving our customer service such that when we exit the Q1 , we're getting pretty close to or where we expect our customer service performance to be. Look, I don't.

Are we out of the woods from a supply chain standpoint? No, I expect it will continue to be challenged on a daily basis with issues. Nothing is smooth right now, but our team has shown the ability to manage through that, and we're pretty confident.

Wendy Nicholson
Equity Research Analyst, Citi

On the Atkins shake business, obviously, you know, protein shakes, great category, rapidly growing, but also very competitive. You know, the Atkins brand obviously speaks for itself in terms of brand recognition, but just can you remind us kind of how is that positioned and how do you intend to kinda carve out a niche in a very crowded category right now?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. Let me dispel that it's a category. It is not. It's a very unusual in this nutrition category, you got products and forms that don't compete with each other. Let me give you the simplest example. Ensure and Boost, high protein, low carbs and low sugar, so they interact very little with Atkins and Premier Protein because the consumer benefit is fundamentally different. Consumer targets are different, consumer benefits are different. If you try to group anything that's a shake, that's high protein, low carbs and low sugar together, you're actually making a mistake on how to think about the category. I think what's happening is because people are home more, shakes, there are more usage occasions of those shakes across the consumer targets and across the consumer benefits. I think you're seeing that.

Second, if you can supply the product, you're getting preferential treatment among retailers because you can service it, you can get display, and keep your shelf stocked. We've not had issues with our shake business, and we're benefiting a little bit from that. Again, there's not a lot of interaction. It's very unusual. You've got identical products that do not interact with each other because the consumer targets and the benefits are so fundamentally different.

Wendy Nicholson
Equity Research Analyst, Citi

Fair enough. Then my last question, it was just one of the comments you made at the very beginning was about the shipments outpacing inventory a little bit in anticipation of sort of normal inventory build and New Year's promotions. I guess my question is just in the first, you know, whatever, two weeks of the year with Omicron and whatnot, are you seeing any delay in purchases, people going back to the stores? I'm just wondering if there's that inventory build means there's gonna be excess inventory on store shelves for some time to come.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. I think our prepared comments, to be clear, had two factors in that. First, we ended last year at a lower trade inventory level than what we would've expected, and it had to do with our ability to flow products to customers, both on the customer side and our side. We had some makeup to do in the quarter. Second, you rightfully pointed out, you know, the build up for merchandising at retail in New Year's. Really too early to call New Year's consumption yet, right? We haven't gotten that kind of first complete week of January from a POS standpoint, so it's hard to tell exactly what the consumer offtake is gonna be in New Year's. Yeah.

Wendy Nicholson
Equity Research Analyst, Citi

Fair enough. Thanks.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Good news.

Wendy Nicholson
Equity Research Analyst, Citi

Yeah.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you, Wendy.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Kaumil Gajrawala with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.

Kaumil Gajrawala
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Hi, guys. Good morning. If I could follow up a little bit on the supply chain commentary you just made. Do you have a sense or an idea on the impact it might have had on overall top line, or was it as simple as, you know, just the customer service wasn't where you wanted it to be?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Q1, again, ability to service the customer impacts your revenue, when you are out of stock, right? If you miss a sale because somebody comes into a store and you're out of stock, that's the challenge of the business. We had out of stocks in the Q1 . We saw those as the quarter progressed steadily get better. Obviously we're a little bit more optimistic. Our service is better. Out of stocks are being reduced. The ability to flow product to the shelf is smoother than it was as we went into the quarter. That's all good news.

Kaumil Gajrawala
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Okay, great. To talk a little bit more on household penetration in the context of market share, you know, you've benefited from mobility, but you've benefited from a lot of brand momentum recently as well. Since you're in so many categories, it's a little difficult for us from the outside to get a good sense on where share trends look. I would anticipate they're up nicely, but if you could give any more context or color on where you sit in terms of share in the context of how you look at your brands.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. Maybe it would be helpful. Sounds like you may be sub-segmenting the brands by form. It will be our strong recommendation that you look at sub-segments of weight management for Atkins regardless of form and on Quest, regardless of form, active nutrition, which would include brands like Premier Protein, to name a few, right? In both of those segments-

Kaumil Gajrawala
Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Right.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Atkins has outperformed the weight management segment, and Quest has outperformed the active nutrition segment. That's what we track. There's so much interaction within our brands, within the forms. It is more accurate to take a brand view, therefore a brand consumer benefit view than it is trying to sub-segment chips and cookies and shakes and bars. Because the brand will interact so much within those, you get a false read of what's really going on. To give you an example, the highest interaction of Atkins meal bars is Atkins shakes. If we're on a roll on shakes because of innovation, because of merchandising, because of good communication, we see an impact in our meal bar business and vice versa. Look at the brand from a consumer benefit, weight management, active nutrition, and evaluate the total brand against those segments.

What you'll see is we've been steadily growing share in both of those subsegments.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Useful. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alexia Howard with Bernstein. Please proceed with your question.

Alexia Howard
Senior Analyst, Bernstein

Good morning, everyone.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Morning, Alexia.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Hi, Alexia.

Alexia Howard
Senior Analyst, Bernstein

Hi. Going into this year, I know we're entering the Q2 for you guys now, but the level of uncertainty is unprecedented. Just given the pandemic, given the input cost inflation and all the other moving pieces, supply chain disruption and so on. If you had to rank order from here what the key sort of uncertainties are in terms of risks and opportunities, given the change in guidance that we've just seen from you, how would you rank order the things that you don't know, or that you don't have visibility into from here? Thank you.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Wow.

Alexia Howard
Senior Analyst, Bernstein

I have a follow-up.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

That's a killer question, Alexia. What keeps me up at night? All right, so I think any change to consumer mobility and shopping behavior, that would be the first, right? We saw at the beginning of the pandemic, that led to huge levels of volatility, from a consumption standpoint. If you remember the early stages, consumption spiked and then it declined, and shopper traffic was down and channel mix changed. If you were looking at risks to the business, the Omicron variant's impact on people's shopping behaviors and their mobility. Are they out and about? Or is life at least reasonably similar to when it's been in this kind of post-COVID consumer mobility world? That would be the first. I think the second in our business is we took a price increase on September 15th.

You know, for the most part, it doesn't start really to hit the shelves until early November, so retailers don't move price that quickly. We don't really have a lot of data on the impact on volume of the price increase. That's a H2 of the year risk, I think. That one keeps me up a little bit. And then I think third, just in general, we know we're gonna be chasing supply chain challenges for the year, right? Our ability to be responsive to those challenges, and our team has done a phenomenal job, but they are playing whack-a-mole every day, right? And they're chasing issues that you typically don't deal with in a year. Nothing's flowing steadily.

You know, our customer service has gotten significantly better, but like a duck on the water, looks smooth, but we're working really hard to make that happen. I would say in the cost environment, you know, I think we, the absolute price has been pretty steady. I think somebody said that in their comments. For us now, it's how long is it gonna linger, and then what do we wanna do about it? I'm less concerned about the price because it appears to have plateaued. The fundamental question is how long is it gonna be around, and then how do we address it going forward?

Alexia Howard
Senior Analyst, Bernstein

Makes perfect sense. Thank you so much. Just a real quick follow-up. You mentioned favorable mix in the press release this morning. What is that attributable to, and how long is it likely to continue?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. During COVID, during the heights of COVID, on both brands, the bar business really suffered. Now that we're getting back to, you know, somewhat normal consumer behavior, the bar business, particularly on the Quest side, has rebounded really nicely. Also from a customer standpoint, you're getting a better balance between brick and mortar and e-com. The C store business on the Quest side has had a tremendous, you know, last couple of months here, and those are all positive things from a mix perspective for us.

Alexia Howard
Senior Analyst, Bernstein

Perfect. Thank you so much. I'll pass it on.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Rob Dickerson with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.

Rob Dickerson
Managing Director of Consumer Staples Equity Research, Jefferies

Great. Thanks so much. First quick question. Just, you know, the top-line guide obviously, you know, implies deceleration year-over-year relative to Q1, and then I realize that H2 will likely grow more slowly than the H1 . Just in terms of Q2, you know, Joe, I guess, and Todd too, just given your comments, you know, it sounds like you know, have hedged a bit, so to speak, in terms of some elasticity risk for Q2. Then also there's, you know, the implied kind of roll-off of the inventory build benefits. I'm just curious, you know, as we think Q2 year-over-year top-line relative to Q1, is there any kind of expectation for an increase in pricing given the timing of the pricing you've already implemented?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Two, on the volume side, is there anything in there?

Rob Dickerson
Managing Director of Consumer Staples Equity Research, Jefferies

That could decelerate a bit, you know, outside of just the inventory build benefits you got in Q1. Thanks. I have a quick follow-up.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. So I mean, you know, you saw the POS growth in the Q1 and really total consumption was in that 18%-19% range, which is, you know, obviously we're very pleased about. What we said in our comments is, we think that's gonna be about the same in Q2. Now, we shipped a little bit ahead of consumption. Some of that was just getting inventory back on the shelves from what was going on during the summer period. We obviously shipped a bit ahead of consumption. Our comments are we're gonna, you know, POS consumption is gonna be about the same. It's always a little bit of a wild card where the inventory is gonna fall as we end the quarter.

We're kind of in that, you know, high teens, 20%, you know, kind of consumption rate we feel comfortable about. Where net sales exactly falls depending on, you know, where shipments are, you know, it's always hard to tell within a couple points. We think the POS will be very, very consistent. As you get into the H2 , obviously, H1 of last year, we grew 1%-2%. H2 of last year, we grew 25%. We're lapping much more challenging numbers. As Joe pointed out with the last question, we still have, you know, noise around pricing elasticity, around consumer mobility.

You know, we're playing, you know, potentially a little bit of conservative, you know, H2 assumptions here, but we have a much more difficult lap in the H2 .

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. The thing that's a little deceptive is, you know, H2 growth rate starts to step down relative to the H1 . We're really confident in our ability to grow the top line, the absolute dollar sales. It's a manifestation of the year ago comparisons in the H2 year, not our ability to grow the business. We're very confident in that. We feel like we've got the products, the marketing, the programming at retail, you know, to continue to drive strong dollar sales. We're very confident in that.

Rob Dickerson
Managing Director of Consumer Staples Equity Research, Jefferies

Fair enough. Just quickly on the incremental pricing commentary, it would seem as if just kinda given the timing of your fiscal year, you know, if you were to implement incremental pricing at retail and just given kind of the lag of announcement relative to when it hits the shelf, it would seem like that could be, you know, maybe kind of a late fiscal 2022 event if needed, but, you know, probably higher probability that kind of rolls into 2023. Is that fair?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Maybe this will be helpful, Rob. When you make the decision to price, takes you three or four months to execute it with customers.

Rob Dickerson
Managing Director of Consumer Staples Equity Research, Jefferies

Yep. Fair enough.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

The minute you pull the trigger, it's three-four months before you can execute, and then from a retailer standpoint, another few months for them to reflect it at shelf. There's a delay to that. Again, as I mentioned in one of the previous questions, you know, our view of the lingering cost is a recent one. We're just starting to evaluate our options right now.

Rob Dickerson
Managing Director of Consumer Staples Equity Research, Jefferies

Yep. Got it. All right, great. Thanks a lot.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thanks, Rob.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ben Bienvenu with Stephens Inc. Please proceed with your question.

Ben Bienvenu
Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Hey, thanks. Good morning. I wanna follow up on the revenue side of the equation. You talked about among the, you know, potential risks outside of your control, one of which being consumer mobility. When you think about your ability to mitigate those risks and thinking about innovation as a growth driver and your ability to price, how comfortable do you feel in terms of the elements that are within your control to help mitigate any risk associated with external factors that are out of your control?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, great question. I think two. You know, there's two risks that people lockdown at home or don't wanna go into stores, right? Those are the two risks, I think. When they lockdown at home, their snacking occasions change, right? For us, probably the single biggest mitigator has been the growth in all other forms. What I mean by that is on both brands, we have a bar business and a shake business, which I think is center of the fairway core business for us, right? And as we noted in our commentary with Atkins that, bars, especially for Atkins, highly correlate to being at work and being in transit. The nice thing that we've learned as we've launched into cookies, chips, and confections is they don't correlate to location at all.

Our ability to grow those is a nice hedge against the risk that we see in consumption on bars if people would kind of go back to staying at home and not going out. The second factor is shopping behavior. If you remember the earliest, it's been two years, but if you remember the earliest behaviors, people stopped shopping and limited the number of retail outlets they were going to. Best hedge there has been e-commerce business. The major brick-and-mortar retailers have accelerated their e-commerce business, both ordering online and having it delivered, as well as pickup and delivery. They combined with Amazon with Amazon is a natural hedge to people shopping behavior and retail doors changing.

We feel like, yes, there's a risk out there, probably gonna be transient, but we've had some natural hedges, to offset those challenges. Still keeps me up at night, though.

Ben Bienvenu
Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Okay, that's great. Thanks. My second question is a follow-up on cost. You talked about, I think 75% of your exposure is covered. Could you discuss, is that uniform across the year, or would it be, you know, would the nature of that be that you're fully covered for the next several quarters and more exposed for maybe the Q4 ? And then within that coverage, where are the buckets of least versus most coverage?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah. I would rather not get into that level of specificity. To answer your question broadly, there are some commodities where we are covered for the entire year. There are some commodities and some more minor ingredients where we might be only covered for 50%-60% of the year. It's not uniform. But again, for competitive reasons, I don't wanna get into specifics. You know, 75% of the year, there's not a huge difference between the commodities, but there are some commodities that we are fully covered on.

Ben Bienvenu
Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Okay, fair enough. Thanks so much, and best of luck with the rest of the year.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steve Powers with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Yes. Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Good morning.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Hey, Steve.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

I guess as you think about the cadence of fiscal 2022 from a gross margin perspective, I guess I'm trying to get a better feel for your anticipated exit rate on gross margin into 2023. It seems like there's a sure hit to come versus prior expectations in the next couple of quarters, but I guess I'm less clear where your guidance and current forecasts have you exiting 2022 versus three months ago and where you wanna be. 'Cause you as you said earlier, that 40%, you know, plus gross margin is a big part of your P&L advantage. As we step away from that the next couple of quarters, I guess, you know, how much progress can we expect to make back towards that ambition by year-end?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, as we mentioned earlier, it's, you know, we're gonna obviously start to see the pretty significant hit here in Q2. Q3 will be the toughest comp for us, not only from a 2022 cost perspective, but if you remember Q3 last year, we just had a blow-out gross margin expansion. Just kinda everything was clicking. We had 140 basis points of gross margin expansion, even despite, you know, a pretty difficult environment. That's gonna be a tough lap. We saw costs start to rise in Q4 of last year a bit, still had gross margin expansion. You know, again, we're not completely covered for the year, and obviously, a lot of things can change in the next, you know, six to nine months.

You know, we should start to see gross margin degradation be a little bit, you know, less severe as we go into Q4. Really depends on where commodities are for the end of the year, really depends on whether we take any very specific actions. It should be better in Q4. If it's, as we've said, you know, several times here on the call, if things are not where we want it to be, you can rest assured we will take some action that, you know, will either start to impact Q4 or, more importantly, impact 2023.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Yeah. Okay. I guess from a, just a what's embedded in your outlook, I get the year-over-year dynamics because of-

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

... the comps. Sequentially, are you gonna take a big step down in 2Q and then kinda go sideways for the next three quarters, or do you expect to see sequential improvement in gross margin, given the levers?

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

You have at your disposal.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, I mean, again, it depends how everything plays out. It'll be fairly flat as we get into Q3 and Q4. Those gross margins will be relatively the same from an absolute basis year-over-year. There'll be some, obviously, changes for what I just said, but the absolute gross margins should be relatively, you know, equal in Q3 and Q4.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Okay. Fair enough. I guess if I could, just totally different topic, just any comments on the M&A landscape in terms of opportunities crossing your desk, as well as any change in your appetite to entertain deals just given the uncertainty you're facing, we've been talking about for the last, you know, almost hour.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

It's a pretty busy environment with a lot of opportunity. As we've stated on a number of occasions, sellers have frothy expectations and buyers need to beware.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Yep. Okay

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

We continue to evaluate complementary brands to our portfolio, and we like to think of ourselves as value buyers. We're looking for assets of decent size, given the size of our portfolio, the number of brands and the size of those brands. We need to understand the consumer promise as part of that, have a pretty good understanding of who the consumer target is and our ability to more effectively market that brand to that consumer target in order to grow it. Obviously, we have, you know, supply chain synergies, a strong selling organization that we could add a brand to the bag, too, and accelerate. For the most part, you're looking for strong consumer brands that are complementary to our portfolio today.

Those are out there, and you just, you know, you continue to have to chase them to see if you can get a business at a decent value.

Steve Powers
Equity Research Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Appreciate it, Joe. Thanks all around.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

All right.

Todd Cunfer
CFO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Thank you.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Have a good day.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Pamela Kaufman with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.

Pamela Kaufman
Equity Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Hi. Good morning.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Morning.

Pamela Kaufman
Equity Analyst, Morgan Stanley

I know that it's a very dynamic environment, but I was curious if you are observing any changes in demand from the recent renewed rise in COVID cases. Would you expect any short-term headwinds from changes in consumer mobility? What, if anything, have you factored into your outlook from Omicron?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, we've not, you know, in the prepared remarks factored any changes, either positive or negative, from a demand standpoint. Our view is it remains where it is. You know, Omicron has been a recent phenomenon. If you think about it, last month it was in South Africa, now it's 95% of the cases in the United States. It's a little too early to call. We're not seeing dramatic foot traffic changes. We're not seeing dramatic changes in consumption behavior or apparent movement. You know, you have to keep your eyes open. This thing is pretty dynamic and pretty volatile.

Pamela Kaufman
Equity Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Okay. I have a broader question on Quest. Quest has seen very strong growth over the last several years. How are you thinking about the midterm growth rate for the brand? What do you see as the key drivers? How much would you expect to come from increasing household penetration versus distribution expansion, innovation?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Let me tell you how we think about it and then it might give you some insights, right? For us, the key metric from a marketing standpoint is household penetration. All the other factors are derivative factors to help that. Share of voice of marketing, white space from a distribution standpoint, product innovation, all accelerates our ability to drive household penetration. The Quest brand has benefited in the last, call it, year or so from two big factors. Factor number one has been the bar business has started to recover from COVID confinement. In particular, channel has helped the brand. We have a big C-store business, small format business. That team has done a phenomenal job at kickstarting the bar business for Quest as foot traffic has improved there.

You're seeing a rebound in bars, which is 60% of the Quest business. That's been a big factor for us. The second is kind of all other forms, what Mark calls the snackier portion of the Quest portfolio. With the exception of our RTD business, Quest, all of the snackier portion of the portfolio has done extremely well. Cookies continue to grow. Chips, we've been supply constrained, the demand has been so strong. Confections have done extremely well. Those have driven oversized growth rates in the business. I think collectively in our prepared remarks, up 100% year-over-year. Law of large numbers will eventually affect the growth rate. We would expect Quest to continue to outperform the subsegment of the category, the active nutrition category that they're in on a sustainable basis.

Pamela Kaufman
Equity Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Thank you.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

You're welcome.

Pamela Kaufman
Equity Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Then just a quick question on pricing. Pricing was a mid-single digit benefit in the quarter, but you indicated that it should continue to build over the course of the year. How should we think about the magnitude of contribution from pricing over the remainder of the year?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, we took a price increase that averaged about 7.5%-8%. Because of the timing of the price increase, we didn't get the full benefit in Q1, only around 5%-6%. We'll get an extra two points from pricing. That's the good news. The question is what is the impact on volume and elasticities. From a pure pricing perspective, we'll get an extra 2 points for the remainder of the year.

Pamela Kaufman
Equity Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Thank you. That's helpful.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Eric Larson with Seaport Global Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Eric Larson
Equity Analyst, Seaport Global Securities

Yeah, thanks, guys, and congrats on a good quarter. Joe, I just wanna dial back to the category growth. The total nutrition category. You folks in your subsegments are outperforming, you know, your peers. In the Q1 , maybe this is just a timing issue and what happened a year ago, and maybe these numbers really aren't all that important from a one quarter perspective. What segments of the nutritional snacking category are actually growing faster than you? Maybe it's not subsegments, maybe it's what value proposition segments are growing faster and are they sustainable? I mean, how are you looking at the total category?

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, you hit it right on the nose. We don't compete and we see the category in three pieces: active nutrition with Quest, Premier Protein, a number of brands, weight management with Atkins, and then we see nutritious bars, CLIF, KIND, as the third segment. That category is experiencing right now against very easy comparables, strong growth. It is, along with active nutrition, is outperforming weight management on a year-over-year basis. That'll moderate as the comparables get more challenging, right? Bars really got slammed in COVID. The nutritious bar segment is comping some, easy comps. They'll get difficult as you move through the year. We're really comfortable overall. If you look at the total category, we're comfortable we can outperform the total category.

In any one quarter, half year, given what's been going on in COVID, you know, you may see some segments outperform some other segments. Over the long term, we're pretty comfortable in our ability to outperform the total category.

Eric Larson
Equity Analyst, Seaport Global Securities

Yeah, got it. It's just a comp issue, and it's just a lot of noise in the quarter, and that will work its way out over the next, you know, two-three or four quarters. Thanks, Joe. I appreciate the comments.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

You're welcome. Looking at two-year stacks right now is a very useful exercise, 'cause you drive yourself crazy with year ago.

Eric Larson
Equity Analyst, Seaport Global Securities

Yeah, I agree. Thank you.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

You're welcome.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our time allowed for questions. I'll now turn the floor back to Mr. Scalzo for any final comments.

Joe Scalzo
President and CEO, The Simply Good Foods Company

Yeah, thanks for your participation on today's call and the terrific questions. We hope you continue to remain safe, and we look forward to updating you on our Q2 results in April. Have a good day.

Operator

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

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