Trevor Rousseau; Investor Relations; Laird Superfood Inc.
Jason Vieth; President, Chief Executive Officer; Laird Superfood Inc.
Anya Hamill; Chief Financial Officer; Laird Superfood Inc.
Hello, everyone. Thank you for attending today’s Laird Superfood Reports Third Quarter 2024 Financial Results Call. My name is Sarah and I’ll be your moderator for today.
All lines will be muted until the Q&A session at the end of the call. And I would now like to turn the call over to Trevor Rousseau, Laird Superfood Inc., Investor Relations.
Thank you. Good afternoon. Welcome to Laird Superfood Reports Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast on today’s call are Jason Vieth, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Anya Hamill, Chief Financial Officer. By now, everyone should have access to the company’s second quarter earnings release which is filed today after market close. It is available on the investor relations section of Laird Superfood’s Website at https://lairdsuperfood.com.
Before we begin, please note that during this call management may make forward-looking statements within the context of federal securities laws. These statements are based on management’s current expectations and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to different materially was described.
Please refer to today’s press release and other filings with the SEC for a detailed discussion of these risks and uncertainties with that. I’ll turn the call, but it’s Jason.
Thank you, Trevor. Good afternoon. As usual, I want to begin by thanking all of our investors that continue to follow and support Laird Superfood and to welcome all of you that are just joining the journey.
Today, I am once again thrilled to be able to share outstanding results for our large superfood business. In the third quarter, we grew net sales by an impressive 28% marking the third straight quarter with strong double digit net sales growth.
This also marks another quarter where we delivered solid sales teams across both our e-commerce and our wholesale channels and where we are growing our top line while also holding or even increasing our spend efficiencies across both trade promotional and marketing activities.
Q3, net sales growth was once again led by our e-commerce business, which grew by an outstanding 42% year-over-year.
Amazon sales once again led the way, increasing by more than 132% driven by superior commercial execution and bolstered by stronger inventory positions in 2024 and a strong prime day execution.
Our CTC platform also grew by 10%, even while up against a very challenging lap given the level of promotional productivity that we executed a year ago.
Virtually all our DTC internal metrics were flashing green again in Q3 with subscription revenue up by 19%, average order size up by 8%, and net sales from email increasing by 38% in the quarter.
Similarly, our sales on Amazon were driven by strong increases in subscription sales, new customer acquisition and gains in winning the buy box for our core products.
I’m also pleased to report that net sales from our wholesale business increasing in Q3 by nearly 13% year-over-year. In the natural channel, as measured by SPINS, our growth rate for the 12 weeks ending October 6th, 2024, was 27% driven by double digit top line growth in all the products that we measure including powder creamers, liquid creamers, coffee, and instant lattes. This growth was driven by a nearly equal split of distribution gains and increases in our sales velocity. In MULO we grew even faster up by 40% in the same 12 weeks period ending October 6th, 2024.
And while we remain strategically cautious in expanding to the conventional grocery channel, I’m going to tell you that you’ll soon be able to find more of our products in new stores in several retailers across the country, including Kroger-Albertsons, Wegmans and more.
Moving into operations. Our supply chain team continues to do a solid job of supporting our growing business. During Q3, we expanded our gross margin to 43% which represents a 12-point increase versus the third quarter of 2023 and marks the fourth straight quarter that we have achieved at least a 40% gross margin. This improvement was driven in large part by the strategic sourcing of our top ingredients where we will continue to focus during 2025.
Our biggest operational challenge in the third quarter and frankly throughout 2024 has been in keeping product on retailer shelves and available to our e-commerce consumers, because we have consistently exceeded our growth targets during the last few quarters, our supply chain has been in a perpetual chase throughout the year. The team has done an admirable job of juggling ingredient supply and manufacturing availability, essentially playing a game of whack a mole as they move from issue to issue.
And while there has been some minor out of stocks during 2024, we remain in a strong inventory position and expect to be back fully in stock for the important Black Friday events and holiday buying season.
I also want to share some of the progress that we’ve been making in building a more environmentally sustainable business. During the past year, we have been able to introduce 30% or more post-consumer recycled material into all of our gusted creamer pouches as well as our nutrition and protein bars.
Impressively, we have done this without any significant incremental cost to our business. This is a meaningful ambition for our team and to our consumers. And we’re in the process of outlining additional goals and creating a multi-year sustainability program.
Many of you were with us during the turnaround that we executed over the past couple of years, and I’m pleased to be able to assert that we are now solidly into the transformation of Laird Superfood into a high growth premium branded business with strong gross margin. But rather than asking you to take my word for it, I want to take a moment to dimensionalize it a bit so that you can internalize it.
Thus far. In 2024 our net sales have grown by nearly 27%. At the same time, we’ve been able to increase our gross margin by 15.3-point going from 26.4% gross margin to 41.7% which is well ahead of our financial goal to maintain gross margin in the high 30s.
Our net loss for the three quarters of this year has been shaved to less than $1.5 million which is nearly a $9 million improvement versus the same time period last year. And during the last 12 months, our cash balance actually increased by $776,000 from $7.4 million to more than $8.2 million as of September 30th, 2024.
And while Q3 and the entire 2024 financial performance has been a tremendous improvement versus our historical performance at Laird Superfood. We’re even more excited about the future opportunities for our brand and business. As we have shared before, we still have a tremendous amount of white space to expand distribution and drive sales velocity growth within the natural channel. And we have not really even begun to expand into the conventional grocery channel or into the massive on-premises channel for food consumption.
We remain confident that we can continue to build our e-commerce business behind relevant and engaging content from our founders and other influencers within health wellness, nutrition and fitness. And as consumers increasingly seek out healthier and more natural foods. Our layered superfood portfolio is perfectly positioned to fuel them in their journey.
With that. I will now turn it over to Anya to discuss our third quarter results in more detail.
Anya Hamill
Thank you, Jason, and good afternoon, everyone. As Jason noted in the third quarter, we have continued to make progress, executing the strategy we articulated earlier in the year, which is to return the business to growth while improving profitability. I am pleased to share with you that our third quarter results were strong on every key metric building on the first half of the year, momentum and delivering significant improvement versus the same period prior year.
Net sales grew 28% to a record $11.8 million compared to $9.2 million in the prior year period. And we’re up by $1.8 million sequentially versus the second quarter of 2024.
Our e-commerce channel led the company’s growth increasing by 42% year-over-year. And accounting for 58% of our total net sales. Sales on the Amazon.com platform had by far the best quarter in the company’s history, delivering an impressive 133% growth driven by outstanding commercial execution and a better in stock inventory position.
Direct-to-Consumer platform also grew 10% driven by a steady increase in subscribers and repeat orders, higher order value and lower discount rates due to strategic shift in promotional spent. Wholesale net sales increased by 13% year-over-year and contributed 42% of total net sales, driven by 36% growth in retail channel from new distribution and velocity acceleration as well as more efficient promotional spend. This was partially offset by timing of corrupt channel orders.
Gross margin for the third quarter came in at 43% reaching a new high and extending 12-point versus last year. This margin expansion was driven by supply chain cost savings initiative, specifically from a strategic shift to direct procurement of key raw materials, settlement with a supplier to recover costs previously incurred in connection with the quality event experienced in 2023, as well as reduction in inefficient trade promotion spend.
I am pleased to highlight that this is the fourth consecutive quarter where we have achieved gross margins at or above the 40% threshold. These results further support our expectations for sustainably achieving gross margin in at least the high 30s in the coming quarters.
Operating expenses decreased $0.3 million in the third quarter compared to the third quarter last year, driven by lower sales and marketing costs as we improve the efficiency of our marketing programs. This was in part offset by higher general and administrative expenses driven by higher professional fees and stock based compensation, which is a non-cash expense. Operating expenses as a percentage of net sales were lower by 16-point compared to the prior year quarter, as we focus on ongoing expense management in order to improve our bottom-line. Net loss for the third quarter was $0.2 million, which is $2.5 million better than during the prior year period.
Turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $8.2 million in cash. And I am particularly pleased to report that for the second quarter in a row, we have delivered a positive quarterly cash flow which was $374,000 in Q3 and totaled $495,000 for the first nine months of the year, reflecting our improved performance and disciplined management of our working capital which decreased year over year excluding cash while driving year-to-date revenue growth of 27%. We also have no debt outstanding and no expected need to draw on our line of credit.
We continue to project that we have enough cash to fund our operations as we grow our business and make operating improvements that drive us towards breakeven and profitability. Overall, we’re still confident about the release of 2024. We expect continued growth in our core business segments as we remain focused on executing our strategic priorities. As such, we’re increasing our full year guidance on both net sales and gross margin.
We now expect net sales to be in the range of $43 million to $44 million for the full year 2024, which represents 26% to 29% growth versus prior year. And gross margin is expected to expand to approximately 41% to 42% representing 11-point to 12-point improvement versus 2023.
Looking ahead to 2025 we made a decision to strategically focus on growth and in doing so, we expect to achieve 20% to 25% top line growth and to manage our P&L to positive cash flow and EBITDA. And now I will turn the discussion back over to Jason for any closing remarks.
Jason Vieth
Thank you, Anya. And thank you once again to all of you who are supporting our journey at Laird Superfood. Our last four quarters demonstrate an incredible turnaround in our business, one where we not only have shored up our finances but have also returned our business to best in class growth rates in the industry operator. This concludes our prepared remarks and we’re now ready to open the call to questions.
Operator
Thank you. Do we now begin the Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to remove that question, press star followed by too. And if you are using a speaker phone, please pick up your handset before asking your question.
Alex Fuhrman, Craig-Hallum.
Alex Fuhrman
Hey, guys, thanks very much for taking my question and congratulations on a really strong quarter. You know, nice to see a really strong initial outlook for 2025. Wanted to ask a little bit more about where that growth is going to come from. I think, Jason, you mentioned in your prepared remarks that we’re likely to a number of other retail doors coming, you name some impressive national accounts coming. Is that really going to be the biggest driver of your growth obviously this year. It’s been more driven by the online business, curious, how you get to that 20% to 25% growth next year if that maybe looks a little bit different.
Jason Vieth
Hey, Alex, how you doing? It’s good to hear you. Here again today.
Alex Fuhrman
Good, good, good to hear from you as well.
Jason Vieth
Yeah, thank you. It’s a great question and one that we’ve been pressing the team on the reality on this, Alex, is we had a great year this year in the online business, the e-com business a bit unexpectedly, we had pulled a lot of spend out and we knew that we were getting the better marketing tactics, but we were really pleasantly surprised with the performance this year.
And the great thing about it is we’ve been heard a number quite a number of our purchases to repeat purchasers and our repeat purchasers to subscribers. And as a result, we have very sticky revenues going into next year. And so we still feel really great about our ability to grow DTC. And at the same time, Amazon has been on fire as you saw and we know that we still have a lot of latent growth in Amazon, just executing the playbook that we’ve been running.
So we think that that e-com business is going to continue to do really well. Probably though we would expect even more growth next year as we look at the wholesale business, we did pick up a number of accounts as I just mentioned. And we’re being very strategic and selective with the retailers that we’re working with. I think I had mentioned previously that we’ve been entering in with target into a couple of categories and the performance looks good there and same thing with this other retail that I mentioned.
But the reality behind that too is our natural channel sales have been on fire and it’s been a combination of additional distribution and putting a lot that we gained this year, as well as a lot of games and been fairly equal, as I mentioned, the velocity and the distribution gains that we’ve had this year. So it’s really a case that everything is really kind of hitting at the same time.
And that’s the point that Anya was making with regards to next year and how to think about our business. We’re going to invest into growth. We have a lot of opportunities in front of us right now with consumers online as well as retailers and their consumers and guests at where they’re shopping out in physical store. And we want to make sure that we have sharp prices on promotion with extra display as much as we can, and that we’re marketing behind the brand and really getting to new consumer, but also leveraging that the very strong database that we have an incredible database with, as we’ve mentioned, over half a million consumers that are very loyal to our brand and we have the ability to launch new products into those channels. So you’re going to see strong growth across all of these channels.
Next year, Alex, and you’re going to see it come across frankly across all of our categories. We are winning in all of our categories. When I go look at the SPINS report, everything is green right now. Everything is lighting up green and it’s been that way this year and it’s the same thing on the e-com platforms of Amazon and DTC.
So we’re going to just use, we’re going to use 25% just reinvest and grow, and build this business, very, very carefully. So as you know, we’ve been very good stewards with marketing dollars and we really watch the ROI very carefully, but we’re in a position right now where we can spend effectively, and so we’re going to do that and you’re going to see really great growth across all these channels as we go forward in our opinion.
Alex Fuhrman
That’s really helpful, Jason. Thank you. And then, if I could just follow up as think about your expansion into more mainstream grocery and big box type retailers, as well as the success you’re having in your more long standing natural food partner. Which these products have those two categories of retailers really been gravitating? As you move towards, some of these more mainstream bigger retailers are they opting for your core powder creamer, New SKUs, or just any color on which products have been resonating as you open more doors would be helpful.
Jason Vieth
Yeah. Our legacy is the powdered creamers, and we continue to grow those, and they continue to do really well. But that’s a space that dry shelf is a space that will never be as productive as the liquid creamers. And so from a sales velocity per point of distribution, the liquid creamers are markedly stronger. But we’re doing well in both of those. You know, when we go measure ourselves and analyze what we call a quintile performance assessment, where we go look at all the products that are on shelf and break it into five quintiles, and look at where we stand. We’re typically always in that top quintile or somewhere between Q1, Q2 or maybe into Q3, a couple of stragglers. But by and large, we’re at the top of these performance metrics that we look at.
And so, we look really good in both of those, that the powder creamers had a rough year two years ago, but they’ve had a really good year this year, and we’ve seen nice distribution growth as well as velocity growth. And we’re flipping that liquid creamer over to a large size, which is going to be a 50% upsizing of 50% of pricing. There’s a little bit more value to the consumer. But really what it’s just a convenience play to give them more creamer. So they do not have to buy as often and run out at home, there’s incremental consumption whenever you do that.
So we’re really excited about liquid creamer as we go into next year, we’ve had some great distribution wins on that also. So both of those categories, Alex, look great. And then the real surprise to me versus where when I came in about 2.5 years ago, the coffee and the instant latte products have just been on fire this year. They’ve driven a lot of our growth in grocery. They’re doing great online.
And so we’re going to continue, we’re launching New SKUs in both of those new items in both of those categories and seeing a lot of success, we launched a protein creamer that we’ve sold out of a couple of times this year and had, we just blew past our expectations and are now running bigger batches off of that. We have a new Mocha Creamer that’s coming out in the Mocha instant latte rather that’s coming out in that instant latte space. And then we’ve launched a couple of new coffee products and are continuing to bring more functionality specifically through the adaptogenic functional mushrooms and retailers and consumers are really gravitating to those SKUs. So I think those are the four product areas that you’re going to see really exploding as we go into next year in addition to the greens, which has been on fire all year for us.
Alex Fuhrman
Great. That’s really Helpful. Jason. Thanks very much.
Operator
John-Paul Wollam, Roth Capital Partners LLC.
John-Paul Wollam
Hi, Anya. Hi, Jason. Thanks for taking the question. If I could just start, maybe kind of touching in on growth a little bit more, and I want to specifically go to kind of the discounts and promotional activity. It sounds like it’s going to be kind of a continued focus next year with the prepared remark about investing some of that margin. And so I was hoping you could kind of just talk about where you’re seeing the most success. What kind of promotions you are finding really resonate and just kind of how you’re thinking about next year in terms of discounting and promotional activity.
Jason Vieth
Yeah. Hey JP. Thanks for that question and I’ll jump in on it on you. If you want to give your vocal cords a workout, you can jump in as well. So, it’s really interesting JP, a year ago, you probably recall, we overspent on the trade line, and we really invested too much into pricing. We felt the consumer is a little bit shaky last year and we were trying to entice them to purchase this, especially first-time consumers and their purchases. And what we found is we gave two months away and in doing that, we were really giving away our brand equity as well.
So we made a strategic pivot at the end of last year really in Q4 that we’ve carried forward this year to do a lot less pricing promotion. And it’s been very effective as you can see from the net sales increases that we’ve had this year. Selling at full price has worked out a lot better for us. And that’s done is it’s really let us keep up the premium cachet of the brand. We heard from our consumers specifically that we are a premium brand, and they’re surprised to see us on sale as often as we were last year.
What we do now is we run fewer deeper sales online. So we leverage Amazon prime days, we leverage Black Friday internally on DTC. And then we have one other big sale on the DTC business and then by and large, we really do not run a lot of promotions. Almost none in fact. And that’s working out really well for us because the consumers that are buying layer at this point are really, they’re believers in what the brand benefits are giving them the functionality of the food, and they’re willing to pay for it at the price that it’s at without the need for promotion.
So we’ve really backed away from that pricing promotion and that extends into the grocery as well. We would we pull back probably 10-point or so of trade over the course of the year?
Anya Hamill
11-point.
Jason Vieth
Yeah. 11-point. And so, that really a very strategic decision, JP, that we made to focus on quality promotions, we call quality merchant. And that’s a function of getting a secondary display or getting into the circulars at grocers and in what’s called feature and display.
And so that’s really where you’ll see us focusing next year. We have a couple of a big planned or committed promotions where we’ll pick up that secondary display and that’s just a tremendous way to introduce your products to a lot of new consumers in a tight time frame. And that’s really going to be where our focus is next year.
But I would just think about it as more of the same in terms of the pricing promotion that we’re going to do. There will be more concerted marketing efforts to really build the brand and drive awareness and pick up more consumers. We’ve found a number of marketing tactics that have worked really well over the last 12 months, especially those that leverage our founders and share the functionality of the food and general health wellness, fitness and nutrition tips.
And so across the various social media platforms, where we’ve continued to invest and grow our subscribership, you’ll see us making a much more or a bigger and more concerted effort to drive awareness, and build those consumer bases.
John-Paul Wollam
Great, that’s very helpful. And then maybe just, I think, Jason, you actually kind of touched on it a little bit there, but if we just kind of step out and think about the customer base now, how are you guys thinking about the customer and kind of whether you extended, whether you made that kind of next jump into sort of a new set of customers, maybe a little bit beyond some of the very strict health and wellness focused customers. Like, could you just kind of give us with another year of projected strong growth? Like, have you made that kind of next jump into a new customer set or how are you thinking about where your kind of is versus a year ago there?
Jason Vieth
Yeah. Well, that’s a great question and that’s one that a smaller company without as much data as some of us are used to having, it’s one that we extrapolate some of the data against quite often. So, look, I tell you when I first got here a couple of years ago, we were largely really what we had our consumer that was, and I think of this in kind of an expanding circle diagram. So at the core, we really were what we had were Laird and Gabby’s friends and family. And we’ve been launched essentially into groups that Laird and Gabby knew whether through Instagram or just leverage in some of the ownership we’re able to establish there off of their own accounts or if it was just leveraging Laird and Gabby and who they were to people.
So, up and down the west coast in the server community and then into some of the health and wellness circles, that’s really who our consumer was at that point. With one exception, the one exception was we had done, and this was a few years ago, but we had done some executions, specifically with some influencer shoppers that would go up and down the aisles and throw product in what we found is that was great for one-time hits whenever you launch it, but it’s extremely expensive and those weren’t the right consumer.
So those folks largely fell away and ultimately, we were left with Laird and Gabby, friends and followers in that next 18 months or so. When I got here, we really focused on getting to the health and wellness diehards specifically kind of think about it in that west coast area, some of the enclaves, health and wellness enclaves like Colorado, parts of Texas, Austin Dallas, specifically Minneapolis, Chicago. You have some folks that are really focused on health and wellness, and I would say targeted that core and did not really geographically make it to the east coast.
And there are a lot of reasons for that, including just a little bit of a lower Q score or awareness score of Laird and Gabby, the Hamilton. And in the last year, I would tell you, we’ve pushed that in the next concentric circle where now we’re pushing out from the Die-hard, what I call the health, a lot of Die-hards into the kind of health and wellness aware.
People that know they need to eat better that are hearing about functional foods that are trying new foods. And that’s why we’re so careful as we’re spending our marketing dollars and watching our role as we’re being very careful, because once you start moving to a group that does not know you as well or is not as aligned to those interests, you can start spending very inefficiently.
And that’s where I’d say we’ve done, our marketing team has done just an incredible job of holding on to those returns and carefully putting their toes into the pools of a couple of people. And we’ve had very, I’d say in the last year, or to your question specifically, we’ve had really great success in finding and tapping into new consumer sets.
And so we’re watching our geography expand. We’re watching our consumer set expand and now because of the push into the conventional channel, I think we’re finding now we’re going to find another set of consumers all together. So, yes, the answer is yes, we are expanding, but we’re certainly doing it, with modest spending very carefully.
John-Paul Wollam
Great. Yeah, certainly. High level to your question there. If I could sneak just one last one in, I just want to maybe talk, I think this goes a little bit to sort of maybe the out of stocks or the inventory balance. And you guys have done a great job managing a really tight operation there. And I want to just kind of get a sense of how you’re thinking about cash in your current liquidity position, just given sort of this return to growth and just want to know how you feel, given maybe a need to at times have a little bit more inventory or maybe if you’re wishing to have a little bit more inventory. Can you just kind of talk about liquidity, please?
Anya Hamill
Hi JP, this is Anya, thank you for that question. Yes. So, as you know we put an ABL in place a line of credit, were put in place in Q2. We have not drawn on it, but we do have it available if we need to finance our working capital extension so far, we have been able to manage it efficiently, really balancing our ARAP and inventory, perfecting our sales and operations, forecasting, refining that, in order to really efficiently manage our working capital. But if we need it for growth next year and we have this EBL available, should we need to draw upon it?
Jason Vieth
Yeah. And JP, let me add a little bit more to that. So, we’re in a position as you’re pointing out where we’re going to need to invest into additional inventory. We’ve been running very tight all year. And so we’re probably a little bit under inventoried right now as well versus where we’d like to be. We’re also a very lean team and we’ve got a team that’s really learning how to operate at just in time type of supply chain. So I do not anticipate that we’ll have a very big inventory need as Anya was mentioning. We do have a backstop in that ABL we do not plan to use it. It’s something that we put in place as we mentioned previously just as a little bit of extra cushion because we could, but we’re still sitting here.
I mean, we’ve increased cash as in the last year and we’re up what is it on you. Almost a half million dollars or right around a half a million dollars year-over-year, and we expect to be able to continue to generate cash. You know, next year I mentioned we’ll continue to, and in fact, increase our investment into growth next year. But at the same time, we’re not looking to shrink our cash balance at all. So there will be that normal fluctuation from quarter to quarter.
But I would anticipate that a year from now. We’re coming back to you guys and talking about how we once again increased our cash balances in 2025 just as we have done now in 2024. So we do not want to take, we do not anticipate taking cash to operate our business. We do not see any reason to we believe that we have, as far as we can see, we have a very solid P&L now. And for us that the only reason we’d raise cash now is if we found just that incredible investment opportunity in a new product, or if we saw an amazing acquisition that fit our business incredibly well. And it felt like it really changed the nature of our business. Maybe then we would, we feel differently, but we have the cash, we need to operate this business. We’re confident of that right now. And so as we go forward, we just we anticipate, we’re just in a great place to be able to continue doing what we’re doing.
John-Paul Wollam
Great. Well, thank you for taking my questions and best of luck going forward.
Jason Vieth
Yeah, thank you much. Appreciate it.
Anya Hamill
Thank you all for your questions.
Operator
They’re no longer question. So I’ll pass the conference back to the management team for any further or closing remarks.
Jason Vieth
Yeah, I’ll just close. I think you guys have heard enough from me today, but I’ll just close by saying that we could not be more excited about where we are, and I hopefully all agree we’ve had a great year at Laird Superfood. We’re in a very different position than we’ve been at any point while I’ve been here.
And at the same time, we could not be more excited about where we are for the balance of this year and in general for our future we’ve got. As Anya pointed out previously in this call, we’re in a great position for 2025 expecting to grow 20% or more next year and continuing to add to our cash balance on the balance sheet. So, I’ll thank you all for joining today. Look forward to getting back in front of you with another quarter that that hopefully looks a lot like this one.
Operator
That will conclude today’s conference call. Thank you all for your participation. You may now disconnect your line.
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