TSE:DOL Dollarama Q1 2024 Earnings Report C$172.13 +0.29 (+0.17%) As of 04:00 PM Eastern ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Dollarama EPS ResultsActual EPSC$0.63Consensus EPS C$0.58Beat/MissBeat by +C$0.05One Year Ago EPSN/ADollarama Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.29 billionExpected Revenue$1.24 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$59.15 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ADollarama Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date6/7/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateWednesday, June 7, 2023Conference Call Time11:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress ReleaseEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Dollarama Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJune 7, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00You, operator, and good morning, everyone. This morning, we announced outstanding first quarter results, including a 17% increase in same store sales and a 29% increase in diluted earnings per share to $0.63 Clearly, Canadians from all walks of life are still responding positively to our compelling value proposition and affordable product mix. While we continue to experience strong demand for consumables in the context of persistent inflationary pressures, we are also seeing strength across our seasonal and general merchandise categories. I'm particularly pleased with the performance of our Easter season this year, demonstrating our strong fundamentals and the fact that the full mix is continuing to drive traffic to our stores. Our entire organization is delivering on our value promise, whether that value promise comes from pricing, merchandising or assortment breadth. Operator00:00:58With our inventory rebuild mostly behind us, I am pleased with our product offering across our price points and with our now solid in stock and in store inventory level. With the goal of increasing proximity to our customers. Q1 was a particularly active quarter on the real estate front with the opening of 21 net new stores. This reflects a concerted effort by our real estate and operations teams to frontload net new store openings this year. The strategy is to take some of the pressure off the last quarter of the year, which is always our busiest quarter. Operator00:01:36Note that the acceleration in the net new store openings in Q1 has no impact on our annual target, which remains between 60 70 net new stores by fiscal year end. Among those 21 in Q1 was our 15th 100th store in Canada, which opened in the Rockland Centre here in Montreal this past April, a milestone we were pleased to reach in our hometown and celebrate as a team. Hats off to our real estate, field and operations teams for their disciplined execution on our long term growth plans of reaching 2,000 stores across Canada by 2,031. Today, about 85% of Canadians live within 10 kilometers of a Dollarama store, which represents no small feed in is something we are very proud of. The team at Dollar City also continues to execute on their long term growth plans in the 4 LatAm countries where they operate. Operator00:02:33In the Q1 this year, 8 net new stores were opened bringing their total store count to 448. It's been just over 2 years since Dollar City launched its 1st store in Peru. With 24 stores and counting in that country, we are very pleased with how this new market is performing and with the team's execution. Turning to ESG. We published our latest comprehensive annual ESG report this morning, outlining our evolving ESG strategy as well as our progress against goals. Operator00:03:08Our commitment to managing our business responsibly, we are further building our organizational ESG capacities and integrating ESG into our daily decision making. Last year, we created an ESG function and earlier this year, we established an ESG steering committee responsible for the advancement of our ESG strategy across the organization. We continue to move our climate strategy forward, including the introduction of our 1st generation GHG intensity reduction goal for Scope 1 and 2 emissions last year. We are proud to have taken this initial step and of the progress made year over year. We are now further advancing our climate roadmap and alignment with TCFD by focusing our attention on identifying and tracking relevant Scope 3 emissions. Operator00:04:00Across our ESG pillars, our operations, our people, our products and customers, our supply chain and our governance, we will continue to implement goals and initiatives that are meaningful and actionable and that enable us to deliver on our value promise to our customers and our shareholders. JP, over to you to review our Q1 financial results in more detail. Speaker 100:04:24Thank you, Neil, and good morning, everyone. As expected, we continued to benefit from sustained demand for affordable everyday items during the Q1 of fiscal 2024. This translated into strong demand across our 3 product segments and same store sales above 17% as mentioned by Neil. SSS was comprised of a strong 15% increase in traffic and a 1.4% increase in average basket size. This quarter, we also maintained our industry leading gross margin, which was 42.2% of sales compared to 42.1% in the same quarter last year. Speaker 100:05:05Q1 represented the tail end of supply chain related cost pressures on our margin with higher logistics costs and saw continued products mix pressure offset by lower ocean freight costs. For its part, SG and A also remained relatively flat year over year at 15.1% of sales compared to 15% last year. Our strong financial performance has enabled us to absorb continued wage pressures to date with additional minimum wage increases in the pipeline and reflected in our annual guidance. While the persistent tight supply in the labor market that has impacted the entire industry remains a concern, it has not resulted in any significant disruptions to our operations. Our 50.1% share of Dollar City's net earnings grew by 50% to 13,100,000 for the same period last year, reflecting the ongoing strong financial and operational performance of Dollar City. Speaker 100:06:10With an acceleration in same store sales along with active gross margin and SG and A management and a higher equity pickup from large city. EBITDA increased by over 22 percent to $366,000,000 representing 28.3 percent of sales and net earnings were $180,000,000 or $0.63 per share, representing a 29% increase year over year. Finally, once again, inventory remained stable sequentially this quarter at 938,000,000 as at April 30, 2023 compared to $957,000,000 as at the end of January. In light of our Q1 performance, we are maintaining our fiscal 2024 guidance ranges published this past March. While we acknowledge that there may potentially be some upside to our same store sales guidance. Speaker 100:07:06We prefer to remain conservative at this point and wait to see how the consumer lapse last year's very strong Q2 SSS performance. That being said, so far in Q2, SSS cadence is generally in line with Q1's 2 year stack SSS. On the capital allocation front, the Board approved a quarterly dividend of $0.0708 per share. While there were no buybacks in Q1, primarily due to higher CapEx with a large number of net new stores combined with the racking of our Laval warehouse and the forthcoming closing of our previously announced industrial property acquisition, we do intend to remain active in subsequent quarters contingent on market conditions. As mentioned on our last call, our strategy is to maintain a balanced approach to capital allocation by continuing to invest in organic growth and returning capital to shareholders. Speaker 100:08:09We intend to continue to allocate our excess free cash flows towards the repurchase of shares through our NCIB. In conclusion, we continue to execute well from an operational and financial standpoint in what remains a complex environment. As always, we're focused on maintaining our value promise to our customers and maximizing long term value for our shareholders. That concludes our formal remarks. I'll turn it over to the operator for the Q and Speaker 200:08:39A. Thank you. Marcus, please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 300:09:27Thanks and good morning everyone. Clearly, consumer demand remains Can you talk about I think Neil mentioned something about Easter. Can you talk about what you're seeing from a demand from a category demand perspective, both for Q1 and Q2 to date now that weather has turned, although not so much this week. And also in terms of the price points, please. Operator00:09:56We're starting to get some traction, Irene, on summer, although as you said, It's unseasonably chilly still in many parts of the country, along with other natural disasters unfortunately, which are challenging many areas of the country, which is a challenge that none of us needed. But the customer has started to move towards our summer offering. We had a good Easter as mentioned. And so there's a move, slight move away from the consumables and back a little bit towards the traditional mix. As far as price points, Again, no change there. Operator00:10:46We still have the same balanced purchasing and sourcing approach to having all the price points available for all the categories of goods and the consumer continues to partake in all of those price points with no real move in any specific price point. Speaker 300:11:04That's really helpful. Just a couple of follow ups, please. Firstly, I seem to remember that refreshes were below normal targeted levels the last couple of years because of some of the difficulties in China. How should we be thinking about now that China has opened again, the offering and maybe more of the sort of the treasure hunting kind of element and the wow factor in sort of the current year and next year? Operator00:11:33We're seeing a slight increase in creativity and production both overseas and domestically. But it's still a slow progressive curve. There's nothing extreme happening on that front. We're optimistic that the next year or 2 should help bring things back to normal on that side. But for the moment, it's a slight increase, not a huge increase. Speaker 300:12:06Thank you very much. And then just Finally, on the whole same store sales guidance. So if we take Q1 as a whole Q1 and we sort of don't change the overall guidance for the year. It implies same store sales in the 1% to I think 2.25%, 2.5% range in subsequent quarters. And with what JP just said about Q2 to date same store sales, we're probably running say 10%, 11%. Speaker 300:12:36So how should we be thinking about all of that? Speaker 100:12:40So Irene, the way to think about this is similar to last year. We prefer to be thoughtful about our guidance. We'll Likely, if all things remain equal, provide an update to The Street in September. But we want to see how the next few months unfold. As you mentioned, Q2 to date, we're seeing the same trends as what we've seen in Q1. Speaker 100:13:11So it's just to be thoughtful about our guidance. Speaker 300:13:16Understood. Thank you very much. Speaker 100:13:18Thanks. Speaker 200:13:22Thank you. The next question is from Chris Lee from Desjardins. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 400:13:28Hi, good morning, everyone. Maybe start up with a question on private label. I know penetration is already very high. I think it's close to around 70%. But just curious to see if you see room in certain categories for further increase in private label penetration, especially in this environment? Operator00:13:47I don't think any category will increase in private label. Honestly, I think we'll continue to focus on putting our best foot forward from an art and branding perspective, continued focus on ESG, reducing packaging where Makes sense. We're converting packaging to something that's more recyclable, more user friendly. But an actual penetration of private label, I don't see any change. Speaker 400:14:22Okay, that's helpful. And then maybe a question on how we should think about unit volume growth. Average basket was up 1.4%, but Tropy was up very high at 15%. Does it mean the customers are effectively frequenting your stores a lot more, but perhaps buying less each time such that your overall unit volume is still growing? Speaker 100:14:46There is a mix of patterns. Of course, I mean the key element is What we saw during COVID was basket consolidation. So we had fewer trips and bigger basket. We're expecting the basket to deconsolidate and have traffic increase. What effectively happened and is happening is We're seeing traction in traffic size, while the basket size is slightly increasing. Speaker 100:15:19So we're happy with the outcome on both fronts. Speaker 400:15:23Okay, that's great. And then maybe last question is maybe on shrink. I know some of your U. S. Dollar peers have called out shrink as having bit of an outsized impact on the margin. Speaker 400:15:31Just curious to see how is shrink impacting your business these days? Thank you. Speaker 100:15:38Our shrink has been increasing for the past few quarters and it's embedded in our guidance. Speaker 400:15:47Okay, great. Thanks and all the best. Speaker 500:15:50Thanks, Chris. Speaker 200:15:53Thank you. The next question is from Tamy Chen from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 600:16:01Thanks. Good morning. Neil and JP, I just want to go back again to your comp on the traffic side. It's just so strong, especially Last year's quarter, which was already strong. And so we know at a high level, there's the consumer trade down. Speaker 600:16:17That's a big factor. But I'm just wondering, you talk a little bit more about where exactly this really continued strength is coming from, whether it's immigration or is it just Continued elevated level of capturing new customers? Speaker 100:16:35Yes. I think it's broad based. So when you look at our category performance, we're seeing those trends, as Neil mentioned, across our categories. So there's nothing overly specific to point out. I just think and we believe it's our value proposition and our strategy just playing out. Speaker 100:16:58So nothing that's overly newsworthy in terms of specific elements. I just think it's broadly speaking a general performance on many fronts. Speaker 600:17:15Okay, got it. And I'm just curious, inflation is starting to decelerate in Canada here, albeit very slowly, but it is starting to decelerate. Though it sounds like at least so far in fiscal Q2, Where your comp is trending that at the margin, you're not really seeing a bit of a change in traffic trends or other consumer behaviors In your stores that it's still quite strong and not the trade down is still continuing. Would you say that's fair to say or at the margin, are you seeing a little bit of change because this High inflationary environment is starting to ease a little bit. Speaker 100:17:58Well, you have to consider many factors despite the inflationary environment. There's wage growth, there's the interest rate environment. So there's many economic factors over and above just inflation to consider when you look at consumer behavior. So what we've experienced so far is all those factors at play and we can't just isolate one factor and drive conclusions from that factor. So, but your statement is right from Q2 to date perspective. Speaker 600:18:39Okay, got it. Thank you. Speaker 100:18:41Thank you. Speaker 200:18:43Thank you. The next question is from George Doumet From Scotiabank, please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 700:18:51Yes. Good morning, JP and Neil. Thanks for taking my questions. JP, can you help us dissect the gross margin performance in the Sure. The extent of the negative mix impacts and maybe the lower product and freight costs. Speaker 700:19:04And maybe how should we think of the cadence of the improvement as the year goes on. Speaker 100:19:10Yes. So in Q1, we had the benefit of lower container costs, so what we call ocean freight costs. That was offset by a higher logistics costs. And when we talk about logistics costs, we're thinking about our Canadian supply chain and there was some mix impact. So When you put it all together, it drove flat ish gross margin year over year. Speaker 100:19:37When we think about the rest of the year and we think about our guidance, the assumptions are that the lower container costs will continue. In terms of mix, it will depend on consumer demand and it's going to be tightly related to our SSS performance. So that one is harder to assess at this point, but usually from a GM dollar and an EBITDA perspective, it's a net positive. Speaker 700:20:06Okay. Thanks for that. And Neil, can you maybe help us think about maybe the second half of the year in terms of the consumable volumes? To what extent maybe do you expect them to grow? And consumables have been kind of steadily growing since 2010, I guess, in good and bad times. Speaker 700:20:23So if you look at the business 5 years out, but can this category be 50%, 55% any color you can provide there? Operator00:20:31I would love to provide you with color because it would mean that I'm much smarter than I actually am. Unfortunately, I haven't got a clue what's going to happen in the future. But I can tell you that it's pretty stable the last month or so and we're hoping it continues in that direction. Speaker 700:20:54Okay, thanks. And last one for me on Dollar City. The contribution margin came in a little bit higher than expectations. Can you maybe talk a little bit about the margins of that business? How they performed year over year? Speaker 700:21:05Any color maybe that you can help us understand what drove that delta? Speaker 100:21:10Yes. So there's a bunch of puts and takes because you're looking at the net income margin. We will not go into details of the Dollar City margin profile. But I'd say that overall, when you think about Dollar City and its performance, a lot of the trends that we're seeing in Canada would be applicable to our Darcy business. Speaker 700:21:33Okay, great. Thanks guys. Great quarter. Speaker 200:21:37Thank you. The next question is from Brian Morrison from TD Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Okay. Speaker 800:21:44Thanks very much. Good morning, JP. Good morning, Neil. So I appreciate your store count, the front end loading comment, Neil. Last time you did this, so you opened 89 stores. Speaker 800:21:54So I just wonder, I know store openings are planned some time ago, but was the thought here to take possession of some planned openings early just due to the strong levels? And should we now think the high end of your range is more reasonable? And maybe JP, you could provide us the planned openings by quarter for the rest of the year. Operator00:22:10So it really has more to do with wanting to do this for many years. And quite honestly, our team is just in a better position, stronger, more well aligned with the real estate landlord market and capable of executing on something we've wanted to do for a decade, which is the front load at the beginning of the year. And this is the first time we've achieved that goal because it's very challenging. Every year it's our goal and every year things happen so to speak that they call us and say, oh, we can't deliver this or we can't deliver that. So our goal as of 2 years ago was really to put the team's efforts towards getting to this spot and I'm super proud of the team and their ability to line up the timing of these things to be in a schedule that's much easier for our team to execute and much less stress on our ops team during the Q4, which is always extremely challenging. Operator00:23:22And I'm also happy to say that the pipeline seems to be lined up nicely to be able to execute the same concept going forward. It really doesn't have anything to do with a change in number. It has Speaker 100:23:34to do with a change in timing. JP? On the quarterly front, of course, it means that usually in the past, you would see our Q4 being the lion's share of our store openings. Now we're front loading some of that growth. So we're going to relieve some pressure from our Q4 Q3 and Q4 store opening numbers. Speaker 100:23:57As to the exact quarterly sequencing, it It depends on many factors, but we're still very comfortable with our guidance. Operator00:24:05So Neil, what is the Speaker 800:24:06key change that enabled you to open these stores early this year? Operator00:24:11Truthfully, I would tell you it's partially the real estate landscape and mostly Our team is just better than it's ever been before and more aligned with the people they deal with. It's really a very challenging thing, at particularly of course during the 3 years of COVID. But even before COVID, I would tell you before COVID it was a work in progress getting the team where we wanted to be and it had more to do with the team just having a hard time getting alignment and then COVID made it difficult for everybody. And now I would say, it's more normal course from a real estate landscape perspective and our team is better than they've ever been. Okay. Operator00:25:02Thank you. Can we talk about Speaker 800:25:04the shift to consumables here for a sec? I know there are many categories within this segment, whether it be papers, pasta, confectionery, food and drinks. Is the growth really across the entire consumer board or when you dive down, is it particularly food that stands out? Operator00:25:19No, it's really across all of it. If it was food, we would tell you, but no, it's across all of it. And the concept of consumables extremely subjective. Is it cleaning? Is it batteries? Operator00:25:38What is it? Where does it end? Where does it start? And since there's not a hard definition of that accepted across the planet, within the subset of what we call consumable, it's pretty much across the Speaker 100:25:52board. Okay. Speaker 800:25:54I guess last question if I can. Just more directly to Irene's question, just trying to understand the potential conservatism that you mentioned in your comment earlier. If Q2 remains constant to current levels, is the expectation of negative H2 same store sales growth. Is that potentially reasonable in your view? Speaker 100:26:16Sorry, Brian, I missed the first part of your question. Speaker 800:26:19I'm just saying, I want to understand the degree of conservatism, JP. It looks like you're going to have negative same store sales growth based on your same store sales growth guidance to date. So I'm wondering That's potentially reasonable in your view, just based on your comment that there's a degree of conservatism in here. Speaker 100:26:36As I mentioned, we'll see how the next few months unfold. So far in Q2, the trends that we've seen in Q1 are remaining stable and in line. So stay tuned for our guidance Update if there's any in our Q2 results. Speaker 800:26:56Thank you both for your comments. Speaker 100:26:58Thank you. Speaker 200:27:01Thank you. The next question is from Vishal Shreedhar from National Bank. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 500:27:09Hi, thanks for taking my questions. It's been addressed several times on the call about the possible upward pressure on same store sales guidance. Wondering if similar comments would apply to gross margin rate, just given we're seeing a bit of Neil mentioned a bit of slowdown in consumables, continued strength in seasonal, possibly favorable operating leverage and all these factors seem to conspire favorably on gross margin, hoping to get some perspective there. Speaker 100:27:42Hivasha, JP, we're very comfortable with our gross margin guidance range. Speaker 500:27:51Okay. Moving on to the buyback. I know you've talked about it off the top and I may have missed it, but I think you said you're looking to renew that buyback activity. But what was the decision behind pausing the buyback? And I think last quarter management stated He was looking to run leverage a Operator00:28:12little bit lower than the Speaker 500:28:13threshold levels. And are you happy with where your leverage is right now and what levels should investor look for Dollarama to target throughout this fiscal year? Speaker 100:28:24Yes. So in terms of the buyback, It was mostly a cash preservation strategy because we have, as you know, the upcoming land acquisition combined with higher CapEx from net new stores and in addition we're racking our Laval warehouse. So there's many cash outflows. So that's the main reason, combined with the fact that in Q1, we only have 1 month of buyback window compared to 2 months in the other quarters. Our intent is to remain active on our buyback and if the market allows to play that capital in the second, third and fourth quarter of this year. Speaker 100:29:11So our cash balance should all else being equal, revert back to more normalized historical levels. In terms of The leverage, as we mentioned in our last conference call, the way we think about our buyback strategy is more about using our excess free cash flows to buy back our shares rather than targeting a specific leverage just given the cost of debt compared to the accretion numbers. So that's how we think about it. Speaker 500:29:48Okay. And last quarter, you can correct me if I'm wrong, but I recall you saying we're looking to run leverage levels a little bit lower in part due to economic uncertainty. Does that thinking still prevail? And if so, what leverage should we and I know you just gave me some caveats there, but is there any level appropriate level lower that you would consider as responsible given your concerns about Speaker 100:30:11the backdrop? I mean, our objective is to maintain that a balanced capital allocation strategy. The way to think about it is really we will be using our accessory cash flows to buy back our shares and then the leverage will be a function of that and our EBITDA growth. Speaker 500:30:35Okay. And maybe just one last question here regarding the Transaction growth continues and augmenting the strong basket as well. Just wondering In that transaction growth, is that predominantly your existing customers shopping more with Dollarama? Or is it You're gaining new customers. Is there any SKU one way or another that you would call out? Operator00:31:06Honestly, it's a great question because JP is looking at me and I'm looking at JP. Neither of us has the answer to your question. The truth is It's coming from our existing, it's coming from some trade down, no doubt. Our goal and job is to ensure that wherever it's coming from, it stays and continues to grow. And so truthfully, to get exactly where it's coming from is almost irrelevant because even if it was from trade down and we knew it was from trade down, the same job exists, which is keeping them. Operator00:31:42And so we're focused on keeping who we have and getting more customers to come and experience the Dollarama shop and that's what we remain focused on. Speaker 500:31:54Thank you, team. Speaker 200:31:58Thank you. The next question is from Karen Short from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 900:32:08Hey, thanks very much and good to talk to you. So a couple of questions. With respect to shrink, I guess I'm curious why that's not becoming a bigger issue. Obviously, a lot of retailers have talked about that and given significant dollar amounts on shrink impact. And then With respect to just rule of thumb, I mean, no one knows if we will and Canadian inflation deflation will be deflationary later in the year. Speaker 900:32:42But to the extent that there may be the risk and potential for deflation, What would be the rule of thumb on comp percent comp decline as it relates to EBIT decline? I don't know if there's any numbers that you can put on that? Speaker 100:33:03Yes. In terms of inflation, deflation and linking that to our comp and then our profitability. I mean, It's a very subjective equation because if you look at our historical growth, we've seen phases of deflation, inflation, stagflation and we've had a range of usually very good SSS and profitability performance. So it's hard to make that linkage. On your Other questions, which was around shrink, when we think about shrink, It's an important line item for us, but keep in mind that usually we have smaller square footage in our stores than some of our other competitors that you may be thinking about. Speaker 100:34:03We also have cameras installed in a lot of our stores. It's an important line in our P and L as I mentioned earlier. It's a line that has been growing, but it's embedded in our guidance. And we're not surprised by anything because we saw that trend coming back in Q3 and Q4. So we baked it in our guidance numbers. Speaker 900:34:29Okay. Sorry, just one more question. Are you and with respect to labor and wages, are you embedding Within your guidance labor wage increases? Or are you embedding that you're stable and you're where you actually need to be? Speaker 100:34:48So we're embedding in our guidance and it's I think we discussed it back in March, but we're embedding the current wage growth of the Canadian labor market to the best of our knowledge. So that's baked in our guidance as well. Speaker 600:35:10Okay. Thank you. Speaker 100:35:11Thanks, Karen. Speaker 200:35:15Thank you. The next question is from Martin Landry from Stifel GMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:35:24Hi, good morning guys. You are clearly gaining market share against other retailers with your customer traffic up mid teens. So as you mentioned earlier, customers are trading down with you. And I was wondering What exactly do you do to ensure that you keep these trade down customers and have those new customers return back to Dollarama? Operator00:35:55Well, firstly, we make sure that the shopping experience is, I guess, meets all of their expectations with regards to value, number 1, the cleanliness and efficiency of the shop itself, making sure that the assortment is interesting and something that brings them back, trying to cash them out in an efficient way that doesn't cause any disruption. And overall, we want them leaving thinking that the experience as a whole was great and that the value was great. And then lastly, when they get home, they're we satisfied with the goods that they bought and that our quality and our packaging and all the things we put the hours we pour into trying to make sure that you're satisfied when you actually use the product is the case. And so it's really a combination of thousands of things that hopefully bring that person back. But high level, those are the most important points. Speaker 1000:37:18And are you able to track or are you tracking new customers returning? Operator00:37:24No, we do not track new customers returning. Speaker 1000:37:27Okay. And then I'm wondering how does the retail environment looks like. Are you seeing increased promotional activity? Are you seeing Some of your competitors reacting to your success, just trying to see a little bit what's going on out there that because given that you're a price follower, I'm trying to see if there's promotional activity that you may have to react to. Operator00:37:56Well, Our approach from day 1 has always been the day in, day out lowest price in the market. We don't react to promotional activity we never have. So when somebody is promoting, often their price is better than ours. Not usually by a lot, but by some. And we don't go chasing that price. Operator00:38:18We're not changing our price that they're going to beat us on something that they've decided to have as a loss leader or to take terrible margins on. That's their business' decision. Where we're in the everyday low price business. So if you come in our stores at back to school, you're probably going to pay more for the 100 pack of loose leaf of ruled white paper than you will walking into another retailer that's giving it away at that time of the year. But for the other 11.5 months of the year, we're cheaper. Operator00:38:52So that's the approach we've always taken. And I think our customers understand that and have come to decide that for Speaker 100:39:00the most part they like that approach. Speaker 1000:39:05Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:39:07You're welcome. Speaker 200:39:10Thank you. There are no further questions registered at this time. The conference call has now ended. Please disconnect your lines at this time and we thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Outstanding Q1 results: same-store sales rose 17% and diluted EPS jumped 29% to $0.63 on strong traffic (+15%) and basket size (+1.4%), with robust demand for consumables and seasonal merchandise. Aggressive store expansion: opened 21 net new stores in Q1 (including the 100th Canadian store), maintaining a 60–70 store target for FY2024 and pursuing a long-term goal of 2,000 stores by 2031; Dollar City also added 8 stores, totaling 448 in Latin America. Stable margins and guidance: gross margin held at 42.2% and SG&A at 15.1%, EBITDA climbed 22% to $366 million, inventory remained steady, and management reaffirmed fiscal 2024 guidance while declaring a $0.0708 quarterly dividend. ESG advancement: published a new ESG report, created a dedicated ESG function and steering committee, set first-generation Scope 1 and 2 GHG intensity reduction targets, and is now focusing on tracking Scope 3 emissions. Capital allocation balance: heavy Q1 CapEx paused share buybacks to fund new stores and logistics expansion, but management plans to resume NCIB repurchases in later quarters, aiming to allocate excess free cash flow efficiently. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallDollarama Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release Dollarama Earnings HeadlinesTop Canadian Stocks to Buy Now With $5,000May 21 at 10:40 PM | msn.comTFSA Investors: 2 Blue-Chip Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever for Tax-Free Wealth GrowthMay 20 at 7:49 PM | msn.comVladimir Lenin was right…The Magnificent 7 could be in for a world of pain… And the insiders know it. It’s why Jeff Bezos just sold $3 billion of Amazon… it’s why Nvidia’s CEO just sold $713 million... and it’s why Zuckerberg just sold $1.3 billion in Meta stock. The financial establishment doesn’t want you to know about this… but a controversial new documentary just pulled back the curtain and exposed what’s really going on. It’s called The Final Frontier.May 22, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Top Canadian Value Stocks Where I’d Invest My $7,000 TFSA ContributionMay 12, 2025 | msn.comWindsor police dispatch bomb squad to west-end Dollarama to investigate 'suspicious package'May 12, 2025 | msn.comWhere I’d Invest $6,000 in The TSX TodayMay 11, 2025 | msn.comSee More Dollarama Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Dollarama? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Dollarama and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About DollaramaDollarama (TSE:DOL) Inc is a Canada-based company principally engaged in operating discount retail stores. The company provides a broad range of everyday consumer products, general merchandise, and seasonal items, with merchandise at low fixed price points. General merchandise and consumer products jointly account for the majority of the company's product offerings. The company's stores are throughout Canada, generally located in convenient locations, such as metropolitan areas, midsize cities, and small towns. All the stores are owned and operated by the company.View Dollarama ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Alibaba's Earnings Just Changed Everything for the StockCisco Stock Eyes New Highs in 2025 on AI, Earnings, UpgradesSymbotic Gets Big Earnings Lift: Is the Stock Investable Again?D-Wave Pushes Back on Short Seller Case With Strong EarningsAppLovin Surges on Earnings: What's Next for This Tech Standout?Can Shopify Stock Make a Comeback After an Earnings Sell-Off?Rocket Lab: Earnings Miss But Neutron Momentum Holds Upcoming Earnings PDD (5/27/2025)AutoZone (5/27/2025)Bank of Nova Scotia (5/27/2025)NVIDIA (5/28/2025)Synopsys (5/28/2025)Bank of Montreal (5/28/2025)Salesforce (5/28/2025)Costco Wholesale (5/29/2025)Marvell Technology (5/29/2025)Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (5/29/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00You, operator, and good morning, everyone. This morning, we announced outstanding first quarter results, including a 17% increase in same store sales and a 29% increase in diluted earnings per share to $0.63 Clearly, Canadians from all walks of life are still responding positively to our compelling value proposition and affordable product mix. While we continue to experience strong demand for consumables in the context of persistent inflationary pressures, we are also seeing strength across our seasonal and general merchandise categories. I'm particularly pleased with the performance of our Easter season this year, demonstrating our strong fundamentals and the fact that the full mix is continuing to drive traffic to our stores. Our entire organization is delivering on our value promise, whether that value promise comes from pricing, merchandising or assortment breadth. Operator00:00:58With our inventory rebuild mostly behind us, I am pleased with our product offering across our price points and with our now solid in stock and in store inventory level. With the goal of increasing proximity to our customers. Q1 was a particularly active quarter on the real estate front with the opening of 21 net new stores. This reflects a concerted effort by our real estate and operations teams to frontload net new store openings this year. The strategy is to take some of the pressure off the last quarter of the year, which is always our busiest quarter. Operator00:01:36Note that the acceleration in the net new store openings in Q1 has no impact on our annual target, which remains between 60 70 net new stores by fiscal year end. Among those 21 in Q1 was our 15th 100th store in Canada, which opened in the Rockland Centre here in Montreal this past April, a milestone we were pleased to reach in our hometown and celebrate as a team. Hats off to our real estate, field and operations teams for their disciplined execution on our long term growth plans of reaching 2,000 stores across Canada by 2,031. Today, about 85% of Canadians live within 10 kilometers of a Dollarama store, which represents no small feed in is something we are very proud of. The team at Dollar City also continues to execute on their long term growth plans in the 4 LatAm countries where they operate. Operator00:02:33In the Q1 this year, 8 net new stores were opened bringing their total store count to 448. It's been just over 2 years since Dollar City launched its 1st store in Peru. With 24 stores and counting in that country, we are very pleased with how this new market is performing and with the team's execution. Turning to ESG. We published our latest comprehensive annual ESG report this morning, outlining our evolving ESG strategy as well as our progress against goals. Operator00:03:08Our commitment to managing our business responsibly, we are further building our organizational ESG capacities and integrating ESG into our daily decision making. Last year, we created an ESG function and earlier this year, we established an ESG steering committee responsible for the advancement of our ESG strategy across the organization. We continue to move our climate strategy forward, including the introduction of our 1st generation GHG intensity reduction goal for Scope 1 and 2 emissions last year. We are proud to have taken this initial step and of the progress made year over year. We are now further advancing our climate roadmap and alignment with TCFD by focusing our attention on identifying and tracking relevant Scope 3 emissions. Operator00:04:00Across our ESG pillars, our operations, our people, our products and customers, our supply chain and our governance, we will continue to implement goals and initiatives that are meaningful and actionable and that enable us to deliver on our value promise to our customers and our shareholders. JP, over to you to review our Q1 financial results in more detail. Speaker 100:04:24Thank you, Neil, and good morning, everyone. As expected, we continued to benefit from sustained demand for affordable everyday items during the Q1 of fiscal 2024. This translated into strong demand across our 3 product segments and same store sales above 17% as mentioned by Neil. SSS was comprised of a strong 15% increase in traffic and a 1.4% increase in average basket size. This quarter, we also maintained our industry leading gross margin, which was 42.2% of sales compared to 42.1% in the same quarter last year. Speaker 100:05:05Q1 represented the tail end of supply chain related cost pressures on our margin with higher logistics costs and saw continued products mix pressure offset by lower ocean freight costs. For its part, SG and A also remained relatively flat year over year at 15.1% of sales compared to 15% last year. Our strong financial performance has enabled us to absorb continued wage pressures to date with additional minimum wage increases in the pipeline and reflected in our annual guidance. While the persistent tight supply in the labor market that has impacted the entire industry remains a concern, it has not resulted in any significant disruptions to our operations. Our 50.1% share of Dollar City's net earnings grew by 50% to 13,100,000 for the same period last year, reflecting the ongoing strong financial and operational performance of Dollar City. Speaker 100:06:10With an acceleration in same store sales along with active gross margin and SG and A management and a higher equity pickup from large city. EBITDA increased by over 22 percent to $366,000,000 representing 28.3 percent of sales and net earnings were $180,000,000 or $0.63 per share, representing a 29% increase year over year. Finally, once again, inventory remained stable sequentially this quarter at 938,000,000 as at April 30, 2023 compared to $957,000,000 as at the end of January. In light of our Q1 performance, we are maintaining our fiscal 2024 guidance ranges published this past March. While we acknowledge that there may potentially be some upside to our same store sales guidance. Speaker 100:07:06We prefer to remain conservative at this point and wait to see how the consumer lapse last year's very strong Q2 SSS performance. That being said, so far in Q2, SSS cadence is generally in line with Q1's 2 year stack SSS. On the capital allocation front, the Board approved a quarterly dividend of $0.0708 per share. While there were no buybacks in Q1, primarily due to higher CapEx with a large number of net new stores combined with the racking of our Laval warehouse and the forthcoming closing of our previously announced industrial property acquisition, we do intend to remain active in subsequent quarters contingent on market conditions. As mentioned on our last call, our strategy is to maintain a balanced approach to capital allocation by continuing to invest in organic growth and returning capital to shareholders. Speaker 100:08:09We intend to continue to allocate our excess free cash flows towards the repurchase of shares through our NCIB. In conclusion, we continue to execute well from an operational and financial standpoint in what remains a complex environment. As always, we're focused on maintaining our value promise to our customers and maximizing long term value for our shareholders. That concludes our formal remarks. I'll turn it over to the operator for the Q and Speaker 200:08:39A. Thank you. Marcus, please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 300:09:27Thanks and good morning everyone. Clearly, consumer demand remains Can you talk about I think Neil mentioned something about Easter. Can you talk about what you're seeing from a demand from a category demand perspective, both for Q1 and Q2 to date now that weather has turned, although not so much this week. And also in terms of the price points, please. Operator00:09:56We're starting to get some traction, Irene, on summer, although as you said, It's unseasonably chilly still in many parts of the country, along with other natural disasters unfortunately, which are challenging many areas of the country, which is a challenge that none of us needed. But the customer has started to move towards our summer offering. We had a good Easter as mentioned. And so there's a move, slight move away from the consumables and back a little bit towards the traditional mix. As far as price points, Again, no change there. Operator00:10:46We still have the same balanced purchasing and sourcing approach to having all the price points available for all the categories of goods and the consumer continues to partake in all of those price points with no real move in any specific price point. Speaker 300:11:04That's really helpful. Just a couple of follow ups, please. Firstly, I seem to remember that refreshes were below normal targeted levels the last couple of years because of some of the difficulties in China. How should we be thinking about now that China has opened again, the offering and maybe more of the sort of the treasure hunting kind of element and the wow factor in sort of the current year and next year? Operator00:11:33We're seeing a slight increase in creativity and production both overseas and domestically. But it's still a slow progressive curve. There's nothing extreme happening on that front. We're optimistic that the next year or 2 should help bring things back to normal on that side. But for the moment, it's a slight increase, not a huge increase. Speaker 300:12:06Thank you very much. And then just Finally, on the whole same store sales guidance. So if we take Q1 as a whole Q1 and we sort of don't change the overall guidance for the year. It implies same store sales in the 1% to I think 2.25%, 2.5% range in subsequent quarters. And with what JP just said about Q2 to date same store sales, we're probably running say 10%, 11%. Speaker 300:12:36So how should we be thinking about all of that? Speaker 100:12:40So Irene, the way to think about this is similar to last year. We prefer to be thoughtful about our guidance. We'll Likely, if all things remain equal, provide an update to The Street in September. But we want to see how the next few months unfold. As you mentioned, Q2 to date, we're seeing the same trends as what we've seen in Q1. Speaker 100:13:11So it's just to be thoughtful about our guidance. Speaker 300:13:16Understood. Thank you very much. Speaker 100:13:18Thanks. Speaker 200:13:22Thank you. The next question is from Chris Lee from Desjardins. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 400:13:28Hi, good morning, everyone. Maybe start up with a question on private label. I know penetration is already very high. I think it's close to around 70%. But just curious to see if you see room in certain categories for further increase in private label penetration, especially in this environment? Operator00:13:47I don't think any category will increase in private label. Honestly, I think we'll continue to focus on putting our best foot forward from an art and branding perspective, continued focus on ESG, reducing packaging where Makes sense. We're converting packaging to something that's more recyclable, more user friendly. But an actual penetration of private label, I don't see any change. Speaker 400:14:22Okay, that's helpful. And then maybe a question on how we should think about unit volume growth. Average basket was up 1.4%, but Tropy was up very high at 15%. Does it mean the customers are effectively frequenting your stores a lot more, but perhaps buying less each time such that your overall unit volume is still growing? Speaker 100:14:46There is a mix of patterns. Of course, I mean the key element is What we saw during COVID was basket consolidation. So we had fewer trips and bigger basket. We're expecting the basket to deconsolidate and have traffic increase. What effectively happened and is happening is We're seeing traction in traffic size, while the basket size is slightly increasing. Speaker 100:15:19So we're happy with the outcome on both fronts. Speaker 400:15:23Okay, that's great. And then maybe last question is maybe on shrink. I know some of your U. S. Dollar peers have called out shrink as having bit of an outsized impact on the margin. Speaker 400:15:31Just curious to see how is shrink impacting your business these days? Thank you. Speaker 100:15:38Our shrink has been increasing for the past few quarters and it's embedded in our guidance. Speaker 400:15:47Okay, great. Thanks and all the best. Speaker 500:15:50Thanks, Chris. Speaker 200:15:53Thank you. The next question is from Tamy Chen from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 600:16:01Thanks. Good morning. Neil and JP, I just want to go back again to your comp on the traffic side. It's just so strong, especially Last year's quarter, which was already strong. And so we know at a high level, there's the consumer trade down. Speaker 600:16:17That's a big factor. But I'm just wondering, you talk a little bit more about where exactly this really continued strength is coming from, whether it's immigration or is it just Continued elevated level of capturing new customers? Speaker 100:16:35Yes. I think it's broad based. So when you look at our category performance, we're seeing those trends, as Neil mentioned, across our categories. So there's nothing overly specific to point out. I just think and we believe it's our value proposition and our strategy just playing out. Speaker 100:16:58So nothing that's overly newsworthy in terms of specific elements. I just think it's broadly speaking a general performance on many fronts. Speaker 600:17:15Okay, got it. And I'm just curious, inflation is starting to decelerate in Canada here, albeit very slowly, but it is starting to decelerate. Though it sounds like at least so far in fiscal Q2, Where your comp is trending that at the margin, you're not really seeing a bit of a change in traffic trends or other consumer behaviors In your stores that it's still quite strong and not the trade down is still continuing. Would you say that's fair to say or at the margin, are you seeing a little bit of change because this High inflationary environment is starting to ease a little bit. Speaker 100:17:58Well, you have to consider many factors despite the inflationary environment. There's wage growth, there's the interest rate environment. So there's many economic factors over and above just inflation to consider when you look at consumer behavior. So what we've experienced so far is all those factors at play and we can't just isolate one factor and drive conclusions from that factor. So, but your statement is right from Q2 to date perspective. Speaker 600:18:39Okay, got it. Thank you. Speaker 100:18:41Thank you. Speaker 200:18:43Thank you. The next question is from George Doumet From Scotiabank, please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 700:18:51Yes. Good morning, JP and Neil. Thanks for taking my questions. JP, can you help us dissect the gross margin performance in the Sure. The extent of the negative mix impacts and maybe the lower product and freight costs. Speaker 700:19:04And maybe how should we think of the cadence of the improvement as the year goes on. Speaker 100:19:10Yes. So in Q1, we had the benefit of lower container costs, so what we call ocean freight costs. That was offset by a higher logistics costs. And when we talk about logistics costs, we're thinking about our Canadian supply chain and there was some mix impact. So When you put it all together, it drove flat ish gross margin year over year. Speaker 100:19:37When we think about the rest of the year and we think about our guidance, the assumptions are that the lower container costs will continue. In terms of mix, it will depend on consumer demand and it's going to be tightly related to our SSS performance. So that one is harder to assess at this point, but usually from a GM dollar and an EBITDA perspective, it's a net positive. Speaker 700:20:06Okay. Thanks for that. And Neil, can you maybe help us think about maybe the second half of the year in terms of the consumable volumes? To what extent maybe do you expect them to grow? And consumables have been kind of steadily growing since 2010, I guess, in good and bad times. Speaker 700:20:23So if you look at the business 5 years out, but can this category be 50%, 55% any color you can provide there? Operator00:20:31I would love to provide you with color because it would mean that I'm much smarter than I actually am. Unfortunately, I haven't got a clue what's going to happen in the future. But I can tell you that it's pretty stable the last month or so and we're hoping it continues in that direction. Speaker 700:20:54Okay, thanks. And last one for me on Dollar City. The contribution margin came in a little bit higher than expectations. Can you maybe talk a little bit about the margins of that business? How they performed year over year? Speaker 700:21:05Any color maybe that you can help us understand what drove that delta? Speaker 100:21:10Yes. So there's a bunch of puts and takes because you're looking at the net income margin. We will not go into details of the Dollar City margin profile. But I'd say that overall, when you think about Dollar City and its performance, a lot of the trends that we're seeing in Canada would be applicable to our Darcy business. Speaker 700:21:33Okay, great. Thanks guys. Great quarter. Speaker 200:21:37Thank you. The next question is from Brian Morrison from TD Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Okay. Speaker 800:21:44Thanks very much. Good morning, JP. Good morning, Neil. So I appreciate your store count, the front end loading comment, Neil. Last time you did this, so you opened 89 stores. Speaker 800:21:54So I just wonder, I know store openings are planned some time ago, but was the thought here to take possession of some planned openings early just due to the strong levels? And should we now think the high end of your range is more reasonable? And maybe JP, you could provide us the planned openings by quarter for the rest of the year. Operator00:22:10So it really has more to do with wanting to do this for many years. And quite honestly, our team is just in a better position, stronger, more well aligned with the real estate landlord market and capable of executing on something we've wanted to do for a decade, which is the front load at the beginning of the year. And this is the first time we've achieved that goal because it's very challenging. Every year it's our goal and every year things happen so to speak that they call us and say, oh, we can't deliver this or we can't deliver that. So our goal as of 2 years ago was really to put the team's efforts towards getting to this spot and I'm super proud of the team and their ability to line up the timing of these things to be in a schedule that's much easier for our team to execute and much less stress on our ops team during the Q4, which is always extremely challenging. Operator00:23:22And I'm also happy to say that the pipeline seems to be lined up nicely to be able to execute the same concept going forward. It really doesn't have anything to do with a change in number. It has Speaker 100:23:34to do with a change in timing. JP? On the quarterly front, of course, it means that usually in the past, you would see our Q4 being the lion's share of our store openings. Now we're front loading some of that growth. So we're going to relieve some pressure from our Q4 Q3 and Q4 store opening numbers. Speaker 100:23:57As to the exact quarterly sequencing, it It depends on many factors, but we're still very comfortable with our guidance. Operator00:24:05So Neil, what is the Speaker 800:24:06key change that enabled you to open these stores early this year? Operator00:24:11Truthfully, I would tell you it's partially the real estate landscape and mostly Our team is just better than it's ever been before and more aligned with the people they deal with. It's really a very challenging thing, at particularly of course during the 3 years of COVID. But even before COVID, I would tell you before COVID it was a work in progress getting the team where we wanted to be and it had more to do with the team just having a hard time getting alignment and then COVID made it difficult for everybody. And now I would say, it's more normal course from a real estate landscape perspective and our team is better than they've ever been. Okay. Operator00:25:02Thank you. Can we talk about Speaker 800:25:04the shift to consumables here for a sec? I know there are many categories within this segment, whether it be papers, pasta, confectionery, food and drinks. Is the growth really across the entire consumer board or when you dive down, is it particularly food that stands out? Operator00:25:19No, it's really across all of it. If it was food, we would tell you, but no, it's across all of it. And the concept of consumables extremely subjective. Is it cleaning? Is it batteries? Operator00:25:38What is it? Where does it end? Where does it start? And since there's not a hard definition of that accepted across the planet, within the subset of what we call consumable, it's pretty much across the Speaker 100:25:52board. Okay. Speaker 800:25:54I guess last question if I can. Just more directly to Irene's question, just trying to understand the potential conservatism that you mentioned in your comment earlier. If Q2 remains constant to current levels, is the expectation of negative H2 same store sales growth. Is that potentially reasonable in your view? Speaker 100:26:16Sorry, Brian, I missed the first part of your question. Speaker 800:26:19I'm just saying, I want to understand the degree of conservatism, JP. It looks like you're going to have negative same store sales growth based on your same store sales growth guidance to date. So I'm wondering That's potentially reasonable in your view, just based on your comment that there's a degree of conservatism in here. Speaker 100:26:36As I mentioned, we'll see how the next few months unfold. So far in Q2, the trends that we've seen in Q1 are remaining stable and in line. So stay tuned for our guidance Update if there's any in our Q2 results. Speaker 800:26:56Thank you both for your comments. Speaker 100:26:58Thank you. Speaker 200:27:01Thank you. The next question is from Vishal Shreedhar from National Bank. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 500:27:09Hi, thanks for taking my questions. It's been addressed several times on the call about the possible upward pressure on same store sales guidance. Wondering if similar comments would apply to gross margin rate, just given we're seeing a bit of Neil mentioned a bit of slowdown in consumables, continued strength in seasonal, possibly favorable operating leverage and all these factors seem to conspire favorably on gross margin, hoping to get some perspective there. Speaker 100:27:42Hivasha, JP, we're very comfortable with our gross margin guidance range. Speaker 500:27:51Okay. Moving on to the buyback. I know you've talked about it off the top and I may have missed it, but I think you said you're looking to renew that buyback activity. But what was the decision behind pausing the buyback? And I think last quarter management stated He was looking to run leverage a Operator00:28:12little bit lower than the Speaker 500:28:13threshold levels. And are you happy with where your leverage is right now and what levels should investor look for Dollarama to target throughout this fiscal year? Speaker 100:28:24Yes. So in terms of the buyback, It was mostly a cash preservation strategy because we have, as you know, the upcoming land acquisition combined with higher CapEx from net new stores and in addition we're racking our Laval warehouse. So there's many cash outflows. So that's the main reason, combined with the fact that in Q1, we only have 1 month of buyback window compared to 2 months in the other quarters. Our intent is to remain active on our buyback and if the market allows to play that capital in the second, third and fourth quarter of this year. Speaker 100:29:11So our cash balance should all else being equal, revert back to more normalized historical levels. In terms of The leverage, as we mentioned in our last conference call, the way we think about our buyback strategy is more about using our excess free cash flows to buy back our shares rather than targeting a specific leverage just given the cost of debt compared to the accretion numbers. So that's how we think about it. Speaker 500:29:48Okay. And last quarter, you can correct me if I'm wrong, but I recall you saying we're looking to run leverage levels a little bit lower in part due to economic uncertainty. Does that thinking still prevail? And if so, what leverage should we and I know you just gave me some caveats there, but is there any level appropriate level lower that you would consider as responsible given your concerns about Speaker 100:30:11the backdrop? I mean, our objective is to maintain that a balanced capital allocation strategy. The way to think about it is really we will be using our accessory cash flows to buy back our shares and then the leverage will be a function of that and our EBITDA growth. Speaker 500:30:35Okay. And maybe just one last question here regarding the Transaction growth continues and augmenting the strong basket as well. Just wondering In that transaction growth, is that predominantly your existing customers shopping more with Dollarama? Or is it You're gaining new customers. Is there any SKU one way or another that you would call out? Operator00:31:06Honestly, it's a great question because JP is looking at me and I'm looking at JP. Neither of us has the answer to your question. The truth is It's coming from our existing, it's coming from some trade down, no doubt. Our goal and job is to ensure that wherever it's coming from, it stays and continues to grow. And so truthfully, to get exactly where it's coming from is almost irrelevant because even if it was from trade down and we knew it was from trade down, the same job exists, which is keeping them. Operator00:31:42And so we're focused on keeping who we have and getting more customers to come and experience the Dollarama shop and that's what we remain focused on. Speaker 500:31:54Thank you, team. Speaker 200:31:58Thank you. The next question is from Karen Short from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 900:32:08Hey, thanks very much and good to talk to you. So a couple of questions. With respect to shrink, I guess I'm curious why that's not becoming a bigger issue. Obviously, a lot of retailers have talked about that and given significant dollar amounts on shrink impact. And then With respect to just rule of thumb, I mean, no one knows if we will and Canadian inflation deflation will be deflationary later in the year. Speaker 900:32:42But to the extent that there may be the risk and potential for deflation, What would be the rule of thumb on comp percent comp decline as it relates to EBIT decline? I don't know if there's any numbers that you can put on that? Speaker 100:33:03Yes. In terms of inflation, deflation and linking that to our comp and then our profitability. I mean, It's a very subjective equation because if you look at our historical growth, we've seen phases of deflation, inflation, stagflation and we've had a range of usually very good SSS and profitability performance. So it's hard to make that linkage. On your Other questions, which was around shrink, when we think about shrink, It's an important line item for us, but keep in mind that usually we have smaller square footage in our stores than some of our other competitors that you may be thinking about. Speaker 100:34:03We also have cameras installed in a lot of our stores. It's an important line in our P and L as I mentioned earlier. It's a line that has been growing, but it's embedded in our guidance. And we're not surprised by anything because we saw that trend coming back in Q3 and Q4. So we baked it in our guidance numbers. Speaker 900:34:29Okay. Sorry, just one more question. Are you and with respect to labor and wages, are you embedding Within your guidance labor wage increases? Or are you embedding that you're stable and you're where you actually need to be? Speaker 100:34:48So we're embedding in our guidance and it's I think we discussed it back in March, but we're embedding the current wage growth of the Canadian labor market to the best of our knowledge. So that's baked in our guidance as well. Speaker 600:35:10Okay. Thank you. Speaker 100:35:11Thanks, Karen. Speaker 200:35:15Thank you. The next question is from Martin Landry from Stifel GMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:35:24Hi, good morning guys. You are clearly gaining market share against other retailers with your customer traffic up mid teens. So as you mentioned earlier, customers are trading down with you. And I was wondering What exactly do you do to ensure that you keep these trade down customers and have those new customers return back to Dollarama? Operator00:35:55Well, firstly, we make sure that the shopping experience is, I guess, meets all of their expectations with regards to value, number 1, the cleanliness and efficiency of the shop itself, making sure that the assortment is interesting and something that brings them back, trying to cash them out in an efficient way that doesn't cause any disruption. And overall, we want them leaving thinking that the experience as a whole was great and that the value was great. And then lastly, when they get home, they're we satisfied with the goods that they bought and that our quality and our packaging and all the things we put the hours we pour into trying to make sure that you're satisfied when you actually use the product is the case. And so it's really a combination of thousands of things that hopefully bring that person back. But high level, those are the most important points. Speaker 1000:37:18And are you able to track or are you tracking new customers returning? Operator00:37:24No, we do not track new customers returning. Speaker 1000:37:27Okay. And then I'm wondering how does the retail environment looks like. Are you seeing increased promotional activity? Are you seeing Some of your competitors reacting to your success, just trying to see a little bit what's going on out there that because given that you're a price follower, I'm trying to see if there's promotional activity that you may have to react to. Operator00:37:56Well, Our approach from day 1 has always been the day in, day out lowest price in the market. We don't react to promotional activity we never have. So when somebody is promoting, often their price is better than ours. Not usually by a lot, but by some. And we don't go chasing that price. Operator00:38:18We're not changing our price that they're going to beat us on something that they've decided to have as a loss leader or to take terrible margins on. That's their business' decision. Where we're in the everyday low price business. So if you come in our stores at back to school, you're probably going to pay more for the 100 pack of loose leaf of ruled white paper than you will walking into another retailer that's giving it away at that time of the year. But for the other 11.5 months of the year, we're cheaper. Operator00:38:52So that's the approach we've always taken. And I think our customers understand that and have come to decide that for Speaker 100:39:00the most part they like that approach. Speaker 1000:39:05Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:39:07You're welcome. Speaker 200:39:10Thank you. There are no further questions registered at this time. The conference call has now ended. Please disconnect your lines at this time and we thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by