NASDAQ:CASY Casey's General Stores Q1 2024 Earnings Report $467.20 +0.82 (+0.18%) Closing price 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$466.50 -0.70 (-0.15%) As of 07:46 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Casey's General Stores EPS ResultsActual EPS$4.52Consensus EPS $3.36Beat/MissBeat by +$1.16One Year Ago EPS$4.09Casey's General Stores Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$3.87 billionExpected Revenue$3.90 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$31.19 millionYoY Revenue Growth-13.10%Casey's General Stores Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date9/12/2023TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, September 12, 2023Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsCasey's General Stores' Q4 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, June 10, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, June 6, 2025 at 7:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Casey's General Stores Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrSeptember 12, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:02Welcome to the Q1 Fiscal Year 20 24 Casey's General Stores Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. And I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Mr. Brian Johnson, sir, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:38Good morning and thank you for joining us to I am Brian Johnson, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and Business Development. With me today are Darren Rebelez, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer as well as Steve Bramlage, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'll remind you that certain statements made by us during this investor call may constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private These forward looking statements include any statements relating to expectations for future periods, Possible or assumed future results of operations, financial conditions, liquidity and related sources or needs, the company's supply chain, Business and integration strategies, plans and synergies, growth opportunities and performance of our stores. There are a number of known and unknown risks, Uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual results to differ materially from any future results expressed or implied by those forward looking statements, Including but not limited to the integration of the recent acquisitions, our ability to execute on our strategic plan or to realize benefits from the strategic plan, The impact and duration of the conflict in Ukraine and related governmental actions as well as other risks, uncertainties and factors, which are described in our most recent annual report on Form 10 ks and quarterly reports on Form 10 Q as filed with the SEC and available on our website. Speaker 100:02:07Any forward looking statements made during this call reflect our current views as of today with respect to future events and Casey's disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise forward looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. A reconciliation of non GAAP to GAAP financial measures Reference in this call as well as detailed breakdown of the operating expense increase for the quarter can be found on our website at www.casey.com under the Investor Relations link. With that said, I would now like to turn the call over to Darren to discuss our Q1 results. Darren? Speaker 200:02:43Thanks, Brian, and good morning, everyone. We'll get to the excellent Q1 results in a moment. First, I want to thank our team for their dedication and to getting the fiscal year off to a great start. As our guests and community shifted into back to school season, Casey's held its annual cash for classrooms giving campaign in August. Thanks to our generous guests and passionate team members, We raised over $700,000 These funds will support needs and projects for schools, students and teachers in our local communities. Speaker 200:03:15The grant application process opens in October and we encourage schools, teachers and parent led organizations to apply. Now let's discuss the results from the quarter. Diluted EPS finished at $4.52 per share, an 11% increase from the prior year. Inside sales remained strong, driving inside gross profit dollars up over 10% to $556,000,000 The company generated $169,000,000 in net income, an increase of 11% and $316,000,000 in EBITDA, an increase of 8% from the prior year. As you may have seen in our Investor Day presentation, We launched a thin crust pizza offering in the Q1. Speaker 200:04:02This addition to the lineup has been a great success and demonstrates the blueprint for innovation at Casey's. Our guest insights team identified a gap in our menu. Our culinary team created a delicious product. Our marketing team worked with our advertising partner to create a great marketing campaign and ultimately our operations team brought to life in our stores and communities across our footprint. And I think the results speak for themselves. Speaker 200:04:29This type of strategic innovation and teamwork is something that will help us achieve our goals for the 3 year strategic plan. On the fuel side of the business, we continue to strike an appropriate balance between volume and margin. However, one notable difference with this quarter's performance is there were no significant macro events that influenced margin. It was a relatively benign quarter from a wholesale cost perspective and we believe this is a strong indicator that higher industry fuel margins are here to stay. Overall, I think this quarter truly illustrates the strength of the unique Casey's business model, particularly in a more normal times and shows our 3 year strategic plan objectives are very achievable. Speaker 200:05:13The team continues to do an excellent job operating the business efficiently and effectively both inside and outside the store. I would now like to go over our results and share some of the details in each of the categories. Inside same store sales were up 5.4% for the Q1 or 12.1% on a 2 year stack basis with an average margin of 40.6%. We saw notably strong performance in whole pizza pies and bakery as well as alcoholic and non alcoholic beverages. Our team with support from our supplier partners continues Fence beverage sales were up 5.9 percent or 14.8 percent on a 2 year stack basis with an average margin of 58.2%, up approximately 260 basis points from the prior year. Speaker 200:06:11The previously mentioned innovation with thin crust pizza helped drive sales as we saw great results with our whole pizza pies in addition to strong performance in bakery. Margin was favorably impacted by softening in commodities, notably cheese during the quarter. Same store grocery and general merchandise sales were up 5.2% or 11% on a 2 year stack basis with an average margin of 34.1%, an increase of approximately 20 basis points from the prior year. We continued our strong momentum in beverages with non alcoholic beverages, specifically energy drinks showing fantastic results. Alcoholic beverages also performed quite well as we continue to leverage our competitive advantage of approximately 1500 stores with liquor licenses. Speaker 200:07:01For fuel, Same store gallons sold increased 0.4 percent with a fuel margin of $0.416 per gallon. Our fuel team is striking the right balance Fuel margins above $0.345 per gallon and 4 of the last 5 quarters have been over $0.40 per gallon. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve to discuss the financial results from the Q1. Steve? Speaker 100:07:33Thank you, Darren, and good morning. Each of the three areas of our business performed well in the quarter, and that's a testament to our business model and the execution of our teams. Total revenue for the quarter was $3,800,000,000 a decrease of $585,000,000 or 13% from the prior year due to the lower retail price of fuel. Total inside sales for the quarter were $1,400,000,000 an increase of $103,000,000 or 8% from the prior year. For the quarter, grocery and general merchandise sales increased by $74,000,000 to $997,000,000 an increase of 8%. Speaker 100:08:14Prepared food and dispensed beverage sales rose by $29,000,000 to $373,000,000 an increase of 8.5%. Results were also favorably impacted by operating approximately 3% more stores on a year over year basis. Retail fuel sales were down $669,000,000 in the first quarter due to a 24% increase in the average retail price per gallon that was partially offset by a 3.6% increase in gallons sold to $714,000,000 The average retail price of fuel during this period was $3.40 a gallon compared to $4.49 a year ago. As a reminder, we define gross profit as revenue less cost of goods sold, but Casey's had gross profit of $878,000,000 in the 1st quarter, an increase of $42,000,000 or 5% from the prior year. This is driven by higher in site gross profit of $52,200,000 or 10.3 percent, partially offset by a decrease of 11,200,000 or 3.6% in fuel gross profit. Speaker 100:09:31Inside gross profit margin was 40.6%, up 80 basis points from a year ago. The grocery and general merchandise margin was 34.1%, that's an increase of 20 basis points from the prior year. Slight increase was due to a favorable mix shift with further penetration of private label products, a lower LIFO charge than in the prior year and favorable vendor funding. Prepared food and dispensed beverage margin was 58.2%, that's up 260 basis points from prior year. The category margin benefited from lower commodity costs, specifically cheese, which was $2.04 per pound for the quarter. Speaker 100:10:12That compares to $2.49 per pound last year, a decrease of 18%. This positively impacted PF and DB margin by approximately 130 basis points. Margin also benefited from a lower LIFO charge in the prior year as our input costs softened, which had an approximate 120 basis point impact. We are in the midst of adjusting certain benefits associated with our Casey's Rewards platform. And during the quarter, these one time changes positively impacted and DB sales and margin by approximately $4,900,000 However, Because we were concomitantly running a summer long promotional campaign of $0.89 fountain drinks, we did not see much of a net benefit from the program change. Speaker 100:11:02Fuel margin for the quarter was $0.416 per gallon, down $0.031 per gallon from the all time high Fuel gross profit benefited by $20,200,000 from the sale of RINs And that's up $2,500,000 from the same quarter in the prior year. Total operating expenses were up 3.2% were $17,600,000 in the Q1. Nearly 3% of the total operating expense increase is due to unit growth as we operated 82 more stores than the prior year. Credit card fees decreased approximately $6,000,000 due to lower retail fuel prices and that offset essentially all remaining operating expense increases. Same store employee expense was approximately flat as the increase in wage rates was offset by the reduction in same store hours. Speaker 100:12:00Depreciation in the quarter was $82,900,000 that's up 6 Down $1,300,000 versus the prior year aided by rising interest rates on our cash balances. As a reminder, about 16% of our debt The effective tax rate for the quarter was 23.6% compared to 24.6% in the prior year. That decrease was driven by a one time benefit that we recorded due to an income tax rate reduction in the State of Nebraska. Net income was up versus the prior year to $169,200,000 an increase of 10.7%. EBITDA for the quarter was $316,900,000 compared to $293,000,000 a year ago, an increase of 8.2%. Speaker 100:12:57Our balance sheet remains in excellent condition and we have ample financial flexibility. On July 31, we had total available liquidity of $1,300,000,000 Furthermore, we have no significant maturities coming due until fiscal 2026. Our leverage ratio calculated in accordance with Senior notes is now 1.7 times. For the quarter, net cash generated by operating activities of $229,000,000 less Purchases of property and equipment of $69,000,000 resulted in the company generating $160,000,000 of free cash flow. That compares to generating $194,000,000 in the prior year. Speaker 100:13:37At the September meeting, the Board of Directors voted to maintain the quarterly dividend at $0.43 During the Q1, we also repurchased approximately $30,000,000 of stock and have $370,000,000 remaining on our Share repurchase authorization. Investing in EBITDA and ROIC accretive growth opportunities remains our primary capital allocation priority. But As we mentioned at our Investor Day, our balance sheet affords us the opportunity to be more opportunistic than in the recent past with regards to share repurchase. In our press release and during this call, we have and well mentioned several pending acquisitions. These acquisitions will be funded with cash on hand. Speaker 100:14:20The pending transaction with EG Group is subject to regulatory approval and is expected to close this calendar year. As a result of the pending transactions, Casey's expects to add at least 150 stores We will revisit the entire annual outlook following our Q2 earnings call. Our August results for the current quarter are as follows. Same store sales, both inside and fuel gallons, are slightly below the midpoint of their respective annual outlooks. Fuel CPG through August was in the high 30s. Speaker 100:15:02At current spot, cheese prices are modestly favorable versus the prior year, but less so than we experienced in the Q1. Total operating expenses will be near the high end of our annual growth range in the 2nd quarter, and that's primarily due to timing. I'd now like to turn the call back over to Darren. Speaker 200:15:23Thanks, Steve. I would like to express my gratitude to the entire Casey's team for delivering another great quarter. We're off to an extremely strong start to our fiscal year and our 3 year strategic plan. Our M and A and real estate teams have been hard at work as we are very excited about the pending acquisition with EG Group and their 63 stores in Kentucky and Tennessee. These stores are located in rural and suburban markets and we look forward to bringing more of our delicious pizza to Kentucky and Tennessee. Speaker 200:15:54It is complementary to our existing footprint and within our distribution center's radii, further leveraging our scale and infrastructure. In the Q1, we also introduced a refreshed app design that makes it easier than ever for our loyalty members to track their points, redeem for rewards and see how much they've saved by shopping with Casey's Rewards. The program is nearing 7,000,000 members And we're excited to see the way our value proposition is resonating across the Midwest. Our guests have also gravitated to our private label products And we exited the quarter approaching 350 items in the assortment with over 40 new items in the pipeline for the remainder of the calendar year. And the results are there, achieving nearly 10% unit share and over 10% gross profit share in the 1st quarter with same store sales up 26%. Speaker 200:16:49On the ESG front, we released our 3rd annual sustainability report in July and it's available on our website. Our team has put in a lot of work to build a more sustainable business for Casey's and we're excited to share our progress on this journey. As we look ahead to the Q2 of fiscal 2024 and beyond, I'm excited about what Casey's has to offer. Our balance sheet gives us the ability to be disciplined but opportunistic with store growth and our capabilities throughout the organization will allow for that growth to be efficient and innovative. The plan we laid out in June has been well received and we have the team in place to execute on that plan at a high level and continue to deliver the kind of results our investors have come to expect from Casey's. Speaker 200:17:35I'm looking forward to seeing the results of our hard work in the quarters and years ahead. Speaker 300:17:40And we Speaker 200:17:40will now take your questions. Operator00:17:42Thank you. One moment please for our first question. Our first question will come from Anthony Bonadio of Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Speaker 400:18:19Yes. Hey, guys. Congrats on the nice quarter. I guess just starting with fuel margins, clearly a lot stronger than some of us were expecting. It seems like a pretty normal environment in Price action, but there does seem to be a growing consensus that breakevens are sort of drifting higher. Speaker 400:18:37I guess just any thoughts on underlying drivers of that dynamic? And then how are you thinking about that mid-30s number that you talked about as a modeling assumption when you gave the 'twenty four guidance? Speaker 200:18:50Yes, Anthony, this is Darren. I'll start with that. Like you said, it was a relatively normal Quarter from a fuel margin standpoint, we had some a little bit of volatility here and there, but nothing of note. And I'd first just say that I think our team did a really great job of balancing that volume and margin. And when we look at volume numbers for the industry, Opus Mid Continent had those volume numbers down about 4.1% In our geography, so I think our positive gallon growth was great. Speaker 200:19:27In terms Of the outlook moving forward, I would prefer to be a little more on the conservative side, but I have to say that The more recent history, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks of 9 quarters over $0.345 I think it would suggest that Those margins may tick up a bit higher. And the pressure that we've talked about over the last couple of years With the smaller operators is still there. The cost of operating the business is still a challenge for a lot of those folks that don't have scale. And I think in the current environment, the continued erosion of the cigarette category is putting additional pressure on those smaller operators. So I would say if anything there's probably an upward bias on fuel margin moving forward. Speaker 400:20:20Got it. That's really helpful. And then just quickly on operating expenses, obviously, a very impressive quarter on costs. But on guidance, you You raised your unit growth guidance by it looks like about 2% for fiscal 2024, but less OpEx growth unchanged. So I guess, 1, why is that? Speaker 400:20:37And then 2, Assuming that still holds and fiscal Q1 is certainly a good data point, I guess what makes you more constructive about your progress there? Speaker 100:20:47Yes. Hey, Anthony, this is Steve. I'll maybe start with what's in or out of the guidance. So We did raise the unit number that we expect to close for the year just based on the strong start to the year that we've had. We don't know the timing of exactly when any of those units are going to come into the system, so to speak. Speaker 100:21:08And the EG Transaction as we mentioned that does require us to get regulatory approval. And so all of our guidance that we gave at the beginning of the year It was predicated on that initial unit number. And so our numbers from an OpEx standpoint are still based on that original Unit count, we haven't adjusted, total OpEx expectations for when those new units will come in yet because we just don't know When we'll get clearance to close those. So when we revisit the total outlook at the end of the second quarter, we'll be halfway through the year. I think we'll have a lot more clarity around Exactly when those units come in and what impact they may have on all of the various metrics and we'll try to be as transparent as we can at that point in time. Operator00:21:59Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Next question will come from Ben Bienvenu of Stephens Inc. Your line is open. Speaker 500:22:12Hey, good morning guys. Speaker 100:22:15Good morning. Speaker 500:22:15So I want to ask, you provided helpful color on quarter to date trends. My understanding or recollection is that August was probably a reasonably difficult comparison just given last year that was a period where we saw A precipitous drop in fuel prices off of a very high base following the onset of the Ukraine war. So I'm wondering What does that mean for the compare in the period? And I know it's just the Q1 in the year and you typically don't revisit guidance until you get A little bit further into the year, but how much does kind of what you're seeing quarter to date play into the You had the decision not to address full year guidance. Speaker 200:23:00Yes, Ben, this is Darren. I would say that that's got nothing to do with Our decision to not update guidance at this point. It's just been our standard practice to wait till the midpoint in the year where we have A bit more visibility into what's going on. So I would just emphasize you should read nothing into the fact that we didn't update guidance other than the fact We're 1 quarter into it and we have another quarter before we typically do that. We did make the adjustment on the stores Because we already have under contract more stores than we had planned to open for the year. Speaker 200:23:36So That one just mathematically we felt obligated to adjust, but Everything else, we're just going to wait till Q2. And with respect to how August played out, it's just Like Steve mentioned in his remarks, we were just slightly below the midpoint of our guidance on fuel And inside the store. And so I think that's what you should read into that. Speaker 500:24:04Okay. Fair enough. Great. My second question is on M and A. You noted the balance sheet is still in a great position. Speaker 500:24:13The performance of the underlying business continues to improve. I know you've already had a pretty brisk pace of M and A to start the year, But, presumably, your appetite is still there and are there options out there in the market that are intriguing to you? Speaker 200:24:32Yes. I would say yes to both. I mean, we definitely have the flexibility on the balance sheet to do more deals and we have the appetite for that. We're really only limited by what's available out there and I think The macro environment is setting up really favorably for us. Like we've mentioned, costs have still been higher To operate, especially for those who don't have scale, the tobacco mix is starting to have an impact on folks, we believe. Speaker 200:25:04And so, we've seen a pretty good uptick in the opportunities that are out there for us to pursue. And we have our dedicated M and A team has been busy looking at all of those that make sense for us and We'll just have to see how that process plays out, but we're definitely in the market for that. Operator00:25:25Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Bonnie Herzog of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 600:25:37All right. Thank you. Good morning, everyone. I wanted to ask about your inside sales, which were quite So maybe just hoping for a little bit more color on some of the key categories where you saw Maybe the most growth and then also on your private label performance, maybe you could share with us just sort of where you're at with That business that you've rolled out and maybe how it trended throughout the quarter, especially in the context of the consumer? Thanks. Speaker 200:26:10Yes, Bonnie. I'd say that I was really happy with the inside sales performance and it was We had strength across a lot of categories. I'd start with our prepared foods, 5.9% and that was cycling over 8.5% from the prior year. So really, really strong performance there. And what we really like about that is that it was Led with our core with whole pizza pies. Speaker 200:26:38And so the innovation around thin crust was Something that was a gap in our menu and has really resonated well with our guests. And we've hit about 15% mix Right out of the chute with that product and that's about where we expect it to be, actually a little bit higher than what we expect it to be Compared to the industry overall, so that was strong. We had some other innovation in the hot lunch sandwich category With our barbecue brisket sandwich on a King's Hawaiian buns, we did a nice collaboration From there and that category was up 30% during the quarter as a result of that innovation. On the grocery and general merch side, we saw Real good strength in non alcoholic beverages up about 8%. Our grocery category was up 7% and alcoholic beverages were up 6%. Speaker 200:27:34So really, Really good strength across the board. Really the only area where we have some softness was in tobacco. And I think that's more of a driven by an industry dynamic More than anything else. With respect to private label, again, we're up 26%, same store in private label. Units were up Close to 16%. Speaker 200:27:57So what that indicates is that we had good velocity on the unit side, but we're also able to take a little bit of price And still keep that relative value proposition for the guests. And so that's been resonating with our guests and we're really happy with where we're at on that one. Speaker 600:28:14Okay, helpful color. And if I may, just a follow-up on that. Just thinking about your inside margin expansion, which was also quite You did attribute it a lot of it, it sounded like to the softening of ingredient costs, specifically cheese. So curious to kind of hear How we should think about your margin performance for the rest of the year? And then thinking about some of what you just mentioned, Darren, and some of the innovation that's driving Growth, how has that been impacting margins? Speaker 600:28:47Is it accretive as you think about as you continue to evolve what you're offering in your store? Thanks. Speaker 200:28:55Yes. With respect to the innovation, I'll start there and I'll let Steve talk A little bit more about the margin cadence. But with the innovation, we've really leaned heavier on that to drive traffic and to drive sales and less focused on some of the more aggressive value offers. I mean, we did do a little bit of that over the summer, A fountain drink promotion and that worked out really well to drive traffic. But when we look at innovation on the food side, we've not had to That innovation and we've been able to drive volume. Speaker 200:29:31And so, we think our team is really hitting a stride in terms of understanding what the guests' needs are and our culinary team is really developing those products that are specifically hitting those needs and that's what's resonating with the guests. And so it's allowing us to drive that incremental growth without having to do a lot of discounting to get there. Speaker 100:29:51Yes. And Bonnie, this is Steve. I think We certainly continue to expect inside margin to improve year over year. That's reflected in the guidance on the grocery side of the business. The private label mix change in conjunction with generally speaking tobacco becoming gradually a smaller part of the mix This is going to naturally, flatter the grocery margin and the real opportunity, as you know, is on the Prepared Foods side of the business. Speaker 100:30:21And so we're 80% Hedged on our cheese buy for the remainder of this year. And so, less exposed to spot variability here in the out quarters. We were 18% to the good on cheese in the Q1. We're kind of mid to high single digits To the good in Q2, Q3 and Q4 as we sit here right now with spot, but the 80% hedge Won't give us quite as much upside as we saw in the Q1, but I feel good about year over year deflation generally on the cheese side of the business. And by and large, there's still less pressure on the protein side of that business. Speaker 100:31:04And so I think we So feel good that we will continue to show improvement year over year on the margins on the prepared food side of the business as the year progresses. Operator00:31:18Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Kelly Bania of BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 700:31:32Good morning. Thanks for taking our questions. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 700:31:38I wanted to just circle back To the inside comps in August, sounds Speaker 800:31:43like maybe a little bit Speaker 700:31:44of a deceleration there, but can you give color on what you're seeing with Traffic, ticket, grocery prepared food, or is this just maybe a little bit of cycling off this Sound drink promotion that was done over the summer or just anything that we should think about that's impacting kind of the trend near term? Speaker 200:32:08Yes, Kelly. We still saw well, first, I'd say we had good traffic throughout the quarter. We were up a little over 1% in actual foot traffic into the store and we saw that trend continue into August. So And we were running that fountain promotion at the same time throughout August. So, really nothing there. Speaker 200:32:30I mean, it is really A cycling issue more than a deceleration issue in my opinion. And the 2 year comps, I think, We're pretty consistent with where we had been in the Q1. So and again, we've got Some higher comps coming in September as well. So I don't when we cycle over those higher comps, I start to focus a little bit more on the Speaker 100:32:552 year Speaker 200:32:57And to make sure that we're still maintaining that momentum there. And so, so far that's what we've seen. And so I don't have any concerns about That number the absolute number being a little bit lower than where we were in the Q1. Speaker 100:33:09Yes. I think Kelly, just for reference, Our inside number in the prior year was almost 8%. So we're cycling that and August would have been indicative of that. And so It's really just what are you laughing in the prior year more Speaker 500:33:24than anything. Speaker 700:33:27Great. That's very helpful. I was also just wondering if you can talk about with some of these new prepared food innovation, if you're able To use your data or your loyalty to analyze if you're getting incremental customers that you weren't maybe reaching before or If you're simply cannibalizing kind of prior products or maybe what your early lead is on how this Innovation is reaching your customer base. Speaker 200:34:00Yes. So far, we've been Really happy with the performance on the prepared foods side. And we think about on the Thin crust Pizza in particular, we think about half of that has truly been incremental to the business. And What some of our loyalty data would suggest is that about 16% of those sales were by new buyers into the So in other words, people that weren't buying pizza from us before, about 12% were new guests entirely. And so That's been really helpful. Speaker 200:34:41And that was really our hypothesis going into the Syncrust Speaker 100:34:44was that there are certain Speaker 200:34:46guests that That's all they want and that's going to be a veto vote in a family if we don't have that offer and so far that's all played out and the rewards data Would validate that. Operator00:35:00Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Bobby Griffin of Raymond James. Your line is open. Speaker 900:35:11Good morning, Bobby. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 100:35:14Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 900:35:15I guess first I wanted to maybe talk about, have you seen any small change in customer behavior or anything as You start to see gas prices move up sequentially, still not at the peak levels we saw back last year, but we have started to see them move up. So just anything curious about If you're starting to see behavior similar to what was happening in the prior period of very high gas prices? Speaker 200:35:40Bobby, we haven't seen a dramatic shift in that and gas prices are still about $1 a gallon Below where they were last year when we hit the peak. So the pressure is probably not as acute on guests. Where we do see Some changes in behavior is really on the lower income consumer. Now as a reminder, we are not overly exposed to that We only have about a quarter of our guests would fit in that category, about 3 quarters are make more than $50,000 a year and so They're out of that lower income. And so for that lower income consumer, we do see some shifting around on fuel. Speaker 200:36:21They're buying Higher ethanol blended fuels in our E15 offering had about 15% gallon growth in the quarter, so that would be indicative of that. Private label is purchased more frequently by them and we are seeing some pressure in some categories that were a little more EBT sensitive Like take home dairy and some edible grocery, but that's primarily from the lower income consumer. And obviously, Even within that grocery category with a little bit of pressure in some subcategories, we're still up 7% year over year. So we think while there is a little bit of that behavior changing at the lower end overall For the total gas base, it's not having a big impact. Speaker 900:37:09All right. I appreciate it. That's helpful. And then maybe secondly for me is just on the ongoing Strong performance in OpEx with the store hour reductions and optimization. Just anything more detail on kind of where you are in that journey, kind of what you're still finding And where areas of the store are that are getting optimized? Speaker 900:37:26And I guess secondly, is it across the network that you're seeing these savings or is it more like, hey, we've identified a subset Stores in certain regions that we're getting better optimization out of, just any further clarity around there because the performance has been very strong. Speaker 200:37:41Yes, thanks. I'm really proud of the continuous improvement team that's been working on this. And this has been going on for over a year now. And what I tell you first is that they're really taking a scientific approach to Where those bottlenecks are in our store operation, where we are spending labor that is just not Having an impact on the business and how we can change those processes or employ technology to make them more efficient. And so I feel really good about the fact that we've taken these hours out, but our engagement scores are up among our team members and our OSAT scores are up among our guests. Speaker 200:38:25So it's an indication that we were just simply running this business more effectively and not Having a negative impact on the guest experience or our team members. In terms of the sustainability, obviously, whenever you go into one of these exercises, there's Some low hanging fruit, you can get that first. But our team has a pipeline or a roadmap For the next 3 years of discrete initiatives that they've identified that we can implement and continue to take OpEx out of the store or give the store more slack to run the store better. So we feel this is sustainable and we still have A few years to go in terms of capturing all these opportunities. Operator00:39:12Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Irene Nattel of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 800:39:25Thanks and good morning everyone. Speaker 200:39:27Good morning. Speaker 800:39:28Good morning. I wanted to come back to the subject of gas margins, which obviously is of great interest to all investors. So as you noted, it's what 5 quarters that you've been in and around that $0.40 range. What would it take for you guys to get more comfortable with sort of a soft guide towards something Speaker 200:40:00Well, Irene, that's a really nuanced question. For me to get more comfortable, I just have See more of it, I suppose. Admittedly, it took me a while to get comfortable with mid-30s, But we got there because we just kept doing it. And so I think we were able to get to 40 this last I would say last year with everything going on in Ukraine, we saw that spike in those 40s kind of came Through more of an exogenous advance. So I would want to see a little bit longer timeframe Of a more normal macro environment and margins at this level before I feel comfortable underwriting that at that level, at that upper 30s, low 40s. Speaker 200:40:50But The mid-30s because we've been there for so long now, I'm very comfortable at that level. Speaker 800:40:59Fair enough and that's very helpful. Thank you. And then just a couple of follow ups. One, you noted that you're 80% Hedged on cheese prices at what price? And you also noted an uptick in M and A activity. Speaker 800:41:14What are you seeing on multiples in terms of expectations? Speaker 200:41:22Well, I'd say with multiple expectations, It's an interesting dynamic because I would say that the EBITDA for some of these smaller operators has actually gone down. So the multiples are kind of hanging in there, but at a lower level of EBITDA. And I know that's counterintuitive given the margins that we're seeing, but I think it's really indicative of the fact that these smaller players that lack scale haven't been able to offset a lot of the cost increases in a way A company like ourselves has been able to and so they're just under a lot of pressure even though they've got those higher margins. And so I think that's worked out to our benefit. And I forget the second part of your question. Speaker 100:42:12Maybe I'll try to answer that. So we are 80% hedged, that's correct. And at the current spot, we obviously hedged the commodity that's a little bit different than The all in costs that we pay, but the all in equivalent for the out quarters looks a lot like what we incurred In the Q1, so kind of that $2.12 or low teen number is about What our strip looks like here for the rest of the year at the current spot. Operator00:42:44Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Daniel Silverstein of Credit Suisse. Your line is open. Speaker 300:42:57Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking our question. Just one on the EG acquisition. So that deal had some stores which will serve denser, larger metro areas like Bowling Green in Lexington, Kentucky. Just wondering if you're seeing more opportunities to penetrate larger markets given the landscape today and how you view the opportunities and challenges of bringing Speaker 200:43:27Yes, Dan. When we think about Markets like Bowling Green and Lexington, those aren't real or significantly larger markets than A lot of the markets we operate in today. Lexington is a city that's comparable to In size to Des Moines, where we're based. And so we're very comfortable at that level. This isn't a Chicago or Los Angeles or New York type of No scenario by any stretch. Speaker 200:43:58And so I've been to both of those markets. Bowling Green is a fantastic market for us. Lexington will be a great market for us. So And we're very comfortable operating in accounts of this size. I don't have any concerns there. Speaker 200:44:13Thank you. Operator00:44:15Thank you. And one moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Christina Khitai of Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:44:31Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask on private label. So the 10% unit share and the gross Profit contribution you shared with us is a great result. Maybe can you talk about where you are in the process of that rollout? Speaker 1000:44:47Any particular areas where you are seeing significant strength? I think you called out 16% unit growth. So my question is, is that broad based or are there any particular areas that are driving that performance? Speaker 200:45:00Yes, Christina, we're still continuing to evolve the private label portfolio. We've got another 40 items that will Go into the assortment by the end of the year and we're at the same time we're optimizing products. So As some products start to atrophy a little bit, we'll remove them from the assortment and we bring in new innovation. And so that's a constant process that our private label team is operating with. With respect to where we saw some strength, certainly bottled water was probably our strongest, up about 70% And in sales and now our bottled water is about 50% of that bottled water category are private label. Speaker 200:45:50So Really strong performance there. Obviously, that's a little bit seasonal in the summertime, but we're seeing great growth year over year in that. Another category that's been really strong is chips. And chips is usually a pretty tough one because it's a very competitive category, but We had some new innovation with some new flavors. They were seasonal just for this summer and saw north of 70% Same store sales in that category as well. Speaker 200:46:18Now that category is about 25% penetrated. And again, With the competitive landscape in that category, that's a big statement. So we like where we are there and We've seen some broader based strength, but those are the really kind of the standouts that we've seen so far. Speaker 1000:46:42That's great. And then just my follow-up, I was going to ask around pizza and in particular the 12% new guests that you mentioned, I Following the thin crust introduction, have you seen any competitive response to you taking pizza share? Or do you anticipate any change In the promotional landscape or anything around pricing? Speaker 200:47:06Not at this point. It's a little bit hard for me to say whether we've taken share from any of the major competitors. For the most part, Pizza Hut is our primary competitor in most of our markets, if we have one. In a lot of cases, in our more rural markets, There may not be a competitor or if there is one, it's more of a mom and pop. So it's really difficult to say, but I couldn't tell you that we've seen an uptick in promotional activity from competitors since we've launched the thin crust. Speaker 200:47:38I think The other pizza players have struggled a little bit from a velocity standpoint. So I think they're starting to get a little more promotional anyway, I haven't seen any change as a result of what we've done. Operator00:47:54Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from John Lawrence of Benchmark. Your line is open. Speaker 300:48:07Hi. Good morning, guys. Speaker 100:48:09Good morning. Speaker 300:48:11Would you discuss a little bit about the new markets? How quickly does some of this innovation, some of the new products, does that help get those Maybe the class of new stores in the last couple of years up and running and ramping a little faster. And what have you noticed with product innovations and maybe the app in some of those new markets? Speaker 200:48:36Yes. John, I'm not so sure that we've seen a difference in terms of the impact innovation has had in the new stores. That being said, we've been really happy with the way our new stores have ramped in the last couple of years. I think that's really a testament So the real estate team and their ability to use more advanced analytics to identify high potential sites Speaker 300:49:03And get Speaker 200:49:04those sites under contract. And so we've just seen an increase in how quickly those stores have ramped in general. I think the innovation only helps in that respect and it gets more people interested in the stores and helps feed that traffic into those Speaker 300:49:25Great. Thanks. And secondly, remind us a little bit on that fuel margin. You talked at Analyst Day about Some of the things, some of the tools you're using to help with the analytics on that data On gas prices, etcetera, would you remind us of that please? Speaker 200:49:46We've had for a number of years, we've had some more analytic tools. We've essentially just given The pricing analysts, the information that they need to make more informed decisions. So they've got real time credit card data that allows us To see where competitors are priced, we've got information feeding to them from the commodity market, so they know Where cost is moving at any given time and so they really have a and then they have inventory Information from the store. So at any given time, they really have a complete picture of all the factors that Would influence price within a particular trade area and so they're just simply able to make more informed decisions as a result of that. Operator00:50:37Thank you. I see no further questions in the queue. I would now like to turn the conference back to Darren Rebelez for closing remarks. Speaker 200:50:48Okay. Thank you for taking the time today to join us on the call. And before we sign off, I want to thank the team members for all their hard work this quarter And everybody have a great rest of the day. Operator00:50:59This concludes today's conference call. Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect and have a pleasant day.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCasey's General Stores Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Casey's General Stores Earnings HeadlinesEx-Dividend Reminder: Casey's General Stores, NRG Energy and SL Green RealtyMay 1, 2025 | nasdaq.comCalculating The Intrinsic Value Of Casey's General Stores, Inc. (NASDAQ:CASY)April 30, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comThe Trump Dump is starting; Get out of stocks now?The first 365 days of the Trump presidency… Will be the best time to get rich in American history.May 6, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Was Jim Cramer Right About Casey’s General Stores, Inc. (CASY)?April 29, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comCasey's General Stores, Inc. (NASDAQ:CASY) Receives $430.33 Average Target Price from BrokeragesApril 27, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comCasey's Selects IntelAgree to Streamline Contract Management with AIApril 23, 2025 | prnewswire.comSee More Casey's General Stores Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Casey's General Stores? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Casey's General Stores and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Casey's General StoresCasey's General Stores (NASDAQ:CASY) engages in the provision of management and operation of convenience stores and gasoline stations. It provides self-service gasoline, a wide selection of grocery items, and an array of freshly prepared food items. The firm offers food, beverages, tobacco products, health and beauty aids, automotive products, and other non-food items. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:02Welcome to the Q1 Fiscal Year 20 24 Casey's General Stores Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. And I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Mr. Brian Johnson, sir, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:38Good morning and thank you for joining us to I am Brian Johnson, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and Business Development. With me today are Darren Rebelez, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer as well as Steve Bramlage, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'll remind you that certain statements made by us during this investor call may constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private These forward looking statements include any statements relating to expectations for future periods, Possible or assumed future results of operations, financial conditions, liquidity and related sources or needs, the company's supply chain, Business and integration strategies, plans and synergies, growth opportunities and performance of our stores. There are a number of known and unknown risks, Uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual results to differ materially from any future results expressed or implied by those forward looking statements, Including but not limited to the integration of the recent acquisitions, our ability to execute on our strategic plan or to realize benefits from the strategic plan, The impact and duration of the conflict in Ukraine and related governmental actions as well as other risks, uncertainties and factors, which are described in our most recent annual report on Form 10 ks and quarterly reports on Form 10 Q as filed with the SEC and available on our website. Speaker 100:02:07Any forward looking statements made during this call reflect our current views as of today with respect to future events and Casey's disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise forward looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. A reconciliation of non GAAP to GAAP financial measures Reference in this call as well as detailed breakdown of the operating expense increase for the quarter can be found on our website at www.casey.com under the Investor Relations link. With that said, I would now like to turn the call over to Darren to discuss our Q1 results. Darren? Speaker 200:02:43Thanks, Brian, and good morning, everyone. We'll get to the excellent Q1 results in a moment. First, I want to thank our team for their dedication and to getting the fiscal year off to a great start. As our guests and community shifted into back to school season, Casey's held its annual cash for classrooms giving campaign in August. Thanks to our generous guests and passionate team members, We raised over $700,000 These funds will support needs and projects for schools, students and teachers in our local communities. Speaker 200:03:15The grant application process opens in October and we encourage schools, teachers and parent led organizations to apply. Now let's discuss the results from the quarter. Diluted EPS finished at $4.52 per share, an 11% increase from the prior year. Inside sales remained strong, driving inside gross profit dollars up over 10% to $556,000,000 The company generated $169,000,000 in net income, an increase of 11% and $316,000,000 in EBITDA, an increase of 8% from the prior year. As you may have seen in our Investor Day presentation, We launched a thin crust pizza offering in the Q1. Speaker 200:04:02This addition to the lineup has been a great success and demonstrates the blueprint for innovation at Casey's. Our guest insights team identified a gap in our menu. Our culinary team created a delicious product. Our marketing team worked with our advertising partner to create a great marketing campaign and ultimately our operations team brought to life in our stores and communities across our footprint. And I think the results speak for themselves. Speaker 200:04:29This type of strategic innovation and teamwork is something that will help us achieve our goals for the 3 year strategic plan. On the fuel side of the business, we continue to strike an appropriate balance between volume and margin. However, one notable difference with this quarter's performance is there were no significant macro events that influenced margin. It was a relatively benign quarter from a wholesale cost perspective and we believe this is a strong indicator that higher industry fuel margins are here to stay. Overall, I think this quarter truly illustrates the strength of the unique Casey's business model, particularly in a more normal times and shows our 3 year strategic plan objectives are very achievable. Speaker 200:05:13The team continues to do an excellent job operating the business efficiently and effectively both inside and outside the store. I would now like to go over our results and share some of the details in each of the categories. Inside same store sales were up 5.4% for the Q1 or 12.1% on a 2 year stack basis with an average margin of 40.6%. We saw notably strong performance in whole pizza pies and bakery as well as alcoholic and non alcoholic beverages. Our team with support from our supplier partners continues Fence beverage sales were up 5.9 percent or 14.8 percent on a 2 year stack basis with an average margin of 58.2%, up approximately 260 basis points from the prior year. Speaker 200:06:11The previously mentioned innovation with thin crust pizza helped drive sales as we saw great results with our whole pizza pies in addition to strong performance in bakery. Margin was favorably impacted by softening in commodities, notably cheese during the quarter. Same store grocery and general merchandise sales were up 5.2% or 11% on a 2 year stack basis with an average margin of 34.1%, an increase of approximately 20 basis points from the prior year. We continued our strong momentum in beverages with non alcoholic beverages, specifically energy drinks showing fantastic results. Alcoholic beverages also performed quite well as we continue to leverage our competitive advantage of approximately 1500 stores with liquor licenses. Speaker 200:07:01For fuel, Same store gallons sold increased 0.4 percent with a fuel margin of $0.416 per gallon. Our fuel team is striking the right balance Fuel margins above $0.345 per gallon and 4 of the last 5 quarters have been over $0.40 per gallon. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve to discuss the financial results from the Q1. Steve? Speaker 100:07:33Thank you, Darren, and good morning. Each of the three areas of our business performed well in the quarter, and that's a testament to our business model and the execution of our teams. Total revenue for the quarter was $3,800,000,000 a decrease of $585,000,000 or 13% from the prior year due to the lower retail price of fuel. Total inside sales for the quarter were $1,400,000,000 an increase of $103,000,000 or 8% from the prior year. For the quarter, grocery and general merchandise sales increased by $74,000,000 to $997,000,000 an increase of 8%. Speaker 100:08:14Prepared food and dispensed beverage sales rose by $29,000,000 to $373,000,000 an increase of 8.5%. Results were also favorably impacted by operating approximately 3% more stores on a year over year basis. Retail fuel sales were down $669,000,000 in the first quarter due to a 24% increase in the average retail price per gallon that was partially offset by a 3.6% increase in gallons sold to $714,000,000 The average retail price of fuel during this period was $3.40 a gallon compared to $4.49 a year ago. As a reminder, we define gross profit as revenue less cost of goods sold, but Casey's had gross profit of $878,000,000 in the 1st quarter, an increase of $42,000,000 or 5% from the prior year. This is driven by higher in site gross profit of $52,200,000 or 10.3 percent, partially offset by a decrease of 11,200,000 or 3.6% in fuel gross profit. Speaker 100:09:31Inside gross profit margin was 40.6%, up 80 basis points from a year ago. The grocery and general merchandise margin was 34.1%, that's an increase of 20 basis points from the prior year. Slight increase was due to a favorable mix shift with further penetration of private label products, a lower LIFO charge than in the prior year and favorable vendor funding. Prepared food and dispensed beverage margin was 58.2%, that's up 260 basis points from prior year. The category margin benefited from lower commodity costs, specifically cheese, which was $2.04 per pound for the quarter. Speaker 100:10:12That compares to $2.49 per pound last year, a decrease of 18%. This positively impacted PF and DB margin by approximately 130 basis points. Margin also benefited from a lower LIFO charge in the prior year as our input costs softened, which had an approximate 120 basis point impact. We are in the midst of adjusting certain benefits associated with our Casey's Rewards platform. And during the quarter, these one time changes positively impacted and DB sales and margin by approximately $4,900,000 However, Because we were concomitantly running a summer long promotional campaign of $0.89 fountain drinks, we did not see much of a net benefit from the program change. Speaker 100:11:02Fuel margin for the quarter was $0.416 per gallon, down $0.031 per gallon from the all time high Fuel gross profit benefited by $20,200,000 from the sale of RINs And that's up $2,500,000 from the same quarter in the prior year. Total operating expenses were up 3.2% were $17,600,000 in the Q1. Nearly 3% of the total operating expense increase is due to unit growth as we operated 82 more stores than the prior year. Credit card fees decreased approximately $6,000,000 due to lower retail fuel prices and that offset essentially all remaining operating expense increases. Same store employee expense was approximately flat as the increase in wage rates was offset by the reduction in same store hours. Speaker 100:12:00Depreciation in the quarter was $82,900,000 that's up 6 Down $1,300,000 versus the prior year aided by rising interest rates on our cash balances. As a reminder, about 16% of our debt The effective tax rate for the quarter was 23.6% compared to 24.6% in the prior year. That decrease was driven by a one time benefit that we recorded due to an income tax rate reduction in the State of Nebraska. Net income was up versus the prior year to $169,200,000 an increase of 10.7%. EBITDA for the quarter was $316,900,000 compared to $293,000,000 a year ago, an increase of 8.2%. Speaker 100:12:57Our balance sheet remains in excellent condition and we have ample financial flexibility. On July 31, we had total available liquidity of $1,300,000,000 Furthermore, we have no significant maturities coming due until fiscal 2026. Our leverage ratio calculated in accordance with Senior notes is now 1.7 times. For the quarter, net cash generated by operating activities of $229,000,000 less Purchases of property and equipment of $69,000,000 resulted in the company generating $160,000,000 of free cash flow. That compares to generating $194,000,000 in the prior year. Speaker 100:13:37At the September meeting, the Board of Directors voted to maintain the quarterly dividend at $0.43 During the Q1, we also repurchased approximately $30,000,000 of stock and have $370,000,000 remaining on our Share repurchase authorization. Investing in EBITDA and ROIC accretive growth opportunities remains our primary capital allocation priority. But As we mentioned at our Investor Day, our balance sheet affords us the opportunity to be more opportunistic than in the recent past with regards to share repurchase. In our press release and during this call, we have and well mentioned several pending acquisitions. These acquisitions will be funded with cash on hand. Speaker 100:14:20The pending transaction with EG Group is subject to regulatory approval and is expected to close this calendar year. As a result of the pending transactions, Casey's expects to add at least 150 stores We will revisit the entire annual outlook following our Q2 earnings call. Our August results for the current quarter are as follows. Same store sales, both inside and fuel gallons, are slightly below the midpoint of their respective annual outlooks. Fuel CPG through August was in the high 30s. Speaker 100:15:02At current spot, cheese prices are modestly favorable versus the prior year, but less so than we experienced in the Q1. Total operating expenses will be near the high end of our annual growth range in the 2nd quarter, and that's primarily due to timing. I'd now like to turn the call back over to Darren. Speaker 200:15:23Thanks, Steve. I would like to express my gratitude to the entire Casey's team for delivering another great quarter. We're off to an extremely strong start to our fiscal year and our 3 year strategic plan. Our M and A and real estate teams have been hard at work as we are very excited about the pending acquisition with EG Group and their 63 stores in Kentucky and Tennessee. These stores are located in rural and suburban markets and we look forward to bringing more of our delicious pizza to Kentucky and Tennessee. Speaker 200:15:54It is complementary to our existing footprint and within our distribution center's radii, further leveraging our scale and infrastructure. In the Q1, we also introduced a refreshed app design that makes it easier than ever for our loyalty members to track their points, redeem for rewards and see how much they've saved by shopping with Casey's Rewards. The program is nearing 7,000,000 members And we're excited to see the way our value proposition is resonating across the Midwest. Our guests have also gravitated to our private label products And we exited the quarter approaching 350 items in the assortment with over 40 new items in the pipeline for the remainder of the calendar year. And the results are there, achieving nearly 10% unit share and over 10% gross profit share in the 1st quarter with same store sales up 26%. Speaker 200:16:49On the ESG front, we released our 3rd annual sustainability report in July and it's available on our website. Our team has put in a lot of work to build a more sustainable business for Casey's and we're excited to share our progress on this journey. As we look ahead to the Q2 of fiscal 2024 and beyond, I'm excited about what Casey's has to offer. Our balance sheet gives us the ability to be disciplined but opportunistic with store growth and our capabilities throughout the organization will allow for that growth to be efficient and innovative. The plan we laid out in June has been well received and we have the team in place to execute on that plan at a high level and continue to deliver the kind of results our investors have come to expect from Casey's. Speaker 200:17:35I'm looking forward to seeing the results of our hard work in the quarters and years ahead. Speaker 300:17:40And we Speaker 200:17:40will now take your questions. Operator00:17:42Thank you. One moment please for our first question. Our first question will come from Anthony Bonadio of Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Speaker 400:18:19Yes. Hey, guys. Congrats on the nice quarter. I guess just starting with fuel margins, clearly a lot stronger than some of us were expecting. It seems like a pretty normal environment in Price action, but there does seem to be a growing consensus that breakevens are sort of drifting higher. Speaker 400:18:37I guess just any thoughts on underlying drivers of that dynamic? And then how are you thinking about that mid-30s number that you talked about as a modeling assumption when you gave the 'twenty four guidance? Speaker 200:18:50Yes, Anthony, this is Darren. I'll start with that. Like you said, it was a relatively normal Quarter from a fuel margin standpoint, we had some a little bit of volatility here and there, but nothing of note. And I'd first just say that I think our team did a really great job of balancing that volume and margin. And when we look at volume numbers for the industry, Opus Mid Continent had those volume numbers down about 4.1% In our geography, so I think our positive gallon growth was great. Speaker 200:19:27In terms Of the outlook moving forward, I would prefer to be a little more on the conservative side, but I have to say that The more recent history, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks of 9 quarters over $0.345 I think it would suggest that Those margins may tick up a bit higher. And the pressure that we've talked about over the last couple of years With the smaller operators is still there. The cost of operating the business is still a challenge for a lot of those folks that don't have scale. And I think in the current environment, the continued erosion of the cigarette category is putting additional pressure on those smaller operators. So I would say if anything there's probably an upward bias on fuel margin moving forward. Speaker 400:20:20Got it. That's really helpful. And then just quickly on operating expenses, obviously, a very impressive quarter on costs. But on guidance, you You raised your unit growth guidance by it looks like about 2% for fiscal 2024, but less OpEx growth unchanged. So I guess, 1, why is that? Speaker 400:20:37And then 2, Assuming that still holds and fiscal Q1 is certainly a good data point, I guess what makes you more constructive about your progress there? Speaker 100:20:47Yes. Hey, Anthony, this is Steve. I'll maybe start with what's in or out of the guidance. So We did raise the unit number that we expect to close for the year just based on the strong start to the year that we've had. We don't know the timing of exactly when any of those units are going to come into the system, so to speak. Speaker 100:21:08And the EG Transaction as we mentioned that does require us to get regulatory approval. And so all of our guidance that we gave at the beginning of the year It was predicated on that initial unit number. And so our numbers from an OpEx standpoint are still based on that original Unit count, we haven't adjusted, total OpEx expectations for when those new units will come in yet because we just don't know When we'll get clearance to close those. So when we revisit the total outlook at the end of the second quarter, we'll be halfway through the year. I think we'll have a lot more clarity around Exactly when those units come in and what impact they may have on all of the various metrics and we'll try to be as transparent as we can at that point in time. Operator00:21:59Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Next question will come from Ben Bienvenu of Stephens Inc. Your line is open. Speaker 500:22:12Hey, good morning guys. Speaker 100:22:15Good morning. Speaker 500:22:15So I want to ask, you provided helpful color on quarter to date trends. My understanding or recollection is that August was probably a reasonably difficult comparison just given last year that was a period where we saw A precipitous drop in fuel prices off of a very high base following the onset of the Ukraine war. So I'm wondering What does that mean for the compare in the period? And I know it's just the Q1 in the year and you typically don't revisit guidance until you get A little bit further into the year, but how much does kind of what you're seeing quarter to date play into the You had the decision not to address full year guidance. Speaker 200:23:00Yes, Ben, this is Darren. I would say that that's got nothing to do with Our decision to not update guidance at this point. It's just been our standard practice to wait till the midpoint in the year where we have A bit more visibility into what's going on. So I would just emphasize you should read nothing into the fact that we didn't update guidance other than the fact We're 1 quarter into it and we have another quarter before we typically do that. We did make the adjustment on the stores Because we already have under contract more stores than we had planned to open for the year. Speaker 200:23:36So That one just mathematically we felt obligated to adjust, but Everything else, we're just going to wait till Q2. And with respect to how August played out, it's just Like Steve mentioned in his remarks, we were just slightly below the midpoint of our guidance on fuel And inside the store. And so I think that's what you should read into that. Speaker 500:24:04Okay. Fair enough. Great. My second question is on M and A. You noted the balance sheet is still in a great position. Speaker 500:24:13The performance of the underlying business continues to improve. I know you've already had a pretty brisk pace of M and A to start the year, But, presumably, your appetite is still there and are there options out there in the market that are intriguing to you? Speaker 200:24:32Yes. I would say yes to both. I mean, we definitely have the flexibility on the balance sheet to do more deals and we have the appetite for that. We're really only limited by what's available out there and I think The macro environment is setting up really favorably for us. Like we've mentioned, costs have still been higher To operate, especially for those who don't have scale, the tobacco mix is starting to have an impact on folks, we believe. Speaker 200:25:04And so, we've seen a pretty good uptick in the opportunities that are out there for us to pursue. And we have our dedicated M and A team has been busy looking at all of those that make sense for us and We'll just have to see how that process plays out, but we're definitely in the market for that. Operator00:25:25Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Bonnie Herzog of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 600:25:37All right. Thank you. Good morning, everyone. I wanted to ask about your inside sales, which were quite So maybe just hoping for a little bit more color on some of the key categories where you saw Maybe the most growth and then also on your private label performance, maybe you could share with us just sort of where you're at with That business that you've rolled out and maybe how it trended throughout the quarter, especially in the context of the consumer? Thanks. Speaker 200:26:10Yes, Bonnie. I'd say that I was really happy with the inside sales performance and it was We had strength across a lot of categories. I'd start with our prepared foods, 5.9% and that was cycling over 8.5% from the prior year. So really, really strong performance there. And what we really like about that is that it was Led with our core with whole pizza pies. Speaker 200:26:38And so the innovation around thin crust was Something that was a gap in our menu and has really resonated well with our guests. And we've hit about 15% mix Right out of the chute with that product and that's about where we expect it to be, actually a little bit higher than what we expect it to be Compared to the industry overall, so that was strong. We had some other innovation in the hot lunch sandwich category With our barbecue brisket sandwich on a King's Hawaiian buns, we did a nice collaboration From there and that category was up 30% during the quarter as a result of that innovation. On the grocery and general merch side, we saw Real good strength in non alcoholic beverages up about 8%. Our grocery category was up 7% and alcoholic beverages were up 6%. Speaker 200:27:34So really, Really good strength across the board. Really the only area where we have some softness was in tobacco. And I think that's more of a driven by an industry dynamic More than anything else. With respect to private label, again, we're up 26%, same store in private label. Units were up Close to 16%. Speaker 200:27:57So what that indicates is that we had good velocity on the unit side, but we're also able to take a little bit of price And still keep that relative value proposition for the guests. And so that's been resonating with our guests and we're really happy with where we're at on that one. Speaker 600:28:14Okay, helpful color. And if I may, just a follow-up on that. Just thinking about your inside margin expansion, which was also quite You did attribute it a lot of it, it sounded like to the softening of ingredient costs, specifically cheese. So curious to kind of hear How we should think about your margin performance for the rest of the year? And then thinking about some of what you just mentioned, Darren, and some of the innovation that's driving Growth, how has that been impacting margins? Speaker 600:28:47Is it accretive as you think about as you continue to evolve what you're offering in your store? Thanks. Speaker 200:28:55Yes. With respect to the innovation, I'll start there and I'll let Steve talk A little bit more about the margin cadence. But with the innovation, we've really leaned heavier on that to drive traffic and to drive sales and less focused on some of the more aggressive value offers. I mean, we did do a little bit of that over the summer, A fountain drink promotion and that worked out really well to drive traffic. But when we look at innovation on the food side, we've not had to That innovation and we've been able to drive volume. Speaker 200:29:31And so, we think our team is really hitting a stride in terms of understanding what the guests' needs are and our culinary team is really developing those products that are specifically hitting those needs and that's what's resonating with the guests. And so it's allowing us to drive that incremental growth without having to do a lot of discounting to get there. Speaker 100:29:51Yes. And Bonnie, this is Steve. I think We certainly continue to expect inside margin to improve year over year. That's reflected in the guidance on the grocery side of the business. The private label mix change in conjunction with generally speaking tobacco becoming gradually a smaller part of the mix This is going to naturally, flatter the grocery margin and the real opportunity, as you know, is on the Prepared Foods side of the business. Speaker 100:30:21And so we're 80% Hedged on our cheese buy for the remainder of this year. And so, less exposed to spot variability here in the out quarters. We were 18% to the good on cheese in the Q1. We're kind of mid to high single digits To the good in Q2, Q3 and Q4 as we sit here right now with spot, but the 80% hedge Won't give us quite as much upside as we saw in the Q1, but I feel good about year over year deflation generally on the cheese side of the business. And by and large, there's still less pressure on the protein side of that business. Speaker 100:31:04And so I think we So feel good that we will continue to show improvement year over year on the margins on the prepared food side of the business as the year progresses. Operator00:31:18Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Kelly Bania of BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 700:31:32Good morning. Thanks for taking our questions. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 700:31:38I wanted to just circle back To the inside comps in August, sounds Speaker 800:31:43like maybe a little bit Speaker 700:31:44of a deceleration there, but can you give color on what you're seeing with Traffic, ticket, grocery prepared food, or is this just maybe a little bit of cycling off this Sound drink promotion that was done over the summer or just anything that we should think about that's impacting kind of the trend near term? Speaker 200:32:08Yes, Kelly. We still saw well, first, I'd say we had good traffic throughout the quarter. We were up a little over 1% in actual foot traffic into the store and we saw that trend continue into August. So And we were running that fountain promotion at the same time throughout August. So, really nothing there. Speaker 200:32:30I mean, it is really A cycling issue more than a deceleration issue in my opinion. And the 2 year comps, I think, We're pretty consistent with where we had been in the Q1. So and again, we've got Some higher comps coming in September as well. So I don't when we cycle over those higher comps, I start to focus a little bit more on the Speaker 100:32:552 year Speaker 200:32:57And to make sure that we're still maintaining that momentum there. And so, so far that's what we've seen. And so I don't have any concerns about That number the absolute number being a little bit lower than where we were in the Q1. Speaker 100:33:09Yes. I think Kelly, just for reference, Our inside number in the prior year was almost 8%. So we're cycling that and August would have been indicative of that. And so It's really just what are you laughing in the prior year more Speaker 500:33:24than anything. Speaker 700:33:27Great. That's very helpful. I was also just wondering if you can talk about with some of these new prepared food innovation, if you're able To use your data or your loyalty to analyze if you're getting incremental customers that you weren't maybe reaching before or If you're simply cannibalizing kind of prior products or maybe what your early lead is on how this Innovation is reaching your customer base. Speaker 200:34:00Yes. So far, we've been Really happy with the performance on the prepared foods side. And we think about on the Thin crust Pizza in particular, we think about half of that has truly been incremental to the business. And What some of our loyalty data would suggest is that about 16% of those sales were by new buyers into the So in other words, people that weren't buying pizza from us before, about 12% were new guests entirely. And so That's been really helpful. Speaker 200:34:41And that was really our hypothesis going into the Syncrust Speaker 100:34:44was that there are certain Speaker 200:34:46guests that That's all they want and that's going to be a veto vote in a family if we don't have that offer and so far that's all played out and the rewards data Would validate that. Operator00:35:00Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Bobby Griffin of Raymond James. Your line is open. Speaker 900:35:11Good morning, Bobby. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 100:35:14Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 900:35:15I guess first I wanted to maybe talk about, have you seen any small change in customer behavior or anything as You start to see gas prices move up sequentially, still not at the peak levels we saw back last year, but we have started to see them move up. So just anything curious about If you're starting to see behavior similar to what was happening in the prior period of very high gas prices? Speaker 200:35:40Bobby, we haven't seen a dramatic shift in that and gas prices are still about $1 a gallon Below where they were last year when we hit the peak. So the pressure is probably not as acute on guests. Where we do see Some changes in behavior is really on the lower income consumer. Now as a reminder, we are not overly exposed to that We only have about a quarter of our guests would fit in that category, about 3 quarters are make more than $50,000 a year and so They're out of that lower income. And so for that lower income consumer, we do see some shifting around on fuel. Speaker 200:36:21They're buying Higher ethanol blended fuels in our E15 offering had about 15% gallon growth in the quarter, so that would be indicative of that. Private label is purchased more frequently by them and we are seeing some pressure in some categories that were a little more EBT sensitive Like take home dairy and some edible grocery, but that's primarily from the lower income consumer. And obviously, Even within that grocery category with a little bit of pressure in some subcategories, we're still up 7% year over year. So we think while there is a little bit of that behavior changing at the lower end overall For the total gas base, it's not having a big impact. Speaker 900:37:09All right. I appreciate it. That's helpful. And then maybe secondly for me is just on the ongoing Strong performance in OpEx with the store hour reductions and optimization. Just anything more detail on kind of where you are in that journey, kind of what you're still finding And where areas of the store are that are getting optimized? Speaker 900:37:26And I guess secondly, is it across the network that you're seeing these savings or is it more like, hey, we've identified a subset Stores in certain regions that we're getting better optimization out of, just any further clarity around there because the performance has been very strong. Speaker 200:37:41Yes, thanks. I'm really proud of the continuous improvement team that's been working on this. And this has been going on for over a year now. And what I tell you first is that they're really taking a scientific approach to Where those bottlenecks are in our store operation, where we are spending labor that is just not Having an impact on the business and how we can change those processes or employ technology to make them more efficient. And so I feel really good about the fact that we've taken these hours out, but our engagement scores are up among our team members and our OSAT scores are up among our guests. Speaker 200:38:25So it's an indication that we were just simply running this business more effectively and not Having a negative impact on the guest experience or our team members. In terms of the sustainability, obviously, whenever you go into one of these exercises, there's Some low hanging fruit, you can get that first. But our team has a pipeline or a roadmap For the next 3 years of discrete initiatives that they've identified that we can implement and continue to take OpEx out of the store or give the store more slack to run the store better. So we feel this is sustainable and we still have A few years to go in terms of capturing all these opportunities. Operator00:39:12Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Irene Nattel of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 800:39:25Thanks and good morning everyone. Speaker 200:39:27Good morning. Speaker 800:39:28Good morning. I wanted to come back to the subject of gas margins, which obviously is of great interest to all investors. So as you noted, it's what 5 quarters that you've been in and around that $0.40 range. What would it take for you guys to get more comfortable with sort of a soft guide towards something Speaker 200:40:00Well, Irene, that's a really nuanced question. For me to get more comfortable, I just have See more of it, I suppose. Admittedly, it took me a while to get comfortable with mid-30s, But we got there because we just kept doing it. And so I think we were able to get to 40 this last I would say last year with everything going on in Ukraine, we saw that spike in those 40s kind of came Through more of an exogenous advance. So I would want to see a little bit longer timeframe Of a more normal macro environment and margins at this level before I feel comfortable underwriting that at that level, at that upper 30s, low 40s. Speaker 200:40:50But The mid-30s because we've been there for so long now, I'm very comfortable at that level. Speaker 800:40:59Fair enough and that's very helpful. Thank you. And then just a couple of follow ups. One, you noted that you're 80% Hedged on cheese prices at what price? And you also noted an uptick in M and A activity. Speaker 800:41:14What are you seeing on multiples in terms of expectations? Speaker 200:41:22Well, I'd say with multiple expectations, It's an interesting dynamic because I would say that the EBITDA for some of these smaller operators has actually gone down. So the multiples are kind of hanging in there, but at a lower level of EBITDA. And I know that's counterintuitive given the margins that we're seeing, but I think it's really indicative of the fact that these smaller players that lack scale haven't been able to offset a lot of the cost increases in a way A company like ourselves has been able to and so they're just under a lot of pressure even though they've got those higher margins. And so I think that's worked out to our benefit. And I forget the second part of your question. Speaker 100:42:12Maybe I'll try to answer that. So we are 80% hedged, that's correct. And at the current spot, we obviously hedged the commodity that's a little bit different than The all in costs that we pay, but the all in equivalent for the out quarters looks a lot like what we incurred In the Q1, so kind of that $2.12 or low teen number is about What our strip looks like here for the rest of the year at the current spot. Operator00:42:44Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Daniel Silverstein of Credit Suisse. Your line is open. Speaker 300:42:57Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking our question. Just one on the EG acquisition. So that deal had some stores which will serve denser, larger metro areas like Bowling Green in Lexington, Kentucky. Just wondering if you're seeing more opportunities to penetrate larger markets given the landscape today and how you view the opportunities and challenges of bringing Speaker 200:43:27Yes, Dan. When we think about Markets like Bowling Green and Lexington, those aren't real or significantly larger markets than A lot of the markets we operate in today. Lexington is a city that's comparable to In size to Des Moines, where we're based. And so we're very comfortable at that level. This isn't a Chicago or Los Angeles or New York type of No scenario by any stretch. Speaker 200:43:58And so I've been to both of those markets. Bowling Green is a fantastic market for us. Lexington will be a great market for us. So And we're very comfortable operating in accounts of this size. I don't have any concerns there. Speaker 200:44:13Thank you. Operator00:44:15Thank you. And one moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Christina Khitai of Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:44:31Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask on private label. So the 10% unit share and the gross Profit contribution you shared with us is a great result. Maybe can you talk about where you are in the process of that rollout? Speaker 1000:44:47Any particular areas where you are seeing significant strength? I think you called out 16% unit growth. So my question is, is that broad based or are there any particular areas that are driving that performance? Speaker 200:45:00Yes, Christina, we're still continuing to evolve the private label portfolio. We've got another 40 items that will Go into the assortment by the end of the year and we're at the same time we're optimizing products. So As some products start to atrophy a little bit, we'll remove them from the assortment and we bring in new innovation. And so that's a constant process that our private label team is operating with. With respect to where we saw some strength, certainly bottled water was probably our strongest, up about 70% And in sales and now our bottled water is about 50% of that bottled water category are private label. Speaker 200:45:50So Really strong performance there. Obviously, that's a little bit seasonal in the summertime, but we're seeing great growth year over year in that. Another category that's been really strong is chips. And chips is usually a pretty tough one because it's a very competitive category, but We had some new innovation with some new flavors. They were seasonal just for this summer and saw north of 70% Same store sales in that category as well. Speaker 200:46:18Now that category is about 25% penetrated. And again, With the competitive landscape in that category, that's a big statement. So we like where we are there and We've seen some broader based strength, but those are the really kind of the standouts that we've seen so far. Speaker 1000:46:42That's great. And then just my follow-up, I was going to ask around pizza and in particular the 12% new guests that you mentioned, I Following the thin crust introduction, have you seen any competitive response to you taking pizza share? Or do you anticipate any change In the promotional landscape or anything around pricing? Speaker 200:47:06Not at this point. It's a little bit hard for me to say whether we've taken share from any of the major competitors. For the most part, Pizza Hut is our primary competitor in most of our markets, if we have one. In a lot of cases, in our more rural markets, There may not be a competitor or if there is one, it's more of a mom and pop. So it's really difficult to say, but I couldn't tell you that we've seen an uptick in promotional activity from competitors since we've launched the thin crust. Speaker 200:47:38I think The other pizza players have struggled a little bit from a velocity standpoint. So I think they're starting to get a little more promotional anyway, I haven't seen any change as a result of what we've done. Operator00:47:54Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from John Lawrence of Benchmark. Your line is open. Speaker 300:48:07Hi. Good morning, guys. Speaker 100:48:09Good morning. Speaker 300:48:11Would you discuss a little bit about the new markets? How quickly does some of this innovation, some of the new products, does that help get those Maybe the class of new stores in the last couple of years up and running and ramping a little faster. And what have you noticed with product innovations and maybe the app in some of those new markets? Speaker 200:48:36Yes. John, I'm not so sure that we've seen a difference in terms of the impact innovation has had in the new stores. That being said, we've been really happy with the way our new stores have ramped in the last couple of years. I think that's really a testament So the real estate team and their ability to use more advanced analytics to identify high potential sites Speaker 300:49:03And get Speaker 200:49:04those sites under contract. And so we've just seen an increase in how quickly those stores have ramped in general. I think the innovation only helps in that respect and it gets more people interested in the stores and helps feed that traffic into those Speaker 300:49:25Great. Thanks. And secondly, remind us a little bit on that fuel margin. You talked at Analyst Day about Some of the things, some of the tools you're using to help with the analytics on that data On gas prices, etcetera, would you remind us of that please? Speaker 200:49:46We've had for a number of years, we've had some more analytic tools. We've essentially just given The pricing analysts, the information that they need to make more informed decisions. So they've got real time credit card data that allows us To see where competitors are priced, we've got information feeding to them from the commodity market, so they know Where cost is moving at any given time and so they really have a and then they have inventory Information from the store. So at any given time, they really have a complete picture of all the factors that Would influence price within a particular trade area and so they're just simply able to make more informed decisions as a result of that. Operator00:50:37Thank you. I see no further questions in the queue. I would now like to turn the conference back to Darren Rebelez for closing remarks. Speaker 200:50:48Okay. Thank you for taking the time today to join us on the call. And before we sign off, I want to thank the team members for all their hard work this quarter And everybody have a great rest of the day. Operator00:50:59This concludes today's conference call. Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect and have a pleasant day.Read morePowered by