Q1 2025 Procter & Gamble Co Earnings Call

In This Article:

Participants

Andre Schulten; Chief Financial Officer; Procter & Gamble Co

Steve Powers; Analyst; Deutsche Bank

Lauren Lieberman; Analyst; Barclays

Dara Mohsenian; Analyst; Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC

Bryan Spillane; Analyst; BofA Global Research

Chris Carey; Analyst; Wells Fargo Securities, LLC

Filippo Falorni; Analyst; Citi Investment Research

Robert Ottenstein; Analyst; Evercore ISI

Kevin Grundy; Analyst; BNP Paribas Exane

Peter Grom; Analyst; UBS

Andrea Teixeira; Analyst; JPMorgan

Kaumil Gajrawala; Analyst; Jefferies

Mark Astrachan; Analyst; Stifel Nicolaus and Company, Incorporated

Nik Modi; Analyst; RBC Capital Markets

Olivia Tong; Analyst; Raymond James

Korinne Wolfmeyer; Analyst; Piper Sandler & Co.

Rob Moskow; Analyst; TD Cowen

Linda Bolton Weiser; Analyst; D.A. Davidson & Company

Presentation

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to Procter & Gamble's quarter-end conference call. Today's event is being recorded for replay.
This discussion will include a number of forward-looking statements. If you will refer to P&G's most recent 10-K, 10-Q, 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, Procter & Gamble needs to make you aware that during the discussion, the company will make a number of references to non-GAAP and other financial measures. Procter & Gamble believes these measures provide investors with useful perspective on underlying business trends, and has posted on its Investor Relations website, www.pginvestor.com, a full reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures.
Now I will turn the call over to P&G's Chief Financial Officer, Andre Schulten.

Andre Schulten

Good morning, everyone. Joining me on the call today is John Chevalier, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations.
Execution of our integrated strategy delivered another quarter of solid earnings and cash results. These results enable us to maintain our guidance ranges for fiscal year '25. Organic sales grew 2% comparing against the strong base period of 7% growth. Volume contributed 1 point to organic sales growth. Pricing added 1 point, and mix was roughly in line with prior year.
8 of 10 product categories grew or held organic sales for the quarter. Family care, home care, and personal healthcare each grew mid-single digits. Hair care, oral care, feminine care, fabric care, and grooming grew low singles. Baby care and skin and personal care were down mid-singles.
Organic sales in focus markets grew 2%, and enterprise markets were up 1%. Organic sales in North America grew 4%, driven by 4 points of volume growth. Over the last five quarters, North America has grown organic sales 7%, 5%, 3%, 4% and now again 4% on volume growth between 3% and 4% each of those quarters. The region delivered broad-based market share growth this quarter. with 8 of 10 categories holding or growing volume share and 9 of 10 categories holding or growing value share.
Europe focus markets organic sales were up 3%. This compares against 50% organic sales growth in the base period and includes a 2-point headwind from lower inventory versus the base period. Volume was up 4 points despite the base period inventory impacts. Over the last five quarters, Europe focus markets have grown organic sales an average of nearly 7% on volume growth of 3%.
Latin America organic sales were up low single digits against the strong 19% base period calm. Brazil grew mid-singles, and Mexico was in line with prior year. Each of these markets comparing against strong 14% growth in the base period.
European enterprise markets grew mid-singles driven by pricing to offset inflation and currency devaluation impacts in addition to modest volume growth. Greater China organic sales declined 15%. Underlying market conditions weakened further during the quarter, and we continue to face brand-specific headwinds on SK-II. We will begin to annualize some of the steep market declines and SK-II headwinds late in December, though it will likely be a few more quarters until we return to growth in China.
Market conditions in the Asia-Pacific, Middle East, Africa region have remained soft, with organic sales down low singles. Global aggregate value share grew 10 basis points, with 28 of our top 50 category country combinations holding a growing share for the quarter.
On the bottom line, core earnings per share were $1.93, up 5% versus prior year. On a currency neutral basis, core EPS increased 4%. Core growth margin was in line with prior year, and core operating margin increased 30 basis points, strong productivity improvement of 230 basis points. Currency-neutral core operating margin decreased 10 basis points.
Adjusted free cash flow productivity was 82%, consistent with our expectations. We returned nearly $4.4 billion of cash to shareowners this quarter, over $2.4 billion in dividends, and over $1.9 billion in share repurchases.
To summarize results, solid top-line growth across roughly 85% of the business, keeping us on track for the fiscal year; continued volume and value share gains in North America; and improving share trends in Europe focus markets. Earnings and cash results in line with our expectations, also on track with fiscal-year guidance.
Overall, good performance in what continues to be a challenging economic and geopolitical environment, we will continue to push all levers in our control to offset the headwinds that are largely not in our control. We remain committed to the integrated strategy that has enabled strong results over the past six years, and that is the foundation for balanced growth and value creation.
We've made portfolio choices across markets and brands to strengthen our ability to generate US dollar-based returns. We are doubling down on superiority across all five vectors. And we are improving productivity in all areas of the operation to fuel investments in superiority, mitigate cost and currency headwinds, and drive margin expansion.
We are driving constructive disruption of ourselves and our industry, a willingness to change, adapt, and create new trends, technologies, and capabilities that will shape the future of our industry and extend our competitive advantage. We are benefiting from an organization that is empowered, agile, and accountable.
Our strategic choices on portfolio, superiority, productivity, constructive disruption, and organization reinforce and build on each other. And we remain confident in our strategy and in our ability to drive market growth and to deliver balanced growth and value creation. We will elaborate on the integrated strategy and how it's driving competitive advantage and results at our Investor Day in November.
Now moving to guidance for fiscal 2025. With one quarter complete, our guidance ranges for fiscal 2025 remain unchanged. And they are consistent with our long-term algorithm. We continue to expect the environment around us to remain volatile and challenging from input costs to currencies to consumer, competitor, retailer, and geopolitical dynamics.
On the top line, we are maintaining our organic sales growth guidance in the range of 3% to 5%. We continue to expect the markets in which we compete to deliver local currency sales growth in the range of 3% to 4% for the year. And our objective remains to grow organic sales modestly ahead of the underlying growth of these markets.
As a reminder, when you're modeling all-in sales, please remember to include the impact of divestitures from last fiscal year. This was an 80-basis-point drag in quarter one and will also impact the balance of the fiscal year.
On the bottom line, our core EPS guidance range for fiscal '25 remains at plus 5% to 7% versus fiscal '24 of a core EPS base of $6.59. This guidance equates to a range of $6.91 to $7.05 per share. Our outlook for commodity costs and foreign exchange have each improved modestly since our initial guidance for the year.
We are now guiding for a commodity cost headwind of approximately $200 million after tax, which equates to a headwind of $0.08 per share for fiscal '25. We are forecasting foreign exchange to be in line with prior year. We continue to expect lower non-operating income benefits this fiscal year and a somewhat higher tax rate versus prior year. Combined, these are additional $0.10 to $0.12 headwind to core EPS.
We expect adjusted fee cash flow productivity of 90% for the year. We have plans to pay around $10 billion in dividends and to repurchase $6 billion to $7 billion in common stock, combined, returning $16 billion to [$7 billion] of cash to shareowners this fiscal year.
This outlook is based on current market growth rate estimates, commodity prices, and foreign exchange rates. Significant additional currency weakness, commodity cost increases, geopolitical disruptions, major supply chain disruptions or store closures are not anticipated within these guidance ranges.
To conclude, the earnings and cash results in the quarter keep us on track with our fiscal-year guidance ranges. And we are doubling down on all levers to accelerate growth in the coming quarters.
We continue to believe the best path forward is excellent execution of our market constructive strategy, with a focus on balance top- and bottom-line growth and value creation, starting with a commitment to deliver irresistibly superior propositions to consumers and retail partners. Coupled with a strong productivity plan, the earnings power and value creation potential of the company, we believe, are as strong as ever.
Finally, as I mentioned, we are hosting our 2024 Investor Day here in Cincinnati on November 21. And we hope you can join us in person or online. With that, we'll be happy to take your questions.