Kirkland's, Inc.

Kirkland's, Inc.

$1.55
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NASDAQ Global Select
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Specialty Retail

Kirkland's, Inc. (KIRK) Q3 2008 Earnings Call Transcript

Published at 2008-11-21 11:00:00
Executives
Trip Sullivan - Corporate Communications Robert Alderson - President and Chief Executive Officer Mike Madden - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts
Neely Tammingo – Piper Jaffray & Co. David Magee – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey
Operator
Good day everyone and welcome to the Kirkland Inc. conference call. Today’s call is being recorded. At this time for opening remarks and introductions I would like to turn the call over to Mr. Trip Sullivan of Corporation Communications. Please go ahead, Sir.
Trip Sullivan
Good morning and welcome to the Kirkland, Inc. conference call to review the company’s results for the third quarter fiscal 2008. On the call this morning are Robert Alderson, President and Chief Executive officer and Mike Madden, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. The results as well as notice of the accessibility of this conference call on a listen-only basis over the internet were released earlier this morning in a press release that has been covered by the financial media. Except for historical information discussed during this conference call, the statements made by company management are forward-looking and made pursuant to the Safe Harbor Provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause Kirkland's actual results in future periods to differ materially from forecasted results. Those risk and uncertainties are fully described in Kirkland's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission including the Company's Annual Report on Form 10K filed on May 1, 2008. With that said, I will turn the call over to you, Robert.
Robert Alderson
Thanks Trip. Good morning everyone. We appreciate you joining us today. For the third quarter we are pleased to report a continuation of the improved sales trends and earnings performance we experienced in the first half. We continued our first half comp improvement with another positive result in the third quarter despite the impacts from hurricane Ike and a deteriorating economic situation. Like the first half, the third quarter performance featured higher merchandise margins and lower operating expenses. Improvement in operating performance combined with the sale of our former headquarters building further strengthened our financial position. Mike will now walk you through the third quarter financial results and I will follow-up with some additional remarks. Mike?
Mike Madden
Thanks Robert. Good morning everyone. For the third quarter ended November 1, 2008 we reported a net loss of $1.5 million or $0.07 per share as compared to a net loss of $10.7 million or $0.55 per share in the prior-year quarter. Net sales for the quarter decreased 3.2% to $85.9 million from $88.7 million for the prior year. Comparable store sales increased 1.2% for the quarter. During the quarter we operated with 31 fewer stores on average than the prior year, or a 9% decrease. Comp sales increased 2.2% in our mall stores and 0.8% in our off-mall stores. The comp sales increase was driven by an increase in the average ticket partially offset by a decline in the number of transactions. The average ticket was up 4%, reflecting an increase in items per transaction, partly offset by a decrease in the average retail selling price. Transactions decreased 2.8% reflecting a slight decrease in traffic counts and flat conversion rates. Sales were impacted during September by hurricanes, particularly in the Houston area. We estimate lost sales from the hurricanes to be approximately $350,000 or 40 basis points in comp sales for the quarter. Based on the normal flow through we estimate the impact on earnings was only about $0.01 per share. The high volume geographic area with the strongest comps was Texas, offset by weaker comps in Florida and Arizona. Merchandising categories performing strongest were art, lamps, and furniture, each with strong sell through and improved margin. In real estate we closed three stores during the quarter. At the end of the quarter we operated 321 stores; 213 off-mall stores and 108 mall stores, representing a 66% off-mall and 34% mall venue distribution. Total square footage under lease decreased 7.1% versus the prior-year quarter while total store units declined by 9%. Gross profit margin for the quarter increased to 33.3% of sales from 27.9% in the prior year. The components of reported gross profit margin were as follows: Merchandise margin increased 400 basis points as a percentage of sales as a result of strong sell through of new merchandise resulting in fewer markdowns. Promotional activity was light and confined to planned item promotions targeted to weekend traffic. Store occupancy costs decreased 150 basis points as a percentage of sales primarily the result of the closing of under performing stores as well as favorable lease renewals and extensions. The continued shift of the store base to less costly off-mall locations also helped the ratio. Central distribution costs increased 10 basis points as a percentage of sales as a result of a decrease to revenue base. Freight costs were flat as a percentage of sales as compared to the prior-year quarter. Operating expenses for the quarter were $25.5 million or 29.6% of sales as compared to $27.1 million or 30.6% of sales for the prior year. Within this line item at the store level operating expenses decreased 70 basis points as a percentage of sales for the quarter. This improvement was primarily the result of a reduction in advertising expenses. At the corporate level the expense ratio decreased 30 basis points as compared to the prior-year quarter. Prior year results included $446,000 in expenses associated with the opening of our Nashville office and $965,000 in severance charges related to personnel restructuring which together amounted to $0.06 per share. Depreciation and amortization was flat as a percentage of sales reflecting a reduction in capital expenditures offset by the acceleration of depreciation on planned store closings. Net interest expense was lower than the prior year quarter reflecting high borrowing levels in the prior year. We have not borrowed from our line of credit thus far in 2008 nor do we anticipate any borrowings for the remainder of the fiscal year. The sale of our former headquarters building announced in this morning’s release resulted in a small loss on sale which is included in the “other” on the statement of operations. Similar to last quarter there was no income tax benefit recorded for the quarter as the result of the valuation allowance on our deferred tax assets and our key motive losses in recent annual periods. The benefit of $113,000 recorded during the quarter related to adjustments to our liability for uncertain tax positions required by accounting standards. In the prior year quarter we recorded an income tax expense of $1.8 million or $0.09 per share. Turning to the balance sheet, inventories at quarter end were $58.8 million or $183,000 per store as compared to $62.8 million or $177,000 per store a year ago. The per-store increase was primarily the result of heavy receipts in the last week of the quarter that were originally planned for the first week of the fourth quarter. Looking at inventories on a per square foot basis, they were flat compared to the prior year. We are comfortable with these levels of inventory entering the fourth quarter and believe the merchandise mix is fresh and current. We plan to end the fiscal year with inventory levels in the range of $39-41 million which would put us equal to or slightly higher on a per store basis when compared with the prior year. At the end of the quarter we had $2 million in cash and no borrowings outstanding on our revolving credit line. That is a dramatic improvement from a year ago when we ended the third quarter with borrowings outstanding of $20.8 million. As of the end of the quarter total availability under the credit line was $45 million. Capital expenditures were $268,000 for the quarter mainly consisting of information technology and maintenance capEx projects. As mentioned in our press release we closed on the sale of the former corporate headquarters building in October and that sale resulted in net cash proceeds of approximately $2.8 million received during the quarter. For the full fiscal year we expect capital expenditures to be approximately $3 million. Net of landlord allowances our capital expenditures are expected to total approximately $2 million for the year. Looking forward to the fourth quarter we are expecting significant year-over-year improvement in our earnings performance. We are cautiously optimistic about our merchandise and our plans for store execution for the holiday season despite the turmoil in the market place. Sales trends in November to date would suggest a continuation of our year-to-date trend, but we are very early in the quarter with black Friday and several major traffic weeks still to come. Also the effect of the Thanksgiving calendar shift restricts our visibility. Before turning it back over to Robert I will provide an update on some of the financial initiatives we have previously reported. As it relates to store activity we have completed our store openings for 2008, opening a total of three stores. We evaluated some additional locations for late 2008 openings but have determined those will fall in the first quarter of 2009. We will increase our opening activity in 2009 but will remain focused exclusively on relocation of stores in proven markets. We continue to pursue closings of unproductive stores and take advantage of lease expirations and kick-out opportunities where appropriate. During the third quarter we closed three stores. The current expectation for additional closings in the fourth quarter is around 20-25 stores heavily weighted towards January. This would amount to total closings for fiscal 2008 in the range of 37-42 stores. As stated previously, and in our release, we closed on the sale of the building in October. Combined with the sale of the corporate airplane earlier this year we received net proceeds of approximately $7 million during the year through the sale of these two assets. Also as previously reported we collected an income tax refund of $2.8 million earlier this year representing the carry-back of a portion of last year’s loss to recover prior year taxes paid. The remainder of our 2007 tax loss will be carried forward to future years. Consequently this net operating loss carry-forward will serve to offset any taxable income generated in fiscal 2008. The third quarter results that further strengthened our balance sheet position, we now don’t expect any borrowings under our credit facility this fiscal year which positions us well to achieve a greatly improved cash position at the end of the fiscal year as compared to the prior year. Now I will turn it back over to Robert.
Robert Alderson
Thanks Mike. Given the tumultuous events marking the third quarter we are truly pleased to be able to record a third consecutive quarter of positive comparable sales and strong improvement in earnings performance versus the prior year period. August started the quarter off with strong comp sales and margin improvement despite a summer spike in oil prices that affected some segments of the consuming market. September was notable for hurricanes especially in our important Houston market, which impacted earnings slightly. Hurricanes happen and we typically recover in short order as happened here, but resulting refinery closures and gas production slow downs contributed to gasoline price spikes and actual fuel shortages in some of our strongest markets. Despite this our stores continued to perform relatively well. October presented a financial market melt down of historic proportions. A combination over a relatively short period of time of housing slow downs, credit issues and devaluation in the housing markets, a rapid run up in the price of oil and other energy sources and finally the financial market meltdown combined to rock the economy and jolt consumer confidence. Kirkland’s was and is impacted by those systemic shocks but our business remained relatively stable throughout the quarter. I think the best explanation for the lessened impact is we have done much of our preparation work for tough times well in advance of this economic perfect storm. We had worked very hard for a year to repair our merchandise offering, both as to content and price, and to reposition with our customer base and our historical role as a high value retailer so that our traffic, conversion and other transactional metrics remained reasonably stable. Most importantly our relentless focus on merchandise gross margin improvement has allowed us to continue to strongly improve our earnings performance even in a less than robust sales environment. Our three-year effort in improving our real estate base has begun to bear real fruit in the form of reduced expenses, especially in rent, with even better news to come next year as closure of a large group of unproductive stores occurs in late January through the first half of 2009. Stringent and disciplined expense control is already firmly in place. All of these initiatives have helped us work towards a greatly improved balance sheet and liquidity position and put the company in position to return to profitability this year. So given the conditions existing with historically low levels of consumer confidence and an uncertain political environment, continued tight credit markets and the unraveling of financial institutions and depressed real estate activity, how are we going so far in the fourth quarter? The good news is the first 20 days of November are pretty much on plan which is very encouraging. The fact we are very early in the quarter, before Thanksgiving weekend, and facing a calendar shift, mitigates reasonable certainty as to our outlook for the fourth quarter. Product gross margin continues to be strong but may be restrained somewhat later in the quarter by promotional needs if the season stalls significantly in our stores due to customer reticence on holiday spending. Our risk as to product gross margin has been mitigated by a couple of things. First, as we mentioned, we entered the quarter in a very clean inventory position. Second, we were already prepared with well-bought merchandise, enabling us to offer great prices and promote as necessary during what will undoubtedly be a highly promotional holiday period. Our seasonal merchandise in Halloween and Harvest performed extremely well during the quarter with an on-time exit, strong sell throughs, and very good margins. Christmas seasonal merchandise started more slowly but it has accelerated in the past three weeks so that we now expect it to perform at or close to plan given our current experience. A very important lift in business has been provided by a sizeable component of value price, mostly impulse, giftable items we added to the mix this year to supplement fourth quarter sales. These items have provided strong support by lifting items per transaction and average ticket and will deliver good margin performance. Mike mentioned we intended to open more stores in 2009. We are committed at this moment to a limited number of deals and will open only as many as we deem prudent under the circumstances. These stores will virtually all represent off-mall replacements of strong mall stores that have reached the end of the applicable lease. Our experience with these situations has shown us that developing the new stores will hardly impact our capital expenditure and almost unfailingly produce significantly higher sales and lower occupancy related expenses resulting in more profit. That said we will pay very close attention to the real estate market and the level of our business as we enter and proceed through 2009 and adjust our store-opening plan as necessary. So far so good. We have no special visibility into the remainder of the fourth quarter because the customer is stressed by so many factors and the economic climate is marked by uncertainty. What we do have is a well-positioned and prepared company to weather the storm and to produce strong financial results. We have the ability to and will react to market conditions as needed. We look forward to reporting to you on the results of the season in a few weeks. Thanks for your time and interest. Operator, Mike, and I are now available to answer questions from our listeners.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) The first question comes from Neely Tammingo – Piper Jaffray & Co. Neely Tammingo – Piper Jaffray & Co.: Robert, kind of a philosophical question here because what you guys are doing is so commendable right now in this environment and I think the results speak to themselves. At what point do you decide to turn on the spigot of spending on talent acquisition, opportunities, inventory, and new category growth? Clearly you guys are actually gaining share by comping positive. Where do you think you are taking these people from and what more do you think you can do for them and when do you do that? Do you wait for the environment to actually improve or do you actually capitalize on some of these opportunities while everybody else is quite weak?
Robert Alderson
I think I will speak philosophically. There is not an exact answer to this. I think you continue to feel your way through this environment. Our feeling is we don’t know how deep the lake is so we remain I think reasonably cautious about spending and expansion. I think the way we are approaching the new units we intend to add next year is reflective of that philosophy. On the talent side we are trying to make sure that we keep our company sized for the level of business we are doing. At the moment I don’t think we are particularly behind the curve with respect to people or systems or anything that we need to add to the mix. Downstream we certainly will improve our technology and we will certainly add people as necessary. I’d like to be a little deeper in the merchandising group right now and we will address that appropriately. But I think right now caution is the word. I think we’d like to see a little stabilization in the economic environment before we do anything unusual.
Operator
The next question comes from David Magee – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey. David Magee – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey: A question about drilling down to the recruitment you are seeing on the merchandising side. It is my impression you are taking it department by department within the store and working to improve it. Can you talk about which departments you have really seen more success with and what your biggest opportunity may be for the next couple of quarters in terms of those same efforts?
Robert Alderson
When this new team took over in the September/October frame a year ago we really started on a very systematic approach of trying to repair categories of business and trying to take a bite of this as something we could handle. The first place for us to look was on the wall and I think we have done a terrific job in repairing our art business. It has certainly been a leader both in sales and producing gross margin dollars and producing good margin. I think that has been a great success. We will actually work really hard on the remaining components of the wall as we go into 2009 because we think we have opportunity there specifically in mirrors and wall décor, the alternative side of it. We also made a big commitment to returning our lamp business to profitability after three years of not doing so well with it and we have done a really good job of that and we are very happy about how we are positioned in that category and what it can do for us going forward. Furniture was the same situation. We needed to repair that. We have had a big effort there and it has resulted in really good results. So we work really hard on textiles and that is something we expect to be a much better margin performer in 2009 and to present a really nice offering to our customer and it is something that will help our business. We have shown improvement this year in lighting and candle side of the business and we still think there is big opportunity there. [Deck access] has been very steady for us throughout the year and the seasonal side of our business has been very helpful in the third quarter and we expect it to be throughout the fourth quarter. So we have opportunities yet to improve our merchandising both in gross margin and sales and we are very systematically approaching that and doing what we can as fast as we can to get it all working together. David Magee – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey: Obviously there has been a lot of noise in the market place which you articulated well in your remarks, but specifically on the gas price pull back here of late are you seeing any meaningful up tick in terms of customer behavior from that factor alone?
Robert Alderson
In the summer when oil spiked and the up price in gas began to affect the economy we really didn’t see a lot of negative effect from that. Our traffic and basically the whole business was improving pretty nicely through August. We had seen traffic that started out a year negative actually work its way to the point where it was positive. We have seen continued good conversion, great items per transaction performance in our store. A lot of good things happening up to the month of August. It has just been in the last two months as we have seen sort of a combination of all those things happening along with the things going on in the economy both in the credit markets and in the financial institution situation itself it seemed to affect the customer the most. I really don’t think there has been a noticeable reaction in terms of increased traffic or significantly increased spending as a result of consumers having a little bit more money in their pocket from gas prices going down. I think there is going to be some lag on that. I think everybody is waiting really for a little stability and to sort of breathe a sigh of relief and feel like things are going to be somewhat more normalized going forward.
Operator
At this time I will turn it back over to management for any closing remarks.
Robert Alderson
Thanks for joining us today. We appreciate your interest and look forward to speaking with you in a few weeks about the fourth quarter.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen this concludes the Kirkland’s, Inc. third quarter conference call. You may now disconnect.