Second Quarter 2016
Transcription
Second Quarter 2016
Tractor Supply Company Second Quarter 2016 Safe Harbor Statement The Company claims the protection of the safe-harbor for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends these forward-looking statements to speak only as of the time of the presentation and does not undertake to update or revise them, as more information becomes available. These statements discuss, among other things, expected growth, store development and expansion strategy, business strategies, future revenues and future performance. These forward-looking statements are based on estimates, projections, beliefs and assumptions, including, but not limited to, competition, product demand, economic conditions, inflation, consumer debt levels, governmental approvals, ability to hire and retain qualified employees, weather, etc. Actual results may materially differ from anticipated results described in these forward-looking statements. Please refer to the Risk Factors section of the Company’s Form 10-K for more details. 2 Our Unique Position Leading Rural Lifestyle Retailer • Largest operator for the lifestyle • Primarily located in rural communities • ~1,500 stores in 49 states Our Customer • Land and animal owners • Self reliant and DIY • Loyal and growing Unique Niche • Dependable supplier • Items to care for home, land, pets & animals 3 Mission and Values Driven Culture 4 2015 Operational Highlights Added ~1,600 new Team Member positions Supply Chain – increased capacity Omni-channel upgrades / new website platform Continued Sustainability • Casa Grande Distribution Center – LEED Silver certified • 65M kilowatt hours saved • 21,277 tons of cardboard recycled • 3.1M wood pallets recycled 5 2015 Financial Highlights Opened 114 stores Grew revenue 9.0%; same store sales 3.1% Improved operating margin to 10.4% Grew Earnings Per Share 12.8% to $3.00 Returned $396M to shareholders through share repurchase and dividend 6 Track Record of Growth Stores 1,588-1,593 2,000 1,500 1,000 1,176 1,276 1,001 1,085 1,382 1,488 Sales (in $ billions) $8 $6 $4 500 $2 0 $0 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16* Net Income (in $millions) $500 $400 $300 $200 168 223 276 328 371 455-467 410 $0 $0 '13 '14 '11 '12 '13 $3 $2 '12 '10 '15 '16* '14 '15 1.12 '10 1.51 '11 * 2016 estimates as of January 27, 2016 1.90 '12 '16* 3.40-3.48 $4 $1 '11 4.23 5.16 6.23 E.P.S. $100 '10 3.64 4.66 5.71 6.9-7.0 2.66 3.00 '14 '15 2.32 '13 '16* 7 Strong Comp Traffic Trends 6% 5.0% 4.7% 4% 3.0% 3.2% 3.3% 2014 2015 2% 0% 2011 2012 2013 8 $0 1Q 2012 2Q 2013 2014 3Q 2015 0.82 0.81 0.68 0.55 0.64 0.55 0.46 0.35 1.12 0.95 0.87 0.73 0.50 0.42 0.35 0.31 0.27 4Q 3.00 2.66 2.32 $1 1.90 Consistent Quarterly EPS Growth $3 $2 FY 2016 9 Continuing Operating Margin Expansion Opportunity 15% Long term target of 11.5% 12% 10.4% 10.3% 10.0% 9.4% 10.5% 11.2% 10.4% 9.7% 9.4% 8.9% 7.3% 8.4% 13.9% 13.3% 7.4% 7.0% 6.7% 6.3% 3% 6.3% 6% 13.6% 13.1% 9% 0% 1Q 2Q 2012 3Q 2013 2014 4Q 2015 FY 2016 10 Operating Profit Philosophy • Balanced focus on sales and margin • Will not risk market share for margin rate • Will continue to… ‐ ‐ ‐ take calculated risks “test and learn” utilize, learn and improve from C.O.E. process • Excited about pipeline of opportunities 11 Unique Merchandise Assortment Livestock & Pet Hardware, Tools & Truck Seasonal, Gift & Toys Percent of Sales – 2015 9% 5% 44% 19% Clothing & Footwear Agricultural Products 23% 12 Merchandising Principals Dependable supplier Differentiated products Quality and value Introduce newness Maintain commitment to the Out Here customer 13 Store Growth Opportunity 14 2015 Store Openings Total: 114 in 33 states 1 – 4 new stores 5 - 9 new stores 10 or more new stores 15 Store Expansion - 2,500 Target Broader consumer base / appeal Increased attribution New markets Store Count Stores closer together 16 The 2,500 Opportunity 147/424 200/352 570/899 588/825 Tractor Supply Store Count 1Q16 / Opportunity (excludes 14 Del’s & 2 HomeTown Pet stores) = DC Locations Total: 1,505 / 2,500 17 Store Growth Cadence 2015 TSC Stores 2016e 2017e 2018e 2019e 114 ~ 120 ~ 120 ~ 120 ~ 120 Growth Rate (gross) 8.2% ~ 8.0% ~ 7.5% ~ 7.0% ~ 6.5% Store Count 1,488 • Open at a gross new store growth of 8% through 2016 • Continue our Del’s transition through 2016 • Build SG&A infrastructure to support ~120 new stores per year • Store manager development • SSC team member investment • Hold store growth at ~120 stores per year subsequent to 2016 18 The Road Ahead 19 Long Term Initiatives Sales Gross Margin Store Growth / Team Member Investment Reduced Cost Continuous Improvement Customer Relationship Management (CRM) / Loyalty Program Systems – Merchandising, Distribution, Corporate Systems, etc. Supply Chain Investment / Alternative Fulfillment Options Omni-channel enhancements 20 Driving Operating Profit Dollars Driving Sales Increasing Gross Margin Creating Efficiencies C.U.E. Price Management TVS Drive Aisle Strategic Sourcing Localization New Products Inventory Management Exclusive Brands Technology Supply Chain Sustainability 21 Sales-driving Initiatives Drive Aisle Merchandise Localization C.U.E. New Products Driving Sales 22 C.U.E. • Core assortments • Most dependable supplier • Grow market share • High in-stock levels • Price management • Expand assortments 23 Localization • Chain vs site philosophy • Relevant assortments • Brand preferences • Customer feedback 24 Drive Aisle Merchandising • Increase basket • Support event merchandising • Offer Treasure Hunt experience • Learn from customer 25 New Products • Pipeline of opportunities • Structured in-store test program • E-commerce test and learn • Open buying days • Category resets 26 Gross Margin Initiatives Price Management Exclusive Brands Inventory Management Strategic Sourcing Gross Margin 27 Inventory Management • Seasonal set and end dates • Ability to adapt and react • Implementing allocation system 28 Price Management • Science and art approach • Balance share vs rate • Clearance management • Promotional management 29 Exclusive Brands • ~ 30% of sales • Brand development approach • Value proposition • Opportunity for growth 30 Strategic Sourcing • Dependable supplier • Landed cost • Supply chain efficiencies • Multi-source emphasis 31 Exclusive/ National Brands Livestock & Pet National Exclusive Seasonal, Gifts & Toy Products National Exclusive 32 Exclusive/ National Brands Hardware, Tools & Truck National Exclusive Clothing & Footwear National Exclusive Agriculture National Exclusive 33 Marketing Initiatives Increase Sales to Existing Customers Expand Customer Base Strengthen Community Connection Build the Brand Marketing Strategy 34 Increase Sales to Existing Customers • Digital marketing • Optimize traditional National Marketing channels • Neighbors Club loyalty program pilot • Personalization - relevance 35 CRM Strategy Direction Objective: Leverage deep understanding of our customers (who they are, how they shop, how they want to interact with TSC) to deliver personalized and relevant communications that will increase their loyalty to Tractor Supply. CRM Focus Areas 36 Expand Customer Base • Broad appeal categories – pet focus • Enhance search engine marketing • Drive trial through existing advertising channels 37 Community Connection • Enhanced 4-H and FFA programs • Sponsorships of community events • Empowering stores with tools 38 Building the Brand • Authority “For Life Out Here” • Tractorize content • Influence marketing – social media • Exclusive brand marketing • Taking the brand to our customer – Follow Me to the Fair tour 39 TSC & E TEAM SALES CUSTOMER EXECUTION It’s About People & Developing Leaders Developing the “Know-How” to Drive Sales Intense Focus on the Customer Driving High Level of In-Store Execution Operating Initiatives 40 Building The Team It’s About People & Developing Leaders • • • • Hiring our customers Rewarding success Team retention Developing people & succession planning 41 Developing the Sales Force Developing the “Know-How” to Drive Sales • Product training programs • Frequent communication • Semi-annual sales meetings • Sales culture 42 Taking Care of the Customer Intense Focus on the Customer • G.U.R.A. • Developing customer relationships • Sharing success stories • Utilizing actionable customer feedback 43 Executing to the Plan Driving High Level of In-Store Execution • • • • Consistent store processes Tractor Value System (TVS) Leadership store visits Measuring store standards 44 Financial Outlook 45 Compelling Long-Term Annual Growth Targets Grow Stores 115 - 120 Same-Store Sales Growth ~ 3% - 5% Improve Operating Margin ~25 bps annually Grow EPS in the Mid-Teens as a % annually Invest to Grow Business ~ $250m - $300m per year Return Cash to Shareholders 46 Long Term Outlook 2016e 2019e Stores ~ 1,590 ~ 1,950 Sales ~ $6.9b to $7.0b ~ $8.8b Same Store Sales ~ 3.0% - 5.0% Gross Margin ~ 15 - 25 bps annually Expense Leverage ~ 5 - 10 bps annually Operating Margin ~ mid 20s bps annually E.P.S.* ~ 13% - 15% annually * Includes impact of share repurchase program. 47 Strong Cash Flow Supports Capital Allocation ($ in millions) Operating Cash Flow 2016e 2017e 2018e 2019e Est. ‘16-’19 Cummulative $ 590 $ 660 $ 700 $ 780 $2,730 250 280 300 300 1,130 Free Cash Flow $ 340 $ 380 $ 400 $ 480 $1,600 Year End Debt $ 200 $ 260 $ 350 $ 430 CapEx Leverage Ratio Peak Borrowing 2.0 x $ 340 2.0 x $ 390 2.0 x $ 470 2.0 x $ 560 Cumulative ~ $1.6b of Cash Available to Return to Shareholders 48 Capital Investment Targets New Stores 2016e 2019e $125m $140m Maintenance / Updates $50m – $60m Distribution Centers $30m – $80m Technology $30m – $40m Total ~ $250m - $300m Annually Consistent Infrastructure Investment in Future Years 49 Capital Allocation Targets 2016 to 2019 • Investing for Growth – ~ $250m - $300m annually • Dividend – $0.20 per share quarterly (raised May 2015) – 20 to 30% Payout Ratio – 15 to 20% Dividend Growth Dividend Reinvest in the Business Share Repurchase • Share Repurchase – ~ 50% of Operating Cash Flow – ~ $260m - $400m annually – ~ 2% - 3% Shares Purchased annually Creating Shareholder Value 50 Consistent Capital Allocation Last Five Years 14% Next Four Years 20% 48% 42% 2011 – 2015 $2.4b Cap Ex 38% 38% Share Repurchase Dividend 2016 – 2019 ~ $3.0b 51 Reasons to Invest in Tractor Supply Growth company in a unique niche • Serves an expanding customer base • Continued store growth in rural markets across the country “Balanced approach” to managing business • Driving sales • Improving gross margin • Managing growth investments Clear strategic plan, rigor and passion • Defined capital allocation strategy • Focused on Shareholder Value Creation 52 Thank you! 53
Similar documents
Tractor Supply Company First Quarter 2016
• Continue our Del’s transition through 2016 • Build SG&A infrastructure to support ~120 new stores per year • Store manager development • SSC team member investment • Hold store growth at ~120 sto...
More informationTractor Supply Company
including, but not limited to, competition, product demand, economic conditions, inflation, consumer debt levels, governmental approvals, ability to hire and retain qualified employees, weather, et...
More information