Categories Consumer, Earnings Call Transcripts
Conagra Brands, Inc. (NYSE: CAG) Q4 2020 Earnings Call Transcript
CAG Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Conagra Brands, Inc. (CAG) Q4 2020 earnings call dated June 30, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Brian Kearney — Head of Investor Relations
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Andrew Lazar — Barclays Bank — Analyst
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
David Palmer — Evercore — Analyst
Nik Modi — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
David Driscoll — DD Research — Analyst
Robert Moskow — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Bryan Spillane — Bank of America — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good day and welcome to the Conagra Brands Fourth Quarter Fiscal Year 2020 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]
I would now like to turn the conference over to you, Brian Kearney. Please go ahead.
Brian Kearney — Head of Investor Relations
Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us.
I’ll remind you that we will be making some forward-looking statements today. While we are making those statements in good faith, we do not have any guarantee about the results we will achieve. Descriptions of the risk factors are included in the documents we filed with the SEC.
Also, we will be discussing some non-GAAP financial measures. References to adjusted items, including organic net sales, refer to measures that exclude items that management believes impact comparability for the period referenced. Please see the earnings release for additional information on our comparability items. The GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations can be found either in the earnings press release or the earnings slides, both of which can be found in the Investor Relations section of our website, Conagrabrands.com.
Finally, we will be making some references to total Conagra Brands as well as Legacy Conagra Brands. References to Legacy Conagra Brands refer to measures that exclude any income or expenses associated with the acquired Pinnacle Foods business.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Sean.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Brian.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter fiscal 2020 earnings call. On behalf of Conagra Brands, I want to start by expressing my heartfelt hope that you and your families are continuing to stay safe and healthy.
On today’s call, we’re going to address our fourth quarter and fiscal 2020 results, our expectations for fiscal 2021 and our perspective on why Conagra is uniquely positioned to succeed in this new environment. But first, I want to provide some context around what has brought us to this point.
Over the past five years, we have been purposefully architecting one of the largest transformations in the food industry. When we embarked on this process, we made major strategic decisions on where to compete and how to win. After decades as a food conglomerate, we transformed into a pure play branded food company with a portfolio focused on competing in three domains: frozen, snacks and staples.
We committed to perpetually reshaping our portfolio for better growth and better margins, and established a disciplined approach rooted in a playbook that we call the Conagra Way. This relentlessly principle-based playbook is filled with repeatable and scalable processes that focus on modernizing our iconic brands through superior food, contemporary packaging and strong, consistent marketing investment. The Conagra Way is not just a way to build brands, but an operating model that has helped cultivate our agile, motivated and highly energized culture.
As I’ll describe in more detail in a moment, fiscal 2020 saw unprecedented performance as we built upon the extraordinary progress we have made over the past five years. We further strengthened our business, including getting legacy Pinnacle back on track, and delivered strong financial results. During the fourth quarter in particular our transformation was put to the test, and you are seeing the fruits of our labor.
Our modernized portfolio and agile culture enabled us to respond to the increased consumer demand driven by COVID-19. At this point, the degree to which demand will return to historical norms is still uncertain and the timing of the changes in consumer demand is also uncertain. However, we believe that demand will likely remain elevated in the near term given both consumer perceptions about returning to work and eating outside the home as well as the fact that consumers are discovering and rediscovering the pleasures, conveniences and tremendous value proposition of dining at home.
Dave will cover the financials in more detail, but I want to let you know that we continue to be on track to deliver our fiscal 2022 algorithm, and we remain committed to achieving our leverage target of 3.5 times to 3.6 times by the end of fiscal 2021.
As we’ll detail today, we believe our portfolio is optimally positioned to succeed in the new normal. We are focused on making the right investments to ensure that we can continue to safely and reliably meet consumers’ needs in fiscal ’21 and the longer term. In today’s presentation, we will cover our business update, the behavioral shifts we have seen and how Conagra is well positioned to benefit from these shifts and what we expect going forward in terms of our near-term outlook and the opportunity to create long-term value.
Beginning with our business update. Before I get into the numbers, I would like to recognize that our extraordinary results have only been possible because of the thousands of hardworking Conagra team members on the front lines across North America. Here at Conagra, we talk about infusing a refuse to lose attitude, and never before have we seen our team make such extraordinary efforts. The team’s commitment has enabled us to meet the elevated demand from our customers and the communities we serve and deliver the strong results that we are announcing today. I couldn’t be more proud of all that they’ve accomplished. To all of our team members, thank you. Great job all around.
During the fourth quarter, we experienced significant growth across our core operating metrics, including 21.5% growth in organic net sales and a 108.3% growth in adjusted EPS. These results helped to contribute to our rapid progress in reducing our leverage, and I’m proud to say that we ended the quarter with a net leverage ratio of 4.0 times, down from 4.8 times in the third quarter. As you can see on slide 9, our growth was not confined to one area, but was driven by strong retail sales across our portfolio, spanning staples, frozen and snacks. Our strong growth in e-commerce continued to accelerate both on an absolute basis and as a percentage of our overall sales. The work we’ve done over the past several years to improve our e-commerce capabilities has certainly paid off. As consumers increasingly adopt online grocery shopping, our share of e-commerce sales has steadily increased.
Slide 11 highlights that our disciplined approach to innovation is clearly working. Our absolute sales on new innovation introduced this year increased 43% compared to our innovation slate of fiscal 2019. As a reminder, we stated at our initial Investor Day that our goal was to have 15% of total sales coming from products launched within the past three years. Well, today I’m proud to say that we’ve consistently performed above that level. In a few minutes, we’ll provide you some of the new innovation that we have in store for fiscal 2021 as we seek to build upon this success.
As we’ve discussed previously, frozen is an increasingly important domain for consumers, especially in today’s environment. For the fourth quarter, total Conagra frozen retail sales grew 26.2% over last year, with strong growth across each frozen category, including single serve meals, vegetables, multi-serve meals and plant based meat alternatives. And as slide 13 shows, as we grew we also gained share in the important frozen meals category during the quarter, continuing a trend we’ve seen for some time now. The Conagra Way playbook continues to pay off.
And while the trends have remained strong, there’s even more opportunity, particularly in frozen vegetables. Birds Eye faced some unique dynamics in the quarter. As I said earlier, the category remained extremely relevant for consumers. We continue to see robust demand for frozen vegetables, and our retail sales up 26.5% during the quarter. Importantly, Birds Eye holds the top position in category share and has 2 times the share of the next branded player. Given the incredible surge in demand we experienced during the fourth quarter and our number one brand position, we hit a ceiling on capacity.
Furthermore, we made the decision to temporarily close a plant during the quarter due to COVID-19 which further constrained capacity. The good news is, the plant is safely back up and running flat out. In addition, we have made the strategic decision to bring on more external partners to fulfill demand and rebuild inventory. These investments in our supply chain will allow us to efficiently meet the elevated demand we are seeing today and expect to see going forward. This is an important example of that investment, and I will expand on this in a few minutes.
Turning to snacks. Recall that our snacks business over-indexes to convenience stores which saw softer traffic due to COVID-19 during our Q4. Also, the seeds category was impacted by the postponement, and in many areas of the country cancellation, of baseball and softball seasons. Baseball and seeds go hand in hand, and the loss of these opportunities had a negative impact on the category. Even despite these discrete headwinds, the snacks business delivered a terrific 20.1% year-over-year growth and a 26.4% growth on a two year basis.
And on slide 16 you can see our performance in staples, a category that is more relevant than ever before. Our total staples business grew an incredible 46.3% for the quarter. The six brands to the right are our largest staples brands, accounting for over 50% of our staples sales at retail pre COVID, and each experienced considerable growth in the quarter. These businesses are proving to be a distinct benefit to our portfolio.
So while we’re pleased with our results for the quarter and the year, we are particularly excited about what the quarter has taught us about the opportunity that lies ahead as consumers have shifted their behaviors and eating habits.
Slide 18 shows some of the key ways in which we’re seeing consumers’ behavior shift in response to COVID-19. Many consumers are rediscovering the enjoyment associated with at home eating, whether it’s making fun baked goods, cooking with the family or enjoying a movie night with some snacks. Numerous consumers are also discovering new things about food during this time. Many are learning how to truly cook for the first time or discovering they can recreate restaurant favorites at home. We believe that many of these activities have staying power and are likely to persist even after a post COVID world in whatever new normal we settle into. We also believe our broad and refreshed portfolio of innovative products is best suited to meet consumers’ needs as they engage in these food behaviors.
And slide 19 shows the strong growth during the quarter across our iconic brands, demonstrating how well suited our portfolio is to meet these behaviors. Our ability to meet the changing consumer needs is balanced across our three domains. Slide 20 shows how household penetration grew during the quarter in staples, snacks and frozen.
And, as we’ve been able to modernize and innovate our iconic brands we are attracting younger consumers. Slide 21 shows that new consumers to our brands over-index in the younger millennial and Gen X market segments. Driving new trial is always a key focus for us. The investments that we’ve made over the past five years in updating our food with bold on trend flavors and modern food attributes were promised on the belief that if we can get people to try our food, they will come back for more, and that is exactly what’s happening.
Slide 22 shows the continuously improving repeat rates from consumers who tried our foods for the first time in March when the pandemic really started to accelerate in the US. The improved repeat rates are broad based across many of our iconic brands. Importantly, when we attract new triers to our brands, they are coming back to purchase again more often than they did a year ago. It’s worth noting that this trend holds true for the big three Pinnacle brands, validating our work over the last 12 months.
And slide 24 shows we’re not just seeing an increase in repeat buyers, but we’re seeing an increase in the frequency at which they return. Customers are not just coming back for more; they’re coming back time and time again. And [Technical Issues] to the strength of our trial and repeat results, on an absolute basis, we are outperforming our peers in terms of new trials.
Let’s take frozen as an example. Slide 25 demonstrates how our Banquet, Healthy Choice and Marie Callender’s brands are leading frozen single serve peers in new buyer acquisition. And, as slide 26 shows, these new frozen buyers are disproportionately coming from the millennial and Gen X market segments, similar to what we see in total Conagra trends. And like the total Conagra trends we discussed, not only are we attracting new buyers, but we’re seeing higher repeat rates in our frozen segment than our peers. Similarly, despite the supply constraints we faced that I noted earlier, Birds Eye continued to lead its category in terms of both new consumers and repeat purchases compared to peers during the quarter.
All of these trends have important implications for our value creation opportunity as we look ahead. We believe the dynamic environment in which we find ourselves provides a unique window of opportunity to maintain the current momentum such that we maximize our long-term value creation potential. To make that possible, we need to make investments focused on doing everything in our power to ensure the physical availability of our products.
Instead of choosing to simply accept the elevated demand as transitory and focus on maximizing near-term margins, we have chosen to bolster the long-term earnings potential of our Company. We plan to accomplish this through investing in the key areas you see on this slide which include increasing capacity, both internal and external; innovation; inventory; e-commerce; and safety. By investing behind today’s elevated trial rates, we will build relationships with new consumers and maximize consumer conversion. The lifetime value of these consumers easily justifies these actions.
Slide 31 shows some highlights of our fiscal ’21 innovation slate. Some of these items began launching in Q4, and we will continue to roll out these new products throughout the year. Overall, we are confident that the investments we are making will produce strong ROIs. They will also maximize our long-term value creation and ultimately shareholder value.
Turning to our guidance on slide 32. We know that you would like as much information about our expectations for the year as possible. Given the very dynamic nature of the external environment, forecasting the full year right now is more difficult than normal. As of today, therefore, we’re providing Q1 guidance. We hope that when we report Q1 results, we will be in a position to give you a further update on our outlook. While we don’t expect the next few months to drive as much change as the past few, we expect to know a lot more by then.
Dave is going to go into more depth regarding the guidance, so I’ll just hit the highlights here. During the first quarter of fiscal 2021, we expect to deliver organic net sales growth of 10% to 13%, adjusted operating margin of 17% to 17.5%, adjusted EPS of $0.54 to $0.59. As I said earlier, we remain on track to reach our fiscal 2022 targets outlined on this slide as well as our deleveraging ratio.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Dave.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Sean, and good morning, everyone.
Before I discuss the details of the quarter, I want to take a moment to wish you all well. I hope you and your families are continuing to stay healthy and safe.
I’ll kick off this portion of the call by pointing out a few highlights for the quarter and the full fiscal year which are captured on slide 34. Overall, we’re very pleased with our performance for Q4 and the fiscal year. As Sean discussed earlier, in the fourth quarter, the COVID-19 pandemic led to unprecedented demand in our retail businesses, which more than offset the softer foodservice demand. This increased retail demand, combined with our strong execution, enabled us to exceed the most recent full year fiscal ’20 guidance for total Company sales, profit and free cash flow metrics.
The key takeaways for Q4 and fiscal ’20 are: organic net sales increased 21.5% in the fourth quarter and 5.6% for the full year. Adjusted operating margin increased almost 400 basis points for the fourth quarter and over 100 basis points for the full year. Adjusted EPS more than doubled in the fourth quarter and grew 13% for the full year. And adjusted EBITDA increased 21.6% for the full year to just under $2.3 billion, helping to reduce the leverage ratio to 4.0 times at the end of fiscal ’20.
Let’s start with the net sales bridge on slide 35. As you can see, our 21.5% organic net sales growth in the fourth quarter was driven by 21% volume growth, with price/mix contributing 0.5 percentage point. Divestitures were a 310 basis point headwind in the quarter. This headwind will diminish sequentially as we continue to anniversary the divestiture closing dates going forward. Foreign exchange was a 70 basis point headwind in the quarter, with the weakening of the Mexican peso representing about two-thirds of the headwind. This was a bit higher than we were expecting for Q4. Finally, the 53rd week added 810 basis points for the quarter, which was more of a net sales tailwind than we expected due to the elevated COVID related demand at the end of the quarter, taking total reported net sales growth to plus 25.8% for Q4 versus a year ago.
Turning to slide 36, you see our sales summary by segment. In the fourth quarter and the fiscal year, we saw strong growth across our three retail focused businesses. Our Grocery & Snacks segment reported very strong organic net sales growth of 40.4%. The grocery business proved to be a significant asset as consumers reengaged with convenient shelf-stable products to facilitate and enhance the at home eating experience.
The Refrigerated & Frozen segment continued to perform very well in the quarter. The segment reported organic net sales growth in each quarter of this fiscal year and has now had positive organic net sales growth in 11 of the last 12 fiscal quarters. This consistency shows that our modernization efforts have been working and are sustainable.
The International segment’s 19.8% organic net sales growth was due to strong growth in Canada and better than expected growth in the Mexican and export businesses due to the pandemic. Foodservice reported an organic net sales decline of 31.5%, which was better than expected as many restaurants continued to serve customer consumers with curbside pickup, drive-through or partial capacity.
Slide 37 outlines the progress we’ve made on our Q4 adjusted operating margin versus the prior year. Throughout the quarter, our gross margin expansion levers such as realized productivity, pricing, mix and COGS synergies continued to be effective. We also benefited from value-driven operating leverage in the quarter, approximating 100 basis points. These tailwinds were partially offset by increased COVID related costs, dilution from significant Foodservice operating margin declines and a 170 basis point headwind from inflation, resulting in a net gross margin improvement of approximately 110 basis points.
Given the already increased demand for food at home, we chose to pull back a bit on A&P in the quarter. That, coupled with increased net sales, drove a 100 basis point improvement to operating margin. While adjusted SG&A expense increased 5.7% in Q4 versus a year ago, net sales grew much faster, resulting in a 180 basis point tailwind to operating margin.
Turning to slide 38, you can see that our adjusted operating profit was $562 million in the quarter, an increase of 63.5%. Adjusted operating margin increased just below 400 basis points to 17.1%. This chart clearly summarizes the outstanding operating margin improvement during Q4 in our domestic retail and international segments. This was partially offset by our Foodservice segment, which had significantly lower operating profit due to the 32% organic net sales decline, unfavorable fixed cost leverage on that sales decline, higher inventory write-offs and higher input costs.
Turning to slide 39, we’ve summarized the various drivers of adjusted diluted EPS in Q4 versus a year ago. As you can see, our adjusted EPS increased $0.39 in the quarter, representing growth of over 100% from the same quarter last year. While the increase in EPS is primarily driven by the increase in operating profit associated with the net sales and margin increases, we also had higher income from Ardent Mills as COVID related demand was a net benefit. We also estimate a $0.05 per share benefit from the 53rd week.
Slide 40 summarizes the excellent progress we’ve made on our overall synergy capture from the acquisition of Pinnacle Foods in fiscal year ’19. We realized $39 million of incremental synergies during the fourth quarter, bringing our total cumulative synergy capture since the close of the Pinnacle acquisition through the end of fiscal ’20 to $184 million, exceeding our fiscal ’20 goal of $180 million. Importantly, we remain on track to deliver our total synergy target of $305 million by the end of fiscal ’22. As a reminder, we have reinvested $20 million from our synergy realization to date into longer-term business opportunities such as product and packaging improvements and innovation related retailer investments.
As I stated on our last earnings call, we expected stronger cash flows in Q4 due to the normal seasonality of our business and the expected increase in retail demand from COVID-19. As a result, we updated our free cash flow expectations to be north of $950 million for fiscal ’20. Fiscal ’20 ended with the Company generating approximately $1.47 billion of free cash flow, which was well above those revised expectations. Some of this benefit was timing related.
Due to the significant increase in sales, we reduced our days of inventory on hand during the quarter, which positively impacted Q4 free cash flow. We expect to build that inventory back as we progress through fiscal ’21 which will be a headwind to free cash flow. It is not yet clear as to the exact timing of the fiscal ’21 inventory rebuild. Another timing item in Q4 was from federal tax payment deferrals, pushing payments from Q4 into Q1 of fiscal ’21. We estimate the combined impact of these timing items on free cash flow between fiscal ’20 and fiscal ’21 to approximate $350 million.
Turning to slide 42. From the close of the Pinnacle acquisition in Q2 fiscal ’19 through the end of the fourth quarter and fiscal ’20, we’ve reduced net debt by nearly $2 billion. In the fourth quarter, we reduced gross debt by $271 million and net debt by $725 million, improving our leverage ratio to 4.0 times at the end of Q4, down from 4.8 times at the end of Q3.
What’s not shown on this slide but is important to note is that we improved the funded status of our pension plans during fiscal ’20 by $80 million, with the total underfunded status declining to approximately $50 million. For context, the pension plans’ underfunded status were approximately $565 million at the end of fiscal ’17, a reduction of over $500 million. This significant improvement was driven by planned pension contributions, lump sum payments to participants and actual returns on plan assets exceeding expectations.
In addition to the significant progress we made towards deleveraging in fiscal ’20 we also further strengthened our liquidity position. We obtained a $600 million, three year senior unsecured term loan which remains undrawn. This facility provides us with additional flexibility to repay debt maturity through fiscal ’21 and positions us to refinance current fiscal ’21 debt maturities at attractive rates with prepayable debt. As a reminder, we also have a $1.6 billion undrawn revolving credit facility. Given where we finished fiscal ’20 from a net debt perspective and given the continued momentum we expect in Q1, as outlined in our guidance, we are confident in our ability to achieve our targeted net debt to trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio of 3.5 times to 3.6 times by the end of fiscal ’21. And importantly, we continue to remain committed to a solid investment grade credit rating.
In addition, we continue to remain open to smart divestitures that can help top line performance and generate cash flow to accelerate deleveraging. While we continue to evaluate portfolio actions, we will not pursue any divestitures that are not value-creating for the long term. As we approach our targeted leverage ratio, we continue to evaluate opportunities to use capital allocation to drive shareholder value.
Slide 44 outlines our guidance for the first quarter of fiscal ’21 and our fiscal year ’22 algorithm. We are expecting the elevated retail demand to continue into Q1, although at a lower rate than Q4, leading us to our Q1 organic net sales expectation of plus 10% to plus 13%. We continue to expect the favorable operating leverage from the elevated volumes in Q1 to offset the additional COVID related costs. Therefore, we expect adjusted operating margin to be in the range of 17% to 17.5%. These operating margin increases, coupled with expected improvement in our below the line items, lead to an expected EPS range for the first quarter of fiscal ’21 of $0.54 to $0.59.
As I already mentioned, we remain confident in our ability to hit our leverage ratio target of 3.5 times to 3.6 times by the end of fiscal ’21. And lastly, we are today reaffirming our fiscal year ’22 algorithm, which is outlined on this slide and in the earnings release.
Thank you, everyone. That concludes my comments. I’ll now pass it back to Sean.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Before we open up for Q&A, I’d like to say a few words about diversity and inclusion at Conagra.
We are deeply saddened by the recent events we’ve seen unfold across our nation. It’s heartbreaking and unacceptable that racism and racial injustices continue to exist around the world. Our goal at Conagra is to work together in a constructive manner where everyone has a voice and has the opportunity to be heard.
D&I is not only part of our value system at Conagra, it’s a business imperative. We serve a wide cross section of the population, and therefore it makes clear sense our organization represents the consumers we serve. D&I has always been a focus for Conagra Brands. But like many others, we can and we’ll up our game. We are working with an external diversity and inclusion consultancy to help us identify specific opportunities that will have the most impact. We’re also hosting listening sessions with employees throughout the organization.
Overall, we are determined to be part of the solution, and we look forward to continuing to share reports of our progress along the way.
Thank you. Now let’s open it up to Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Andrew Lazar with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Andrew Lazar — Barclays Bank — Analyst
Good morning, everybody.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Andrew, good morning.
Andrew Lazar — Barclays Bank — Analyst
I wanted to start off, if I could, with the Company’s reaffirmation of its fiscal ’22 targets. Specifically, while I understand certainly the rationale for perhaps not yet providing full fiscal year ’21 guidance, the fact that you’re comfortable reiterating fiscal ’22 EPS means at least to me that there should be some good progress in ’21 versus ’20 to be able to achieve ’22 guidance in a reasonable way where I guess not all of the EPS growth needs to come in in ’22 versus ’21, if you see what I’m saying. So any perspective you can add around that, whether I’m thinking about that in the right way, even though I understand not providing specific guidance for this fiscal year?
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, sure. Andrew, here is how I think about this. Clearly, since nobody can accurately predict what will happen with COVID and the range of outcomes is very wide, calling ’21 with any accuracy is virtually impossible. But when you step back and you look at where we landed in ’20, if you look at the momentum of the business, the continued elevated demand, the new triers, the very strong repeat and synergies remaining on track, our view is that it would be hard to argue that we’re not on a path to the ’22 targets.
And the real question for us as kind of you think about our prepared remarks today on trial and repeat is whether these dynamics that we’re seeing currently offer incremental long-term upside beyond our ’22 algorithm. Obviously, we’re not going to comment on a longer-term algorithm. But certainly, these are positive markers, and we have elected to invest behind that option, for lack of a better phrase.
Andrew Lazar — Barclays Bank — Analyst
That’s helpful. And it’s a good segue into my follow-up, which is — certainly appreciate all of the data and the metrics on trial, household penetration, repeat rates and the like. And of course, none of us have a crystal ball regarding where consumption and growth rates for many of your key categories ultimately settle out. But in light I guess of the metrics you’ve discussed, I mean, would it be your expectation that for some of your key categories, Conagra should see an elevated rate of growth versus let’s say, pre-COVID, for a more prolonged period of time? The investments that you discussed on the call with respect to incremental capacity and such would seem to support that thought process, but again wanted to hear it from you and get some clarity.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I think the phrase I used earlier was, we see this as a unique window. Something is happening that is above and beyond what our normal marketing programs would do. COVID has introduced this dynamic where, as you saw in the slides earlier, consumers are legitimately rediscovering certain things in their house, whether it’s their kitchens, their freezers, being together, and they like it. They are also discovering that some of the things that they thought existed actually have changed quite a bit; so, for example, the quality of frozen food.
And as you know, we’ve spent the last five years dramatically transforming our product. So you put both of those things together and there is clearly an element of pleasant surprise the consumers have when it comes to cooking at home. And given the tremendous value proposition of cooking at home and that we are in a recessionary environment, it’s entirely plausible that these dynamics persist for some time, especially with the news changing hourly on COVID and what’s happening with positive cases. And we believe that once people try our products, the data supports that we extend a very good chance they will come back again and again and again. So we are investing today in order to maximize long-term value creation potential of this portfolio and really seize any option that there is further upside beyond our current algorithm.
Andrew Lazar — Barclays Bank — Analyst
Thanks so much.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ken Goldman with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
Hi, good morning.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi Ken.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
I think I need to check what was in my smoothie this morning because on slide 31, I thought I saw a unicorn lama wearing sunglasses on a box of Act II that I must be hallucinating.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
You did not. Lamas are hot.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
Okay. I didn’t know that. I knew unicorns were.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
As is Act II. Ken, you probably may not have known that either. Act II is on fire.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
I didn’t know that until I saw your slide. So I appreciate that. A couple of questions from me if I can. And Dave, you may have answered this when you talked about not being clear on the timing of the inventory rebuild. But in your first quarter organic sales guidance, is there any benefit baked in there from an inventory load by retailers or is that sort of what you expect consumption to be as well roughly?
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Ken, you saw in Q4, with shifted consumption everywhere except Refrigerated & Frozen, that was really driven by Birds Eye. In this environment, it is difficult to predict exactly when retailers are going to build inventories. And so, as we put our Q1 guidance together, clearly it started with demand. We tried to make some assumptions on will there be additional shipments to build inventory, particularly in frozen. But again, in this environment it’s difficult to predict just given the significant demand that’s still there.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
Okay. Yes…
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Just to comment on that, Ken, just more broadly. Retailers are at some point going to rebuild inventories I would imagine in all their categories. And if you think of, in the last several years, the focus on on-time and full was the focus we’ve talked about recently with retailers putting more facings against high velocities. Retailers paid out of stocks. So that is not going to change. And at some point, I would imagine that inventory levels would revert to kind of historical norms.
The question, of course, is when will that happen. Because the way that happens is, one of two things or both have to happen. Either demand has to slow or capacity has to increase. We’ve seen demand slow recently, but it’s still at very, very high levels. You also heard me talk about how we are making investments in increased capacities, but there is an upper control limit to how we can do that. So, for the foreseeable future, in the near term, we are running flat out and much of what we make and leaves our plants is going straight through to the consumer. When that slows down and the inventory levels build back is one of the wildcards that’s virtually impossible to predict.
And while I’ve got you, since you raised Act II, I want to link your question on Act II back to Andrew’s question, which is, will any of what we’re seeing now persist. Interestingly, one of the things that you’re seeing now and you’re reading about now is movie studios are going to direct release at home, on demand.
And there are some questions around what’s going to happen with movie theaters going forward. As that happens, people will be watching movies as a group at home at a level we probably have not seen before. We’re already experiencing this. And the shift in our microwavable popcorn business has been dramatic, reflecting that new behavior. That could very well be a persistent thing, but it may depend in part on what the movie studios ultimately choose to do. But those are the kinds of things that seem to be logically tracking in our favor, but we need to see how long they persist.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
Okay. That’s helpful. Thank you for that. And then for my follow up quickly, we are hearing some rumblings in the trade that maybe retailers are considering getting a little more aggressive on pricing in the back half of calendar ’20 just because of obviously the economic environment, and maybe they’ll ask some vendors to help out with that. But we’re not seeing any hard evidence of this yet. I just wanted to know from your perspective, are you hearing about any, if I could say, incremental pressure from your customers on that pricing front.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Not really, Ken, at this point. And I would say it’s probably a function of two things. Number one, our portfolio, as you know, has a very strong value segment to it. Brands like Banquet and other [Phonetic] already offer extremely favorable value that is and historically have proven very resilient in a recessionary environment. The other piece of it, two, is that in many of the categories you continue to see out of stocks because the throughput is flat out and demand still exceeds that product production availability and therefore you only exacerbate that problem when you price promote in that type of a category. So I think it will be category specific.
I will point out though that in our Q4 we did honor most of our promotional commitments, and that’s because those are longstanding commitments. We have a principle of not kind of backing out. But going forward, I would expect our average can prices may move north a little bit near-term because we are likely to see less discounting price promotion activity.
However, I wouldn’t want you to take that as less retailer investment because it’s more likely to be a shift in retailer investments, really the profile of the retailer spend than the absolute level. So less discounting, more brand building, more new habit creation. To give you a specific example, a good example would be creating loyalty on our frozen brands with millennials by making click and collect behaviors habitual by increasing our e-com spend with retailers. That’s a positive constructive alternative in a supply constrained environment to more of a price promotion approach.
Kenneth B. Goldman — JP Morgan Chase & Co. — Analyst
Very clear. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from David Palmer with Evercore. Please go ahead.
David Palmer — Evercore — Analyst
Thanks. Good morning.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, David.
David Palmer — Evercore — Analyst
Your fiscal ’22 guidance, it’s obviously closer than it’s been before and it’s also above consensus. And it might be hopefully the first full year without this COVID issue. So related to that, what are the key one or two variables that you’ll be watching and thinking about that would make the mid to high end of that guidance possible? And I have a follow-up.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I think the way I framed it up earlier is, we have momentum on the business and we are investing to maintain that momentum. And as we maintain that momentum, we have a very good chance of continuing to bring more households into our portfolio and then converting them to multiple-time repeat purchasers. That’s really the logic flow as to how you get right in the heart of that long-term top line profile.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
I would just add to that. Obviously, the synergy number that we have, making sure that that stays on track, we feel good about it. We’re on track, we affirmed it again. But making sure we deliver that, managing all our other core productivity programs to be able to offset inflation.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. That, recall, got us a long way there on the bottom line side of the long-term algorithm. That, alongside the additional volume and any operating leverage associated with it is obviously a good thing for our portfolio.
David Palmer — Evercore — Analyst
And then just a follow-up. The free cash flow conversion of earnings; obviously, that relationship of capex to D&A. But how do you see that in ’22 free cash flow versus that earnings target? Thanks.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
I mean, we had guided to — greater than 95%, I think, was our guidance, and that, again, shouldn’t change. I did comment that as it relates to fiscal ’21, because we finished fiscal ’20 with very strong free cash flow, and some of that was timing, right. So it was about $350 million of benefit that we received in Q4 due to basically inventory working capital benefits and some timing on tax payments that’s going to flip into fiscal ’21. So when you look at ’20 versus ’21, you’re going to see a super high conversion in ’20 that’s going to come out in ’21 for the $350 million, but ’22, we should be back in balance.
David Palmer — Evercore — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah.
Operator
Our next question comes from Nik Modi with RBC. Please go ahead.
Nik Modi — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Thanks. Good morning, everyone.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Nik, good morning.
Nik Modi — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Just two quick questions for me. When you think about the guidance that you provided for the upcoming quarter, I’m just curious if you can provide some perspective on how you’re thinking about demand. And I ask this only because obviously in recent weeks or recent days, the case surge is really mapped in very popular states, which I reckon would probably reaccelerate some of the at-home food consumption as the reopening slows. So I just wanted to get perspective on that. And then, Sean, maybe you could just provide some kind of perspective around innovation timing and how things are shaping up with retail in terms of the next reset and just kind of how you’re thinking about your innovation flow over the next six months or so. Thanks.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. On the first piece, if you go back to the beginning of this thing, Nik, what happened was we had this massive initial surge, right, with pantry stocking and the like. And that went a long way toward kind of depleting our inventories and really starting to deplete customer inventories. Since then, while we haven’t been at the level of that initial surge, demand has been extremely high. So we’ve got categories where we’ve hit the ceiling where we’re just flat out, we’ve got categories where we’ve made some early progress in starting to kind of catch-up.
But with another surge, that’s just going to put more strain on it. So we are focused — it’s interesting, because we are typically focused on optimizing demand, and now we’re in this environment where we are really heavily focused on optimizing supply because we’re really up against it. And that has been the case in the early days of our Q1, and even if you look at the scanner data, it’s been pretty strong. And that’s all pre this news of these upticks. So we’ve got to monitor it. We’re doing everything in our power to add additional capacity so that we can protect the upside to the best of our ability. But it’s going to be strained near-term and we are investing to make sure that that happens.
Did you have anything else to add on that point, Dave?
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, just briefly. For organic net sales, we do expect strong growth from the domestic retail businesses. So, as Sean said and you see in consumption, just to get a little color on the other segments: International is going to be relatively flat. We had a really strong Q4. We don’t expect to see the organic net sales growth in Q1 to that level. And then continued declines in Foodservice like we saw in Q4.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Now, with respect to innovation, let me, before I’d comment on forward-looking information, just give you a little perspective on Q4. Because recall at CAGNY, we had talked about how some of our customer base had moved up their shelf resets in frozen, and I’m sure many of you are curious what happened with that with respect to COVID hitting. Well, you may be surprised to learn that the vast majority of our customers proceeded as planned in Q4 with their earlier frozen resets. And that’s good news.
We see our exciting fiscal ’21 innovations on the shelf and they look great and we are hustling to try to keep them in stock because they’re obviously getting good trial. And also, with respect to Q4 innovation in total, which includes the innovations we launched earlier in the year, Q4 innovation was up over 25% versus the prior Q4. And it definitely had some benefit versus the prior Q4 of shipments of the following year’s innovation coming a little bit earlier, and that’s because of those frozen shelf resets that we talked about.
But the reality is, despite what you’ve heard about SKU reduction to maximize throughput and things like that, we have continued to have strong favorable reaction from our retailers on our new innovation, and we continue to feel super-strong about the slate we’ve got out there and expect it to perform well this year. As you’ve seen in the last few years, every year’s innovation has outperformed the prior year’s for the last several years and there is no reason to expect this year wouldn’t continue, albeit we have a few more wildcards that we are dealing with than in previous years.
Nik Modi — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Very helpful. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from David Driscoll with DD Research. Please go ahead.
David Driscoll — DD Research — Analyst
Great. Thank you. Good morning.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
David Driscoll — DD Research — Analyst
Wanted to start off with the Grocery & Snacks and the Frozen & Refrigerated, slide 9. Sean, you got nice metrics here. But what I want to get your impression of is the — you’ve made a comment repeatedly for years that your expectation is that frozen is going to be just a critical area of growth in the grocery store. When we just look at these 4Q results, obviously heavily affected by COVID, right, the staples piece is growing much, much faster than frozen. There is that initial stock-up that’s going on in there.
What I was hoping you could do is just explain how you thought frozen would grow relative to that of staples on a go-forward basis. Should frozen be half as much as staples, as we see almost in this graph? Or should frozen on a relative basis begin to be much stronger after we’ve kind of cleared through that first stock-up that occurred in March-April?
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, the slide 9 that you referred to is actually pretty consistent with what I would expect having been in and around staples products for a lot of my career. Whenever you see any kind of crisis hit, people will load their dry goods pantry which has a tremendous amount of holding power. And actually you tend to see more of a pantry load dynamic there because of the holding power of pantries relative to the holding power of a freezer. Most freezers are actually incredibly limited in space, and that’s one of the governors that you see on frozen.
Interestingly, one of the things we didn’t put in the deck is the sales rate of standalone frozen freezers. If you had gone to a Home Depot or a Best Buy in the last few months in search of a freezer, you would not have been able to find one. So clearly consumers are recognizing there is a limit to what they can fit in their freezer. I know in my household, we were frustrated because we’d get to the — you’d go to the store on a day if shipments came and you want to buy stuff but you had nowhere to put it because your freezer was full. So that’s a governor you have there versus staples.
That said, while I might expect the two to converge more going forward, staples, what you see in the staple space is a super value proposition. So Chef Boyardee, and this may be more of a function of what is the consumers’ household balance sheet look like going forward, how long does the recessionary environment persist, items like Chef are a tremendous value proposition in that kind of environment, could continue to perform well.
Furthermore, if people are learning to cook again, and cooking from scratch, a lot of the staples products we have like Pam cooking spray or our beans business or our tomato business ought to remain elevated. And these are the kinds of things you can use in multiple recipes throughout the week that are different recipes as opposed eating the same thing again and again.
So, I’m not going to try to forecast how these will perform relative to one another. The key point we wanted to make today is that all three of our consumer domains have been elevated and are enjoying this notion of rediscovery and discovery that I talked about.
David Driscoll — DD Research — Analyst
That’s helpful. Dave, I just wanted to follow up on SG&A. In the fourth quarter, as a percent of sales, the SG&A was down significantly versus kind of what the trend rate that we had seen in the prior few quarters. What do you expect on a go-forward basis? Can you get that SG&A as a percent of sales to continue to be reduced for the next bunch of quarters? Any color there? I mean, I know you’re not giving explicit guidance, but just any color on how you’re thinking about SG&A as a percent of sales very helpful.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sure, Dave. So at a high level, obviously, a lot of the synergy that we’re getting from Pinnacle is SG&A. In fact, more than half of the synergy to date has been from SG&A. More will come in cost of goods sold moving forward. So that is starting to work its way in quarter by quarter into our actual results. So, as I look to Q1, because we gave specific margin guidance in Q1, a big part of the operating margin improvement versus the prior year is actually because of the leverage on SG&A. So the 17% to 17.5%, a good amount of that improvement is the SG&A leverage.
Gross margin, there is a lot of puts and takes with all the different costs. So there’d be more moderate improvement there, but it’s mostly SG&A. So we start seeing that leverage in a bigger way starting in Q1. And you’ll continue to see leverage going forward. I’m not going to give you specific numbers, but that’s the color for Q1 for SG&A.
David Driscoll — DD Research — Analyst
But the leverage does continue even if you don’t give exact numbers. You’re confident that the leverage continues in the following quarters.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, obviously, it depends on sales, right? But yeah, we took the SG&A cost out and we’re going to continue to see that benefit.
David Driscoll — DD Research — Analyst
Thank you.
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah.
Operator
Our next question comes from Robert Moskow with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Robert Moskow — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Hi. Thanks for the question. Actually a couple. I think, talking to investors, a lot of the controversy around ConAgra does still revolve around this long-term EPS range because it is so much higher than your fiscal ’20 results. I was wondering, in August when your proxy get published, do you think it’s going to peak at the three year cycle for fiscal ’20 to fiscal ’22 and the EPS target that’s in there for executive compensation? Because I think that would give people a better sense of how management is being incentivized in relation to the target that you’ve given us. So I think that would be the first cycle that we’ll get to see how executive comp is related to that range. Is that a fair assessment?
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Rob. The way I’d respond to that is, big picture, our Board has a very strong pay for performance philosophy. As such, the targets in our incentive programs are anchored in our annual and long-term financial plans and consistent with the guidance that we provide to investors. So, with respect to the 2020 proxy, we expect our disclosure to mirror that of past years. We will provide details on the fiscal ’20 to ’22 program overall, including the growth CAGRs that are in the program, and you will see that management and shareholder interests are aligned with respect to the ’22 numbers.
Robert Moskow — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Right. Okay. And a quick follow-up. I remember last year there was a lot of inventory de-loading in the frozen section related to the shelf resets. Given what you’ve said now about the resets being done, is there going to be any kind of inventory reload in first quarter and is that part of your guidance? Or is your guidance really related to consumption and consumption will reflect shipments?
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
I think, near-term, Rob, we are playing catch-up. We’re trying to keep up with demand. Orders have continued to come in, and inventories have been depleted. And it varies, obviously, by category. So, as long as demand remains elevated, it’s more of a flow-through to consumption and pantries I think than a rebuilding in inventory. Now, that is going to vary by category because you don’t see the same level of pull category by category. So you can almost model out categories with kind of more muted pull are probably rebuilding inventories. Categories where pull remains extremely strong, we’re probably continuing to run flat out and scanning a lot of what we’re producing.
Robert Moskow — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Got it. Great. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Bryan Spillane with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Bryan Spillane — Bank of America — Analyst
Hi, good morning everyone.
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Bryan.
Bryan Spillane — Bank of America — Analyst
So just two quick ones. And I might have missed it, but, Dave, capital spending for fiscal ’21, given I guess what some of the commentary that’s been made about investments. Even if you can’t give a pinpoint number, directionally, would it be close to what it’s been historically? Or is it going to be higher than normal this year?
David Marberger — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
No, Bryan, I did not mention it specifically. But as we look to fiscal ’21, based on the investments that Sean outlined, particularly investments to shore up capacity and supply, we will be increasing our capex. Right now, our estimate is that we’d be about $100 million above where we landed fiscal ’20 in terms of capex.
Bryan Spillane — Bank of America — Analyst
Okay. Great. Thanks. And then maybe, Sean, as a follow-up to Rob Moscow’s question about incentive comp. Have you made any adjustments maybe with frontline employees or just organizationally to focus more on being in stock, keeping up with demand, I think is you’ve phrased it before, versus having to previously really trying to stimulate demand? I’m just trying to understand if you’ve had to kind of change the incentive mix a little bit to ensure that you’re going to get these capex projects happening on time and really improving service levels?
Sean Connolly — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, our, our short-term — for our salaried employees, our short-term incentives is really a function of sales, of profit and cash flow and employees are incentivized very clearly to maximize those. In the last quarter, the real focus area for us has been in our facilities. It’s been in ensuring the health and safety of our employees because we’ve got to keep our plants running. And then also honoring those employees for being such heroes during this intense COVID period on the front lines and we have made investments behind our frontline employees to honor them accordingly. So that’s really what’s been in place. And as I mentioned earlier, I couldn’t be more pleased with just this incredible refuse to lose attitude that we’ve seen, especially on the front line.
Bryan Spillane — Bank of America — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Brian Kearney for any closing remarks.
Brian Kearney — Head of Investor Relations
Great. Thank you. So, as a reminder, this call has been recorded and will be archived on the web as detailed in our press release. The IR team is available for any follow-up discussions anyone may want. So thank you for your interest in Conagra Brands.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
Disclaimer
This transcript is produced by AlphaStreet, Inc. While we strive to produce the best transcripts, it may contain misspellings and other inaccuracies. This transcript is provided as is without express or implied warranties of any kind. As with all our articles, AlphaStreet, Inc. does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company’s SEC filings. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed in this transcript constitutes a solicitation of the purchase or sale of securities or commodities. Any opinion expressed in the transcript does not necessarily reflect the views of AlphaStreet, Inc.
© COPYRIGHT 2021, AlphaStreet, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, redistribution or retransmission is expressly prohibited.
Most Popular
Intensity Therapeutics is establishing a new field of localized cancer reduction: CEO
Intensity Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: INTS) is a clinical biotechnology company engaged in the discovery development, and commercialization of first-in-class cancer drugs that attenuate tumors with minimal side effects while training
INTU Earnings: Intuit Q1 2025 adj. profit rises on higher revenues
Financial technology company Intuit Inc. (NASDAQ: INTU) Thursday announced results for the first quarter of 2025, reporting a modest increase in adjusted earnings. The Mountain View-headquartered company’s first-quarter revenue came
Riding the AI wave, Nvidia looks set to stay on the high-growth path
After delivering strong results for the third quarter, Nvidia Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) this week said the launch of its new-generation Blackwell chip is on track. The company is thriving on