Earnings call transcript: Albertsons Q1 2025 sees steady EPS, stock dips

Investing.com

Published Jul 15, 2025 09:56AM ET

 Earnings call transcript: Albertsons Q1 2025 sees steady EPS, stock dips

Albertsons Companies reported its Q1 2025 earnings with an adjusted EPS of $0.55, matching analysts' expectations. Revenue slightly surpassed forecasts, reaching $24.88 billion against an anticipated $24.68 billion. Despite meeting EPS forecasts, the stock saw a pre-market decline of 2.39%, closing at $21.6. According to InvestingPro analysts maintain a consensus target price range of $20-31, with the stock showing relatively low volatility with a beta of 0.3. The company's defensive nature is further evidenced by its steady dividend yield of 2.71% and 25% dividend growth over the last twelve months.

Outlook & Guidance

Albertsons updated its FY2025 guidance, projecting identical sales growth between 2.0% and 2.75%. The company also anticipates an adjusted EBITDA of $3.8 to $3.9 billion and an adjusted EPS of $2.10 to $2.16. These projections indicate a moderate growth outlook, with expectations of gradual improvement in grocery units in the latter half of the year.

Executive Commentary

  • "Our Customers for Life strategy is working," stated Susan Morris, CEO, emphasizing the company's focus on customer loyalty and engagement.
  • Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, noted, "We are making several ways of working moves that are helping to offset some of the pressure that we're seeing in wages."
  • CEO Susan Morris highlighted, "We sell a lot of commodity-driven items and we are very agile in the pricing process."

Risks and Challenges

  • Supply chain disruptions: Potential impacts on inventory and delivery timelines.
  • Competitive pressures: Intense competition in the grocery sector could affect market share.
  • Economic conditions: Inflation and consumer spending patterns may influence sales.
  • Technological investments: High costs and execution risks associated with digital expansion.
  • Regulatory changes: Potential impacts from changes in healthcare and food safety regulations.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the impact of GLP-1 medications, which are driving approximately half of pharmacy comps. Questions also focused on the company's e-commerce profitability, national buying strategies, and vendor partnerships, highlighting areas of strategic importance for Albertsons moving forward.

Full transcript - Albertsons Companies (ACI) Q1 2025:

Conference Operator: Greetings, and welcome to The Albertsons Companies First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call, and thank you for standing by. All participants will be in a listen only mode until the Q and A session. This call is being recorded. I would like to hand the call over to Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management. Please go ahead, sir.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies: Good morning, and thank you for joining us for The Albertsons Company's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings conference call. With me today are Susan Morris, our CEO, and Sharon McCollum, our President and CFO. Today, Susan will recap the first quarter of twenty twenty five and update you on our progress against our strategic priorities. Then, Sharon will provide the details related to our first quarter twenty twenty five financial results and our outlook for the remainder of fiscal twenty twenty five, before handing it back to Susan for closing remarks. After management comments, we will conduct a Q and A session.

I would like to remind you that management may make forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the factors identified in our filings with the SEC. Any forward looking statements we make today are only as of today's date, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise any such statements as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Additionally, we will be discussing certain non GAAP financial measures.

A reconciliation of these financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures can be found in this morning's earnings release. And with that, I will hand the call over to Susan.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Thanks, Cody. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. In the first quarter, our teams delivered solid results with ID sales growth of 2.8%, adjusted EBITDA of $1,110,000,000 and adjusted earnings per share of $0.55 These results again demonstrate gradual and incremental progress against our five strategic priorities, which include driving customer growth and engagement through digital connection, growing our media collective, enhancing the customer value proposition, modernizing capabilities through technology and driving transformational productivity. Within these priorities, four digital platforms continue to be the catalyst for customer growth and engagement. We continue to drive increased sales and to more deeply engage our most loyal customers, all while generating data and insights for the media collective.

Our first digital platform is e commerce, which grew 25% and reached 9% of total grocery revenue in the first quarter. This growth was again led by strong performance in our first party business, driven by award winning capabilities in our fully integrated mobile app and supported by our five star certification program. Our focus on delivering exceptional customer service experience is fueling new customer acquisition and strengthening existing customer retention. To do this, we're continuing to enhance our digital shopping experience, including the introduction of AI and interactive features that deliver both ease and convenience. For example, we launched our new shop assist feature, which enables a connected shopping experience that allows customers to communicate back and forth with our in store associates throughout their orders fulfillment process.

We've also created more flexibility in our basket building. Customers can now add items to their orders up until picking has started, recognizing that shoppers often think of one more item they need just after an order is placed. While our e commerce penetration is still below industry peers, it is one of our biggest growth customer acquisition and customer retention opportunities for 2025 and beyond. From a profitability perspective, our e commerce business is near breakeven and improving. Our second digital platform is loyalty, which grew 14% to 47,000,000 members in the first quarter as we capitalized on simplification of our program and further enhanced the value the program offers.

Members in the program today are engaging more frequently, using more of our easy to understand and redeem features and spending more with us. As case in point, 30% of our engaged households are now electing the cash off option, reinforcing the customer's desire for immediate value. As we did last quarter, loyalty is a key enabler of digital customer engagement and a rich source of data for our media collective. Throughout 2025, we will continue to introduce compelling benefits that will attract new members, improve share of wallet and further enable marketing and monetization opportunities for the media collective. We will also continue to simplify and expand the program to include strategic partnerships to offer even more value.

Our third digital platform is Pharmacy and Health, which grew 20% year over year driven by industry leading script and immunization growth, best in class customer satisfaction scores and the ongoing integration of Pharmacy and Sicily Health into our overall digital experience. Cross shoppers between grocery and pharmacy are exceptionally valuable. Over time, these customers visit the store four times more often and buy significantly more groceries with us, resulting in outsized customer lifetime value across the entire store. For this reason, in addition to the market share opportunity competitor closings are creating for us, we are also continuing to invest in our pharmacy and health digital platform. Through this platform, we are also launching customized omni channel benefits that are not only attracting new customers, but also converting existing pharmacy and grocery only customers to become cross shoppers.

It is also helping customers to find new and personalized ways to improve their health and well-being consistent with evolving national trends. Our pharmacy and health platform is an integral part of our Customers for Life strategy and a significant growth and customer engagement opportunity. For this reason, leveraging our growing scale to improve pharmacy profitability over time is a key operational priority. To deliver this, we are continuing to pursue higher margin service offerings and drive productivity through improved sourcing, increased automation and labor optimization. This quarter we opened our third central field processing facility, which is reducing our cost to serve, while at the same time improving overall customer experience.

The fourth digital platform is the integration of the mobile app for use in our stores. We're not just selling food, we're simplifying meal planning and making shopping easier and more convenient both in store and online. Our app has become the epicenter of the omni channel experience with digital customers engaging nearly three times a week on average. What began as a tool for enabling e commerce and delivering great deals is now a Swiss army knife of tools that makes customers' lives easier regardless of whether they're shopping in our stores or online. These tools include best in class list building and personalized meal planning capabilities, powerful search and product locating capabilities, and an in store mode that connects meal planning and other store specific capabilities.

Intermediate collective in the first quarter, we significantly increased the high impact digital inventory as our digital platforms work together to enrich our data and generate deeper customer engagement to accelerate growth and deliver superior return on ad spend. We'll continue to invest in building industry leading integrated solutions that will support both endemic and non endemic partners. These solutions include refining shopper audiences, running targeted media campaigns with compressed measurement timelines, and delivering consistent omni execution to develop personalized relationships for our collective partners with our customers. These same solutions are also providing benefits for our internal loyalty and marketing initiatives. As we look forward, we expect the collective to grow faster than the retail media market and ultimately be one of the largest sources of fuel for reinvestment into our core business over time.

To improve our customer value proposition, we intentionally invested in value, in both loyalty and promotional offerings, as well as by partnering with strategic vendors to invest in price in certain categories in certain markets. We also surgically managed through the pass through of cost inflation to further invest in the customer's needs for immediate value. While it is early, these investments did deliver a sequential quarterly unit sales improvement and over time are expected to drive greater existing and new customer engagement across our banners. We additionally amplified our own brands presence to drive further value for our customers. Own brand sales penetration finished the quarter at 25.7% as we launched new offerings across multiple categories.

We also expanded the assortment in our recently introduced Overjoyed brand and launched our newest brand, Chef's Towner, a chef inspired meal solution targeting foodies seeking fast and easy restaurant quality choices at affordable prices. These launches coupled with greater prominence and better value in own brand merchandising is expected to drive greater loyalty, increase digital and omni channel household engagement and higher transaction counts over time. Our next priority is the modernization of our capabilities through technology. As we said last quarter, our North Star is to use technology in everything we do and we are energized by the progress we are making toward this aspiration. Our technology first focus is positioning us to make a greater impact faster, allowing us to drive greater innovation at a lower cost.

Our advanced technology platform, on which we are continuing to innovate, powers our e commerce, store, pharmacy, supply chain, merchandising and media collective operations, and is allowing us to leverage emerging AI technologies to accelerate our operational transformation going forward. We are also using our advanced capabilities to use AI agents to enhance many business functions, including pricing and promotion, personalization, customer care, and cogeneration among others. Driving transformational productivity is our next priority, which is an imperative to fuel our growth. Our productivity engine continues to reduce costs, offset headwinds and fund our growth priorities. It works hand in hand with our technology modernization, including our initiatives to leverage AI and data analytics, optimize supply chain costs through automation, and build up shrink and labor management tools to name a few.

In addition, the largest of our opportunities continues to be the leveraging of our consolidated scale to buy goods for resale through national buying and more efficient supplier relationships. As we previously shared from fiscal year twenty twenty five through 2027, we expect our productivity engine to deliver $1,500,000,000 in savings, which we plan to reinvest in growth and our customer value proposition, as well as to offset other inflationary headwinds. Before I hand the call over to Sharon for an overview of our first quarter and to provide an update to our 2025 outlook, I'd like to give you an update on recent labor negotiations. In fiscal twenty twenty five, we have negotiations covering approximately 120,000 associates. As of today, we've reached agreement covering nearly half of these associates with two pending ratifications in Colorado and Southern California.

We appreciate and value our associates and in these contracts we are meaningfully improving wages and benefits. At the same time, we're working to negotiate contracts that are not only financially viable, but also provide the operational flexibility the company needs to streamline operations, manage costs and offer affordable prices in a rapidly changing grocery landscape.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: Sharon, over to you. Thank you, Susan, and good morning, everyone. It's great to be here with you today. As Susan shared, the investments we are making are delivering value to our customers and adding breadth to the capabilities we need to drive future growth. During the quarter, we saw early wins from these investments affirming our confidence in our strategic priorities and our Customers for Life strategy.

Included in these wins was identical sales growth this quarter of 2.8%, driven by 20% growth in pharmacy and a 25% increase in digital sales. We also saw a sequential improvement in core grocery units. To drive this growth, our gross margin rate of 27.1% was lower than last year by 85 basis points, excluding fuel and LIFO expense. Incremental investments in our customer value proposition and the mix shift impact related to the strong growth in our pharmacy and digital businesses drove this decrease, but was partially offset by benefits driven by our productivity initiatives, including improved shrink expense. Offsetting this gross margin investment was a 63 basis point improvement, excluding fuel, in our selling and administrative expense rate.

This decrease was primarily driven by the leveraging of employee costs, reflecting the positive benefits from our ongoing productivity initiatives and lower merger related costs. Interest expense in Q1 twenty five decreased 4,000,000 to 142,000,000 compared to $146,000,000 last year due to lower average borrowings. Income tax expense in the first quarter totaled $75,000,000 or 24.1% compared to $69,000,000 or 22.3% in Q1 last year. This tax rate increase was primarily driven by a reduction of an uncertain tax position last year that did not recur in 2025. Adjusted EBITDA was $1,111,000,000 the first quarter compared to $1,184,000,000 last year.

Adjusted EPS was $0.55 per diluted share compared to $0.66 per diluted share last year. Now I'd like to discuss capital allocation, the balance sheet, and cash flow. Consistent with our capital allocation priorities, during the first quarter, we invested $585,000,000 in capital expenditures, including the opening of three new stores and the completion of 36 remodels, as well as the ongoing modernization of our digital and technology capabilities. We also returned $4.00 $1,000,000 to our shareholders, including $86,000,000 in quarterly dividends and $315,000,000 in share repurchases, leaving approximately 1,500,000,000.0 in our existing multi year $2,000,000,000 share repurchase authorization. At the end of the first quarter, our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 1.96.

Now let me walk you through our updated 2025 outlook. As Susan said, we remained focused on our five strategic priorities. Through the balance of fiscal twenty five, we will continue to invest in our customer value proposition, customer experience, digital growth, the media collective, and health and pharmacy. These investments are expected to drive outside growth in digital and pharmacy, both of which drive higher future customer lifetime value, but create near term margin headwinds. We will also continue to drive our productivity agenda to fuel this growth and offset inflationary headwinds.

With that backdrop, we are updating our outlook as follows. We expect identical sales growth in the increased range of two to 2.75%, up from 1.5 to 2.5% last quarter. This assumes continuing growth in pharmacy and digital sales, as well as gradually increasing units in grocery. From a cadence perspective, we expect the second quarter IV sales to be towards the lower end of our guidance range with gradual acceleration in the back half of the year. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of 3,800,000,000.0 to $3,900,000,000 unchanged from last quarter.

As a reminder, this includes approximately $65,000,000 in adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter related to our fifty third week. We expect adjusted EPS to be in the range of $2.3 to $2.16 unchanged from last quarter and including $03 related to the fifty third week. The effective income tax rate is expected to be in the range of 23.5% to 24.5%, unchanged from last quarter, and capital expenditures are expected to be unchanged in the range of 1,700,000,000 to $1,900,000,000 Looking beyond 2025, as we capitalize on the investments we are making behind our strategic priorities, we continue to expect fiscal twenty twenty six to coincide with our long term growth algorithm of two plus percent identical sales and adjusted EBITDA growth higher than that. I will now hand the call back to Susan for closing comments. In closing,

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: our Customers for Life strategy is working. We're investing in our core operations and improving our customer value proposition. These investments are driving increased traffic and growing digitally engaged customers, omni channel households and loyalty members. To fuel these initiatives, we are driving productivity and leveraging new technologies to drive efficiencies across our operation. As Sharon said, we continue to expect 2025 to be a year of investment, including enhancing our customer value proposition.

As a result, we expect gradual and incremental improvement in top line trends in our grocery business in the second half of twenty twenty five, ultimately driving growth in line with our long term algorithm of 2% plus identical sales and adjusted EBITDA growing higher than that in fiscal year twenty twenty six. With just over two months as CEO of Albertsons Companies, let me say that I am more confident in our strategy with each day. I'm energized by the work our teams are progressing and excited to continue building on our strong foundation. To our 02/5000 great associates, I am more inspired than ever by you and all that you make possible for our customers and our communities each day. No matter where you are across our business, you make a difference.

You keep our systems running, ensure our products are in stock and delight our customers. We will now open the call for questions.

Conference Operator: Thank session. Our first question comes from the line of Paul Lejuez with Citi. Please proceed with your question.

Paul Lejuez, Analyst, Citi: Hey, thanks guys. Curious if you could talk about the drivers of the gross margin decline this quarter, maybe find them for us, and how we should think about each of them remaining a headwind for the rest of the year, which stay, which might go away, which become less of a headwind? Maybe that you can start with that. And then also curious how you would characterize the pricing environment around you in the competitive landscape. Thanks.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Thanks, Paul. As I think about gross margins, so we've been very clear that our top priority is driving sales and specifically driving an increase in units. And we're investing in that and remain true to that. We expect to continue that by the way throughout the rest of the year. As we think about Q1, it was actually one of our largest overlaps year over year and thus the compare that you're seeing from the gross margin investment.

That said, as I mentioned before, we're going to continue to invest in margin, but we also expect our productivity to begin to provide a tailwind as our national buying gradually kicks in as the year progresses. Also keep in mind, our focus is on gross margin dollars, on EBITDA dollars and not on rate. You had a second question about the pricing environment and I might have missed a question in the middle. And what we're seeing is continued promotional investment from the competitive set, of course in our own operations. We're also leaning in more heavily on loyalty, on personalized deals.

I would say that the pricing environment is rational, so we've not seen any broad swings across the industry at this point in time.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: And I would just add to that that you're continuing to see pressure from mass club stores and the value players. Thank you, guys. Good luck.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Leah Jordan with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.

Leah Jordan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. You made an interesting comment that e com profitability is near breakeven and improving. Just seeing if you could provide more detail on the key drivers supporting that improvement. How much is Albertsons Media Collective a factor at this point?

And what's your line of sight into reaching breakeven in that business?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: So, Leah, I think it's really important to recognize that different companies are calling e commerce different things in their P and Ls. When we are talking about e commerce, that is specifically our e commerce business. There is nothing in our e commerce P and L related to the media collective from a financial point of view. Of course, it creates data for the media collective and it is a major provider of information for the media collective, but from a P and L point of view, it's pure. What is driving that is volume, first and foremost, leveraging the fixed costs of the operations of that business.

Also, efficiency in the business. We've invested in tools and systems in order to drive efficiency in labor. And then we are also very much focused on continuing to leverage transportation costs in that process. So it's across the P and L where we're seeing improvement, but in that type of a business where you've got fixed costs that put the space in the stores, the real estate, because all that's allocated to that business, we are continuing to lever that. So we are getting very close to breakeven in our ecom business.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Sharon, if I could just add to that as well, and you touched on this, reminder that our fulfillment model is through our stores, and our stores are already in the neighborhoods that are serving our customers, So that creates efficiencies for us perhaps versus some others out there. Think that's it.

Leah Jordan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: That's very helpful. Thank you. And then I just had a quick follow-up on the ID sales guidance. I mean, just seeing if you could comment on the cadence of ID sales throughout the quarter. And then with the deceleration that you're guiding in 2Q, just what are the key drivers of that?

Are you seeing something change with the consumer? Is this related to the pharmacy business? Anything there would be helpful. Thank you.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: Leah, there's a couple of things. First and foremost, the compares on pharmacy, you have to look at pharmacy growth last quarter, which we disclosed. If you take a look at that, that has a major swing impact on the comp each quarter, so look at that. Secondly, from a cadence point of view, we feel pretty confident that as we progress through the year, we expect to see our on the grocery side of the business, we talked about the fact that we're expecting to see progressive units as we go through the back half of the year. Thus, the price investment that we have spoken about.

So in Q2, we do need to keep in mind that there will be an impact from the strike that we had during the quarter. So that'll have an impact, we quantified that for you in order for you to help model. We said in our prepared remarks that we expected in the second quarter to be at the low end of our guidance range. So hopefully that'll be helpful and we continue to expect to see strong pharmacy in the numbers going into Q2.

Leah Jordan, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Very helpful, thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Edward Kelly with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.

Edward Kelly, Analyst, Wells Fargo: Hi, good morning, everyone. I was hoping that you could maybe take a step back and update us on your price investment goals, just kind of given what you have seen so far. Customer response, does that give you any confidence maybe to lean in a little bit more? And then as you think about productivity initiatives rolling in and then you think about returning to your algo next year, is it your expectation that eventually gets to the point where you will continue to invest in price, productivity offsets, gross margin is a bit more stable? Just curious as to how we should be thinking about all that, thank you.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Sure, thanks Ed for the question. So as we think about price, just a reminder, as we went into the year, we have an incredible amount of data and our price investments are very surgical. We know the categories and the markets where we need to make those investments and we've begun that process. Also keeping in mind too that as we talk about investing in price, really it's investing in the total value proposition. So yes, some of it's based pricing, it's promotional, it's investing in our loyalty programs as well.

And of course, focusing on own brands. To date, it's still early in the investment process. So we'll be able to understand a little bit more. This is certainly a journey, not something that is a one and done. It will be an iterative process with multiple phases launching throughout the year.

Right now we've seen sequential improvements in our unit trajectory, which is what we expected to see. We have been tracking our CPI versus the competitive set and are generally pleased with what we see, but once again it's quite early in the process. You asked about productivity and what I would say here is, as I mentioned a moment ago, there will be a tailwind from a gross margin perspective as we implement our national buying processes. But keeping in mind too that that is a process, we're working closely with our vendor partners category by category, vendor by vendor. So we expect to see that start to show through towards the second half of the year, and expect to leave 2025 going into 2026, delivering on the long term algorithm.

Edward Kelly, Analyst, Wells Fargo: And then just maybe a follow-up on the pharmacy and grocery cross shopping momentum. I mean, pharmacy growth has obviously been very impressive, but the grocery business has lagged. And I'm just curious as what's happening with the momentum of that cross shopping activity, what you're doing to get those customers to engage more in the store. Over time, I mean, it seems like we should expect the grocery ID to respond to all this. I'm just kind of curious as to how you are thinking about the momentum there and when that really begins to improve.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: So as we've shared before, it does take time for the cross shopping to begin between pharmacy and grocery customers. That said, we know what they do, they often visit the store four times more frequently, they drive outsized customer lifetime value, and one of our goals with all of this is of course getting them engaged in both center store and pharmacy, recognizing that as they're engaging in the pharmacy side of the business, we are working to increase their engagement with higher service offerings, test and treat is one example, immunizations is another. From a grocery perspective, we did see positive growth in grocery in the first quarter, exclusive of our pharmacy business. So we were pleased to see that happening there. As I mentioned before too, we're focused on creating incredible amounts of productivity in our pharmacy business, including improving our sourcing, buying better, increasing automation, creating solutions for our pharmacy techs and teams to make their jobs more efficient.

We've invested in three central fill facilities in our Southwest Division, in Dallas and in Southern Washington State, which are also helping our productivity. So again, we like the total value equation when our customers engage with us in store, in pharmacy, online. That's a virtuous flywheel for us that drives ongoing growth and productivity, by the way. So we're very excited about the future and believe in the priorities that we've laid forth.

Edward Kelly, Analyst, Wells Fargo: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Rupesh Parikh with Oppenheimer and Company. Please proceed with your question.

Rupesh Parikh, Analyst, Oppenheimer and Company: Good morning and thanks for taking my question. Just going back to Retail Media, I was just curious how that ramp is going versus expectations so far and just anything surprising at this point?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Hi, Rupesh. We are very pleased with the progress that we're seeing on the media collective. Our growth is outpacing the industry. Our team has done a phenomenal job of condensing the amount of time that it takes for us to be able to give feedback to our vendor partners on the performance of their investments. They're enhancing our digital properties so that we have more inventory to be able to sell.

And we are also working on really creating more streamlined personalization opportunities so that our vendor partners can have direct connections with the customers that they are serving. So we feel good about our progress there, but we also see that as some blue sky ahead. We recognize that we're catching up in some ways and our goal is to leap forward, but there's great progress there from the team.

Rupesh Parikh, Analyst, Oppenheimer and Company: Great, and then maybe just one follow-up question, just on the consumer, just curious what you guys are seeing right now with the recently passed legislation, just any thoughts on SNAP impact?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: I'll start with the SNAP impact. So for us, we have a lower penetration of SNAP than the majority of the competitive set that we have. That said, that customer is very important to us. They typically have a larger basket. They're very loyal and we'll work hard to make sure that they have the communication and information they need to get access to those resources when available.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: I would also add to that that when you look at the new legislation, there is a very long ramp to implementation of many of the things within that legislation. So in the short term, we don't anticipate that being a headwind of any material amount in the short term. Thanks, Sharon.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: And on consumer side, we continue to see the customer seeking value. We're selling more on promotion, that's been happening for quite some time now. We're leaning heavily into own brands, understanding that and as we mentioned before, we're proud of our own brands program that we have, but we're not satisfied with the penetration that we have. So we're really leaning in for the Q2 and the rest of the year. That's upside potential for us moving ahead.

As I think about the customer, we were looking at some category information and it's been interesting, some of our top performing categories in the first quarter was kind of a tale of two cities. We absolutely saw increases in the shift into pork and ground beef as one example, again indicating that the customer is looking for value. We also saw strong growth in our deli chicken business as an example, knowing that I think customers are always looking for quick and easy meal solutions and with the increase of food away from home, I think inflation was almost 4%. We're absolutely providing value there.

Rupesh Parikh, Analyst, Oppenheimer and Company: Great, thank you for all the color.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of John Heinbockel with Guggenheim Partners. Please proceed with your question.

John Heinbockel, Analyst, Guggenheim Partners: Hey, guys. I want to start with I think you said, maybe I heard wrong, food volumes were positive in the quarter, grew. Was that right? If so, is that predominantly traffic or items per basket? And then I think your goal, a couple of quarters ago, you talked about 50 basis points.

Is that still a fair goal? You think you can do better than that?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: Yeah. So, John, traffic in the AIB were positive. On the units, it is a sequential improvement in units from Q4 to Q1. And that is not yet to positive.

John Heinbockel, Analyst, Guggenheim Partners: Okay. And then my follow-up is if you think about you referenced technology, where do you think the most fruitful labor productivity opportunities are? I think about these you guys are are promotional electronic shelf labels, you know, thinking about that, thinking about, you know, automation, back into, the warehouses. Where where are the biggest, opportunities to move the needle on cost per unit?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: John, thanks for the question. So you actually touched on a few that are very important to us today, one of which is DC automation. We've had great success with recent launches and look forward to accelerating that agenda for a variety of reasons, efficiency being one of them. With regards to store labor, we have an incredible amount of data and I think about e commerce as one example where we've actually been able to enhance productivity because we're able to get the data that we need to create more predictive scheduling, that's really helping us create efficiencies there. That's already underway in the rest of the store and we're in the process, it's actually fairly robust in center store, we're working through the fresh departments, wall to wall forecasting is what we call it and that's going be a big unlock for us.

We are currently in pilot on ESL in 40 stores at this moment in time, seeing great results there. But to your point, we're absolutely leaning in heavily on technology and automation of tasks where we can, eliminating pain points across the organization and existing tasks, and looking forward to what we're going to learn from our experiments on AI across the company, because we see further opportunity there for efficiency.

John Heinbockel, Analyst, Guggenheim Partners: Thank you.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: I would also add that over the last several years, we've invested heavily in our stores in several technologies that are used by a very large number of people in our stores. We implemented offresh. We've implemented ordering and other types of technologies. And one of the big opportunities that every retailer has is the utilization of that technology. And there is a full court press within the company on execution in the stores and elevating that in our stores.

So, we are expecting to see changes and continued improvement in the stores in the utilization of the tools we currently have. Another area that we continue to invest in, and you have to invest in it from two perspectives. One is the customer experience and one of them is from a shrink perspective, but is in the self checkout and the various things we can do with self checkout from a customer experience point of view. Using Vision AI as part of that process, We saw, as you saw in our prepared remarks, that we did have some favorability in shrink. Part of that, we believe, is coming from the technology that we have invested in self checkout.

So that is another area that it benefits you in labor in many different ways. But the key to self checkout is making sure that that customer experience is as great as it can be, And we're spending time on that and ensuring that, and I believe that will help us continue to take self checkout to the next level.

Mark Carden, Analyst, UBS: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies0: Hey, Susan. Hey, Sharon. How are you? I wanted to follow-up on pricing. Susan, I'll ask you about where your head is on pricing.

I think you've lived in the high low environment for most of your career. So curious what this iteration looks like. Are you moving to part EDLP with high low? And you mentioned this isn't is this a one time catch up or this is iterative and, of course, open to changes down the road? And then I don't know what, in the conversations with vendors, how you're communicating some of the changes as you try to work with them on the central buying?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Thanks for the question. So first and foremost, I want to highlight the fact that, and I've mentioned this a couple of times and we talked about this last time, we have an incredible opportunity with our own brands. Our penetration, while it's growing at 25.7% for the quarter, we should be at 30% plus. So we are leaning into that from both ends, both from a price perspective but also from a cost of goods perspective so that we can fuel our own growth there. Going back to your price question in general, yes you're right, we've typically been a high low retailer and if I had to describe our go forward approach, I'd say we're more of a modified high low, that's where we're looking to achieve.

And yes, it's iterative. This is absolutely not a one and done and what the team has created, which is actually pretty fantastic, internally we've created a suite of tools that helps us utilize the data that we have to anticipate the changes that we're making based off of past performance of various price points, understand the customer elasticities and then feed us what those pricing changes should be to optimize unit growth, optimize profitability. Those tools are only becoming more and more robust, we continue to add to the suite, so answer your question shortly, no, this is not a one and done. This is a new go to market strategy. We are deeply engaging our vendor partners, that takes time by the way, so as we talk about our productivity as a tailwind, that will come gradually over time as we're leaning into partnerships with our vendors to say, hey, how do we do this together?

We want to move more units, we want to move them with you, how can we lean in and create the right opportunity to grow unit sales and share collectively.

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies0: Okay, and then switching topics for a follow-up, SG and A run rate. Can you talk about, I think it was up 3.5% or so. Union contracts,

Paul Lejuez, Analyst, Citi: I'm sure it was part of

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies0: your plan at some point, because you know when they come up and you have some expectation. Can you talk about how the union contract could or couldn't change that run rate and any investments that come in? And managing it relative to where you think comps can come in, is it in the right range so that you could eventually leverage when you get some of the unit pickup in the back half?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: Simeon, yes. In our SG and A guidance, in our outlook for this year, we have anticipated what these increases could look like, and that is incorporated in the adjusted EBITDA guidance that we provided for the year. As it relates to other areas in SG and A that you didn't ask about, keep in mind this quarter we had a year over year benefit of about 63 basis points. Take a look at how much of that is one time cost. You can see the one time cost in our reconciliations in the press release.

So, about half of that comes from the elimination of merger costs, but the rest of that has been driven by productivity. One of the big areas of productivity that we expect to see this year, early in the year particularly, is going to be in SG and A. Remember, we are materially changing our ways of working. We've had several announcements on the opening of our new headquarters in India for technology, which we're very excited about. We are also transitioning many of our back end accounting functions to an existing location that we have in The Philippines, and that transition is also happening.

So, we are making several, we call them internally ways of working moves that are helping to offset some of the pressure that we're seeing in wages. And wages, don't want to specifically say union wages, it's wages in general.

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies0: Thanks. Good luck.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Carden with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Mark Carden, Analyst, UBS: Thanks so much for taking the questions. So on the pharmacy front, how does the contribution shake out from GLP-1s? And then for the growth outside of GLP-1s, is it being more driven by newer customers or more by your engaged existing customers?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: On the GLP-one question, it's about half the pharmacy comp. So think about GLP-one as half the comp. However, remember, it comes at an incredibly outsized average unit retail and script growth, actual script growth outside of GLP-one was also very strong. Susan, do you have something you'd like to add to that?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Yeah, so, Sharon touched on it, clearly the profitability is quite different on the GLP-one script itself, but the customer is quite valuable. What we found is there might be an initial dip when they start shopping with us in their grocery basket, but that quickly turns around and actually leans into items like supplements, lean proteins in our meat department, categories that are actually quite profitable for us as a company. Sharon mentioned our core script count ex GLP-one is very strong and that's again exciting to us as customers continue to engage in our total ecosystem that adds profitability, that adds long term lifetime value, so we feel very good about where we're at in the pharmacy space. That said, and I mentioned this earlier, we are very focused on productivity there, improving sourcing, increasing automation, and of course, the central field that I spoke of.

Mark Carden, Analyst, UBS: Great, and then on tariffs, I know that indirect impacts were a big unknown from an ingredient and a packaging standpoint in grocery and pharmacy. Now that we're a few months in, are you expecting this to be any more or less of a contributor to inflation over the course of the next few quarters relative to what you're expecting last quarter? Thanks.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Thank you. And yes, as we've mentioned before, well over 90% of the goods we source are domestically based, but to your point, ingredients are certainly playing a factor in our CPG partners and their cost of goods. We're starting to see increases in cost of goods moving ahead and we've got a very rigorous process of first and foremost, quite frankly just pushing back. We've worked hard and it shows in our price position as well that we've not passed through all of the inflation that we're seeing from a cost of goods perspective. Our first line of defense though is to push back with our vendor partners, deconstruct the cost increase and make sure that we're all in alignment of the rationale behind it, looking for alternate sources of supply or other products that we can push if the tariffs become unwieldy and then finally in certain cases if we have to we'll pass them on to customers, but we're going to remain very close to the competitive set, especially on key items when I start to think about commodity items that come through, which is something we do every day right away.

You know, this is part of our DNA. We sell a lot of commodity driven items and we are very agile in the pricing process there.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: And Susan, I would just add to that. It is also having us take a look at what we are offering in OwnBrands. So as we look forward and we look at the tariffs, it may be that there comes a point where we decide that an expansion in our assortment in OwnBrands is a great solution for our customer, and we're looking at that as well.

Mark Carden, Analyst, UBS: Great. Thanks so much and good luck.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Kelly Bania with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies1: Hi, good morning, Susan and Sharon. Thanks for taking our questions. I wanted to go back to the sequential improvement in grocery units. It sounds like you were pleased with that. Just want to clarify, would you expect that to continue into Q2, and it's just a pharmacy dynamic there in Q2?

Just wanted to understand really what underpins that confidence regarding the stronger second half IDs, and what's the measure of that? Is that more of a grocery unit dynamic?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: Yeah, Kelly, first and foremost, in Susan's prepared remarks, her statement about the sequential improvement in units, that is and we were clear it is grocery. So when we are referring to this sequential improvement and what we expect for the balance of the year, what is important and one of our top priorities is growing units in grocery. Now, as we look for the rest of the year, we said last quarter and we continue to believe that each quarter this year, we will continue to sequentially improve grocery units. We're making the investment in the margin. We are focused on driving those units.

And as we get toward the back half of the year, when you think about the margin, remember what Susan said, the productivity will start to provide a tailwind to the investment in order to drive the units, but we are committed to driving units through the balance of the year. Susan, do you want to add to that?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: No, Sharon, I think you said it well. The primary purpose of the investments that we're making, yes in price, yes in loyalty, yes in own brands, it's literally all about driving that unit growth and driving those improvements, so we do expect it to continue. We will be funding it again over time, as we mentioned, investments and the tail list don't exactly line up, which again, though fits the algorithm that we've shared.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: But that's what gives us the confidence. Your question was what gives us confidence? That is why we are confident.

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies1: That's helpful. And is there anything that you've learned as you've had these discussions with vendors in terms of more of a national buying process that makes you think about the opportunity over time and in any different way sizing that up in terms of the impact that could have on productivity?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Yeah, so just what we're learning as we go through the process is there's an incredible opportunity for us, right? As you think, we own our own manufacturing plants. So we understand that the more information that we can get and the further out that we're out on forecasting for our own plants creates incredible efficiencies for production. It's no different for our vendor partners who shared with us that their ability to forecast demand, which by the way we're also developing, have developed and then there's more in development, various AI tools to help us create stronger and further out demand planning signals, but it's just a complete unlock in terms of efficiencies for everybody. It also enables us to plan further ahead and align our media collective dollars along with our digital dollars and of course the cost of goods reductions that we'll see so that we can create a comprehensive program in store, online to drive more traffic and drive more units by creating this total package for the customers that we serve.

Our vendors, think we're a large company and there are times when it's very efficient and effective for us to act locally and be very agile, but our vendors clearly recognize that there is a significant change in our thought processes that we're committed to doing this. And I'm excited about what that brings for the future.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: And in the conversations, the goals that we have about driving units are completely aligned with our vendors. So we are aligned, when you're aligned on the same business objective, it's very helpful and very constructive in those conversations.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Yes, and to your point, Sherri, we have joint business plan goals that we put in place with most of the major CPGs. So again, we're aligned on the same targets, we're leaning in together and I really am excited about what will come in the second half of the year.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Montani with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question.

Paul Lejuez, Analyst, Citi: Yes, hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Just wanted to ask guidance and then one on the trends for the consumer. So on the guidance front, there was about a 40 or 50 bp increase in ID sales, but then obviously EPS did not change.

So I just wanted to confirm, is that due to the nature of the ID sales being stronger in pharma or was there incremental investments either in price or labor as you do the union contract negotiations that caused that?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: Yes, so I think it's

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: a blend of some of the things that you just described. Yes, some of the growth in our pharmacy growth continues to be outsized, right? And that's great because we love that customer, we love that relationship, but there is an impact on profitability there. Sharon, is there anything that you would add from?

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: I think that throughout the year, we expect this in the total comp guidance for 2025, pharmacy is going to be the biggest driver of comp for sales growth for the year. We are continuing, you know what that business is doing, Mike, and we continue to believe that we are going to continue to take share from pharmacy. On the grocery side, you will see that each quarter we expect to see gradual and incremental improvement in units. And that will, through the year, bring the grocery comp as a slightly bigger percentage of the total. But on the top line, you're going to see the increase that we put in the guidance for 2025, that is pharmacy grade.

Paul Lejuez, Analyst, Citi: Got it. Okay, thanks for clarifying that. And then just in terms of the consumer trends, as it relates to kind of better for you product, natural, organic and otherwise, what percent of the mix is that for you today? How is that trending? And I guess is there any surprises that you're seeing with respect to GLP-one absorption and then how that's impacting consumer buying behavior?

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Sure, so Mike what we're seeing, we call it NOSHI, natural organic specialty health and ethnic products, and those categories are growing for us. It's interesting as you start to break it down, I think there's a few things in play. Certainly trends you, sorry, certainly trends in better for you products are strong. Also interesting though, the influence that we see from specialty items like premium sparkling water is one of our top growth categories, it's fascinating to watch. This one, oh I had to double check the numbers, but cottage cheese is actually a strong growth category, yes some of that is from the focus on protein, lower carbs, perhaps GLP-one users, then, just being totally frank, Tick Tock is driving some of that.

So we're leaning into those categories, they do lend themselves, those categories pair well with some of what we see for GLP-one customers, but it goes well beyond just the GLP user. We're definitely seeing overall trends focusing on health and well-being, and that works perfectly for us as one of our five priorities is driving the customer value proposition and creating an environment, an ecosystem that brings customers into brick and mortar, into digital, into pharmacy and health.

Paul Lejuez, Analyst, Citi: Got it, thank you.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Our final question this morning comes from the line of Robbie Ohmes with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.

Cody Purdue, Senior Vice President, Treasury, Investor Relations and Risk Management, Albertsons Companies2: Hi. This is Kendall Toscano on for Robbie. Thanks for taking my question. I just have a follow-up in terms of the percent of your customers that are cross shopping grocery and pharmacy today versus how much higher you think that number could go over time. And basically just trying to get a sense of after four years of pharmacy growth in the double digit range, which has obviously been a huge sales driver but a headwind to profitability, are we nearing a point where pharmacy could eventually start to normalize or the growth rate could start to

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: normalize? Thanks. Hi, Kendall. So what we're seeing is, yes, of course the cross shopping between pharmacy and grocery is pivotal for us. We do have very strong pharmacy growth and I mentioned a lot of that is core pharmacy business.

Just a side note there as well, in that core pharmacy business we continue to strive for profitability, stronger profitability, increasing our generics mix, improving offerings such as test and treat, immunizations, those kinds of things. And again, creating that linkage between store and pharmacy is critical. From the pharmacy business, here's what I see. There's been a serious, I mean you guys see the information out there, there's been a serious decline in the availability of doors for customers to go to take care of their pharmacy needs. We think that's critical.

And I believe that we're well positioned with the steps that we've made both from an acquisition perspective, meaning acquiring scripts from outside, hiring the amazing pharmacists and techs that are out there looking for work. We need more and more of that support. So we're leveraging that and becoming, think we're becoming, that helps become an essential choice for customers. I can get my groceries there, I can meet my pharmacy needs in an environment where the doors are shrinking, right? We have less and less opportunity in certain markets, less choices for customers and we're happy to be there for them.

So I actually see it as a moat and a competitive advantage for us moving ahead with the investments that we've made in pharmacy. And so that again, can't repeat also the fact that we are striving to improve the profitability there. Again, recognizing that that customer's total value when we engage them in both center store as well as pharmacy is tremendous for us. We love those customers. We want to serve them.

Sharon McCollum, President and CFO, Albertsons Companies: And Susan, would only add also, we have invested significantly in the customer experience in pharmacy, integrating it into the total company app, and being able to serve that customer, including, we talked last quarter, now being able to pick up your prescription at the same time that you're picking up your Drive Up and Go order. And as we continue to create the linkage and the ease of shopping between the pharmacy customer and the grocery customer, we believe that that does provide incremental opportunity for us as we move forward, through the year and into next year. So these investments we're making on the digital side and linking them together with everything we're doing in pharmacy and health and then the mobile app for use in the stores, we think that that is also going to make a significant difference with these cross shopping customers. Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question and answer session. I'll turn the floor back to Ms. Morris for any final comments.

Susan Morris, CEO, Albertsons Companies: Just thank you everybody for the time today. We're excited about the year to come, and, thank you to our associates that make all of this happen.

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

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

Trading in financial instruments and/or cryptocurrencies involves high risks including the risk of losing some, or all, of your investment amount, and may not be suitable for all investors. Prices of cryptocurrencies are extremely volatile and may be affected by external factors such as financial, regulatory or political events. Trading on margin increases the financial risks.
Before deciding to trade in financial instrument or cryptocurrencies you should be fully informed of the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite, and seek professional advice where needed.
Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. The data and prices on the website are not necessarily provided by any market or exchange, but may be provided by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual price at any given market, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Fusion Media and any provider of the data contained in this website will not accept liability for any loss or damage as a result of your trading, or your reliance on the information contained within this website.
It is prohibited to use, store, reproduce, display, modify, transmit or distribute the data contained in this website without the explicit prior written permission of Fusion Media and/or the data provider. All intellectual property rights are reserved by the providers and/or the exchange providing the data contained in this website.
Fusion Media may be compensated by the advertisers that appear on the website, based on your interaction with the advertisements or advertisers.

Sign out
Are you sure you want to sign out?
NoYes
CancelYes
Saving Changes