The Simply Good Foods Company (SMPL) Q2 2020 earnings call dated Apr. 06, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Mark Pogharian — Vice President, Investor Relations, Treasury and Business Development
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Christopher Growe — Stifel Nicolaus — Analyst
Rob Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst
Alexia Howard — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. — Analyst
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
John Baumgartner — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Fauzer Ali — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Greetings and welcome to The Simply Good Foods Company Fiscal Second Quarter 2020 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note this conference is being recorded.
I will now turn the conference over to your host today, Mark Pogharian, Vice President of Investor Relations, Treasury and Business Development. Please proceed, sir.
Mark Pogharian — Vice President, Investor Relations, Treasury and Business Development
Thank you. Good morning. I’m pleased to welcome you to The Simply Good Foods Company earnings call for the second quarter ended February 29, 2020. Joe Scalzo, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Todd Cunfer, Chief Financial Officer will provide you with an overview of our results, which will then be followed by a Q&A session. The company issued its earnings release this morning at approximately 7:00 AM Eastern Time. A copy of the release and accompanying presentation are available under the Investors section of the company’s website at www.thesimplygoodfoodscompany.com. This call is being webcast live on the website and an archive of today’s remarks will also be available. During the course of today’s call, management will make forward-looking statements that are subject to various risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially.
COVID-19 has been included as a risk as it’s uncertain what the potential impact could be to our business and therefore it could cause our future results to be different than our current expectations. The company undertakes no obligation to update these statements based on subsequent events. A detailed listing of such risks and uncertainties can be found in today’s press release and the company’s SEC filings. Note that on today’s call, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe will provide useful information for our investors. The presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Please refer to today’s press release for a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP.
With that out of the way, it’s now my pleasure to turn the call over to Joe Scalzo, President and Chief Executive Officer.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Thank you, Mark. Good morning and thank you for joining us. Today, I’ll recap Simply Good Foods second quarter highlights and provide you with the details on the performance of our Atkins and Quest brands. Then, Todd will discuss our second quarter financial results in a bit more detail and we’ll wrap it up with a discussion of our outlook and then open the call to your questions. Before we get into the details of our Q2 results, I’d like to discuss the impact we’re seeing with respect to COVID-19. Overall, the first half of fiscal 2020, which ended on February 29th, exceeded our expectations with no material impact from COVID-19. We entered the second half of the fiscal year with positive net sales momentum, solid cost containment and confidence in our ability to execute our plans and to deliver on the outlook we provided on our earnings January 9.
Furthermore, the Quest integration is on track and our synergy plans are proceeding as expected. In March, overall retail foot traffic was extremely volatile with the surge in the beginning of the month followed by a significant slowdown in the second half of the month at most brick and mortar retailers. The retail takeaway trend of both our category and our brand followed a similar pattern. Given the likely continuing uncertainty around consumer purchasing behavior due to COVID-19 movement restrictions, we believe it’s prudent to withdraw our fiscal 2020 full year guidance at this time. Our key priorities now are to safeguard the continued health of our employees and community, ensure the reliability of our supply chain and provide accurate and timely service to our retail customers and consumers.
We are in close communication with our key customers and suppliers. And to-date our supply chain remains robust and fully operational. Our contract manufacturers are taking extra measures to ensure that they’re providing their workers with a safe environment and are committed to meet the consumer and customer requirements of our business in the coming weeks and months. Net, we will do what’s right for the long-term health of our employees, brand and goods. Now, let’s move on to slide 5 and discuss our fiscal second quarter results. Second quarter results were greater than our expectations as both Atkins and Quest delivered strong sales growth as well as growth and adjusted EBITDA margin expansion. Legacy Atkins retail takeaway in the second quarter was generally in line with our [Indecipherable].
Growth was driven by bars and confections across all channels. Additionally, Atkins e-commerce momentum continued with sales up double-digit. Quest Q2 results were strong across all metrics and are tracking to our acquisition model. Integration work continues and is progressing on schedule. In our fiscal second quarter and for the year-to-date period the nutritional snacking category had increased mid- to high-single-digit. The growth rate may move around a bit in the short-term due to changing shopping behavior related to COVID-19 moving restriction. But over the long term, we believe the mega-trends that have fueled nutritious snacking categories such as healthy snacking, convenience, meal replacement and on-the-go consumption will continue to be tailwinds for our business and brands
In Atkins and Quest, we have two trusted advantage lifestyle brands that target different consumer groups and position us to maintain our leadership role within the category. On a run rate apple-to-apple basis we have a scale business with net sales in excess of $900 million. And our offshore supply chain enables solid margins, low capex and results in strong cash generation. The Atkins and Quest brands are tightly aligned around the consumer mega trends such as more frequent snacking occasions and the desire for on-the-go meal replacement. In additions, our products are uniquely positioned to benefit from growing consumer interest of high-protein, low-carb and minimal sugar. This profile has broad appeal to consumers interested in better-for-you as well as weight management and active nutrition shoppers looking to achieve their goals.
And while we like the diversified forms on this page, bars, chips, shakes, cookies and confections, we also have a solid R&D pipeline that we’ll continue to work on and refine. This is an advantage portfolio with solid margin and financial flexibility to invest in marketing to drive growth. Turning to the second quarter, net sales increased 83.4%. Legacy Atkins net sales increased 12.1% and as expected outpaced the increase in retail takeaway due to our strong e-commerce growth as well as a slight seasonal inventory build. The contribution from Quest was a 71.3% benefit to net sales growth and grew strong double digits versus comparable period year ago.
The increase in adjusted EBITDA is a direct result of higher gross profit driven by a higher Atkins net sales and the benefit of Quest. The increase in gross profit was partially offset by the timing of marketing we previously discussed.
Total Simply Good Foods Company second quarter and year-to-date retail takeaway in the IRI/MULO-measured outlet universe increased 11.8% and 13.6% respectively. Note that this includes the traditional food, drug and mass merchandisers as well as Walmart, BJ’s, Sam’s and dollar stores. Additionally IRI/MULO captures about 90% of legacy Atkins U.S. sales. However, it only represents about 50% of Quest sales. Atkins Q2 retail takeaway increased 6.1% with growth across all major channels. We were particularly pleased with our performance in the club channel, which was up strong double digits on a percentage basis versus last year. And Atkins e-commerce business continues to do well up about 60% in both the quarter and year-to-date periods with bars, shakes, and confections all up double digits. And while early on, our momentum here has continued into Q3.
Year-to-date e-commerce represents nearly 7% of Atkins total gross sales. We’ve doubled our e-commerce business over the last two years and anticipate continued growth over our strategic planning cycle. Quest’s second quarter nutritional snacking growth was up about 27% driven by growth in food, mass and club channels. In non-measured channels, the specialty class of trade has been a headwind. This is a broader multi-year category issue and not specific to Quest. And given the COVID-19 movement restrictions, the specialty channel could be a greater headwind in the balance of fiscal 2020. The building blocks of Atkins’ point-of-sale growth are similar to what we discussed over the last few years, strong base velocity growth. By foreign [Phonetic] year-to-date bars and confections retail takeaway growth remained strong, up about 8% and 31% respectively. Shakes were off roughly 4% in the second quarter and the year-to-date period due to challenging year ago comps and other new branded product entry as well as a distribution loss of our 30-gram shake at a couple of retailers.
As expected, base velocity on bars and confections was solid and distribution was down due to shake as well as the decision we made last year to close some underperforming bar flavors to free up supply capacity. Promotional volume returned to more normalized levels following a scale back in fiscal 2019 due to supply constraints. Although this may not be the case in the second half of the year due to changing shopping behavior related to the COVID-19 situation retailers are reevaluating the timing of shelf resets and promotion plans that may result in a delay or cancellation of some of our previous agreed to programs.
Let me now turn to Quest. As a reminder, Quest is a uniquely positioned brand. The management team has done a great job transitioning it’s positioning from a high protein bar brand to a broader, healthy, lifestyle mass brand focused on providing craveable food backed by metabolic science. About two-thirds of the business is a core protein snack bar, with the remaining one-third consisting of fast-growing products such as protein chips, cookies, and pizza. But no matter which product you consume the nutritional profile is the same; high in protein, low in carb with minimal sugar.
Additionally, Quest generates about half of its U.S. sales in the IRI/MULO universe in traditional food, drug, mass and club channel. The other half of Quest U.S. sales are generated in the convenient store class of trade and the unmeasured e-commerce and specialty channels, which are not tracked by IRI or MULO.
Quest year-to-date retail takeaway in the measured IRI/MULO universe increased 27.6% with equally balanced gains from both base velocity and distribution gain. Growth across all major forms was up double digits on a percentage basis versus last year, including the important bar business which increased 12.7% in measured channel. The Quest team continues to do a great job of driving awareness, consideration and trial the other sophisticated digital and social marketing efforts. The unique Quest squad influencer network is effective in attracting and retaining core consumers. The presence across various social media platforms such as Instagram where Quest has nearly 900,000 followers has driven solid growth.
And the Quest R&D team has recently launched some close in flavor and line extensions as well as some new pack types such as the snack bar and four pack protein chip depicted on this model. We’re confident in our long-term growth plans for this business. It’s a scale lifestyle consumer brand and not just a single product. And like Atkins it’s backed by an underlying nutritional philosophy supported by science; high protein to improve strength and low carbs and sugars to minimize blood sugar spike, while providing a steady source of energy. Quest is in the early innings of growing brand awareness, consideration and trial and we believe a significant runway exists for long-term growth.
In summary The Simply Good Foods Company competes in an attractive category and is a leader in that category. Combination of Atkins and Quest provides us with two uniquely positioned brands and a diversified portfolio that is aligned around the consumer mega trend of wellness snacking, convenience and meal replacement. We’re operating our business for the long-term and committed to do the right thing for our employees, customers and consumers during this challenging time.
Now, I’ll turn the call over to Todd, who will provide you with some greater financial detail.
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Joe, and good morning everyone. Let me start with two points as it relates to the numbers you see on the slides that follow; first, for comparative purposes, we will review the financial statements with a 13- and 26-week ended February 29, 2020; second, given our asset light, strong cash flow business model we evaluate our performance on an adjusted basis as it relates to EBITDA and diluted earnings per share. We have included a detailed reconciliation from GAAP to adjusted historical items in today’s press release. We believe these adjusted measures are a key indicator of the true underlying performance of the business. I will begin with a review of our net sales drivers of growth. Second quarter U.S. legacy Atkins volume growth was 13%.
Higher volume was partially offset by greater trade promotions resulting in total U.S. legacy Atkins net sales growth of 12%. As expected, this was greater than the retail takeaway growth of 6.1% given the continued strength of our non-measured e-commerce business as well as a slight seasonal inventory build. Legacy Atkins non-U.S. net sales, including Canada and our International business was up a healthy 13.5%. As a result, total organic net sales growth in the quarter was 12.1%. The Q2 Quest contribution was a 71.3% benefit resulting in total Q2 net sales increase of 83.4%. Now for a review of second quarter results across other major metrics; gross profit was $85.4 million, an increase of $35.7 million or 72%, driven by legacy Atkins sales growth and the inclusion of Quest, partially offset by a non-cash $5.1 million inventory purchase accounting step-up adjustment related to the Quest acquisition, which is now complete.
As a result, gross margin was 37.6%, a 250 basis point decline versus last year. The non-cash inventory step-up adversely impacted gross margin by 220 basis points. Quest lower gross margin and the previously mentioned increase in trade promotions were a 30 basis point headwind. Input costs were relatively benign in the quarter and we expect only modest inflation for this year. Adjusted EBITDA increased 81.7% to $41.7 million driven by the increase in gross profit, partially offset by selling and marketing expenses, which increased 83.6% or $12.3 million to $27 million. The majority of the increase, about 75%, was due to the addition of Quest. And the remainder driven by the timing of our higher legacy Atkins marketing expense, as discussed previously.
Additionally, G&A expenses increased by 82% in Q2, primarily attributable to Quest as legacy Atkins was relatively flat to the year-ago period. Moving to other items in the P&L, interest expense increased $7.2 million to $10.6 million due to the increase in the term loan balance. Our effective tax rate in the second quarter was about 26.9% higher than the year-ago period of 24%. As a result, reported net income in Q2 was $10.7 million versus $12.7 million in the year ago period. Year-to-date results are as follows: As I indicated earlier net sales was driven primarily by volume growth and the Quest acquisition, gross profit was $147.6 million, an increase of $46 million or 45.3% driven by legacy Atkins sales growth and Quest. This was partially offset by the non-cash $7.5 million inventory purchase accounting step-up adjustment related to the Quest acquisition.
As a result, gross margin was 38.9%, a 260 basis point decline versus last year. The non-cash inventory step-up adversely impacted year-to-date gross margin by 200 basis points. Quest lower gross margin and the previously mentioned increase in trade promotions were a 60 basis point headwind. Adjusted EBITDA increased 48%, $73.5 million, driven by the increase in gross profit, partially offset by selling and marketing expenses, which increased 51.3% or $15.4 million to $45.5 million. The majority of the increase, about 75%, was due to the acquisition of Quest and the timing of higher legacy Atkins marketing expense as discussed previously. Additionally, G&A expenses increased $14.5 million to $36.6 million, primarily attributable to Quest and higher legacy Atkins employee-related costs.
Business transaction costs were $26.9 million and primarily associated with the Quest acquisition. Moving to the other items in the P&L, the net impact of interest income and interest expense was an increase of $9 million due to the increase in the term loan balance. Year-to-date income tax expense was $3.2 million versus $8.7 million in the prior year. In fiscal 2020, we anticipate an effective tax rate of around 26%. As a result Q2 year-to-date reported net income was $5.9 million versus $28 million last year.
Now, turning to earnings per share, in the second quarter of 2020 the company reported $0.11 per share diluted compared with $0.15 per share diluted for the comparable period of 2019. The Q2 year-over-year change was impacted by the non-cash inventory step-up of $5.1 million, integration cost of $3.9 million and business combination cost of around $700,000.
Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.23, an increase of $0.05 versus the year-ago period. Note that we calculated adjusted diluted EPS as adjusted EBITDA less interest income, interest expense and income tax. Year-to-date reported EPS was $0.06 versus $0.33 per share diluted in the prior year, impacted by the non-cash inventory step-up of $7.5 million, integration cost of $5.3 million, and business combination cost of $26.9 million. Year-to-date adjusted EPS was $0.45, an increase of $0.06 versus the year ago period. Please refer to today’s press release for an explanation and reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures. Moving on to the balance sheet and cash flows, year-to-date we paid down $21 million of term loan and at quarter end the outstanding term loan balance was $635.5 million.
Given our cash balance and outstanding term loan balance at the end of the second quarter, we are well on track to achieving our trailing 12-month net-debt-to-adjusted EBITDA target of less than 3.7 times By fiscal year-end 2020. Given the unpredictable nature of the COVID-19 crisis, in March, the company began to increase finished goods inventory of some of its high velocity products. In conjunction with this as well as for other working capital and general corporate purposes the company drew down $25 million of its $75 million available under its revolving credit facility. The company believes it is in a strong liquidity position and at the end of March, the company’s estimated cash balance was about $80 million.
We anticipate the net impact of interest income and interest expense to be in the $33 million to $35 million range, an increase of $1 million versus our previous estimate due to the drawdown of the revolver. Year-to-date depreciation and amortization was $7.1 million, capital expenditures were about $0.5 million. Capex for fiscal 2020 is expected to be about $5 million, driven primarily by the ERP implementation. Let me now provide you with a brief update on the Quest integration. The identified cost synergies of $20 million are on track and will begin to materially flow through the — in fiscal year 2021.
The major parts of the integration work stream are well under way and tracking with our plan. Specifically, the supply chain team is working on an integrated approach to procurement, distribution and warehousing. Work and discussions with vendors are proceeding as planned. Additionally, the Quest and Atkins IT teams are working collaboratively on ERP implementation on to Quest’s existing platform. To-date we’re on schedule and haven’t encountered any major obstacle. Despite the challenges of everyone working remotely, this is one of our top priorities and the integration steering committee is in constant communication to ensure that we’re progressing on our timeline.
I would now like to turn the call back to Joe for closing remarks.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Thanks, Todd. As I previously stated, our first half of the fiscal 2020 performance exceeded our expectations. And as we began the second half of the year, we were confident in our ability to achieve our previously communicated fiscal year 2020 outlook. However in March, retail foot traffic was volatile. Retail takeaway of our product was very strong in the first half of the month followed by notable slowdown thereafter, underscoring the unpredictable nature and current consumer purchasing behavior due to COVID-19. The severity and duration of the current situation is uncertain and will likely continue during much of the second half of fiscal 2020. Therefore, given the rapidly evolving situation and the uncertainty related to the potential effect of the COVID-19 outbreak we believe it is prudent to withdraw our previously communicated fiscal 2020 outlook.
We’ll continue to monitor the situation and will provide additional perspective on the year during our fiscal third quarter conference call in early July. As I mentioned earlier, we’re fortunate to participate in the category that has so many positive underlying growth characteristics. We believe that health and wellness will continue to be an important part of consumers’ life that the mega trends related to healthy snacking, convenience, meal replacement, and on-the-go eating are long-term trends and at the low household penetration this category will be a tailwind for our business for years to come. As such, we believe and have confidence in the long-term growth prospects of our brand and our business.
Finally, I want to extend my appreciation during these unique times. First, thank you to our employees in Denver, El Segundo and around the world. They have adjusted remarkably well to their new, remote work environment. By juggling multiple new challenges at home, they have continued to collaborate well and execute superbly. Second, I want to thank the leadership team of Simply Good and Quest as well as our Board of Directors. With their continued guidance and leadership, I’m confident we will navigate the short-term challenges of this situation while positioning the business for continued long-term growth. We appreciate everyone’s interest in our company and are now available to take your questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Chris Growe with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
Christopher Growe — Stifel Nicolaus — Analyst
Hi, good morning.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Good morning. Good morning, Chris.
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Hi, Chris.
Christopher Growe — Stifel Nicolaus — Analyst
Good morning. Glad to hear you guys are healthy and hope it stays that way. I just thought I would ask you first of all, as we think about — this very loyal consumer base you have — just wanted to get a sense from you, Joe, if you can speak to it. And I know it’s very early, but how those consumers react in this environment? And then, I’m just curious how you get a sense of that? Is it through e-commerce trends? Sounds like those were strong through March. I’d say that’s probably ticking up a bit. You’ve seen more activity through your website, is there panel data; just to get a sense of how these consumers are reacting now, if you have any sense of that and then how you’re going to track that?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, Chris. Good question. Again, very early, early stages of this and I think right now the big driver of this has been shopping behavior influence more than its consumption behavior input. So we have a pretty good view of what’s going on from a shopping standpoint. And as we said in our prepared comment that March was really volatile. Through the early portion of March up to the weekend of the 20, 21st, we saw a significant spike in foot traffic and a significant uptick in our business in both our business as well as the category. The weekend of the 20th and 21st appeared to be a inflection point in people’s shopping behavior, a dramatic fall off, double-digit fall off that has remained through — that remained through the end of the month in people’s shopping patterns and going into stores. We saw significant channel shifting. So e-commerce, online, pickup and delivery all accelerated and then brick and mortar saw a significant fall off that’s kind of remained till — until now.
So most of it right now, I’d say Chris is shopping behavior driven more than it’s consumption-driven. And right now we don’t have a really good read on how the confinement is influencing, how people consume the product. I can give you my anecdotal experience. It’s your home, the pantry is pretty close and I’m snacking more frequently. So I think from a snacking behavior, our category will do well once we get over some of the shopping behavior issues. I think obviously the on-the-go aspect of this category is going to be a negative drag for us offset somewhat by the snacking behavior increases. But really early innings at this point, we don’t know a whole lot about consumption behavior and our view of how we are thinking about guidance had much to do with uncertainty around shopping behavior and the decisions people are making when they go into store.
Christopher Growe — Stifel Nicolaus — Analyst
And presumably in any given period there are volatile weeks and this is obviously very unique, no question. I’ve heard anecdotally as well, you’re seeing a pickup in sales in early April here — SNAP benefits and again, there’s been another reload if you will of pantry loading. So has that picked up a bit? Have you seen that of late and most recent days and the week or any sense of that yet?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, last few days have been much better than the previous two weeks, yeah.
Christopher Growe — Stifel Nicolaus — Analyst
Okay. That’s what I assumed. I was kind of jumping around, yeah.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah. And that’s — I think that was in part one of the reasons that we suspended guidance, just the sheer level of volatility of what people are doing. I’d also add I’ve been into a fair number of stores just watching shopping behavior. And actually in the stores the behavior is really interesting. So people are moving into the stores, quickly doing their shopping and for the most part, staying in center of store, so shopping shelf-stable, I would say basic staple and getting out of the store pretty quickly. So one of the behaviors we noticed early in this is even when people are shopping, they’re avoiding the perimeter not always getting into the health and beauty section where a predominant number of our products are and that had some impact to foot traffic in the aisle and then obviously purchase behavior impact.
Christopher Growe — Stifel Nicolaus — Analyst
Well, let’s hope they go online to buy the items they miss when they go through that section. So I appreciate your color there. And I’ll leave it on for the next question. Thank you.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Thanks, Chris.
Operator
Our next question comes from Rob Dickerson with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Rob Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst
Great. Thanks so much. Those were all good questions. I guess, it seems like what you’re implying obviously or what you’re saying is there is a ton of volatility, we all understand that. Just I’ve had a number of people ask me this morning, if Q2 came in so well though, right, you came in with above [Phonetic] 12% organic sales growth. And that’s through the end of February and you also had 12% in the first half. In the first half, it’s 12%. The guidance is still kind of high-end the 4% to 6%. Obviously, everything’s changed since then. You said in the statement though that tracking to — still to hit that guidance even though there is volatility in the back half. We don’t really know what’s going to happen in the back half, but at the same time just try to find — keep it positive here as in Q2.
And if you put up 12% I know there is a lot of concern kind of in the shake business coming on in the February data trend. Your quarter really goes through February so there is no COVID pre-buying impact, let’s say, outside of the inventory build. Net-net, it seems like that business actually gets better on the bar side than you would have thought because the narrative kind of coming in to today and through February was — would seem like they’re doing worse in shakes because there’s more competition in shakes. We worry about shake. What about shake? But you actually blew away expectations in the quarter, which would make me think that you actually were way ahead of expectations on bars. So as we think about like kind of the base business, right, ex-COVID, ex-near-term behavior shift, can you just speak to that bar business and the shake business in Q2 pre-COVID. Thanks.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, Rob, we felt, as I said in the prepared comments, we felt very good about where we were due to mid-year, obviously pre-COVID-19. Both of our brands were at/or exceeding expectations through the first half of the year, and we felt we were well-positioned and very confident in our ability to deliver the year. So I think that’s clear-cut. So our decision going forward was much more to do about consumer shopping behavior over the month of March and the unpredictability of projecting that behavior going forward. I would also add that the decision to suspend guidance was a more strategic decision and not just about the uncertainty and the magnitude or the duration of consumer shopping behavior, although that clearly was an important factor.
It also reflected our current priorities, namely, to protect our employees and our communities, ensure the robustness of our supply chain and to provide service to our customers and consumers. So for us, it was much more about doing the right thing for our business over these challenging times than it was just about the POS. But again, to reiterate, we felt really good about where we were. We felt very confident pre-COVID-19 that we were going to be able to achieve our financial guidance. And we felt good about the composition of our business. As you’d mentioned it had been driven through the first half of the year by strong bar and confection business. We had an RTD business that for the first half of the year was down a little bit. We felt good about the plans we have put into place in the second half of the year to get that moving into positive digits. And all-in-all, prior to the confinement, the consumer confinement, we were really confident that we had momentum on our side and the way which closed the second half of the year strongly.
Rob Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst
Okay, great and then just one follow-up. Obviously, given everything that’s occurring within consumer behavior and what you were saying about the perimeter of the store relative to the size of the store. As that relates to the marketing plan — promotional plan, how quickly do you think those plans could actually shift, their capital allocation could shift? Like I’m asking more about positioning online, various themes like good protein shelf-stable products. If you had the right placement, let’s say online, like on an Amazon, you could ship that very quickly relative to be shifting your product placement within the store. Is there ability to ship promotional spend or rather marketing spend, product placement spend on the page upfront to try to actually further increase and grow that online business given the current dynamic? That’s it, thanks.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
So Rob, excellent question, already under way. So we’ve obviously seen, as I mentioned in the prepared comments, our e-commerce business, the post COVID-19 has accelerated as is other online delivery and pickup. So people are the best they can, trying to avoid going in the stores and choosing other means of buying products and we’ve seen that significant pick up in our business at other channels. That has led us to shift marketing spend already to promote our brand in those channels in order to keep some marketing pressure on the business. So, good question, thank you.
Rob Dickerson — Jefferies — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Alexia Howard with Bernstein. Please proceed with your question.
Alexia Howard — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. — Analyst
Good morning, everybody.
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Good morning.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Hi Alexia.
Alexia Howard — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. — Analyst
Okay. Graham [Phonetic] asked about the supply chain and I know this has — you’re using co-manufacturing for all of your supply. How much flexibility is there to ramp up production in those facilities and also how dedicated are the plants? I mean if one of them goes those offline because of COVID-19, could other plants pick up that capacity? And I’m thinking about both bars and shake. How much could you increase production on a steady state over the next few months while restaurant traffic is down? Thank you.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, good question, Alexia. First, we’ve been in constant communication, not only with our contract manufacturers, but communication upstream with our ingredient suppliers. Their situation — they are well prepared for this. We’ve been in communication for over five weeks with these suppliers to understand what their plans are coming into the situation and we’re very confident in the robustness of our co-man, our third-party logistics provider and our ingredient suppliers. And so far, there have been no impacts in their facilities and production and our ability to meet demand. We in the early stages of this stepped up inventory on key SKUs, so we typically are running about call it, five to six weeks of inventory in our own warehouses for key SKUs, about 35 of our top SKUs.
We started moving our inventory position closer to eight weeks, and we’ll be continuing to monitor that and continuing to move that up. In some instances we’ll go to 10 weeks of inventory just to give ourselves some safety stock in the event of a spike in demand from a retail standpoint. We’re able to get that because we’ve been in communication very early on in the process. We’re able to get that available capacity pretty easily. Again, I have complete confidence in their preparedness, in the robustness of the supply chain and our ability to flow goods, ingredients to co-man, to our third-party warehouse and to customers smoothly. So it’s been our top priority. We’re on it very early and so far, our supply chain is responding wonderfully to the situation.
Alexia Howard — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. — Analyst
Great. And can I follow up with a question on promotional activity? I think you alluded to the idea that you might be pulling back on that going forward. When might that kick in and do you anticipate an increase in realized pricing as a result over the next few months?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, terrific question. These are — this is less about us pulling back. It’s more about retailers changing their priority. So as you can imagine they’re dealing with operational issues in their stores to keep the short stores stocked and trying to keep social distancing so the number of employees in the stores while consumers are shopping. You’re seeing those behaviors number of retailers announced the number of people that could be in the store at any one time. Some retailers are actually having traffic patterns in the store in order to minimize interaction between their employees and other shoppers.
So the retail operational impact of the situation is for some retailers to prioritize that over promotions and even shelf resets. So I would say it’s too early for us to understand the impact of that. I think it’s reasonable to believe some retailers will delay shelf reset, some retailers will push out promotion events to focus on in-stock shelf and safety and security of shoppers. Hard for us to know that. I do think it’s reasonable to believe we are not going to be — we probably aren’t going to spend most of our trade spend that we had originally planned, simply because customers will pull back event. And then, and those monies will go unused.
Alexia Howard — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. — Analyst
Thank you very much. I’ll pass it on.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah. You’re welcome.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Jason English with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Hey. Good morning folks. Thanks for…
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Good morning Jason.
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Good morning Jason.
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Hey. So I think in response to last question, Joe was talking about taking inventory from five to six [Indecipherable] somewhere in eight to 10 range. It sounds like that could have a bit of an impact on cash balance just given the working capital needs. In that context where do you think you’ll land at net debt by the end of fiscal ’20?
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, so that impact in the short-term probably has about a $10 million to $15 million cash flow impact. I’d like to think by the end of the fiscal year we can wind a good chunk of that down, but obviously, it depends on how the COVID situation plays out over the next few months. Not a big impact on our goal of 3.75 or less on the leverage; still confident we will be below that target. As of now, we obviously have some levers to pull from a cash flow perspective on it. Joe just mentioned trade. Obviously, with no travel going on we’ll have some G&A savings here in the back half of the year. So feel much more comfortable trying to predict cash flow and to some extent EBITDA than sales just given what’s going on in the marketplace right now but very confident on the leverage.
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
So and that’s kind of what I was going to back into — I was trying to reverse engineer practically where you’re still expecting EBITDA to be and it sounds like your EBITDA expectations aren’t changing materially, it’s just the sales volatility. So in that context, I imagine you have masked out sort of bull-bear base-type scenarios or worst case, best case type scenarios in the various offsets that would allow you to manage cash and EBITDA in each. Do you feel like you’ve adequately stress tested on both ends of the range? And do you feel confident in the leverage ratio on either end?
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
We do — obviously, whether this thing is going to last three months or longer, hard to tell. Hopefully it would be even shorter than that, but we are in the process of doing a lot of stress test right now. Again, we do have some levers to pull. On the cost side, we will be smart both from a short term and a long-term perspective on those cost levers. But we should be very good on leverage.
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Okay. And then last question just on.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Hey Jason. One other point — as you think about consumers sheltering in home and the influence of marketing pressure, you really start challenging how much marketing dollars you should be spending and how truly effective they are. So we’ll be looking at our marketing investment levels. I totally expect us to see a fall off in return on investment and I would expect us to pull back on marketing, actually keeping some powder dry from when people are out and about again. So that will be another lever that we will pull at on a — just based on ROI. If we’re seeing we’re not getting a return for that spending we’re going to pull back. We’ll keep our powder dry and that provides us even more financial flexibility going forward. But I think you accurately reflected our sentiment. A lot of volatility on shopping, which drives some volatility on revenue but we have a fair amount of dry powder from an EBITDA standpoint.
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. And as you mentioned, as people shelter at home, marketing may be less responsive. Behavior may also be different too. Can you remind us what percentage of your consumption occasions you believe fall in meal replacement versus snacks?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, I don’t think we accurately know that because we don’t have that group. I don’t completely understand how much is meal replacement versus snacking? There is a fair portion of our business that’s snacking only. And so, I think we’re going to see, again, as I mentioned an increase in snacking behavior and probably fewer occasions on meal replacement. The other thing to think through, which is I think is really important is the consumer benefit that we offer in our brands, weight management and active nutrition, probably a little less relevant from a consumer standpoint during times of confinement.
That said, I think healthy snacking will continue to be relevant to folks as they’re in their homes. But I think the weight management benefit and kind of active nutrition, when we just — those are less relevant to us. That has some impact on consumption going forward. That said, look, we’re really confident in our business after we emerge out of this. We’re going to make the right decisions in the short term for our business, for our employees and for our communities. And then we feel really confident in our ability, once this crisis ends, our business will be right back on track.
Jason English — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Right on. Thank you guys very much. Appreciate it.
Operator
Our next question comes from John Baumgartner with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.
John Baumgartner — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Good morning. Thanks for the question. I guess first off, Joe, looking at the Quest business, obviously, the specialty channel, it has been weak already and now with the store closures that number falls harder as you alluded. What are you seeing in terms of pick up in e-commerce, maybe being able to offset those declines? Any data you can share thus far about any channel shift?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, just — on Quest or the entire company?
John Baumgartner — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Quest.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Quest — as you just step back the — this has been going on for a number of years. Quest’s growth in food, drug, mass, and then online has more than offset the declines in the specialty channel. I think with this crisis, specialty channel will accelerate. The good news there is for us is that it’s — as a percent of our total business declined pretty significantly versus the last few years. So we’re reasonably comfortable that that channel shifting is going to continue. This may accelerate a little bit, but we’re in a good position in those other channels to pick up [Indecipherable].
John Baumgartner — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Okay, great. And then the follow-up, one of the push backs that we get on the investment case for example is a degree of uncertainty as to how long the Atkins brand can grow, how long the Rob Lowe messaging can work. But when you look at COVID, when you hear about the more severe cases being associated with obesity, diabetes, it would seem to reinforce the low sugar, low carb messaging. And as you referenced the R&D pipeline in your comments, I’m curious; as you sit back, do you think COVID opens new opportunities for you to expand the low-carb portfolio into new categories? Do you have any Household Panel data or any anecdotes about healthcare as being positive for low-carb demand? How are you thinking about things on the other side of COVID from a demand perspective maybe?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, great question. And the one observation, the high protein, low-carb diet is beneficial from a stress standpoint, beneficial from a community standpoint. So I think people that — I think all those things that have been driving our business from a mega trend standpoint around health and wellness with obesity, diabetes will continue to be relevant. And in times when people are concerned about their health will continue to be relevant. So we feel really good about how our brands are positioned from a health and wellness standpoint. but those that kind of push back on how long can we grow this business, I just point out that it’s been 11 years now compound annual growth rate of 13% on Atkins.
The category is still massively under-penetrated. A lot of opportunity, a lot of white space from a consumer target standpoint. So we’re again really confident that the mega trends, once we come out of this crisis will continue and our ability to continue to capture those consumers open to low-carb and protein rich will continue to be there for us. And it’s backed by science. It is a trend that’s continued for a lot of years and we’re reasonably comfortable in our ability to continue to grow household penetration. And frankly, this will just teach us that health and wellness is important to us. Good immunity is important to us, to people and that’s going to continue to be beneficial.
John Baumgartner — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Great. Thanks, Joe. Thanks for the insights.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Fauzer Ali with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
Fauzer Ali — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Yes, hi, good morning. So I just wanted to, you touched on this a little bit during the call, but I wanted to talk more about what you’re seeing from various category point of view. We don’t have full March data at this point and we kind of saw the uptake across the board through data that we do have through March 21. But I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about which categories are you seeing the most volatility versus the more slowdown? And then which categories do you think are most easily transferable to e-commerce?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
So I understand when you talk about categories, what are you referring to?
Fauzer Ali — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
I just mean sort of shakes, bars, yes, yeah.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Okay. Yeah. The reason I ask that is we don’t consider those categories, right? We look at the category organization and around consumer need state. So broadly, we think about it is nutritious snacking, sports, active, performance and kind of weight management. Those are the three segments that we see. As we moved — as shopping behavior after the 20th and 21st declined kind of double digits, the category broadly moved with that — with the foot traffic. So that’s what we experienced after the 20, 21st. Within those segments of the category — the category segments that are in the health and beauty aisle, namely sports and active and weight management, saw more fall off than nutritious snacking, which is in center of store. But we believe that, again that category, center store, that’s where KIND, that’s where CLIF is, right, they were in the center of the shopping area with shoppers coming in, getting in the center store and getting out of the store whereas pharmacy, HABA, we saw just less traffic.
I think that’s the phenomenon that’s going on — at least was going on towards the end of March as we moved into April. Really, purchasing behavior is driven by shopping behavior. And the reason we’re pretty confident that that is the case, if you look at both of our e-commerce businesses spiked and has stayed strong since the crisis started. So we saw a significant uptick in our Quest business. By the way, Amazon is its largest customer. 15% of their business comes from Amazon. They saw a significant spike in the business on Amazon across all their products. And it’s continued to be strong. And again, on top of kind of 60% growth on Atkins business, on online, we spiked above that after the restrictions started to take place. So again, strong growth in the business where shopping is clearly not the issue, right? So I think right now we’re seeing purchase — less about the forum, almost less about the consumer benefit, much more about where it is in the store and how people are shopping.
Fauzer Ali — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Got it.
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
And online, yeah, online, our business is strong across the board, for every form including shakes, we are seeing significant growth so not impacted by form.
Fauzer Ali — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Got it. Just one quick follow-up, just going back to the supply chain. I know historically you’ve talked about how you’re kind of — as you talk to your co-packers, you’re kind of putting in certain orders relative to where you expect sales will be and to the extent that you diverge from that there can be incremental cost associated with that. Sort of is there any framing that you can give us where, I don’t know, sales are up X percent like that might have, what the cost impact of that might be?
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
So far we’ve not seen a cost impact. We were very early in the stages, just to give you an example, we went to travel restrictions at the very beginning of March. We also went to remote operations as a company a few days after that. So we’re early on this. We were early in communicating with our suppliers and we were early in, in increasing orders on key items. So we grabbed a lot of available capacity early in the process not with really a significant — no significant uptick in costs. We’ve seen a little bit of extra costs in our warehouse operations mainly driven by making sure that our — the employees in those operations continue to come to work, there is a lot of pressure in the area for other distribution companies looking to try to get employees to come into their places. So we’ve been paying bonuses that have been helpful. And us making sure that we have the employees necessary to get products out the door. But Todd, do you have any other comments? We have not experienced any uptick at all in cost of goods.
Todd Cunfer — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, very nominal at this point. Look, as we pointed out on the call we are looking at this very strategically. If we have to pay a little bit more in the future to make sure we have products in our warehouse and on our customer’s shelves we’re more than willing to do that. We have not seen that yet. So hopefully that will not be created over the next couple of months, but so far very, very little.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, I would remind you to a year ago we saw pretty significant uptick in bar demand. We were able to get that extra supply. We really didn’t have any increase in cost in order to get that extra supply. So the good news — we’re a big manufacturer, right? We have large volume and we offer a long run when a contract manufacturer makes our products. So we’re somebody that they will actually want to have more business with. So if we’re getting our demands in, our requirements in pretty early, they’re happy to meet those needs if they’ve got surplus capacity. And so far that capacity is available.
Fauzer Ali — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Thank you.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
You’re welcome.
Operator
Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Joe Scalzo for closing comments.
Joseph E. Scalzo — Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Yeah, thanks again for your participation on our call today. We hope you’ll continue to remain safe and we look forward to updating you on our third quarter results in July. So, hope you all have a good day. Take care.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]