Scholastic Corporation

Scholastic Corporation

$31.61
0.01 (0.03%)
NASDAQ
USD, US
Publishing

Scholastic Corporation (SCHL) Q1 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Published at 2020-09-24 22:27:08
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Scholastic First Quarter Fiscal 2021 Results Conference Call. At this time all participant lines are in listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference maybe recorded. [Operator Instructions] I'd now like to hand the conference over to your host today, Mr. Gil Dickoff, Senior Vice President, Treasurer and Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Gil Dickoff
Thank you, Liz, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Scholastic's fiscal 2021 first quarter earnings call. Joining me on the call today are Dick Robinson, our Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Ken Cleary, the company's Chief Financial Officer. We have posted an investor presentation on our IR website at investor.scholastic.com, which we encourage you to download if you haven't already done so. I would also like to point out that certain statements made today will be forward-looking. Such forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties, including those arising from the continuing impact of COVID-19 on the company's business operations. These forward-looking statements by their nature are uncertain and actual results may differ materially from those currently anticipated. In addition, we will be discussing some non-GAAP financial measures as defined in Regulation G, and the reconciliations of those measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in the company's earnings release filed this afternoon on Form 8-K, which has also been posted to our Investor Relations website. We encourage you to review the disclaimers in our press release and investor presentation, and to review the risk factors contained in our annual and quarterly reports filed with the SEC. And now, I'd like to turn the call over to Dick Robinson.
Dick Robinson
Good afternoon, everybody, and thank you for joining our call. As you all know from your own lives or from the news, it is a difficult time for U.S. schools, which are grappling with how best to keep their teachers, students and community safe, while also implementing new ways to schedule an organized learning, carry out rigorous distancing and sanitation methods and supporting families who are navigating this new normal with them. Most schools delayed openings this academic year, and while some have started with fully remote learning models, many others have started in-person sessions or hybrid schedules. During this time of readjustment as teachers are beginning to send in book club orders and schools are just now able to schedule book fairs, we remain intently focused on both managing the effect of COVID-19 on our business, and supporting our school and family customers, as they acclimate to their new environment in three important ways. First, we have substantially completed our $100 million cost reduction program and our transition to a more flexible operating model. Ken Cleary will cover the program in detail, but I'll touch on the key initiatives. We took immediate action in March to reduce costs, while also developing a comprehensive program to mitigate the impact of the pandemic on our operating income and cash flow, to strengthen our businesses and positions Scholastic for growth in the years to come. This program reduced the seasonal operating loss this quarter by $38.1 million, excluding onetime items and meaningfully lowered free cash use in the quarter. In the first quarter, most reductions were related to labor, resulting in a onetime pre-tax severance charge of $12 million. We've streamlined all of our U.S. units, and particularly our club and fair organizations, significantly reducing headcount and improving efficiency. As part of these costs focused measures, we sold or underutilized Danbury, Connecticut facility, and we continue to pursue other cost saving actions in response to the changing circumstances of our school customers. This program is designed to enable us to reach our goals of preserving profitability and positioning ourselves to ramp operations efficiently as demand increases during the year. Longer-term, we believe that our efforts will improve Scholastic's operating leverage, streamline financial processes, and significantly lower our cost base. At the same time, we're positioning the parts of our business that are less sensitive to COVID Trade and Education, for continued success for the rest of the year and beyond. We're proud of our strong frontlist and portfolio of popular IP, and accelerated our work to deepen our digital connections with our customers. COVID-19 is fast track to digital evolution that was already underway, and our blend of traditional and digital solutions allows us to meet customers' current needs and anticipate how to best solve the challenges. Third, we're flexing the makeup of our products and services and the timing of delivery to meet customers where they are. Because of our transition to more flexible model, we're able to match our offering and therefore our costs with our best revenue potential. For example, we are now giving parents and schools the choice of shipping club and fair orders to homes, as well as schools as many have requested. We've already seen a strong response to home shipments from parents ordering from book clubs. For schools operating in a tradition in-person manner, we are beginning to schedule in-person fairs for delivery later this fall. For schools that up for online fairs, we are enhancing our model to improve revenue per virtual fair, with a new animated promotion website directed virtually to parent and child customers ordering from home. Teachers and administrators are quickly settling into their new environments, and we are beginning to see momentum. Now turning to Q1 performance in more detail, largely as a result of the challenges presented by COVID-19, Scholastic's first quarter revenue of $215.2 million was 7% lower than Q1 of last year. Excluding onetime items, the operating loss in the first quarter was $45 million, a 46% improvement from the prior year’s operating loss of $83.1 million, also excluding onetime items, due to our aggressive actions to reduce costs and transition to a more flexible and responsive model to meet new needs of schools and classrooms. In trade, in the first quarter, our strong sales continued with The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, which as you know is Hunger Games number four, staying strong on bestseller list throughout the summer. The Baby-Sitters Club graphics, Captain Underpants, The Bad Guys and Nat Enough series all performed very well, as did, You Should See Me in a Crown by bestselling author Leah Johnson, which is the first young adult novel picked by Reese Witherspoon's Book Club. We're also seeing more and more parents turn to our workbooks for early learners. Dav Pilkey's Dog Man, Grime and Punishment, the ninth book in the series launched on September 1, just as we enter the second quarter. This critically acclaimed book remains the number one bestselling book overall in the U.S., Australia and Canada over the past several weeks, and has topped every bestseller list. We are thrilled with his performance, which was exceptional in a busy summer publishing season. We are planning also for the important November release of J.K. Rowling's first new children's book in 13 years, called The Ickabog, along with other exciting new releases. We are also gaining more traction for our entertainment unit, based on strong demand for our characters and IP, with recent development deals for live action feature films of, Caster, Goosebumps , Animorphs , and The Magic School Bus, a famous Scholastic brand. These media deals will help to engage a new generation of fans and also pay off in a backlist boost, marketing opportunities in our school channels and international sales lift. Fairs, and turning to clubs and fairs. What we're seeing this academic year so far as the teachers and administrators are focused on getting their in-person and remote classrooms up and running, and helping students and families settle into new routines. And this has slowed down fairs bookings. We had anticipated a lower fair count this fall due to the delayed openings. And we expect the pace of Club and Fair activity to increase toward the end of the second quarter, and in the second-half of the year. We know the schools are motivated to host fairs, which are crucial fundraisers for the schools and give kids a sense of normalcy that they miss. And we've converted many physical fairs to a virtual online model, and we are working with schools to schedule safe and easy physical fairs that solve for space time and people limitations. These can be set up in hallways or outdoors and are easy to move from one location to another. And all of the all fairs offer an online extension. We're also offering drive-through options in certain districts, as well as our full fair model, with our strict safety precautions in place. We're seeing interest in our new shippable fair option and we are ready to scale up as schools become ready to schedule physical fairs. As schools across the country implement and adjust their learning models to accommodate local infection rates in their area or school, we can provide solutions that fit each school's individual needs. Similarly, in our clubs business, we are currently seeing significant engagement from teachers and higher revenue per event. But we are currently lagging in orders from teachers as a result of delayed openings and changes to their classroom environments. However, across the board we're hearing the teachers, students and families want books and they want the kind of engaging, entertaining books that they can get from us and our clubs. We are bringing costs down by reducing SKUs and encouraging migration to our digital platform, while also efficiently distributing reimagined flyers that are designed to help teachers spark discussion, teach understanding and tolerance and engage young readers. Teachers appeared to be about three weeks behind normal ordering patterns. So we expect that order volume will increase over the next several weeks, but will not catch up fully during quarter to last year's pace. In our education business, our transition to digital is gaining traction that we expect to pay long-term dividends for our company. And we expect digital education programs to be an essential part of classroom instruction long after the pandemic is behind us. We are in a strong position as schools trusted professional learning partner, and our summer programs performed well across the segment as we are able to provide digital print or blended solutions. We're continuing to strengthen our digital platforms as our programs become part of the school curriculum, which are the bedrock of modern education models, and digital subscription billing showed promising 15% growth in first quarter. As is typical for digital and subscription revenue streams, we're seeing a higher steady volume of smaller transactions for our digital components. Schools look to us to help keep kids engaged in fight against the summer slide, with offerings like our take home grab and go reading packs, which are ordered by schools for delivery by us to children's homes. We transformed our Scholastic LitCamp at home to digital in time for the summer, and New York City used it for its summer program for kids. The digital reading programs have resonated right away because we're offering the books kids want to read from authors they love and recognize. We had new engagement for Scholastic F.I.R.S.T. and Literacy Pro, our digital independent reading tool, through a district wide order from LAUSD serving most of the population of kids in schools in Los Angeles. We're encouraged by the response to an engagement with our innovative and award winning digital literacy programs, such as Scholastic F.I.R.S.T., and W.O.R.D. as well as the digital companions to our classroom magazines, and our recently launched digital-only classroom magazine subscription, which is very popular and has generated new sales for the education segment. To pair with successful platforms like our Scholastic learn at home club, we have launched new initiatives, like Scholastic bookshelf on Instagram, which gives parents and teachers free access to excerpts from over 60 Scholastic stories, accessible with a few simple swipes. In our international business, we are seeing some similar trends is in the U.S. Lower book fair volumes, primarily caused by school closings in Australia, Canada and the UK, and lower direct sales in Asia were partially offset by stronger trade publishing globally, and strong book club performance in Australia. Profits grew substantially in the quarter for international. Looking ahead, we continue to believe we will improve Scholastic's operating results in the second-half of our fiscal year, but because of the continued uncertainty surrounding the impact of COVID, given the delayed school openings and new methods of scheduling and organizing learning, we will not be providing an outlook for fiscal year 2021. As noted, we expect club and fair sales to increase toward the end of the second fiscal quarter, and to continue to strengthen in the second-half of the year. We have not only completed our $100 million costs program, but we're taking additional action to lower cost and be more efficient. And this will continue to be a key focus of the company. We are also supporting our revenue streams by submitting our position as a trusted partner to our customers, providing a wide range of bestselling books, best-in-class solutions in the form of flexible school distribution channel solutions, and engaging digital education platforms and literacy solutions. This is the essence of our work to nourish and support kids, as well as their teachers and parents and schools on their personal learning journeys through the year. As more than 55 million children returned to a mixture of in-person hybrid and remote classrooms across the country, learning models and school needs vary from school-to-school and district-to-district. The one thing that has not wavered in this challenging time is our dedication to helping children learn and grow, and our ability to deliver value to our school teacher, parent and child customers. This dedication has driven us every day for the past century, and will continue to drive us forward for years to come. With that, I will turn the call over to Ken Cleary, our Chief Financial Officer.
Ken Cleary
Thank you, Dick, and good afternoon, everyone. Today I will refer to our adjusted results for the first quarter, excluding onetime items unless otherwise indicated. First quarter revenue was $215.2 million, a decrease of 7% compared to $232.6 million last year, driven by lower sales in school distribution channels due to delay in school openings. The timing of Dav Pilkey's new Dog Man book, which was released on September 1 of this year and will benefit our second quarter, also affected our year-over-year comparison. Last year's Dog Man, For Whom the Ball Rolls and this year's Dog Man Grime and Punishment both went on sale the Tuesday before Labor Day, which fell in August or Q1 in calendar 2019 in September, or the second quarter in 2020. As Dick said, our trade and education businesses are less impacted by the COVID-related disruptions, with strong trade sales, including audiobook sales, and improve results across their education business for digital products subscriptions, teaching resources, summer literacy camps and summer reading programs, which helped to partially offset the revenue declines in clubs and fairs. Operating loss in the first quarter was $45 million, a $38.1 million or 46% improvement from $83.1 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $15.9 million, compared to a loss of $61 million in the first quarter of 2020, an improvement of $45.1 million. Net loss for the current period was $30.9 million compared to a net loss in the prior year period of $55.4 million. We realized the non-operating gain of $6.6 million in the first quarter from the sale of our underutilized Danbury, Connecticut facility. Loss per diluted share was $0.90, compared to $1.59 last year. Turning now to cash. We traditionally have high free cash use in the first fiscal quarter when schools are closed, and we're procuring inventory making other preparations for the back to school selling season. We continue to carefully manage our cash use, including executing our labor cost savings program, restricting non-essential spending, reducing inventory purchases to match expected sales volumes and implementing our new procurement model designed to drive more accurate orders, which are placed close to the timing of customer demand. As a result of our successful cost savings initiatives and cash preservation efforts, net cash used in operating activities was $26 million compared to $97.6 million last year. Free cash use was $34.9 million compared to $118.5 million last year. At the end of the quarter, cash and cash equivalents exceeded total debt by $135.6 million compared to $186.4 million a year ago. Capital expenditures in the first quarter were $16 million, just slightly higher than depreciation and amortization. We realized net proceeds of $12.3 million from the Danbury facility sale, and we distributed $5.1 million in dividends in the first fiscal quarter. Our balance sheet is solid and our working capital management and access to liquidity remain strong. We have $175 million available under our existing credit facility in addition to the cash and equivalents on hand at quarter end. We will continue to assess funding needs in the context of evolving information, school reopenings and banking market conditions. Turning now to our segment results. In children's book publishing and distribution, first quarter revenues decreased 17% to $90.9 million, primarily in our school club and fair channels as a result of delayed school reopenings and other COVID-related disruptions. Much of our cost savings initiatives were achieved in operation supporting our school channels. We had excellent trade frontlist sales in Q1. Our Scholastic Early Learners workbooks and Bob Books lines were also very popular with parents who looked for materials for the kids learning at home. Segment operating loss improved by $12.5 million compared to last year, as a result of the aggressive actions taken to effectively match labor and operating costs to near-term revenue opportunities, and the temporary closure of fair distribution facilities. In education, segment revenue was $53.6 million, an 11% increase over last year, driven by sales of our core instruction programs, such as summer LitCamp and after the Bell and our grab and go summer reading packs. Digital revenues increased significantly, driven by successful moves to deepen digital connections and offer schools the digital solutions they need in remote learning environment. We also had higher volume sales across our teaching resource business, including our first little readers packs and teaching guides, Jumbo and Summer Express activity books and teachable lesson plans and activity sheets, where we increased our subscriber base by 21% over last year. Segment offering loss was $2.2 million, an $11.2 million improvement over last year's loss of $13.4 million, as a result of our strong revenues and effective cost savings measures. In International, first quarter revenues were $70.7 million, down 5% compared to last year, as a result of lower book fairs volumes in Canada, Australia and UK due to school closings, as well as lower direct sales in Asia. These declines were partially offset by stronger trade publishing globally and good performance for Book Clubs in Australia. Many of our international operations in Australia and Asia are beginning to see increased activity as the pandemic has eased in these regions. Operating income of $6.2 million was a $9.9 million improvement over the prior year period due to our cost containment measures, largely in labor and operations costs. Our cross-functional COVID task force substantially completed work to achieve $100 million in cost savings this year, as you can see from this quarter's results. We took action to streamline improve procurement rationalize our inventory purchases. We consolidated our book fairs distribution function and made difficult staffing decisions that reduced our workforce, including the temporary closure of our distribution facilities and the elimination of redundant functions. We have focused our book fair sales team on activities deemed critical to our customers, while deemphasizing low value add activities. We have streamlined our Book Clubs distribution function to achieve greater efficiencies and lower costs. We've consolidated certain corporate functions and permanently reduced costs as a result. We have halted all travel and entertainment spend, and our more recent technology investments are enabling us to work effectively while many of our employees work remotely. We have identified areas of additional cost savings that we will continue to pursue throughout the fiscal year. Our program to reduce costs and mitigate the impact of lower COVID-related sales help to reduce our selling, general and administrative expenses by $41.5 million in the current quarter, compared to the first fiscal quarter last year, excluding onetime items. A substantial portion of these costs are permanent and will not return as the pandemic eases. The lower overhead expense was primarily due to lower labor expenses and operational savings across multiple costs variance, as well as lower technology related spend in the current quarter. Our labor reductions and restructuring programs resulted in onetime pre-tax severance charge of $12 million this quarter, including $11 million in overhead. Looking ahead, we're not relenting in our focus on our goals of preserving profitability and maintaining liquidity, because we know we face a tough second quarter in our school channels, while teachers and students adjust to new schedules and therefore slower orders to sponsor clubs and host fairs as the school year begins. When teachers and book fairs hosts are ready to order, Scholastic will meet their needs, including virtual fairs, better digital tools to engage students and parents, and more flexible distribution methods, such as ship to home options. Our outlook for our trade and education businesses remain positive, and we have robust frontlist of best-selling series and authors scheduled for release over the course of the fiscal year. And our digital education programs are steadily gaining traction, as we are able to provide schools the blended learning solutions they need for students in the classroom and at home. Additionally, we have broadened the usage of our magazines by offering digital only subscriptions for schools that prefer online learning. As administrators, teachers, parents and students become more acclimated to offering in their new learning models, teachers and parents will continue to seek books and other educational resources for their children, which will support learning both in school and at home. We have new offerings to meet the needs of this new environment, like virtual fairs, which provide panoramic walkthrough of our top selling books and collections and connect seamlessly to our online fair point of sale. Additionally, many schools will resume traditional in-person learning are asking for the in-person book fair options that they expect from Scholastic, and we have a variety of formats to offer them. As more people resume these favorite choices, we expect improved results for the second-half of our fiscal year, but we are not providing financial outlook for this fiscal year. As we look ahead, we remain focused, discipline and driven to reduce costs while we navigate this disruptive period. We're carefully monitoring the data on a daily basis, especially in the crucial second quarter, and we continue to leverage this period to reduce our costs in the near-term. Longer-term, we believe that our efforts to streamline processes and implement a more flexible operating platform will improve operating leverage and lower our relative cost base, which will provide long-term benefits to our company and customers. And with that, I will hand the call back to Gil for the Q&A session.
Gil Dickoff
Thanks so much, Ken. Liz, if you would, we are now ready to open the lines for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] We have a question from the line of Drew Crum with Stifel. Your line is now open.
Drew Crum
Okay, thanks. Hey, guys, good afternoon. So you've given us a sense as to what the shape of fiscal 2Q should look like for Clubs and Fairs. As we think about the second-half your comment that you should see increasing demand, as you progress through the period. Understanding you're not providing guidance at this point, but directionally should or could Clubs and Fairs grow year-on-year in the second-half?
Dick Robinson
It's a little too soon for us to really know that in detail, Drew. Obviously, we think about it, and we think about the pace of which schools are coming back to fairs and sponsoring clubs. And given their way they're adjusting to what's going on in schools, it's taking them a little longer to organize themselves to avail themselves of the services, and they are changing the nature of what they order. There's a great interest in the virtual online fairs, as other schools come back and want to sponsor in-person fair. So, we believe that the second quarter will be a difficult one with lower revenues clearly than in the prior year, where we had an excellent second quarter, particularly in fairs. But the second-half of the year, we should see continued momentum in fairs, and of course, then clubs. And at the end of the year, of course, we had the pandemic from last year, which reduced significantly our fourth quarter revenue. So we're sort of a reverse pattern this year, with stronger revenues in the second-half.
Drew Crum
Okay. Fair enough. And then with the education business 11% growth in the quarter, and then you mentioned that the digital offerings are gaining some traction. How would you characterize the funding environment as you move into the 2020-21 academic year? And then on a related note, you referenced the sales of Scholastic literacy to the LA Unified School District. What's been the receptivity to that product? And can you comment on what your backlog or pipeline looks for the -- like for this product?
Dick Robinson
Scholastic literacy is one of the number of different solutions that we offer. It's more of a core instructional program. It's used in certain schools districts very effectively. But it's not broad scale in its use. Most of our revenues are really coming from our normal classroom collections, grab and go gold packs, growing digital sales, classroom magazine sales, and we see quite a positive environment. As schools, try to bridge the gap between school and home, obviously, they're turning to some of our online programs. There's also a need for engagement of kids. So getting them back into school, getting the learning loss, or overcoming the learning loss, having access to a wide number of classroom libraries. There are also programs that help teachers understand where the kids stand with their skill development, such as Literacy Pro, or actually teach foundational literacy in phonics and in grades K2, as a core part of the curriculum, which is Scholastic F.I.R.S.T. So the funding picture is I think rosier than many people predict, because people have their budgets from last year. And then there's the state governments have not yet begun to cut back on the school funding, the way I think they probably will, absent a COVID bill from Congress coming in this year. But this year, I don't believe there will be a material impact from school funding. And conversely, there's going to be a demand for materials as kids try to overcome the learning loss from six months of being out of school and the attendant reading drop that many kids are experiencing, that will also help our club and fair business.
Drew Crum
Got it. Okay. And then just shifting gears to the trade business. Can you comment on how this year's Dog Man sales performed relative to last year's new release? And then any way to size Ickabog? How big of an opportunity is this for the trade business? I mean, obviously, from one of the best-known authors in the world, but not really sure how to size the opportunity here?
Dick Robinson
Yes. Well, just starting with Dog Man. It's doing extremely well and is outpacing the Dog Man from the year before. It was the number one as we said in our notes here, was the number one top selling book adult or children's in the U.S. for several weeks at the beginning of September and in Canada similar. And this week, it became the number one best-selling book in Australia, of all books. So it's got a tremendous response and it shows that the Dog Man franchise is even expanding as it goes into its second and third year. Ickabog, we think will be very strong. A new book by J.K. Rowling also aimed at the sweet spot of age group, really between seven and 12 is going to really be an outstanding offering in November, when it comes out. Helping you size it, we definitely are printing an awful lot of Ickabog all around the world. And we're expecting that it will do extremely well in this end of the second quarter.
Drew Crum
Okay. And then maybe one last one for me for Ken. The 71% improvement in free cash flow use, it's about an $84 million swing year-on-year. Can you quantify what came from, or what cost savings contributed to that versus the collections for the Hunger Games book?
Ken Cleary
Yes. Sure. The Hunger Games book collections, I won't give you an absolute number. But as we published our financial statements, you'll see our receivables are down. Also, in terms of the costs, I won't give you an exact number for what the cost savings were, but you can see we're down north of $40 million in SG&A. And that's where the bulk of it came out of. The other big thing moving through there is inventory purchases, which are $35 million better year-on-year, Drew.
Drew Crum
Yes. Okay. All right. Thanks, guys.
Dick Robinson
Drew. I'd like to just amplify a little bit on your first question. Scholastic Literacy continues to sell well, but most of the demand is in other areas of supplementary material. And we continue to be pleased with Scholastic Literacy, but it's only a part of the component of the growth that we experienced this summer from education.
Drew Crum
Okay. I appreciate it. Thanks, guys.
Dick Robinson
Thank you.
Ken Cleary
Thanks, Drew.
Operator
That concludes today's question-and-answer session. I'd like to turn the call back to Mr. Robinson for closing remarks.
Dick Robinson
Well, thank you all for your support. We had a strong first quarter from a cost point of view. We're very proud of our cost reduction program and of all the wonderful things we're publishing to meet needs of schools, parents, children and teachers as we go into the second quarter of our 2021 fiscal year. Thanks for your attention. We look forward to talking to you in December.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.