The Procter & Gamble Company (PG) Q4 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
Published at 2008-08-05 16:24:22
Clayt Daley - Chief Financial Officer AG Lafley - COO Jon Moeller – Treasurer
Bill Pecoriello - Morgan Stanley Nik Modi – UBS Wendy Nicholson – Citi Chris Ferrara – Merrill Lynch Bill Schmitz – Deutsche Bank [Sophia Senis] – JP Morgan Lauren Leiberman - Lehman Brothers Ali Dibadj - Sanford Bernstein Jason Gere – Wachovia Joe Altobello – Oppenheimer Connie Maneaty – BMO Capital Filippe Goossens – Credit Suisse Bill Chappell – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Alice Longley - Buckingham Research
Welcome to Procter & Gamble’s fiscal year-end conference call. (Operator Instructions) Today’s discussion will include a number of forward looking statements. If you will refer to P&G’s most recent 10-K and 8-K reports you will see a discussion of factors that could cause the company’s actual results to differ materially from these projections. As required by Regulation G, P&G needs to make you aware that during the call the company will make a number of references to non-GAAP and other financial measures. Management believes these measures provide investors valuable information on the underlying growth trends of the business. Organic refers to reported results excluding the impact of acquisitions and divestitures and foreign exchange where applicable. Free cash flow represents operating cash flow plus capital expenditures. P&G has posted on its website www.pg.com a full reconciliation of non-GAAP and other financial measures. Now I’d like to turn the call over to P&G’s Chief Financial Officer, Clayt Daley.
AG Lafley, our COO and Jon Moeller, our Treasurer are joining me this morning. As is typically the case, we have a lot of information to cover on the year end call. I’ll begin with a summary of fourth quarter results. Jon will cover business highlights by operating segment. I will then provide a brief update on commodities, pricing, markets and Folgers. I’ll also provide guidance for the current fiscal year and the September quarter. AG will then close out the call. On to the results, P&G’s business has performed well allowing us to complete both the quarter and the year with sales, earnings per share and free cash flow all at or above our long term targets. The June quarter is the 24th consecutive quarter in which P&G delivered top line growth at or above the company’s target. We also delivered another quarter of high quality earnings and record cash flow, despite unprecedented increases in commodity and energy costs. Our ability to consistently deliver our top and bottom line commitments is the direct result of the breadth and depth of our unique portfolio, the strength of our innovation and our disciplined cost management and productivity efforts. For the June quarter diluted net earnings per share increased 37% to $0.92 per share. This includes net tax benefits of $0.12 per share due to a number of significant adjustments to tax reserves in the US and other large countries. Excluding these tax adjustments P&G’s underlying business delivered $0.80 per share, $0.02 above the high end of our goal and expectations. Total sales increased 10% to $21.3 billion, organic sales were up 5%, and organic volume was up 4%. Pricing added 3% to sales as previously announced price increases took effect. Foreign exchange contributed six points to sales growth. This proportionate growth in developing regions large sizes and mid tier brands resulted in a negative 2% mix impact. Quality of earnings was strong, operating profit increased 13% for the quarter to $3.8 billion and non-operating profit was below year ago. Operating margin grew 50 basis points. Gross margin decreased 160 basis points. Higher commodity and energy costs impacted the quarter by over 300 basis points. Faster growth in Baby Care, Family Care, and developing markets reduced gross margin by about 50 basis points. We also increased restructuring activities in the fourth quarter in anticipation of the Folgers deal. These projects brought fiscal 2008 restructuring costs to slightly more than the top end of the range of $400 million. This resulted in a negative 30 basis point impact on gross margin in the fourth quarter. Without the change in business mix and increased restructuring gross margin would have been down about 80 basis points. SG&A expenses were down by 210 basis points. This was driven by tight cost control and overhead productivity improvements. Importantly, while SG&A has been down every quarter, advertising spending remained constant as a percent of sales for the year at 10.4%, even as we continue to improve efficiency. Turning to cash, operating cash flow in the quarter was $4.1 billion, up $0.5 billion from the same period year ago. Free cash flow was $2.9 billion up $300 million versus year ago. Free cash flow was 96% of earnings ahead of our 90% productivity target. P&G generated $12.8 billion of free cash flow during the year an increase of over 20% or $2.3 billion. Capital spending was 3.6% of sales below the company’s target of 4%. Working capital was up about two days versus year ago driven by higher inventory balances. Year end inventory values were impacted by the run up in commodity costs. During the June quarter P&G increased dividends by 14% the 52nd consecutive year dividends have increased. For the full year P&G paid $4.7 billion in dividends to shareholders. In July 2007 we announced a three year $24 to $30 billion share repurchase program as part of that program we repurchased $2 billion worth of stock in the June quarter bringing the fiscal year total to $10 billion, at the high end of our $8 to $10 billion target range for the year. Combining dividends and share repurchase, P&G distributed nearly $15 billion to shareholders in fiscal 2008 or over 120% of earnings. Based on the current market capitalization P&G is providing shareholders a cash yield of over 7%. To summarize, P&G continues to drive top and bottom line growth despite a challenging cost and competitive environment. We have been pricing to recover commodity and energy cost increases and we are driving productivity and operational efficiencies to expand operating margins. We are generating significant cash and are aggressively returning that cash to our shareholders while maintaining our AA credit rating. Now I’ll turn it over to Jon for a discussion of the business unit results by segment.
Starting with the Beauty segment, all end sales grew 11% and organic sales were up 4% in a very competitive market. Olay Skin Care volume grew mid single digits with over 40% growth in Central and Easter Europe, Middle East and Africa and mid teen’s growth in Western Europe. These strong results were driven by market share gains and continued distribution expansion. In the US, Olay Facial Moisturizers leading all outlet value share was in line with prior year at more than 44%. Retail Hair Care volume grew 3% despite a base period that included pipeline shipments for the Pantene base brand restage in North America. Excluding North America Pantene, global retail Hair Care volume grew 6% behind double digit growth of Head & Shoulders and high single digit growth of Rejoice. Head & Shoulders volume was up double digits in North America and Western Europe and tripled versus year ago in Japan behind the Head & Shoulders brand re-launch. Head & Shoulders is now the number one shampoo in the world. We expanded our retail Hair Care portfolio in June with the launch of Gillette Hair Care brand in North America. We also strengthened our Prestige Hair portfolio during the quarter with the acquisition of the Frederic Fekkai business. Professional Hair Care and retail Hair Color volume were both down slightly. Professional Hair Care shipments were down versus prior year due to soft results in North America and Northeast Asia. In retail Hair Color strong volume growth on the Nice ‘N Easy brand was more than offset by declines on several smaller brands. Nice ‘N Easy US all outlet value share is up more than three points to over 20% driven by share gains from the Perfect 10 line that launched in January. Nice ‘N Easy has now grown sales double digits for four consecutive years and has doubled its market share over this time period. The Cosmetics business has a very strong quarter with high single digit volume growth behind the continued success of Cover Girl Lash Blast Mascara. Lash Blast is on track to be the largest global cosmetics industry initiative every. Cover Girl’s market leading all outlet value share in the US is up nearly a point to 19%. In the Grooming segment all end sales were up 12% for the quarter and organic sales grew 4%. This compares to a base period that included Blades and Razors organic sales growth of 13% driven by the expansion of Fusion in European markets. Blades and Razors delivered solid sales and volume growth behind mid single digit market growth and continued market share gains. Global Gillette Blades and Razors share increased versus prior year to 71%. Volume in developing markets grew double digits with over 20% growth in developing Asian markets and double digit growth in Latin America behind continued distribution and market share increases. In the US, Fusion and Venus continued to grow value share but these gains were offset by declines on Legacy Male Systems. Fusion added four value share points versus year ago and is now over 36% of the US male systems market. Venus added nearly seven points behind the Embrace initiative and is now over 58% of the US female systems markets. Shave product shipments increased mid single digits on double digit growth in developing markets. In the US Gillette shave prep all outlet value share increased nearly six points to 36% behind the growth of the Fusion line. Braun shipments were down modestly due primarily to the exit of the Tassimo Coffee appliance business. Health Care all end sales grew 7% and organic volume increased 3%. This was the first full quarter reflecting the loss of market exclusivity for Prilosec OTC which negatively affected volume growth. Excluding Prilosec OTC health care organic volume increased 4% for the quarter. Feminine care volume grew high single digits with the Always brand up double digits and Naturella up more than 20%. In the US Always all outlet value share of the Pads segment increased more than a point to 58%. Share of the Pantiliner segment grew almost three points to nearly 32%. These results are driven by the continued strength of the Always Clean and Always Fresh initiatives that launched last calendar year. Expansion of Naturella in Central and Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa drove shipment growth of nearly 30% in that region and Naturella volume in Latin America grew double digits. Oral care shipments were up for the quarter with growth of both the Crest and Oral-B brands. Crest [inaudible] maintained its all outlet value share leadership in the US despite intense competitive promotional activity. P&G’s leading all outlet value share of toothpaste in the US remained at about 38% and Oral-B toothbrush value share held steady at 43%. In Personal Care shipment volumes were down high single digits due to the competitive market entry against Prilosec OTC which resulted in brand volume down more than 20% for the quarter. Despite intense competitive promotional activity, Prilosec OTC maintains a very strong 34% value share of its segment in the US. Pharmaceutical volume was up low single digits versus prior year as high single digit growth of Actonel was partially offset by lower shipments of other minor brands. Sales for the Snack, Coffee and Pet segment increased 8% for the quarter and organic sales grew 4%. The Snacks business delivered high single digits volume growth and high teen sales growth driven by the Pringles Stix, Extreme Flavors and Minis initiatives. Pringles all outlet value share of the US potato chip market is up modestly versus prior year to more than 14%. Coffee sales declined in mid single digits due mainly to an expected reduction in trade inventory ahead of the Folgers brand re-stage launching this month and due to temporary price advantages versus the leading brand and competitor. P&G’s all outlet value share of the US Coffee market was in line with prior year at nearly 36% and Dunkin Donuts is now approaching 4% value share after less than a year in market. Pet care shipments increased mid single digits for the quarter behind the Iams Proactive Health initiative for dogs and the Iams Healthy Naturals initiative for cats. Sales were up double digits as pricing was taken to recover higher input costs. Fabric Care and Home Care sales grew 13% for the quarter with organic sales up 7%. Top line growth was broad based with every region posting solid volume increases. Fabric Care global shipments increased mid single digits with balanced growth in developing markets. Tide and Arial each grew volume mid singles and the Gain and Downy franchises each grew high singles or better. We completed the North American conversion to the concentrated liquid laundry format in the June quarter. We’re on track to meet or beat every element of our success criteria for this initiative including gaining distribution on new SKUs and delivering target shelf pricing. Home Care shipments were up high single digits led by North America with a double digit volume increase. Febreze volume grew double digits behind Febreze Candles and new scent innovation on Air Effects. Febreze share of the instant action air care market is up two points to nearly 21%. Dawn and Swiffer volumes were also up double digits due partially to forward volume by retailers ahead of previously announced price increased effective in the September quarter. Batteries volume grew modestly for the quarter as solid growth in greater China and Latin America offset modest declines in developed markets that were mainly due to market contraction. Duracell alkaline value share in the US was down about a point to 47%. In Western Europe lower volumes were driven by trade inventory reductions in anticipation of the September quarter launch of a new Duracell marketing and promotional campaign. Baby Care and Family Care delivered an excellent quarter with all end sales growth of 10%. Organic sales also grew 10% and organic volume increased a very strong 9%. Pampers Diapers global volume grew mid teens with each region posting shipment increases. Developed markets grew mid singles and developing markets grew high teens. China, Russia, Turkey, India, Saudi Arabia, Poland and the Philippines all delivered double diaper volume growth. In the US, Luvs diaper volume grew mid teens and Pampers Baby Dry grew high single digits. In total, P&G all outlet value share in the US Diaper market increased nearly a point to 35%. In Western Europe Pampers market leading diaper share was in line with prior year at a strong 54%. Family Care organic volume grew high single digits behind double digit growth on Charmin, and mid single digit growth on Bounty in North America. Charmin US all outlet value share increase more than two points to over 28% behind the Ultra Soft and Ultra Strong innovation launched nearly a year ago. Bounty US value share also increased more than two points to nearly 47%, a 43 year high, continuing to leverage the Best Bounty Ever initiative. That concludes the business segment review, now I’ll hand the call back to Clayt.
There are several important topics I want to discuss before getting into guidance; commodities, pricing, market growth rates and Folgers. Starting with commodities, the rate of commodity and energy cost increase has clearly accelerated. For the fiscal year just ended we incurred approximately $1.5 billion in incremental costs. There’s a great deal of volatility and uncertainty so this is a moving target. Based on where spawn and forward markets are today we expect to incur about $3 billion in additional commodity and energy costs this fiscal year. This is higher than we anticipated three months ago when we expected commodity and energy costs to be up more than $2 billion. Since that time crude oil, diesel fuel and natural gas have each made moves of 25% to 35%. Other important materials such as surfactants, alcohols and sodash have moved up sharply as well. Given the magnitude of this increase I want to help frame the margin dynamics for you. If we take the results from the fiscal year just completed and simply add $3 billion in commodity costs to cost of goods sold and $3 billion of pricing to net sales holding everything else equal our gross margin would decline by about 180 basis points and operating margin would drop by about 70 basis points, even though we would fully maintain our profit. A complete reconciliation of this is posted on our website so you can check our math. Pricing beyond commodity and energy cost increases to maintain operating margin would be very risky given the pressure that our consumers are under. We’re going to have to live with some amount of gross margin compressions throughout this fiscal year. It is important to understand this to put our April-June, July-September and fiscal ’09 results in the right context. We have also previously announced that we will incur additional restructuring costs in fiscal 2009 in order to offset the dilution caused by the Folgers transaction. I’ll say more about this later but these additional restructuring projects will lower operating margin by roughly 50 basis points. Assuming we fully price to offset the impact of commodities and we execute our plan to offset Folgers dilution gross margin would be down 180 basis points and operating margin down about 120 basis points and that’s the starting point for fiscal 2009. To manage our business against this back drop we are pricing to recover commodity costs and challenging every part of our cost structure. Since the last call we announced price increases in Oral Care, Family Care, Baby Care, Fabric Care, Health Care, Beauty Care, Home Care, Batteries, and Pet Nutrition. On the cost front each of our businesses are working to strengthen its ongoing cost savings projects in manufacturing, product formulation and capital spending efficiency. In SG&A we are broadening and accelerating the overhead productivity program we discussed at Cagney. We also continue to improve return on our marketing spending while we increase on marketing investments at roughly the same rate as sales growth. To summarize, commodity and energy increases will put pressure on margins even as we price to offset those increases but what really matters is cash and profit which will grow at our target rates this year. Turning to our markets, on a global basis market growth rates remain in the 3% to 4% range on a value basis and one to two points below this on a volume basis. Developed markets are slowing modestly but still growing for the most part. We have not yet seen a slow down in developing markets which continue to grow in the high single digit pace. We do see some evidence of trade down. For instance, in Laundry Detergents, Tide grew volume in mid single digits in the fourth quarter down from its high single digit growth previously while Gain continued to grow volume in high single digits. This highlights the benefits of our tiered portfolio. We also continue to see examples of trade up where an invention warrants it. A good example is Perfect 10, our premium priced retail hair color. Perfect 10’s value share is above 3% and almost 100% of that is incremental to the Nice ‘N Easy brand. Gillette Clinical Strength Deodorant is another good example. Gillette Clinical Strength is priced two times higher than the base offering but continues to gain distribution and share. Private label in the US is up modestly excluding Personal Health Care where Prilosec OTC came off patent exclusivity, private label shares in our categories are up less than half a share point in aggregate and most importantly P&G continues to grow or hold value share in the majority of our categories. Like commodities, market dynamics are something we will continue to closely monitor taking a balanced consistent measured approach with one eye on sales and the other on volume. Switching to Folgers, on June 4th we announced the signing of a definitive agreement to merge the Folgers Coffee business into the JM Smucker Company and an all stock reverse morse trust transaction. Since that time we have filed a preliminary S-4 with the SEC and clarified the transaction structure as a split merge where P&G shareholders tender shares in exchange for new Smucker shares. The deal structure maximizes the after tax value of the Coffee business for P&G shareholders and minimizes earnings per share dilution versus other structures. We expect to complete the transaction during the second quarter of fiscal 2009. The Folgers deal will bring with it a significant one time gain. We will not know the exact amount of the gain until the deal is completed. For now our guidance assumes that the gain will be approximately $0.50 per share and again occurring in the December quarter. As I mentioned earlier P&G will incur additional restructuring costs during fiscal 2009 in order to offset about $0.04 of dilution caused by the Folgers transaction. The cost of these additional restructuring projects will be about $400 million. Adding this amount to our ongoing base restructuring budget of $400 million brings our fiscal year 2009 restructuring budget to approximately $800 million. The Folgers gain will be outside of operating earnings and will only impact the December quarter. The incremental restructuring charges will be in operating earnings and will impact all four quarters. The September and December quarters will be the most heavily impacted as we have chosen to accelerate several projects to get as much of the benefit as possible into this fiscal year. The additional restructuring costs will be about $0.04 per share in Q1 and Q2 and about $0.02 per share in Q3 and Q4 adding to about $0.12 per share for the year. If actual results are materially different than these estimates we will update these numbers. Otherwise we will not provide further guidance or reconcile the quarterly split of restructuring charges during fiscal 2009. Before moving on I need to take a moment to reassure you that P&G’s approach and philosophy toward restructuring charges has not changed. We will continue to manage our business with ongoing versus episodic restructuring and we’ll continue to report the results including these costs. In situations where strategic portfolio decisions result in stranded overheads and earnings dilution we will take action to offset those impacts. In fiscal year 2010 we expect restructuring spending to return to fiscal 2008 levels as a percent of sales. Now on to guidance, for fiscal 2009 P&G projects organic sales growth of 4% to 6% in line with our long term target range. With that, price mix should contribute to a 3%, foreign exchange is estimated to have a positive impact of 2% to 3%, acquisitions and divestitures will reduce net sales by about 1% to 2% and therefore in total we expect all end sales growth of 5% to 7% for the year. Organic volume is likely to grow 2% to 3% this is below the 4% to 5% we have been delivering during the first half of the calendar year which we think is appropriately conservative giving the amount of pricing that we have recently announced. Also the fact is I mentioned earlier that volume growth in our categories is below sales growth by 1% to 2%. We expect gross margin to be down only 75 to 125 basis points for the year despite the fact that the combined impact of commodities and pricing will reduce gross margin by about 180 basis points. We will accomplish this through cost savings programs and volume leverage. SG&A will be 75 to 125 basis points lower on the year with productivity savings more than offsetting the approximate 50 basis points of the incremental Folgers restructuring charges. The net result of our aggressive cost savings and productivity efforts is that despite roughly 70 basis points of net commodity and pricing impacts and incremental 50 basis points from restructuring operating margins on an all end basis should be about flat for the year. The tax rate should be between 27% and 28%. Our updated fiscal 2009 EPS guidance starts with fiscal 2008 GAAP results of $3.64 a share. Backing out $0.14 per share of tax benefits this brings us to an adjusted base EPS number of $3.50 a share for fiscal 2008. From that base we are projecting EPS growth of about 10% to $3.80 to $3.87 per share. This includes the $0.04 Folgers dilution and compares to our prior guidance of $3.80 to $3.85. We took the high end of our guidance range up by $0.02 a share to reflect better results in the fourth quarter. We have also widened our guidance rate slightly which we think is prudent given the volatility and uncertainty that exists in the commodity and energy markets today. To arrive at the GAAP guidance for 2009 you need to add the Folgers one time gain of $0.50 a share and then subtract $0.12 a share in temporary increases and restructuring charges. This produces a fiscal 2009 GAAP EPS range of $4.18 to $4.25 a share. We have included a full reconciliation in the press release materials. We expect to continue to generate strong cash flow and are confident that we will deliver against our goal of 90% or greater free cash flow productivity excluding the impact of the Folgers gain which is a non-cash item but will result in substantial additional share repurchase when the transaction is executed. While we expect to deliver the fiscal year numbers in line with long term targets there is likely to be greater quarter to quarter earnings volatility in fiscal 2009. We’ve been dealing with higher input costs with pricing but pricing does not take place instantaneously. We like to couple pricing with innovation to deliver better consumer value. We also need to give our retail partners time to adequately plan for pricing. All of these dynamics are factored into our planning efforts. The lag between when we announce pricing and when it’s effective on our revenue combined with a rapid escalation that took place in commodity markets during May and June will create some gross margin compression during the September quarter. We will catch up as price increases we just announced take effect in September and October and expect to see sequential gross margin improvement throughout the year. Turning to the September quarter, organic sales are expected to grow 4% to 6% within this price mix should contribute 2% to 3%, foreign exchange is estimated to have a positive impact of 4% to 5%, acquisitions and divestitures will reduce sales by about 1% and so in total we expect all end sales growth of 7% to 10% for the quarter. Organic volume growth will be 2% to 3%. We expect earnings per share to be in the range of $0.98 to $1.00 a share including the $0.04 of additional restructuring costs. On a GAAP basis this is up 7% to 9% versus year ago and 9% to 11% excluding the $0.02 per share tax benefit in the base period. Gross margin will be down 250 to 300 basis points primarily due to commodity and energy cost increases. Business and geographic mix will also decrease gross margins. We expect gross margins to improve sequentially during the balance of the year. We will offset about 50% to 60% of the gross margin reduction with focused productivity efforts which should result in operating margins being down 100 to 150 basis points for the quarter. Excluding the 4% per share of incremental restructuring costs operating margin should be down less than 50 basis points and operating income should increase in high single digits. The other income should be up versus year ago reflecting the timing of minor brand divestitures such as ThermoCare which was announced in July. We expect the tax rate for the quarter to be about 28%. Now I’ll turn it over to AG to wrap up the call.
Fiscal 2008 was another very good year for P&G. Total sales grew 9% to $83.5 billion. We’ve more than doubled the size of our business over the past six years. Sales in developing markets exceeded $25 billion and now account for 30% of our total business. P&G is now the largest consumer products company in the developing world. Organic sales grew 5% in the middle of our long term target range of 4% to 6%. For seven years running we’ve delivered these top line objectives. Two thirds of our billion dollar brands grew value share globally. Fusion became our 24th billion dollar brand and did so faster than any other P&G brand in history crossing the threshold in just under two years. Excluding the Health some significant adjustments to tax reserves diluted earnings per share increased 15% to $3.50 a share. Our cash performance was excellent. We generated $12.8 billion of free cash flow and returned over 120% of net earnings to shareholders through dividends and share repurchase. On top of all this, we beat the odds with say large acquisitions fail by successfully completing the integration of Gillette. We exceeded our cost synergy and dilution targets, revenue synergies are on target with significant up side over the next three to five years. Gillette and Oral-B brands are platforms for innovation and we’ve just begun the efforts to fully leverage these equities. Looking forward, I believe P&G is well positioned for continued success. Our portfolio, our commitment to innovation and our productivity efforts are the reasons for this. Our portfolio is stronger than at any time in our history. With the addition of Fusion, P&G now has 24 billion dollar brands far more than any other company. Billion dollar brands are platforms for innovation; they support larger investments in consumer research and R&D. They build strong equities with consumers, they become indispensable to retailers and they earn a leadership share of category profit. P&G’s billion dollar brands give P&G the number one or number two position in 18 different product categories around the world. This breadth of category leadership position is unmatched in our industry. This portfolio of brands and categories provides many unique advantages, strong growth potential and financial stability and reliability. Let me share just a couple examples of how the portfolio creates unique advantages for us. The first example is cost category innovation. Bleach technology from Laundry has been used in Health and Beauty Care products such as Crest White Strips and Clairol Perfect 10 hair colorant. Non-woven top sheet technology started in diapers, traveled to feminine care then moved on to Swiffer and Olay Daily Facials. Proprietary perfume technology has been used to enhance the performance of Bounce and Febreze our fine fragrance brands Camay and more recently Secret and Gillette Clinical Strength Deodorant. Looking forward we are very excited about the innovation possibilities we have in combining Gillette’s expertise and mechanical engineering with our expertise in chemical engineering. A second example of portfolio advantage is developing market penetration. The depth and breadth of P&G’s portfolio allows us to penetrate markets quicker and deeper than many competitors because it allows us to attract and build a network of best in class dedicated distributors in countries like China, India and Russia. These distributors have the deepest reach and the best capabilities in their respective markets. Today, our distributor network in China reaches 2,300 cities and 40% of towns and villages. This is about 60% of the population and 800 million more people than our next largest competitor. In India our distributor network now covers 4.5 million stores an increase of 2 million stores in just five years. In Russia we are now reaching 80% of the population. The third example I’ll offer is an advantage created by scale and by the unique combination of categories that comprise our portfolio. In combining Household and Health and Beauty businesses each benefits from the unique scale advantages of the other. Health and Beauty benefits from the larger raw material purchasing pool created by high tonnage, Household businesses like laundry, diapers and other paper products. They’re able to purchase packing materials and basic commodities at lower prices than direct competitors. Household care enjoys economies of scale created by Health and Beauty cares larger advertising and marketing budgets. The cost advantages created by scale provide the investment flexibility needed to build our brands with leadership levels of innovation and marketing support. These examples are just three of the many ways in which we’re advantaged by our diversified portfolio. Our portfolio as currently structured has significant potential for growth not just in Health and Beauty but also in Household care. Household care excluding acquisitions has grown sales at a five year compounded annual growth rate of about 40% in China and India, 30% in Russia and 20% in Brazil and Turkey. Household Care also had significant growth up side in the developed world. In the United States innovation, compaction and lower prioritization of the category by competition have driven meaningful growth in categories like Laundry. Other categories like Bath Tissue are growing in excess of 10% on an all outlet basis because of better consumer understanding and shopper segmentation and of course leading innovation. Household Care has increased sales in the US excluding acquisitions by almost 40% over the past five years, adding approximately $4 billion to our sales. Our Health and Beauty business gives us access to a structurally attractive $370 billion global market that is growing on average 4% to 6%, has favorable demographics and which is still fairly fragmented. P&G share of this market is still only about 10% which of course we expect to grow steadily over time. We generate 30% of our sales in developing markets today and that number is increasing every year. We have leadership shares in China, Russia, Poland, Turkey and Saudi Arabia. In China, P&G is number one in 11 of 12 categories in which we compete. We’re the largest consumer products goods manufacturer by a factor of four and we have, as I said, the deepest distribution network. In Russia our value share is now about 40% and sales are three times larger than the next largest CPG manufacturer. In Poland, value shares are approaching 30%. In Turkey, the number is closer to 40% and in Saudi we are approaching 50%. There is still an awful lot of room for growth. Despite the size of our developing market business we are frankly still under developed in these countries. We currently compete in only nine categories in India, 11 in Brazil, 12 in China and 18 in Russia. In Indonesia the fourth most populous market in the world we compete in only six. This compares to North America where we currently compete in 24 categories. Sales per person per year is another way to look at market development potential. Using the US is probably not a fair point of comparison so let’s use Mexico. In Mexico, P&G generates sales of approximately $20 per person per year. In Brazil that number is less than $10, in China less than $5 and in India still less than $1. In addition to unique advantages in growth potential our portfolio provides financial stability and reliability. This allows us to reach quickly to competitive challenges in a given area while continuing to deliver the results that shareholders expect from us. Stability allows us to think longer term which is what building enduring brands is really all about. It allows us to reliably and consistently invest in innovation and P&G’s commitment to innovation has never been stronger. Innovation is what will differentiate the winners and the losers in our industry and in the current environment. Innovation drives consumer value and builds brand equity and trust over time. Both brand value and brand equity scores for P&G brands are strong. Over 70% of our billion dollar brands have top quartile consumer value scores and approximately 80% have top quartile equity scores. P&G’s commitment to cost control and productivity has also never been stronger. Over the last year our selling, research and administrative costs as a percentage of sales dropped 100 basis points with advertising growing in line with sales. We’re committed to accelerated progress in this area; our productivity focus will provide us with the financial flexibility we need to deal with short term challenges while maintaining our focus on the long term drivers of value creation. All of these things, our category and geographic portfolio, our unwavering commitment to innovation and our focus on productivity give me the confidence that we’ll continue to deliver the results our shareholders expect from us despite the challenging and more volatile environment in which we’re now operating. Now Clayt, Jon and I would be happy to take your questions.
(Operator Instructions) Your first question comes from Bill Pecoriello - Morgan Stanley. Bill Pecoriello - Morgan Stanley: On the price mix guidance for ’09 is that assuming that the price will be four to five and you’re holding the mix negative 2% was on the fourth quarter so no additional trade down expected and then in the volume component this is what your elasticity models are showing by category by market there’s no category market that you would single out in terms of where we might see more of the volume impact this is pretty broad based give the pricing.
I think the volume is pretty broad based and I think your assessment on the relationship between pricing and mix is actually pretty close. I think that assessment is pretty accurate.
Your next question comes from Nik Modi – UBS. Nik Modi – UBS: In terms of going back to the volume growth what are you embedding in terms of the emerging market growth for fiscal ’09 in terms of volumes?
We think that we still expect to deliver double digit organic sales growth in emerging markets. I would say that the volume growth behind that will probably be upper singles and therefore it’s quite clear based on what’s happened to the markets. A lot of this is driven by the markets as it impacts volume growth where volume growth is now below sales growth by a couple of percentage points in North America and in Western Europe. That’s what will create the aggregate 2% to 3% volume growth for the company.
Your next question comes from Wendy Nicholson – Citi. Wendy Nicholson – Citi: If I could follow up on Nik’s question, I think he was asking volume growth in emerging markets and my question is the 2% to 3% outlook is a little on the low end because I would have expected volume growth in markets like China, Russia and India to be healthy, healthy double digits and what we’ve heard from some other companies is that reported sales growth in those emerging markets is lower than volume growth because of the heavy levels of promotion and that kind of thing. In a market like China specifically where it sounds like you’ve got so much headroom from a category perspective and reaching more of the population what kind of outlook for volume growth do you see in China over the next 12 months.
We’re seeing the opposite; we’re seeing sales growth exceed volume growth. There are significant price increases going on in emerging markets as well. We have been raising prices in Russia and Eastern Europe some fairly sizeable percentages, in China and Latin America as well. We are seeing organic sales growth rates well above volume growth rates and that’s why as I said we think the volume growth rate in emerging markets is likely to be in the upper singles. I think its important also to note that we think that it’s prudent given the amount of pricing that is going into the marketplace to not get ahead of ourselves in terms of what volume growth is likely to be in this environment.
The markets we estimate are growing, take our two biggest developing markets, SAMEA and China we think they’re growing about 7% in aggregate across all of our categories. As Clayt just said we actually have a couple quarters or more now of concrete experience where we’ve been rolling through pricing across our categories and we’re delivering very consistent double digit sales growth but it’s been on high single digit volume growth. As Clayt also said, we have pricing planned that’s not going to impact until this first quarter of the new year and into the second quarter of the new year. We’re trying to estimate the roll through there. The other thing that I think is important to understand is one of the biggest engines to growth in developing markets in the past year has been the big cities. In the big cities we’re selling more of our premium line. The kind of product lines that we’re selling in the Shanghai and Moscow and Delhi of the world right now are actually growing sales at a rate faster than volume. The third point is incredibly important, we’re one month into a new year, and we’re looking at the largest increase in commodity and energy prices at least any of us who have been with the company 30 plus years now have seen including the 70’s. We’re going to be taking pricing that is unprecedented. We just want to make sure that we’re prudent. We want to make sure that we’re cautious and we’re careful. If we do better that would be great.
Your next question comes from Chris Ferrara – Merrill Lynch. Chris Ferrara – Merrill Lynch: I wanted to ask a little bit about the mix overall back to that. Obviously decelerated, can you quantify how much of it is geographic mix versus what mix was in developed market? Could you talk about what mix looked like in the US and Western Europe?
About 1% in geographic of the total which is pretty consistent with what we’ve been seeing for the last couple of quarters. Chris Ferrara – Merrill Lynch: One point down for developing markets?
Obviously as that becomes a bigger percentage of our business it’s a little bit bigger drag but it’s still worth it, it’s where you want to be. You want to be where babies are born, households form, incomes are rising and economies are growing faster and we just have a lot of white space.
As we’ve said many times before from an all in after tax profit basis this is not a negative mix story.
Your next question comes from Bill Schmitz – Deutsche Bank. Bill Schmitz – Deutsche Bank: Can we talk a little bit longer term on how you juxtapose the short term pressures in the business and having to really belt tighten on the SG&A side and how that impacts both the deliver the decade. What you pushed to deliver the decade and what’s left in the tank after that. A long way of saying are you guys trimming fat here in the SG&A side or is there some muscle there as well given the unprecedented rise in input costs in the short term?
I think there’s still a long runway for the kind of steady and consistent growth that our targets represent. Let me hit the key drivers, the first is the portfolio and I hope we’ve made it clear that we’re going to continue to evolve the portfolio over time. I think Clayt and I have tried to be very clear about that and I think if you look at our actions over the last eight to 10 years you’ve seen it. Very methodically move out of categories where the growth prospects aren’t as good, where they aren’t quite as structurally attractive and where they don’t lend themselves to our brand and innovation driven business model and you will continue to see that. The portfolio will be a growth driver. The second piece is innovation. We worked very hard this last eight to 10 years to build a robust innovation engine and we think we’ve got one and we’ve said before we have clear visibility out at least five years more on some of our businesses and we’re looking at an innovation pipeline that’s robust enough to deliver the growth rates that we’ve set for ourselves. Most of our organic sales growth every year is driven by new product innovation. We could talk about a lot of things there but the way we innovate the whole connect and develop program over half of our new products now have at least one outside partner. The way we cross pollinate technologies and learn from each other and reapply. There’s just a lot there. The third one in the productivity I hate to say it but this is my 32nd year and there’s still fat to trim. It’s not because we don’t work at it. It’s not because we don’t have 138,000 P&G’s working their hardest everyday around the world it’s simply because there are always ways to do things more simply and that’s what we’re focused on. We’re focused on simplicity and productivity. I’ll tick off a few really quick ones. GBS IDS we moved to the shared services structure back in the early art of this decade. It’s been a big driver for productivity and we’ve still got more productivity to grow. We’ve got five more years of productivity improvement currently identified. Look at our CapEx; 10 years ago we were running 7.8% of sales. We now arguably have a portfolio that should be as capital intensive especially when we added Blades and Razors and Batteries. We just turned in 3.6% this is fantastic work by our engineering and product supply and R&D organizations. Look at our R&D productivity, what we run as a percentage of sales; we peaked at 4.8% of sales a decade ago. We’re running 3.2%, 3.3% of sales. There’s a little bit more productivity there. We still have a lot of productivity opportunity where our organization structures connect. There is duplication and there are opportunities to be more efficient where the GBU touches the MDO, etc. The program we laid out at Cagney we’re going to accelerate and we’re going to broaden and there’s at least a five year timeline for that one.
Your next question comes from [Sophia Senis] – JP Morgan. [Sophia Senis] – JP Morgan: Most of the consumer companies actually are seeing organic growth accelerate, they take more pricing. What are you doing differently to get your top line accelerated?
What we’re saying is that the pricing we’re taking is on top of the volume growth. The scenario where our sales growth would be a little higher is if we could get toward the upper end of our volume growth range and if the price increases are fully reflected and we don’t end up in a situation where we have to spend money back into the marketplace. That’s the scenario where organic sales growth could be on the upper end of our ranges.
Your next question comes from Lauren Leiberman - Lehman Brothers. Lauren Leiberman - Lehman Brothers: I still had a follow up on the mix question because don’t feel like it got totally answered and then one on advertising. The geographic mix was one point but what were mix trends in developed markets is that the other negative point of mix?
Yes, that’s what we said. We have seen some mix, some trade down to lower priced brands that are still P&G brands that have created some negative mix.
There are really three things going on here. One is developing markets which Clayt commented on. The second is some trade down and the third one is our mix of categories. When we do more Baby and we do more Family Care that impacts our mix. As Jon pointed out when you look at it all from a profit standpoint, on an earnings basis we do fine because there are really no negative mix effects when you get to the after tax profit line. It’s a little bit complex but that’s the way it’s working and as we continue to grow in developing markets we’re going to see this top line net sales mix impact. Frankly, when you’re in an economic period like this in Western Europe and the US the staples businesses hold up better, they’re more stable, people keep buying the staples every week and using them every day. That means we see a little bit of negative top line mix coming from the Household business. Lauren Leiberman - Lehman Brothers: The advertising piece, you guys commented on advertising for the full year. I wanted to know what advertising grew in the quarter and then as you think about next year because of the change in the CMO is advertising becoming a target for more productivity.
No, we don’t disclose quarterly advertising spending as a percent of sales. Suffice it to say, we spent 10.4% last year which was the same as the year before and our plans for the coming year would be to sustain it at about that level. Cutting advertising is not part of our plans to cut costs.
Our thrust is almost every year we’re right about at 10% usually up a few ticks. What’s changing is the mix which I think you understand obviously less TV. In developing markets TV is still powerful. The third thing that’s going on is we keep driving the market mix modeling in the marketing RLI so when we spend that 10% plus we get more bang for it. We get 11% or 12% worth of bang for it. In terms of the change from Jim to Mark, I’d say two things. One, we’re going to run the same brand building and marketing focus program with both guys, they’ve been working together on reinventing brand building over the last year. Some of the productivity things that Jim started in marketing, Mark will continue.
The productivity things related to people not to advertising spending. The advertising spending is fundamentally the decision of the business units.
Your next question comes from Ali Dibadj - Sanford Bernstein. Ali Dibadj - Sanford Bernstein: Maybe I’m the only one confused about this but I love your clarification particularly on the restructuring on Folgers. Are you saying the $400 million that you’re spending on the restructuring of Folgers would not have been spent otherwise without Folgers? The reason I ask that is it seems a little bit disproportional to me that you’re restructuring internally at $400 million for $80 billion sales of the business…
As we’ve said, we think the ongoing restructuring program will grow over time with the business. If Folgers hadn’t happened there’s a chance that the restructuring program in fiscal ’08-‘09 would have been a little bit over, it might have been $400 to $500 million versus $300 to $400 million, $400 to $450 million I don’t know. It might have grown a little bit but it certainly would not have gone up to $800 million. The increase to $800 million is directly tied to the Folgers transaction and our desire to rapidly deal with the stranded overhead costs and rapidly deal with the earnings dilution. If you look at the $0.04 earnings dilution which on an after tax basis is about $135 million on a pre-tax basis that will be close to $200 million, I don’t think the incremental structuring relative to the amount of dilution we’re trying to mitigate is off by a lot.
Your next question comes from Jason Gere – Wachovia. Jason Gere – Wachovia: I was wondering if you could give a little more clarity about the sales by channel in the developed market. Talking about the role of incremental in store communication to drive the innovation that you’re bringing to the marketplace.
You asked a question about our channel progress in developed markets? Jason Gere – Wachovia: Correct
Obviously if you look at the monthly retailer report and if you look at consumer shopping behavior over the last several weeks and months what’s going on is she’s reducing trips and she’s consolidating her shopping and that has advantaged the club channel we’re in a higher than fair share position. For some shoppers it has been good for discounters and I think obviously Wal-Mart has done reasonably well in this environment and that’s not surprising they’re well positioned. The other channel that I think has done pretty okay is the Dollar channel in the US. If you turn to Western Europe it’s still a story of discounters. The growth channel is the discounters, although what’s changed versus a few years ago is the soft discounters are now going faster than the hard discounters which is good for branded manufacturers like P&G. The Legal’s of the world are actually growing faster than Aldi and we are well represented in Legal. We’ve spent a lot of time and effort building out our distribution with Legal over the last few years. That’s been the trend. I think you have to be careful not to look just at channels. There are winners within each channel and the grocery channel some of the grocery players are doing quite well. The second question was about; remind me of your second question. Jason Gere – Wachovia: Thinking about more from the alternative channels from that perspective?
Looking at retail channels? Jason Gere – Wachovia: No, looking at club, looking at mass dollar from that perspective. More obviously to mass and to club if there’s any incremental in store communication needed to drive the innovation.
I would say three things, one is we need to be strong in innovating where shoppers are shopping so we follow the shopper; the consumer is the boss we follow the consumer with demand creation and with our innovation we follow the shopper. Second thing is clearly there’s been a shift and you’ve seen it from us and I’m sure you’ve seen it from other players in our industry to more in store communication, more in store marketing. Thirdly, I would say we’re all experimenting continuously with what we need to do to generate more trial. I think I’ve said this on prior calls we still have a huge opportunity. We have a $1 to $2 billion net sales opportunity. We had a question earlier how could we accelerate our growth. We could close our trial opportunity just on our current brands and with our current innovation that’s in the market. We’re experimenting continuously with in store and out of store techniques to build trial faster.
Your next question comes from Joe Altobello – Oppenheimer. Joe Altobello – Oppenheimer: In terms of the developing market growth I’m curious why haven’t we seen these emerging markets slow given that a disproportionate amount of their incomes are typically spent on food and fuel and that’s where you’re seeing a lot of the cost inflation. Is the discretionary income growth in these countries overwhelming that inflation impact? Looking ahead to ’09 I know China is one country, but typically what you see is post Olympics the GDP growth of the host country tends to slow considerably. Are you taking that into consideration in terms of your ’09 guidance?
The consumers who literally have had to shift their income to deal with higher food prices, the consumers who are that far down the economic spectrum are not heavy consumers of our products. Even in emerging markets if consumers are making choices on what to buy because of higher food prices at least so far they’re not choosing to reduce consumption in the staples categories. Those markets are continuing to grow at the rates they’ve been growing. We’ve said before we don’t know how to predict this one. Will these market growth rates continue forever, no. There will be a point at some point where we will start to see some slow down even strictly because of the law of large numbers as these markets get significantly larger bases behind them. At least for the moment we have not seen slow down and it would be difficult for us to predict it.
What’s been going on is that there are broadly speaking three income levels that we’re doing business with across developing markets. I spoke about the highest income group they tend to be in the biggest cities generally two wage earners and incomes rising fairly fast. I think what’s been going on in that developing market top tier growth has been more than offsetting the developing market lowest tier pressure that’s come from food inflation. We just have to watch that. The other thing I think is important to understand is no two developing countries are alike. What we do in China is different in important ways versus what we’re doing in Brazil or Russia, Ukraine for example. The third thing I think Clayt makes the right point, we had a lot of questions about the volume guidance for next year but we’re trying to be cautious all the way around because yes, there is uncertainty. The Chinese GDP is not a consumer driven GDP. Our consumer markets are growing about 7% the one’s we’re in, in China, their GDP has been growing at a rate faster than that. We’re cautious and we’re watchful and we’re in the market everyday and we try to stay very close to consumers. We try to stay very close to our distributors and retailers and we try to be agile and flexible and adaptable.
Your next question comes from Connie Maneaty – BMO Capital. Connie Maneaty – BMO Capital: I have a longer term question on restructuring. I understand that the plan is to do restructuring on an ongoing rather than episodic basis and the consolidation of distribution centers is part of that ongoing process. Are there circumstances under which an episodic charge might be more appropriate to move the organization to where it needs to be for a five to 10 year period especially given the higher platform for commodity costs and the opportunity still to simplify?
I think that’s a fair point. If we had projects that were not funded, in other words, if we had opportunities that the businesses had come to us and we were saying no, we’re not funding projects because we’re trying to keep an arbitrary restructuring budget then I think it’s an absolutely fair point as to why would you say no to good projects because of an arbitrary funding limit. That has not been the case. We have been funding all of the restructuring projects that have been coming to us from the various business units therefore there hasn’t been a capital constraint or a restructuring budget constraint imposed on the organization where we would be foregoing an opportunity.
If we had to recapitalize to move to a new technology platform, you may recall we spent over $1 billion to re-platform Baby Care about eight to 10 years ago. We did a major re-platforming of Fem Care. If we had to do something like that we would step up to it. If you don’t have that this is a much better way to run the railroad. A lot more disciplined, a lot more operating disciplined with the way we’ve been running the last eight years.
Your next question comes from Filippe Goossens – Credit Suisse. Filippe Goossens – Credit Suisse: I would like to go back to my question from the last earnings call related to Pantene in general and Brazil in particular. Last year our sources as well as our own research indicated that you were going to make a big push in Hair Care particularly in that country which has already resulted in the hiring of [Inaudible] your spokesperson. If you look at what’s happening to date our sources tell us that the push in Brazil with Pantene has not been as strong as they had expected so the question there is has anything changed with regard to your game plan. As it relates to the US obviously disappointing reformulation of Pantene. In order to go back to your 3% to 5% organic volume growth for the Beauty GVU it is critical in our opinion that Pantene gets turned around as well. What are your current plans there?
I hope you understand that I really can’t comment on our future plans because we’re just not going to make an announcement and our competitors are probably paying attention to what we’re doing. On the main point that make I couldn’t agree with you more and I hope I’ve been very clear and very straightforward about that as well as our Hair Care business has done a lot of our brands as Jon reported earlier are doing quite well. We did stumble in some markets and you mentioned one of them, the US on the last round of Pantene innovation. We have new innovation going into the US market right now and you will see innovation from us on Pantene across the US and in other markets around the world. Regarding Brazil we are in a testing period. I believe our share is up; it’s still relatively modest, mid to high single digits. We’re learning it’s a big hair care market. Eventually we’re going to have to have a position there and we’re in the learning phase.
Your next question comes from Bill Chappell – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey. Bill Chappell – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey: A follow up on the Folgers restructuring should we read into the fact that no additional charges in 2010 expected means we’re through with the rationalization of the portfolio or at least of the major brands? Also, with the share count, I think you said there’s a big share repurchase related to this deal can you say what you expect the average share count to be at year end fiscal ’09?
To answer your first question, this does not signal that there’s an end to the evolution of the portfolio. We’re not saying that we’re going to do more than Folgers but we’re not sitting here saying that we’re going to do nothing further. All we can plan at this point is what we know. We obviously know the impact of Folgers and we know that we’re planning to step up restructuring this year to offset it and then next year right now we’re planning to take that restructuring back down to about the prior level as a percent of sales. I would expect in fiscal 2010 the restructuring program could be above $400 million but not a huge amount above. Relative to the share count, what’s going to happen when the Folgers transaction occurs is we’re going to exchange P&G shares for newly issued shares of Smucker. What basically will happen is at the time that deal is closed there will be a substantial reduction in P&G share count that occurs with that transaction and that’s what we were talking about earlier. That’s in addition to the ongoing, if you think about share repurchase in fiscal 2009 we’re going to do the $8 to $10 billion we had previously committed to and then the share repurchase associated with the coffee, Smucker deal will be on top of that. That reduction in share count is factored into the dilution number for Folgers as well.
Your next question comes from Alice Longley - Buckingham Research. Alice Longley - Buckingham Research: Doing the math on the volume guidance it sounds, for fiscal ’09 that volume may be up something like 8% in developing markets and maybe down 1% in Western Europe and up 1% in the US does that sound reasonable?
We can’t call it that close. Alice Longley - Buckingham Research: Basically very little volume growth in the US and Western Europe?
It will be modest. I don’t think it’s going to go negative.
I’ll turn the conference back to you for any additional or closing remarks.
Thanks for joining us again today. As always, Jon Moeller, Mark Erceg, Jen Chelune and I will be around for the rest of the day. We’d be happy to take any questions and follow up that you have and thanks again for joining us.