NASDAQ:VITL Vital Farms Q1 2025 Earnings Report $32.21 +0.56 (+1.77%) Closing price 06/16/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$31.87 -0.34 (-1.06%) As of 06/16/2025 07:37 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. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Vital Farms EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.37Consensus EPS $0.26Beat/MissBeat by +$0.11One Year Ago EPS$0.43Vital Farms Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$162.19 millionExpected Revenue$164.43 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$2.24 millionYoY Revenue Growth+9.70%Vital Farms Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/8/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, May 8, 2025Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsVital Farms' Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, August 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, August 7, 2025 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Vital Farms Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 8, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Vital Farms First Quarter twenty twenty five 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 session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:18I would now like to hand it over to your host, John Mills with ICR. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:00:27Good morning and welcome to Vital Farms' first quarter twenty twenty five earnings conference call and webcast. I am John Mills, Managing Partner at ICR. On the call today are Russell Diaz Canseco, President and Chief Executive Officer and Tilo Abreta, Chief Financial Officer. By now, everyone should have access to the company's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings press release issued this morning. This is available on the Investor Relations section of Vital Farms website at investors.vitalfarms.com. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:00:57Throughout this call, management may make forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs and do involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in these forward looking statements. Please refer to today's press release, the company's quarterly report on Form 10 Q for the fiscal quarter ended 03/30/2025 filed with the SEC today as well as other filings with the SEC for a detailed discussion of the risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward looking statements made today. Please note that on today's call, management will refer to adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin, which are non GAAP financial measures. While the company believes these non GAAP financial measures provide useful information for investors, the presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:01:57Please refer to our earnings press release for a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin to their most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. And with that, I will turn the call over to Russell Diaz Canseco, President and Chief Executive Officer of VinylPharm. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:02:13Thank you, John. Good morning, and thank you for your time today. Our first quarter performance was in line with our expectations. We hit new record levels for first quarter volume and net sales and maintained our momentum in delivering ethical food to the table. With this solid foundation in place, I'm pleased to reaffirm our 2025 financial outlook. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:02:37Consumer awareness and demand for Vital Farms products continues to grow, confirming the strength of our brand and the relevance of our mission. I'm grateful to all of our stakeholders, our farmers, suppliers, customers, crew members, stockholders and communities who make our progress possible every day. Net revenue for the first quarter was $162,000,000 up 10% from last year, and the first quarter marked our twentieth consecutive quarter of year over year volume and net revenue growth since our IPO in 2020. First quarter net revenue growth was driven primarily by pricemix benefits and volume related growth. Volume related growth was below trend due to egg supply constraints and depleted inventory levels. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:03:29As we previewed last quarter, we entered the first quarter with significantly lower egg inventory relative to the same period last year, which pressured our year over year growth rate. We believe the volume growth headwinds we experienced in the first quarter will ease beginning this quarter, setting the stage for net revenue growth to reaccelerate as the year progresses. Turning to our Butter business, growth continues to be very robust with first quarter net revenue up 41% year over year. Looking ahead, we expect to deliver sustained growth driven by increasing demand for our products and improving supply as farm expansion initiatives and supply chain investments bear fruit. Let me talk a bit more about each of these drivers starting with demand. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:04:19While demand for our egg products has been consistently strong, we've recently not been able to fully keep up with increased orders due to our supply constraints, just as avian influenza disrupted the market and egg prices surged. We are confident that demand for our egg products will continue to grow as a result of two primary factors. First, we have built strong relationships with our consumers based on trust in the brand and a sense of shared values. We believe our strong consumer relationships represent an enormous and sustainable competitive advantage we have earned through years of consistent execution, strong brand building and our mission driven culture. Our aided brand awareness continues to improve, reaching 31% by the end of the first quarter, a five point increase since the beginning of the year, partly attributable to the unusually high level of media attention our industry has received in recent months. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:05:19Our data indicates that brand awareness has been a strong leading indicator of net revenue growth with a lag of several quarters. Second, we benefit from secular trends as more consumers prefer cleaner labels and want to know where their food comes from and how it is produced. With low levels of market penetration today, we believe we have a long runway for growth in the years ahead as these trends build momentum. We are also encouraged by the increased demand across all segments of consumers as they continue to place more emphasis on the values of companies they buy from. A closer look at the data reinforces our belief that we have only scratched the surface of our market opportunity. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:06:06Despite strong growth, we are still in only 11.3% of U. S. Households, a small fraction of what we believe to be our long term market opportunity. And as we are landing in the fridges of a growing number of households in The U. S, our consumers are becoming more loyal. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:06:24As we have doubled our household penetration over the past four years, we have also doubled the number of heavy and ultra heavy buyers of our brand. In other words, even while we are entering new households, already loyal consumers are becoming even more loyal. This trend has held true in the past even in years when inflation in The United States outpaced wage growth. Moving to the supply side. We're making strong progress on several of the important initiatives to expand capacity and strengthen our supply chain that we outlined on our last call, and we're on track to deliver our commitments on time. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:07:03Last year, we added about 125 family farms to our network in the pasture belt, and today, we're pleased to share that we added approximately 25 additional farms to our network during the first quarter of twenty twenty five. As a result, we are now working with more than four fifty of the best family farmers in America, an increase of roughly 50% since the end of twenty twenty three, with 8,200,000 hens under contract. With a strong pipeline of new Family Farm candidates, we're confident in our ability to grow our network at a healthy pace over the remainder of the year and beyond. I'd like to take a moment to thank our world class farm team for their hard work and expertise in explaining the appeal of the Vital Farms model to our family farmer prospects. The network growth we expect to achieve leaves us very well positioned to deliver $1,000,000,000 of net revenue by 2027, and we are already above our gross margin target of about 35% and our adjusted EBITDA margin target of 12% to 14%. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:08:12In addition to adding new family farms to our network, we are investing in our supply chain infrastructure to increase capacity and support ongoing innovation. As we enter the second quarter, the work to break ground at our new facility in Indiana is progressing as planned, and we remain on schedule for an early twenty twenty seven opening. In addition, the construction of our new additional egg grading system at Egg Central Station, or ECS, in Springfield, Missouri remains on schedule for completion in the fourth quarter of this year. We anticipate that this new system will expand ECS capacity by the end of twenty twenty five by 30% from current levels, which will bring us to ECS revenue capacity of more than $1,000,000,000 Finally, our first company owned accelerator farms are progressing as anticipated. We intend for these farms to allow us to accelerate the pace of innovation and create a flywheel as we share our learnings and encourage the exchange of best practices within our existing farm network. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:09:17Before I hand it over to Telo, I want to address one more topic. Just like everyone in our industry, we expect to be affected by the recently announced tariffs. While we believe our consumer to be very loyal and resilient, we're anticipating cost impacts on our business. To offset this anticipated impact and provide us with operating flexibility, we've announced to our retailer partners a modest low double digit percentage price increase for our Shell egg products that will go into effect this month. In summary, we delivered a strong first quarter that leaves us well positioned to achieve our financial targets. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:09:56Egg supply remains tight, but we expect it to improve beginning this quarter as farms recently added to our network ramp up production and new farms continue to come online over the course of the year. As a result, we expect to deliver significantly faster year over year net revenue growth in the back half of this year, consistent with our 2025 outlook. Over the long term, we expect demand growth to remain healthy as we drive increased market penetration from low levels and target a loyal and resilient consumer. I'm very excited about our future and believe we are on our way to becoming America's most trusted food company. I'm certainly looking forward to it, and I hope you are, too. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:10:39And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Tilo. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:10:43Thank you, Russell. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I will now review our financial results for the first quarter ended 03/30/2025, and then provide color on our guidance for fiscal year twenty twenty five. Net revenue for the first quarter of twenty twenty five rose to $162,200,000 an increase of 9.6% compared to the prior year period. This was driven by price mix benefits and volume related growth of $1,900,000 The volume related growth was well below trend due to limited ag supply. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:11:19As a reminder, we expected the first quarter to be our slowest volume and net revenue growth quarter this year due to the previously discussed supply constraints and we continue to forecast improving year over year volume and net revenue growth beginning in the second quarter. Gross profit for the first quarter rose to $62,500,000 or 38.5% of net revenue from $58,900,000 or 39.8% of net revenue last year. The increase in gross profit dollars was primarily driven by revenue growth. Lower conventional commodities and diesel costs also contributed to the profit gain. Gross profit margin was down year over year due to increased investments and crew members to keep pace with expected company growth and less efficient operations due to the limited ag supply after an exceptional operating quarter last year. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:12:12SG and A expenses for the first quarter were $31,900,000 or 19.7% of net revenue compared with 27,100,000 or 18.3% of net revenue in the first quarter of last year. The increase in SG and A in the first quarter was driven primarily by employee related costs, including stock based compensation and increased headcount, professional service expenses and technology and software related expenses. These costs all reflect the expansion of the business. Shipping and distribution expenses for the first quarter of twenty twenty five were $8,800,000 or 5.4% of net revenue compared to $7,600,000 or 5.1% of net revenue in the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The increase was driven by higher sales volumes and higher line haul rates. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:13:05Net income for the first quarter of twenty twenty five decreased 11.2% to $16,900,000 or $0.37 per diluted share compared to $19,000,000 or $0.43 per diluted share for the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The decrease in net income was driven by increased investments and future growth of the business, partially offset by higher sales and gross profit. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter of twenty twenty five was $27,500,000 or 16.9% of net revenue compared to $29,100,000 or 19.7% of net revenue for the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The decrease in adjusted EBITDA was driven primarily by higher personnel investments, partially offset by higher sales and gross profit. Turning now to our balance sheet. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:13:56As of 03/30/2025, we had total cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities of $161,300,000 with no debt outstanding. Our balance sheet reflects the land parcels in Indiana valued at $3,200,000 as an asset held for sale, which was previously acquired for potential Accelerator Fund development. We have identified available land that better meets our needs and are therefore selling this plot. I believe this situation exemplifies exactly the kinds of learnings we can only gain by putting ourselves into the shoes of our family farmers and reinforces the rationale for developing our Accelerator Farms. It is also worth noting that this decision has no impact on our ability to deliver the about 15 Accelerator Farms we are committed to as our existing land holdings fully support our development plans. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:14:52Before I discuss our guidance, I would like to address our progress on remediating the material weakness in internal controls previously highlighted in our 2024 annual report on Form 10 ks filing. The finding relates to the revenue recognition process. Specifically, we elect automated reconciliation between purchase orders and sales reporting. Importantly, this was a design deficiency only. No revenue inconsistencies were found and we do not anticipate any restatements. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:15:22Our remediation plan is progressing well and remain on track to address this issue. We remain confident in our financial reporting integrity and overall control environment. Now looking ahead, for full year 2025, we are happy continue to expect net revenue of at least $740,000,000 or at least 22% growth versus 2024 and adjusted EBITDA of at least $100,000,000 or at least 15% growth. The guidance includes the price increase Basil had mentioned and any expected impacts from our current understanding of the new tariff environment. Given the increasingly dynamic and uncertain macroeconomic backdrop created by the recent tariff announcements, we are reiterating our full year guidance. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:16:10While recently announced tariffs could impact the purchasing behavior of our consumers as well as our cost structure, we believe we will be relatively insulated from these pressures given our premium consumer base, domestic focus and the non cyclical nature of our product categories. As for the cadence of the year, we expect volumes to accelerate over the course of the year as supply improves, As recently added farms ramp up production and additional farms come online, we expect sequential capacity increases to drive accelerating year over year volume growth each quarter as we move through the year. Lastly, we still expect fiscal year twenty twenty five capital expenditures in the range of 50,000,000 to $60,000,000 As previously discussed, CapEx spending will be elevated in 2025 and 2026 because of the new actuating system at ECF Springfield, the plant new facility in Seymour, Indiana, the construction of accelerator farms and our internal digital transformation project, which I'll provide an update on in just a moment. We plan to fund our current plans with Seymour and all other projects this year with existing cash and operating cash flow. We project that every dollar of CapEx investment in Seymour will generate more than $5 of annual revenue capacity, which we consider a very strong return. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:17:31As always, we continue to evaluate and monitor our capital allocation priorities. After the last several quarters, we want to ensure that we have enough capacity in place ahead of expected demand growth and that we optimize the use of capital and the return for all of our stakeholders. We will provide updates on this as necessary. Now to discuss our digital transformation initiative, which includes our new ERP system implementation. We've updated the launch date from summer to early fall twenty twenty five to ensure flawless switchover. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:18:04The timing adjustment supports our commitment to minimize any risk for operational disruptions and does not add cost to the budget for the project. We remain fully committed to this investment, which is fundamental to the operational improvements we are planning, including streamlined processes, increased efficiency and an enhanced ability to compete and reinforce our position as an industry leader. Our long term guidance remains unchanged. We're continuing to target $1,000,000,000 of net revenue by 2027 with a gross margin of about 35% and an EBITDA margin of 12% to 14%. The financial outlook I've just shared reflects the strength of our business model and the proven success of our strategy. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:18:48Our loyal customer base provides us with a resilient foundation, while our growing network of family farms ensures product quality and supply chain stability. Every investment we make to increase retail penetration and brand awareness is delivering measurable results as our Egg and Butter products reach more households quarter after quarter. We are executing against our commitments and remain confident in the value we are creating for all stakeholders. Once again, we thank you for your time and interest in BioPharm today and for the confidence that you have placed on us with your investment. With that, we are now happy to take your questions. Operator00:19:30Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Your first question comes from the line of Brian Holland with D. A. Davidson. Your line is now open. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:20:00Hey, Brian. We can't hear you. And we we don't hear you. Operator00:20:26Reminder, if you are called upon to ask your question and are listening by a loud speaker on your device, please pick up your handset and ensure that your phone is not on mute when asking your question. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:20:39Try again. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:20:45Ma'am, we heard you for a second. Operator00:21:01Your next question comes from the line of Robert Moskow with TD Cowen. Your line is now open. Robert MoskowManaging Director at TD Cowen00:21:08All right. Hopefully, we'll have a little better luck here. Hello and Russell, hi there. Good morning. The price increase that you've announced, you described it as low single digit. Robert MoskowManaging Director at TD Cowen00:21:20My perception is that a lot of retailers have raised prices already on your products a lot more than that just because of category dynamics. So did you consider raising prices more in line with what retailers have already done? And then secondly, I guess what I would hope is that if the retailers have already raised prices a lot, that they won't take this as a signal to raise them even further. So can you talk a little bit about that balance? Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:21:56Absolutely. Rob, it's Russell. Great questions. So as we've said before, we think about pricing primarily in service of protecting our gross margins, which we believe are reflective of the power of our brand. A lot of what we're focused on is driving long term sustainable growth. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:22:20And so we want great relationships and frankly great economics for our retail partners and pricing that ensures great kind of consumer surplus or value for our consumers as well relative to the price they're paying. So we drove this primarily based on our assessment of what we thought we needed to do in order to ensure a strong make on our guidance this year. Now as for retailer pricing, there's every retailer has their own process for that, and it's not really something we have a lot of influence over or any packaged goods company, I think, for that matter. I can only speculate that they'll continue to price relative to their competitive needs and making sure that they're meeting their own brand commitment to their consumers. Robert MoskowManaging Director at TD Cowen00:23:14Okay. And then as a follow-up, I mean, just anecdotally, you look at the shelves today, they look a lot more full in the egg aisle than they were during the height of avian influenza. So to what extent are you right now fully up to speed at retailers in line with the rest of the category, which also appears to be back to normal? Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:23:44Yes. I think the category is still far from fully servicing the demand that retailers are placing through their orders. We certainly see continued elevated orders from retailers, which we think reflects both their desire to refill their channel with our eggs but also with eggs from throughout the category. So we're not out of the woods yet. In fact, there was yet another layer flock impacted, not ours, but in the industry by avian influenza within the last few weeks. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:24:19That said, as you can see from our own scan data in recent weeks, our the volumes continue to go up as we execute on the plan that we shared at the end of the year to increase our volumes throughout the year. And I'm hopeful that we'll see a reprieve from avian influenza, and we'll get back to a more normalized market in the back half. Operator00:24:53Your next question comes from the line of Jon Andersen with William Blair. Your line is now open. Jon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.C00:25:01Good morning. Thank you for the questions. I wanted to ask about volumes both in the quarter and then kind of the full year. Was the kind of low single digit volume growth in Q1 consistent with kind of your expectations? And as you progress through the year, is your expectation that the way that kind of the egg supply kind of onboards via your new farms and your capacity, processing capacity of those eggs, that the step up in growth from quarter to quarter as you move through the year is fairly uniform? Jon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.C00:25:42Or are you expecting more of an unlock at some point during the year? I'm just trying to get a little bit more sense of that. And then I did want to confirm on the price increase that you said low single digit on all Shell eggs. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:25:59Thanks, Jon. Great question. I appreciate you asking the question about volume because there is a little bit of detail I want to make sure we share. I'll ask Kilo to answer the question about the price increase. So we did show, as you saw, a low single digit percent increase in volumes year on year, which is lighter than I think reflects the actual growth of our strong commercial business. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:26:24And the X factor here is the volume of sort of waste eggs or second grade eggs that we sell into the breaker market and don't make it into a Vital Farms carton. We have become much more efficient at processing our eggs, and so we have much fewer eggs that aren't making it into a carton. So our yields are up, which supports our strong gross margins, but the volume that we end up sending into that market is down. And in fact, if you normalize, if you take out breaker volume both last year and this year, our volume growth was 5.6%. So the underlying branded business had a much stronger growth than the financial volume reporting would indicate. Tilo, do you want to comment on pricing? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:27:15Yes, John. What we said about pricing was that it was low double digit increase in pricing over the charging retailers. And so that will come into effect this quarter. And then as we're going through the year, I think the question you asked about the cadence of volume growth. As you look at the rest of the year, I think the volume growth that you'll see will reflect a bit more of the farm growth that we have talked about over the last few quarters. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:27:48As those farms come online, we can now start selling those eggs. What dragged down the volume growth in Q1 in addition to what Russell just said about the wholesale market not showing up in scanner data, for example, but showing up in our results. The other part that dragged down Q1 was the fact that we had inventory last year that we could sell to retailers, and we didn't really have ag inventory this year. And so as we are now starting to bring farms online, I think Q2 will still be somewhere as a transition point in terms of volume growth. And then as we get into the back half of the year, it will reaccelerate. Jon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.C00:28:29Super helpful. Thank you so much. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:28:33Thanks, John. Operator00:28:36Your next question comes from the line of Matt Smith with Stifel. Your line is now open. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:28:45Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my question. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:28:48Good morning. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:28:50You reiterated the guide for the year, but can you talk about how the recently announced pricing has impacted your outlook? I mean, was the pricing contemplated in the initial outlook or and can you talk about the visibility you have into the phasing of egg availability? Teela, you just talked about the farms coming online. But is the timeline consistent with your previous expectation of when you sign up a farmer and when they start taking or start producing eggs off the farm? Thank you. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:29:22Thanks, Matt. I'll take the first part of that, which was that no, we did not anticipate a price increase when we offered guide at the beginning of the year. I think we were really clear in our guidance that there was no anticipated price increase. But as we progressed into the year and we started to learn more about the impact of tariffs, for example, on the cost of various commodities, we thought it was prudent to take this modest price increase to ensure that we're in great shape to deliver on our commitments for this year. And so that's all that it is. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:29:59We have built in a fair bit of flexibility into our operating model, as we've always had, to make sure that we can deliver the plan. And we may find in the back half that we have different ways to allocate the revenue that we get from that price increase, again, to ensure we deliver both on our long term goal of building a sustainable brand and our short term financial commitments. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:30:28And then Matt, just to add to the visibility of comps coming online. Funds are coming online pretty much at the pace and at the magnitude that we anticipated twelve months ago. They're coming online at the post that the announcements from last year quarter after quarter would would imply. The the time line between signing a fund and the fund coming online, what we've talked about for quite a while now, taking, you know, somewhere around nine months, give or take. That hasn't changed. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:31:02And so that that is all, pretty much on not pretty much. That is all on track, And that gives us the visibility that we need for the remainder of the year to feel really confident about our guidance. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:31:16And just one follow-up on the tariff exposure, Russell. Can you talk about where some of the cost pressure you're seeing is coming from? I think the butter business is fully imported, pretty clear that that would have an impact, but maybe where you're seeing the cost pressure on the egg business? Thank you. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:31:35Yes, Matt. Let me take that one. So you're right. Butter is imported. We are importing it right now from Ireland. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:31:44We're importing some of our packaging. Our packaging provider has capacity in Canada where we're, importing some of our packaging from. And, as we're building out the accelerator farms, some of the farm equipment comes from comes from Europe. Obviously, as we are building up a farm network, our family farmers that we are recruiting are also importing the same barn equipment. So for them, the construction costs are increasing presumably with the tariffs. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:32:17Now that being said, I think compared to the rest of the consumer space that's reporting right now, I think our exposure to tariffs is a bit more limited. And we have a very good handle on what the tariff impact could be. And so with that, the price increase that we've talked about, that is more than sufficient to cover the impact of the tariffs. And, with that, I think with the price power that we have, with the resilience of the business that we have, I think we are really well positioned for this year despite the tariffs. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:32:53Thanks, Tito. I'll pass it on. Operator00:32:59Your next question comes from the line of Ben Clive with Lake Street Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:33:07All right. Thanks for taking my question. First, I'd like to ask a question on the retail distribution. It looks like in your presentation that you noted distribution increased from 24,000 stores to 26 here. That 24,000 number had been kind of stale for my record show like about one point years. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:33:25So I'm wondering if you can elaborate a bit on this distribution increase and kind of characterize the retailers that were included in that increase. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:33:38Yes. Ben, let me take that one. That one is really more technicality rather than, increasing distribution. As you know, we switched our data provider from Nielsen to Surcana. Surcana has a somewhat different universe that they're tracking relative to Nielsen. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:33:56And so in Surcano, we are now in 26,000 stores, not in 24,000 stores that Nielsen is tracking. We had some distribution gains over the course of the quarter, but certainly not to the degree that the change in numbers in the deck would imply. And so don't read too much in that change from 24,000 to 26,000 retailers. It really is just a change in data source. There's no underlying meaningful growth of new retailers that we are in or new doors that we are in, I should say. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:34:34Got it. Okay, fair enough. And then last one for me and then I'll pass it on. A follow-up to the tariff question. Totally makes sense for all the impacts in the income statement. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:34:43Can you elaborate though on any impact you see on the expansion into Seymour? Are you expecting your pricing to increase in a material way for that project? Or have you fully considered that in the plans that you've discussed today? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:35:01Yes. C More is there certainly will be somewhat of a tariff impact. Some of the equipment that we are installing in Seymour comes from Europe, so there will be an impact. As construction costs overall go up because of tariffs on steel, for example, that will impact us. But that is all, within the range of our budget for C More as it is. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:35:27And so the CapEx guidance that we have given for the year, the 50,000,000 to $60,000,000 that is, the impact that we are foreseeing for phase one of C More right now. And, with that, we don't see any need right now to change that. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:35:42Very good. Okay. I appreciate the color. Thanks for taking my questions. I'll get back in queue. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:35:47Thanks, man. Operator00:35:52Your next question comes from the line of Eric Des Lauriers with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Eric Des LauriersSenior Research Analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC00:36:06First ones for me are around, consumer behavior. I apologize if any of this is, being repeated. I think I had some audio issues when you're discussing consumer metrics. But just wondering if you've seen any changes in recent weeks to consumer behavior in the pasture raised egg category as a whole or in your brand, just in light of this macro uncertainty? And then if you've seen any evidence of increased trial by new customers, given the, heightened prices for conventional eggs? Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:36:36Thanks, Eric. Russell here. I think this quarter has been a wonderful proof point of the power of the model that we've been using to build this brand over the last decade. We shared a terrific slide in the presentation that accompanied our release, which shows how we as we have grown households over the last several years, we've had a very consistent breakout of heavy users, medium users, light users, etcetera. And what that tells me is that in good times and bad, in challenged economy and not, our consumers continue to go very predictably from awareness to trial to repeat to heavy user. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:37:25And that hasn't changed, including with this macro backdrop. Additionally, we found, I think, a very powerful increase in brand awareness. I believe that's from 26% to 31% over the last quarter. And some of that certainly would be from the eggs simply being more in the news. But I think it's also reflective of the fact that we did not go dark in our commercial efforts, in our marketing efforts, even though we are in a period of supply constraint because we know that investing in awareness now will help us drive increased household penetration and expansion of our brand in the quarters and years to come. Eric Des LauriersSenior Research Analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC00:38:12That's very helpful. And then just last one from me. Really strong growth in the butter business, I guess, sort of on the backs of the improving brand awareness. Just wondering if you could talk a bit more about the dynamics of building the supply side of the butter business. Wondering what levers you have to sort of expand supply and capitalize on growing demand. Thanks. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:38:40Yes. Thank you for that. So as we have discussed over the last several quarters, we spent 2024 really transitioning our butter supply chain. For several quarters prior to that, we had been very limited by our ability to source the high quality cream and ultimately butter that we thought was critical to our brand and to the product we wanted to offer consumers. And there are lots of structural reasons for that here in The United States. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:39:14That said, the kind of butter we offer is much more consistent with growing practices and production practices in Ireland, and that's why we made that change. And so with that change, we do not anticipate bottlenecks to our continued growth for years to come. Operator00:39:45Your next question comes from the line of Ben Mayhill with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:39:55Hi, good morning. So my first Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:39:58question Hey, Ben. Welcome. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:39:59Hey, good to be here. So the comment around your guidance taking into account the potential impact that global trade and economic tensions could have on on consumer spending. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:40:13I'm just hoping to get a little deeper on that because I think it's really important to the future. So could you explain the durability of build sales and profitability in an environment that's Like, what's your price gap between Vital and conventional and where consumers spend is higher? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:40:34Your connection broke up there. I picked up guidance consumer tariffs, price gaps, something along those lines, but maybe try again. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:40:45Let me take a shot at what I think the question was, which was, hey, if tariffs challenge consumer, will that in turn impact how we think about sales growth and driving top line growth? And the answer is we actually don't see an impact from a potential macro impact from tariffs on the consumer impacting our continued ability to drive the growth that we've put up historically year after year after year. And I think there are two reasons for that, the most important of which is that we have a brand that connects with consumers and really creates value because we do things with a purpose and we produce our eggs in a different way than the traditional producers do. And consumers are showing us that they're much less willing to trade that down even when their wallets are challenged than perhaps some other categories. And I think that's reflected in the results we shared this morning versus some of the other results we've been seeing in this quarter's releases from other companies. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:41:56The other reason is that we have one of the highest levels of exposure to high income households. And so while people across the income spectrum are showing that once they've tried our eggs, once they understand our story, they're really reluctant to trade away from that in general. If you believe that exposure to higher income households is a further way to insulate a brand from the risks of trade down, we have that as well. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:42:31Yes. Thank you. That answered my question. And just my last one here. You noted that you have exceeded four fifty Family Farms now from 04/25. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:42:43So I was just hoping that you could comment on how the recruitment and onboarding process is going as you continue to scale and reach a much higher baseline of farms. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:42:57Thanks. Very fair question. As we've said in the release and in the prepared remarks, we continue to recruit farmers on our schedule as we've elected to. We have a really terrific team in the field that does everything from build awareness of who Vital Farms is in the farming community to helping educate prospective farmers on what it takes to do really well working with us. And then perhaps even most important, provides the support necessary for our farmers to be successful in the months and years to come after they've signed up with us. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:43:37And with that sort of nine- to twelve month lead time between signing a contract with a new farmer and having eggs coming off of that farm, the number of farms producing today was essentially what we elected to add nine to twelve months ago. That's always been the case, and we're having terrific success adding the farms we have chosen to add this year as well. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:44:07Great. Thank you. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:44:08Thank you. Operator00:44:14Your next question comes from the line of Megan Klap with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Megan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:44:21Hi, good morning. Thanks so much. Maybe a follow-up to some of the comments earlier around the price increase and the guidance. Certainly don't want to put words in your mouth, but if you could just clarify, it does sound like maybe you could have raised the guide given the price increase, but makes sense and is prudent to leave some cushion just given the consumer uncertainty and and maybe some flexibility to go after demand in the second half. Would just be curious, your reaction to that. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:44:53Yeah. I don't think you're far off. The thing that I would add is that we probably have less concern about consumer uncertainty than some other companies do. Again, lots of reasons that we believe our consumer is both resilient and much less willing to trade away from our product. And you can see that in our ability to put up strong growth and gross margins over time regardless of price gaps to the lowest priced eggs in the market, which I think is the maybe the key proof point that even when there's a much lower priced alternative in an egg that on the outside looks the same as ours, the consumers who have come to appreciate our brand and what it stands for aren't interested in trading down to those. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:45:41So but the rest of it sounds pretty reasonable and is very consistent with what we've been doing since we went public, which is making sure that we set ourselves up for success and to be able to deliver on our commitment to all stakeholders, especially our shareholders. So at this point, we believe we've got the right mix of levers, including the benefits from this modest price increase to deliver on the guidance we gave at the beginning of the year. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:46:12Megan, let me just add to that. We are we just finished Q1. Q1 played out the way we thought it would play out with volume, with maybe slightly better price mix than what we initially thought. But overall, it played out the way we thought. This was always intended to be the smallest quarter of the year, so we still have a long way to go. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:46:34And I would argue across the entire U. S. Economy, uncertainty has certainly increased. So before we think about how high it's high for the rest of the year, I would want to see a bit more of what the year really looks like and how the year will play out before we reconsider what guidance would be. Megan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:46:56Fair enough. That's a lot of sense. Megan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:46:57And then maybe just a follow-up on the gross margin. The 38.5% did accelerate from what you've seen in the back half of last year. So would be curious how did that come in relative to your expectations? Was there anything transitory we should be thinking about? Related to that, how should we think about the phasing of the rest of the year for gross margin? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:47:21Yeah. The gross margin was pretty much where we thought it would be. We pointed out after the first quarter last year that we've had very healthy gross margin because ECS ran incredibly well. This year was the first quarter was much more a normal quarter, I would say. So for example, we we had, you know, a snowstorm in Missouri that resulted in in us not being able to ship any eggs because trucks wouldn't show up at ECS. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:47:54Trucks just couldn't drive in Missouri, right? And so this was a much more normal quarter in terms of operations. The quarter was also because we had this ex supply constraint, that means that ECS just doesn't run as efficiently as it normally would because you have to do more switchovers depending on when X come in and so on. And so with that, the quarter this quarter, we always thought would be lower gross margin. And then we are staffing up in anticipation of growth for the rest of the year, right? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:48:25So we are staffing up before we actually need crew, so we have the time to train them and to build up their skills. And those were costs that we started to incur in the first quarter already. And with that, the year over year decline in gross margin was really something that we expected. For the full year, the pricing that we announced might benefit us a bit. But keep in mind, second quarter last year was also a very strong quarter last year because EPS, again, ran exceptionally well, probably not going to repeat this year. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:49:05And then between tariffs and commodity costs in the back half of the year, I probably wouldn't expect gross margin to repeat at the same level as last year. Operator00:49:26That concludes our question and answer session. I will now turn the conference back over to John Mills for closing remarks. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:49:35Great. Thank you, and thank you, everyone, for participating on our first quarter call today. We look forward to updating everyone on our progress for this fiscal year during our second quarter call. Hope everyone has a wonderful day. Operator00:49:52Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesRussell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive OfficerThilo WredeChief Financial OfficerAnalystsJohn MillsManaging Partner at ICRRobert MoskowManaging Director at TD CowenJon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.CMatthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel InstitutionalBen KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLCEric Des LauriersSenior Research Analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLCBenjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital MarketsMegan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan StanleyPowered by Key Takeaways Vital Farms delivered Q1 net revenue of $162.2M, up 10% YoY, marking its 20th consecutive quarter of volume and revenue growth; egg supply constraints weighed on volume but are expected to ease starting in Q2. The Butter business remained a standout, with 41% YoY net revenue growth, driven by robust consumer demand and scaling supply through farm additions and supply-chain investments. Consumer engagement continues to strengthen, with aided brand awareness rising to 31% and household penetration at only 11.3%, while heavy and ultra-heavy buyers have doubled over the past four years, underscoring a large growth runway. On the supply side, Vital Farms expanded its network to over 450 family farms (8.2M hens), while investing in a new Indiana facility (early 2027) and a 30% capacity boost at its Missouri grading station, supporting the goal of $1B in revenue by 2027. To offset anticipated tariff-related cost pressures, the company announced a low double digit price increase on shell eggs and reaffirmed full-year 2025 guidance of ≥22% net revenue growth to $740M and ≥15% adjusted EBITDA growth to $100M, with CapEx of $50–60M. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallVital Farms Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Vital Farms Earnings HeadlinesVITL Q1 Earnings Call: Supply Chain Expansion and Tariff Impacts Guide 2025 OutlookJune 10, 2025 | msn.comBeyond Meat, Plby among consumer staple names set to join Russell Microcap Index, Veru, Vitals Farms to leaveMay 30, 2025 | msn.comThe End of Elon Musk…?The End of Elon Musk? Don't make him laugh. Jeff Brown has been hearing this same tired story for years, and he's been proven right time and time again. And now, while the media focuses on Tesla's "demise," he's uncovered an AI breakthrough that's about to make Elon's doubters eat their words yet again. According to his research, if you listen to the media and miss out on Elon's newest breakthrough, it's going to cost you the fortune of a lifetime.June 17, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)Vital Farms to Participate in June 2025 Investor ConferencesMay 20, 2025 | globenewswire.comWe Think That There Are Issues Underlying Vital Farms' (NASDAQ:VITL) EarningsMay 17, 2025 | uk.finance.yahoo.comVital Farms: A Hold Until The Growth Slowdown Is ResolvedMay 12, 2025 | seekingalpha.comSee More Vital Farms Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Vital Farms? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Vital Farms and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Vital FarmsVital Farms (NASDAQ:VITL), a food company, provides pasture-raised products in the United States. It offers shell eggs, butter, hard-boiled eggs, and liquid whole eggs. The company was founded in 2007 and is headquartered in Austin, Texas.View Vital Farms 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 Broadcom Slides on Solid Earnings, AI Outlook Still StrongFive Below Pops on Strong Earnings, But Rally May StallRed Robin's Comeback: Q1 Earnings Spark Investor HopesOllie’s Q1 Earnings: The Good, the Bad, and What’s NextBroadcom Earnings Preview: AVGO Stock Near Record HighsUlta’s Beautiful Q1 Earnings Report Points to More Gains Aheade.l.f. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Vital Farms First Quarter twenty twenty five 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 session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:18I would now like to hand it over to your host, John Mills with ICR. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:00:27Good morning and welcome to Vital Farms' first quarter twenty twenty five earnings conference call and webcast. I am John Mills, Managing Partner at ICR. On the call today are Russell Diaz Canseco, President and Chief Executive Officer and Tilo Abreta, Chief Financial Officer. By now, everyone should have access to the company's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings press release issued this morning. This is available on the Investor Relations section of Vital Farms website at investors.vitalfarms.com. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:00:57Throughout this call, management may make forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs and do involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in these forward looking statements. Please refer to today's press release, the company's quarterly report on Form 10 Q for the fiscal quarter ended 03/30/2025 filed with the SEC today as well as other filings with the SEC for a detailed discussion of the risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward looking statements made today. Please note that on today's call, management will refer to adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin, which are non GAAP financial measures. While the company believes these non GAAP financial measures provide useful information for investors, the presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:01:57Please refer to our earnings press release for a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin to their most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. And with that, I will turn the call over to Russell Diaz Canseco, President and Chief Executive Officer of VinylPharm. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:02:13Thank you, John. Good morning, and thank you for your time today. Our first quarter performance was in line with our expectations. We hit new record levels for first quarter volume and net sales and maintained our momentum in delivering ethical food to the table. With this solid foundation in place, I'm pleased to reaffirm our 2025 financial outlook. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:02:37Consumer awareness and demand for Vital Farms products continues to grow, confirming the strength of our brand and the relevance of our mission. I'm grateful to all of our stakeholders, our farmers, suppliers, customers, crew members, stockholders and communities who make our progress possible every day. Net revenue for the first quarter was $162,000,000 up 10% from last year, and the first quarter marked our twentieth consecutive quarter of year over year volume and net revenue growth since our IPO in 2020. First quarter net revenue growth was driven primarily by pricemix benefits and volume related growth. Volume related growth was below trend due to egg supply constraints and depleted inventory levels. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:03:29As we previewed last quarter, we entered the first quarter with significantly lower egg inventory relative to the same period last year, which pressured our year over year growth rate. We believe the volume growth headwinds we experienced in the first quarter will ease beginning this quarter, setting the stage for net revenue growth to reaccelerate as the year progresses. Turning to our Butter business, growth continues to be very robust with first quarter net revenue up 41% year over year. Looking ahead, we expect to deliver sustained growth driven by increasing demand for our products and improving supply as farm expansion initiatives and supply chain investments bear fruit. Let me talk a bit more about each of these drivers starting with demand. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:04:19While demand for our egg products has been consistently strong, we've recently not been able to fully keep up with increased orders due to our supply constraints, just as avian influenza disrupted the market and egg prices surged. We are confident that demand for our egg products will continue to grow as a result of two primary factors. First, we have built strong relationships with our consumers based on trust in the brand and a sense of shared values. We believe our strong consumer relationships represent an enormous and sustainable competitive advantage we have earned through years of consistent execution, strong brand building and our mission driven culture. Our aided brand awareness continues to improve, reaching 31% by the end of the first quarter, a five point increase since the beginning of the year, partly attributable to the unusually high level of media attention our industry has received in recent months. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:05:19Our data indicates that brand awareness has been a strong leading indicator of net revenue growth with a lag of several quarters. Second, we benefit from secular trends as more consumers prefer cleaner labels and want to know where their food comes from and how it is produced. With low levels of market penetration today, we believe we have a long runway for growth in the years ahead as these trends build momentum. We are also encouraged by the increased demand across all segments of consumers as they continue to place more emphasis on the values of companies they buy from. A closer look at the data reinforces our belief that we have only scratched the surface of our market opportunity. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:06:06Despite strong growth, we are still in only 11.3% of U. S. Households, a small fraction of what we believe to be our long term market opportunity. And as we are landing in the fridges of a growing number of households in The U. S, our consumers are becoming more loyal. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:06:24As we have doubled our household penetration over the past four years, we have also doubled the number of heavy and ultra heavy buyers of our brand. In other words, even while we are entering new households, already loyal consumers are becoming even more loyal. This trend has held true in the past even in years when inflation in The United States outpaced wage growth. Moving to the supply side. We're making strong progress on several of the important initiatives to expand capacity and strengthen our supply chain that we outlined on our last call, and we're on track to deliver our commitments on time. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:07:03Last year, we added about 125 family farms to our network in the pasture belt, and today, we're pleased to share that we added approximately 25 additional farms to our network during the first quarter of twenty twenty five. As a result, we are now working with more than four fifty of the best family farmers in America, an increase of roughly 50% since the end of twenty twenty three, with 8,200,000 hens under contract. With a strong pipeline of new Family Farm candidates, we're confident in our ability to grow our network at a healthy pace over the remainder of the year and beyond. I'd like to take a moment to thank our world class farm team for their hard work and expertise in explaining the appeal of the Vital Farms model to our family farmer prospects. The network growth we expect to achieve leaves us very well positioned to deliver $1,000,000,000 of net revenue by 2027, and we are already above our gross margin target of about 35% and our adjusted EBITDA margin target of 12% to 14%. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:08:12In addition to adding new family farms to our network, we are investing in our supply chain infrastructure to increase capacity and support ongoing innovation. As we enter the second quarter, the work to break ground at our new facility in Indiana is progressing as planned, and we remain on schedule for an early twenty twenty seven opening. In addition, the construction of our new additional egg grading system at Egg Central Station, or ECS, in Springfield, Missouri remains on schedule for completion in the fourth quarter of this year. We anticipate that this new system will expand ECS capacity by the end of twenty twenty five by 30% from current levels, which will bring us to ECS revenue capacity of more than $1,000,000,000 Finally, our first company owned accelerator farms are progressing as anticipated. We intend for these farms to allow us to accelerate the pace of innovation and create a flywheel as we share our learnings and encourage the exchange of best practices within our existing farm network. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:09:17Before I hand it over to Telo, I want to address one more topic. Just like everyone in our industry, we expect to be affected by the recently announced tariffs. While we believe our consumer to be very loyal and resilient, we're anticipating cost impacts on our business. To offset this anticipated impact and provide us with operating flexibility, we've announced to our retailer partners a modest low double digit percentage price increase for our Shell egg products that will go into effect this month. In summary, we delivered a strong first quarter that leaves us well positioned to achieve our financial targets. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:09:56Egg supply remains tight, but we expect it to improve beginning this quarter as farms recently added to our network ramp up production and new farms continue to come online over the course of the year. As a result, we expect to deliver significantly faster year over year net revenue growth in the back half of this year, consistent with our 2025 outlook. Over the long term, we expect demand growth to remain healthy as we drive increased market penetration from low levels and target a loyal and resilient consumer. I'm very excited about our future and believe we are on our way to becoming America's most trusted food company. I'm certainly looking forward to it, and I hope you are, too. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:10:39And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Tilo. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:10:43Thank you, Russell. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I will now review our financial results for the first quarter ended 03/30/2025, and then provide color on our guidance for fiscal year twenty twenty five. Net revenue for the first quarter of twenty twenty five rose to $162,200,000 an increase of 9.6% compared to the prior year period. This was driven by price mix benefits and volume related growth of $1,900,000 The volume related growth was well below trend due to limited ag supply. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:11:19As a reminder, we expected the first quarter to be our slowest volume and net revenue growth quarter this year due to the previously discussed supply constraints and we continue to forecast improving year over year volume and net revenue growth beginning in the second quarter. Gross profit for the first quarter rose to $62,500,000 or 38.5% of net revenue from $58,900,000 or 39.8% of net revenue last year. The increase in gross profit dollars was primarily driven by revenue growth. Lower conventional commodities and diesel costs also contributed to the profit gain. Gross profit margin was down year over year due to increased investments and crew members to keep pace with expected company growth and less efficient operations due to the limited ag supply after an exceptional operating quarter last year. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:12:12SG and A expenses for the first quarter were $31,900,000 or 19.7% of net revenue compared with 27,100,000 or 18.3% of net revenue in the first quarter of last year. The increase in SG and A in the first quarter was driven primarily by employee related costs, including stock based compensation and increased headcount, professional service expenses and technology and software related expenses. These costs all reflect the expansion of the business. Shipping and distribution expenses for the first quarter of twenty twenty five were $8,800,000 or 5.4% of net revenue compared to $7,600,000 or 5.1% of net revenue in the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The increase was driven by higher sales volumes and higher line haul rates. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:13:05Net income for the first quarter of twenty twenty five decreased 11.2% to $16,900,000 or $0.37 per diluted share compared to $19,000,000 or $0.43 per diluted share for the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The decrease in net income was driven by increased investments and future growth of the business, partially offset by higher sales and gross profit. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter of twenty twenty five was $27,500,000 or 16.9% of net revenue compared to $29,100,000 or 19.7% of net revenue for the first quarter of twenty twenty four. The decrease in adjusted EBITDA was driven primarily by higher personnel investments, partially offset by higher sales and gross profit. Turning now to our balance sheet. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:13:56As of 03/30/2025, we had total cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities of $161,300,000 with no debt outstanding. Our balance sheet reflects the land parcels in Indiana valued at $3,200,000 as an asset held for sale, which was previously acquired for potential Accelerator Fund development. We have identified available land that better meets our needs and are therefore selling this plot. I believe this situation exemplifies exactly the kinds of learnings we can only gain by putting ourselves into the shoes of our family farmers and reinforces the rationale for developing our Accelerator Farms. It is also worth noting that this decision has no impact on our ability to deliver the about 15 Accelerator Farms we are committed to as our existing land holdings fully support our development plans. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:14:52Before I discuss our guidance, I would like to address our progress on remediating the material weakness in internal controls previously highlighted in our 2024 annual report on Form 10 ks filing. The finding relates to the revenue recognition process. Specifically, we elect automated reconciliation between purchase orders and sales reporting. Importantly, this was a design deficiency only. No revenue inconsistencies were found and we do not anticipate any restatements. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:15:22Our remediation plan is progressing well and remain on track to address this issue. We remain confident in our financial reporting integrity and overall control environment. Now looking ahead, for full year 2025, we are happy continue to expect net revenue of at least $740,000,000 or at least 22% growth versus 2024 and adjusted EBITDA of at least $100,000,000 or at least 15% growth. The guidance includes the price increase Basil had mentioned and any expected impacts from our current understanding of the new tariff environment. Given the increasingly dynamic and uncertain macroeconomic backdrop created by the recent tariff announcements, we are reiterating our full year guidance. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:16:10While recently announced tariffs could impact the purchasing behavior of our consumers as well as our cost structure, we believe we will be relatively insulated from these pressures given our premium consumer base, domestic focus and the non cyclical nature of our product categories. As for the cadence of the year, we expect volumes to accelerate over the course of the year as supply improves, As recently added farms ramp up production and additional farms come online, we expect sequential capacity increases to drive accelerating year over year volume growth each quarter as we move through the year. Lastly, we still expect fiscal year twenty twenty five capital expenditures in the range of 50,000,000 to $60,000,000 As previously discussed, CapEx spending will be elevated in 2025 and 2026 because of the new actuating system at ECF Springfield, the plant new facility in Seymour, Indiana, the construction of accelerator farms and our internal digital transformation project, which I'll provide an update on in just a moment. We plan to fund our current plans with Seymour and all other projects this year with existing cash and operating cash flow. We project that every dollar of CapEx investment in Seymour will generate more than $5 of annual revenue capacity, which we consider a very strong return. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:17:31As always, we continue to evaluate and monitor our capital allocation priorities. After the last several quarters, we want to ensure that we have enough capacity in place ahead of expected demand growth and that we optimize the use of capital and the return for all of our stakeholders. We will provide updates on this as necessary. Now to discuss our digital transformation initiative, which includes our new ERP system implementation. We've updated the launch date from summer to early fall twenty twenty five to ensure flawless switchover. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:18:04The timing adjustment supports our commitment to minimize any risk for operational disruptions and does not add cost to the budget for the project. We remain fully committed to this investment, which is fundamental to the operational improvements we are planning, including streamlined processes, increased efficiency and an enhanced ability to compete and reinforce our position as an industry leader. Our long term guidance remains unchanged. We're continuing to target $1,000,000,000 of net revenue by 2027 with a gross margin of about 35% and an EBITDA margin of 12% to 14%. The financial outlook I've just shared reflects the strength of our business model and the proven success of our strategy. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:18:48Our loyal customer base provides us with a resilient foundation, while our growing network of family farms ensures product quality and supply chain stability. Every investment we make to increase retail penetration and brand awareness is delivering measurable results as our Egg and Butter products reach more households quarter after quarter. We are executing against our commitments and remain confident in the value we are creating for all stakeholders. Once again, we thank you for your time and interest in BioPharm today and for the confidence that you have placed on us with your investment. With that, we are now happy to take your questions. Operator00:19:30Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Your first question comes from the line of Brian Holland with D. A. Davidson. Your line is now open. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:20:00Hey, Brian. We can't hear you. And we we don't hear you. Operator00:20:26Reminder, if you are called upon to ask your question and are listening by a loud speaker on your device, please pick up your handset and ensure that your phone is not on mute when asking your question. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:20:39Try again. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:20:45Ma'am, we heard you for a second. Operator00:21:01Your next question comes from the line of Robert Moskow with TD Cowen. Your line is now open. Robert MoskowManaging Director at TD Cowen00:21:08All right. Hopefully, we'll have a little better luck here. Hello and Russell, hi there. Good morning. The price increase that you've announced, you described it as low single digit. Robert MoskowManaging Director at TD Cowen00:21:20My perception is that a lot of retailers have raised prices already on your products a lot more than that just because of category dynamics. So did you consider raising prices more in line with what retailers have already done? And then secondly, I guess what I would hope is that if the retailers have already raised prices a lot, that they won't take this as a signal to raise them even further. So can you talk a little bit about that balance? Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:21:56Absolutely. Rob, it's Russell. Great questions. So as we've said before, we think about pricing primarily in service of protecting our gross margins, which we believe are reflective of the power of our brand. A lot of what we're focused on is driving long term sustainable growth. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:22:20And so we want great relationships and frankly great economics for our retail partners and pricing that ensures great kind of consumer surplus or value for our consumers as well relative to the price they're paying. So we drove this primarily based on our assessment of what we thought we needed to do in order to ensure a strong make on our guidance this year. Now as for retailer pricing, there's every retailer has their own process for that, and it's not really something we have a lot of influence over or any packaged goods company, I think, for that matter. I can only speculate that they'll continue to price relative to their competitive needs and making sure that they're meeting their own brand commitment to their consumers. Robert MoskowManaging Director at TD Cowen00:23:14Okay. And then as a follow-up, I mean, just anecdotally, you look at the shelves today, they look a lot more full in the egg aisle than they were during the height of avian influenza. So to what extent are you right now fully up to speed at retailers in line with the rest of the category, which also appears to be back to normal? Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:23:44Yes. I think the category is still far from fully servicing the demand that retailers are placing through their orders. We certainly see continued elevated orders from retailers, which we think reflects both their desire to refill their channel with our eggs but also with eggs from throughout the category. So we're not out of the woods yet. In fact, there was yet another layer flock impacted, not ours, but in the industry by avian influenza within the last few weeks. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:24:19That said, as you can see from our own scan data in recent weeks, our the volumes continue to go up as we execute on the plan that we shared at the end of the year to increase our volumes throughout the year. And I'm hopeful that we'll see a reprieve from avian influenza, and we'll get back to a more normalized market in the back half. Operator00:24:53Your next question comes from the line of Jon Andersen with William Blair. Your line is now open. Jon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.C00:25:01Good morning. Thank you for the questions. I wanted to ask about volumes both in the quarter and then kind of the full year. Was the kind of low single digit volume growth in Q1 consistent with kind of your expectations? And as you progress through the year, is your expectation that the way that kind of the egg supply kind of onboards via your new farms and your capacity, processing capacity of those eggs, that the step up in growth from quarter to quarter as you move through the year is fairly uniform? Jon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.C00:25:42Or are you expecting more of an unlock at some point during the year? I'm just trying to get a little bit more sense of that. And then I did want to confirm on the price increase that you said low single digit on all Shell eggs. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:25:59Thanks, Jon. Great question. I appreciate you asking the question about volume because there is a little bit of detail I want to make sure we share. I'll ask Kilo to answer the question about the price increase. So we did show, as you saw, a low single digit percent increase in volumes year on year, which is lighter than I think reflects the actual growth of our strong commercial business. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:26:24And the X factor here is the volume of sort of waste eggs or second grade eggs that we sell into the breaker market and don't make it into a Vital Farms carton. We have become much more efficient at processing our eggs, and so we have much fewer eggs that aren't making it into a carton. So our yields are up, which supports our strong gross margins, but the volume that we end up sending into that market is down. And in fact, if you normalize, if you take out breaker volume both last year and this year, our volume growth was 5.6%. So the underlying branded business had a much stronger growth than the financial volume reporting would indicate. Tilo, do you want to comment on pricing? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:27:15Yes, John. What we said about pricing was that it was low double digit increase in pricing over the charging retailers. And so that will come into effect this quarter. And then as we're going through the year, I think the question you asked about the cadence of volume growth. As you look at the rest of the year, I think the volume growth that you'll see will reflect a bit more of the farm growth that we have talked about over the last few quarters. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:27:48As those farms come online, we can now start selling those eggs. What dragged down the volume growth in Q1 in addition to what Russell just said about the wholesale market not showing up in scanner data, for example, but showing up in our results. The other part that dragged down Q1 was the fact that we had inventory last year that we could sell to retailers, and we didn't really have ag inventory this year. And so as we are now starting to bring farms online, I think Q2 will still be somewhere as a transition point in terms of volume growth. And then as we get into the back half of the year, it will reaccelerate. Jon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.C00:28:29Super helpful. Thank you so much. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:28:33Thanks, John. Operator00:28:36Your next question comes from the line of Matt Smith with Stifel. Your line is now open. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:28:45Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my question. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:28:48Good morning. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:28:50You reiterated the guide for the year, but can you talk about how the recently announced pricing has impacted your outlook? I mean, was the pricing contemplated in the initial outlook or and can you talk about the visibility you have into the phasing of egg availability? Teela, you just talked about the farms coming online. But is the timeline consistent with your previous expectation of when you sign up a farmer and when they start taking or start producing eggs off the farm? Thank you. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:29:22Thanks, Matt. I'll take the first part of that, which was that no, we did not anticipate a price increase when we offered guide at the beginning of the year. I think we were really clear in our guidance that there was no anticipated price increase. But as we progressed into the year and we started to learn more about the impact of tariffs, for example, on the cost of various commodities, we thought it was prudent to take this modest price increase to ensure that we're in great shape to deliver on our commitments for this year. And so that's all that it is. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:29:59We have built in a fair bit of flexibility into our operating model, as we've always had, to make sure that we can deliver the plan. And we may find in the back half that we have different ways to allocate the revenue that we get from that price increase, again, to ensure we deliver both on our long term goal of building a sustainable brand and our short term financial commitments. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:30:28And then Matt, just to add to the visibility of comps coming online. Funds are coming online pretty much at the pace and at the magnitude that we anticipated twelve months ago. They're coming online at the post that the announcements from last year quarter after quarter would would imply. The the time line between signing a fund and the fund coming online, what we've talked about for quite a while now, taking, you know, somewhere around nine months, give or take. That hasn't changed. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:31:02And so that that is all, pretty much on not pretty much. That is all on track, And that gives us the visibility that we need for the remainder of the year to feel really confident about our guidance. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:31:16And just one follow-up on the tariff exposure, Russell. Can you talk about where some of the cost pressure you're seeing is coming from? I think the butter business is fully imported, pretty clear that that would have an impact, but maybe where you're seeing the cost pressure on the egg business? Thank you. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:31:35Yes, Matt. Let me take that one. So you're right. Butter is imported. We are importing it right now from Ireland. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:31:44We're importing some of our packaging. Our packaging provider has capacity in Canada where we're, importing some of our packaging from. And, as we're building out the accelerator farms, some of the farm equipment comes from comes from Europe. Obviously, as we are building up a farm network, our family farmers that we are recruiting are also importing the same barn equipment. So for them, the construction costs are increasing presumably with the tariffs. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:32:17Now that being said, I think compared to the rest of the consumer space that's reporting right now, I think our exposure to tariffs is a bit more limited. And we have a very good handle on what the tariff impact could be. And so with that, the price increase that we've talked about, that is more than sufficient to cover the impact of the tariffs. And, with that, I think with the price power that we have, with the resilience of the business that we have, I think we are really well positioned for this year despite the tariffs. Matthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel Institutional00:32:53Thanks, Tito. I'll pass it on. Operator00:32:59Your next question comes from the line of Ben Clive with Lake Street Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:33:07All right. Thanks for taking my question. First, I'd like to ask a question on the retail distribution. It looks like in your presentation that you noted distribution increased from 24,000 stores to 26 here. That 24,000 number had been kind of stale for my record show like about one point years. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:33:25So I'm wondering if you can elaborate a bit on this distribution increase and kind of characterize the retailers that were included in that increase. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:33:38Yes. Ben, let me take that one. That one is really more technicality rather than, increasing distribution. As you know, we switched our data provider from Nielsen to Surcana. Surcana has a somewhat different universe that they're tracking relative to Nielsen. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:33:56And so in Surcano, we are now in 26,000 stores, not in 24,000 stores that Nielsen is tracking. We had some distribution gains over the course of the quarter, but certainly not to the degree that the change in numbers in the deck would imply. And so don't read too much in that change from 24,000 to 26,000 retailers. It really is just a change in data source. There's no underlying meaningful growth of new retailers that we are in or new doors that we are in, I should say. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:34:34Got it. Okay, fair enough. And then last one for me and then I'll pass it on. A follow-up to the tariff question. Totally makes sense for all the impacts in the income statement. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:34:43Can you elaborate though on any impact you see on the expansion into Seymour? Are you expecting your pricing to increase in a material way for that project? Or have you fully considered that in the plans that you've discussed today? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:35:01Yes. C More is there certainly will be somewhat of a tariff impact. Some of the equipment that we are installing in Seymour comes from Europe, so there will be an impact. As construction costs overall go up because of tariffs on steel, for example, that will impact us. But that is all, within the range of our budget for C More as it is. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:35:27And so the CapEx guidance that we have given for the year, the 50,000,000 to $60,000,000 that is, the impact that we are foreseeing for phase one of C More right now. And, with that, we don't see any need right now to change that. Ben KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC00:35:42Very good. Okay. I appreciate the color. Thanks for taking my questions. I'll get back in queue. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:35:47Thanks, man. Operator00:35:52Your next question comes from the line of Eric Des Lauriers with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Eric Des LauriersSenior Research Analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC00:36:06First ones for me are around, consumer behavior. I apologize if any of this is, being repeated. I think I had some audio issues when you're discussing consumer metrics. But just wondering if you've seen any changes in recent weeks to consumer behavior in the pasture raised egg category as a whole or in your brand, just in light of this macro uncertainty? And then if you've seen any evidence of increased trial by new customers, given the, heightened prices for conventional eggs? Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:36:36Thanks, Eric. Russell here. I think this quarter has been a wonderful proof point of the power of the model that we've been using to build this brand over the last decade. We shared a terrific slide in the presentation that accompanied our release, which shows how we as we have grown households over the last several years, we've had a very consistent breakout of heavy users, medium users, light users, etcetera. And what that tells me is that in good times and bad, in challenged economy and not, our consumers continue to go very predictably from awareness to trial to repeat to heavy user. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:37:25And that hasn't changed, including with this macro backdrop. Additionally, we found, I think, a very powerful increase in brand awareness. I believe that's from 26% to 31% over the last quarter. And some of that certainly would be from the eggs simply being more in the news. But I think it's also reflective of the fact that we did not go dark in our commercial efforts, in our marketing efforts, even though we are in a period of supply constraint because we know that investing in awareness now will help us drive increased household penetration and expansion of our brand in the quarters and years to come. Eric Des LauriersSenior Research Analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLC00:38:12That's very helpful. And then just last one from me. Really strong growth in the butter business, I guess, sort of on the backs of the improving brand awareness. Just wondering if you could talk a bit more about the dynamics of building the supply side of the butter business. Wondering what levers you have to sort of expand supply and capitalize on growing demand. Thanks. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:38:40Yes. Thank you for that. So as we have discussed over the last several quarters, we spent 2024 really transitioning our butter supply chain. For several quarters prior to that, we had been very limited by our ability to source the high quality cream and ultimately butter that we thought was critical to our brand and to the product we wanted to offer consumers. And there are lots of structural reasons for that here in The United States. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:39:14That said, the kind of butter we offer is much more consistent with growing practices and production practices in Ireland, and that's why we made that change. And so with that change, we do not anticipate bottlenecks to our continued growth for years to come. Operator00:39:45Your next question comes from the line of Ben Mayhill with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:39:55Hi, good morning. So my first Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:39:58question Hey, Ben. Welcome. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:39:59Hey, good to be here. So the comment around your guidance taking into account the potential impact that global trade and economic tensions could have on on consumer spending. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:40:13I'm just hoping to get a little deeper on that because I think it's really important to the future. So could you explain the durability of build sales and profitability in an environment that's Like, what's your price gap between Vital and conventional and where consumers spend is higher? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:40:34Your connection broke up there. I picked up guidance consumer tariffs, price gaps, something along those lines, but maybe try again. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:40:45Let me take a shot at what I think the question was, which was, hey, if tariffs challenge consumer, will that in turn impact how we think about sales growth and driving top line growth? And the answer is we actually don't see an impact from a potential macro impact from tariffs on the consumer impacting our continued ability to drive the growth that we've put up historically year after year after year. And I think there are two reasons for that, the most important of which is that we have a brand that connects with consumers and really creates value because we do things with a purpose and we produce our eggs in a different way than the traditional producers do. And consumers are showing us that they're much less willing to trade that down even when their wallets are challenged than perhaps some other categories. And I think that's reflected in the results we shared this morning versus some of the other results we've been seeing in this quarter's releases from other companies. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:41:56The other reason is that we have one of the highest levels of exposure to high income households. And so while people across the income spectrum are showing that once they've tried our eggs, once they understand our story, they're really reluctant to trade away from that in general. If you believe that exposure to higher income households is a further way to insulate a brand from the risks of trade down, we have that as well. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:42:31Yes. Thank you. That answered my question. And just my last one here. You noted that you have exceeded four fifty Family Farms now from 04/25. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:42:43So I was just hoping that you could comment on how the recruitment and onboarding process is going as you continue to scale and reach a much higher baseline of farms. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:42:57Thanks. Very fair question. As we've said in the release and in the prepared remarks, we continue to recruit farmers on our schedule as we've elected to. We have a really terrific team in the field that does everything from build awareness of who Vital Farms is in the farming community to helping educate prospective farmers on what it takes to do really well working with us. And then perhaps even most important, provides the support necessary for our farmers to be successful in the months and years to come after they've signed up with us. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:43:37And with that sort of nine- to twelve month lead time between signing a contract with a new farmer and having eggs coming off of that farm, the number of farms producing today was essentially what we elected to add nine to twelve months ago. That's always been the case, and we're having terrific success adding the farms we have chosen to add this year as well. Benjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:44:07Great. Thank you. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:44:08Thank you. Operator00:44:14Your next question comes from the line of Megan Klap with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Megan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:44:21Hi, good morning. Thanks so much. Maybe a follow-up to some of the comments earlier around the price increase and the guidance. Certainly don't want to put words in your mouth, but if you could just clarify, it does sound like maybe you could have raised the guide given the price increase, but makes sense and is prudent to leave some cushion just given the consumer uncertainty and and maybe some flexibility to go after demand in the second half. Would just be curious, your reaction to that. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:44:53Yeah. I don't think you're far off. The thing that I would add is that we probably have less concern about consumer uncertainty than some other companies do. Again, lots of reasons that we believe our consumer is both resilient and much less willing to trade away from our product. And you can see that in our ability to put up strong growth and gross margins over time regardless of price gaps to the lowest priced eggs in the market, which I think is the maybe the key proof point that even when there's a much lower priced alternative in an egg that on the outside looks the same as ours, the consumers who have come to appreciate our brand and what it stands for aren't interested in trading down to those. Russell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive Officer at Vital Farms00:45:41So but the rest of it sounds pretty reasonable and is very consistent with what we've been doing since we went public, which is making sure that we set ourselves up for success and to be able to deliver on our commitment to all stakeholders, especially our shareholders. So at this point, we believe we've got the right mix of levers, including the benefits from this modest price increase to deliver on the guidance we gave at the beginning of the year. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:46:12Megan, let me just add to that. We are we just finished Q1. Q1 played out the way we thought it would play out with volume, with maybe slightly better price mix than what we initially thought. But overall, it played out the way we thought. This was always intended to be the smallest quarter of the year, so we still have a long way to go. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:46:34And I would argue across the entire U. S. Economy, uncertainty has certainly increased. So before we think about how high it's high for the rest of the year, I would want to see a bit more of what the year really looks like and how the year will play out before we reconsider what guidance would be. Megan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:46:56Fair enough. That's a lot of sense. Megan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:46:57And then maybe just a follow-up on the gross margin. The 38.5% did accelerate from what you've seen in the back half of last year. So would be curious how did that come in relative to your expectations? Was there anything transitory we should be thinking about? Related to that, how should we think about the phasing of the rest of the year for gross margin? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:47:21Yeah. The gross margin was pretty much where we thought it would be. We pointed out after the first quarter last year that we've had very healthy gross margin because ECS ran incredibly well. This year was the first quarter was much more a normal quarter, I would say. So for example, we we had, you know, a snowstorm in Missouri that resulted in in us not being able to ship any eggs because trucks wouldn't show up at ECS. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:47:54Trucks just couldn't drive in Missouri, right? And so this was a much more normal quarter in terms of operations. The quarter was also because we had this ex supply constraint, that means that ECS just doesn't run as efficiently as it normally would because you have to do more switchovers depending on when X come in and so on. And so with that, the quarter this quarter, we always thought would be lower gross margin. And then we are staffing up in anticipation of growth for the rest of the year, right? Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:48:25So we are staffing up before we actually need crew, so we have the time to train them and to build up their skills. And those were costs that we started to incur in the first quarter already. And with that, the year over year decline in gross margin was really something that we expected. For the full year, the pricing that we announced might benefit us a bit. But keep in mind, second quarter last year was also a very strong quarter last year because EPS, again, ran exceptionally well, probably not going to repeat this year. Thilo WredeChief Financial Officer at Vital Farms00:49:05And then between tariffs and commodity costs in the back half of the year, I probably wouldn't expect gross margin to repeat at the same level as last year. Operator00:49:26That concludes our question and answer session. I will now turn the conference back over to John Mills for closing remarks. John MillsManaging Partner at ICR00:49:35Great. Thank you, and thank you, everyone, for participating on our first quarter call today. We look forward to updating everyone on our progress for this fiscal year during our second quarter call. Hope everyone has a wonderful day. Operator00:49:52Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesRussell Diez-CansecoPresident & Chief Executive OfficerThilo WredeChief Financial OfficerAnalystsJohn MillsManaging Partner at ICRRobert MoskowManaging Director at TD CowenJon AndersenEquity Research Analyst - Consumer at William Blair & Company, L.L.CMatthew SmithDirector - Food & Tobacco at Stifel InstitutionalBen KlieveSenior Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets, LLCEric Des LauriersSenior Research Analyst at Craig-Hallum Capital Group LLCBenjamin MayhewVice President - Equity Research at BMO Capital MarketsMegan ClappExecutive Director at Morgan StanleyPowered by