X

VF Corporation (VFC) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

VF Corporation (NYSE:VFC) Q3 2023 Earnings Call dated Feb. 07, 2023.

Corporate Participants:

Allegra Perry — Vice-President, Investor Relations

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Matt Puckett — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Laurent Vasilescu — BNP Paribas — Analyst

Dana Telsey — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

Michael Binetti — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Brooke Roach — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Jay Sole — UBS — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

Greetings and welcome to the VF Corporation Third Quarter 2023 earnings call.

At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded.

I will now turn the conference over to our host Allegra Perry, Vice-President, Investor Relations. Thank you, you may begin.

Allegra Perry — Vice-President, Investor Relations

Good afternoon, and welcome to VF Corporation’s Third Quarter Fiscal 2023 conference call.

Participants on today’s call will make forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current expectations and are subject to uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. These uncertainties are detailed in documents filed regularly with the SEC. Unless otherwise noted, amounts referred to on today’s call we’ll will be on an adjusted constant dollar basis, which we have defined in the press release that was issued this afternoon and which we use as lead numbers in our discussion because we believe they more accurately represent the true operational performance and underlying results of our business. You may also hear us refer to reported amounts, which are in accordance with US GAAP. Reconciliations of GAAP measures to adjusted amounts can be found in the supplemental financial tables included in the press release, which identify and quantify all excluded items and provide management’s view of why this information is useful to investors. Unless otherwise noted, results presented on today’s call are based on continuing operations.

Joining me on the call will be VF’s Interim President and Chief Executive Officer, Benno Dorer; and EVP and Chief Financial Officer, Matt Puckett. Following our prepared remarks, we’ll open the call for questions. I’ll now hand over to Benno.

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Hello, everyone. Since I stepped into my new interim role about two months ago, I have been fully immersed in the business. I have uncovered areas of strength and promise, but also gained a deeper understanding of where we must improve. And I have been impressed with our talent at all levels and their leadership and commitment to VF on which our future success is dependent.

Many of you know about my career history, which culminated in roles as CEO and Chair of the Clorox Company until my retirement from a full-time corporate career two years ago. This gave me the opportunity to lead a global, purpose-driven consumer portfolio company towards more profitable, sustained and responsible growth with financial discipline, a fully engaged organization, brands people love, consistently strong product innovation and a differentiated approach to the portfolio to maximize value.

You also know that I have served on the Board of the year for the last six years, including as lead Independent Director from July 2021 until December 2022. I believe that my deep insight into VF, my passion for the company, its people and brands, coupled with my prior career experience gives me a solid foundation for the Interim CEO role. And I do plan to use my time to make a positive difference to VF business and organization.. My overall theme for today is that VF will sharpen its near-term focus on the biggest consumer opportunities within our existing brand portfolio and on enhanced operational performance.

Consistent with this objective, we are shifting resources priorities across the company. This will include rightsizing our dividends, exploring the sale of non-core assets and cutting costs in lower-value areas to strengthen our execution, and to enable incremental targeted investments in our brands and the consumer.

With that, I’m pleased to speak with you today about four topics; VF’s results in Q3, our near-term priorities to address performance, how we are taking prudent steps to build a stronger company for the future, and why I’m even more optimistic than I was two months ago about the long-term prospects for VF.

First, we overcame a very challenging environment in Q3 where our performance highlighted examples of success while also clearly showcasing areas to improve. Amidst the difficult geopolitical and economic backdrop we grew Q3 revenue 3% in constant dollars, and today we are reaffirming our revenue outlook at the low-end of our prior range and also the midpoint of our EPS outlook for fiscal year 2023.

Our EMEA business continues to be a bright spot. With Q3 revenue up 10%, our 7th consecutive quarter of double-digit growth, driven by broad-based strength, including The North Face of 13% and Vans up 7%.

Another strength in Q3 has been our consistent performance of the outdoor brands, led of course, by The North Face, where revenue was also up 13% globally with growth achieved in each region and channel. We also saw nice growth in Timberland. Up 6% in the quarter, with solid performance in EMEA and in wholesale globally. And our outdoor emerging brands continued to grow strongly, up 10%, highlighted by Ultra. Finally, in Asia, we saw a sequential improvement with Q3 revenue up 4%. This was driven by the beginning of what could be a return to stronger momentum in Greater China, which was close to flat at minus one.

Secondly, we are clear-eyed about performance barriers, which are predominantly operational in nature, and our near-term priority is to put aggressive plans in-place to improve our execution. We are not reaching our full potential as a company. The good news though is that doing so is largely within our control. We must consistently delight consumers with exciting products, engaging content delivered with effective marketing tools and with great shopping experiences in-store and online. Where we do this well, see The North Face and the broader portfolio in EMEA, our brands continue to thrive. Where we are inconsistent, with Vans being far the highest impact, but not the only example, we must improve our consumer execution to return to full strength.

We must also return to delivering products to our consumers and customers on-time and at lower-cost to VF. Supply-chain has long been a core competitive advantage of VF, but our recent performance also requires focus. So to improve execution, we have two near-term key priorities, which represent significant value-creation opportunities. First, turning around our Vans performance through improved consumer execution, and second, returning to supply-chain excellence across the company.

On Vans, we clearly have been challenged for some time now. This is predominantly a challenge in the Americas, and it is mostly executional in nature. For perspective, Vans Q3 revenue rose by 7% in EMEA, but declined by 13% in the Americas, which is primarily North-America and accounted for 90% of the global Vans Q3 revenue decline. While there are differences in EMEA compared to the North American market, the relatively stronger performance of Vans in EMEA also reflects the benefits of a clear growth strategy and stronger marketplace execution. We must do better with Vans in its home markets, and we will. Our action plan follows the four growth drivers laid out in our Investor Day last September, consumer, products, marketplace, and operating model.

Here are a few specific examples of actions. We will sharpen our view of the changing consumer landscape through a new consumer segmentation, which is underway and will inform the business’s overall growth strategy and begin to influence direct-to-consumer plans as of summer this year. We need to delight consumers in ways that are relevant to their specific needs, and to do so we must be more intimately familiar with them.

We will also better turn data and insights into significant consumer opportunities available today. For example, a strong untapped opportunity exists with our UltraRange product-line. Here, awareness is very low at around 10% among all consumers, and at below 30% even among Vans loyalists. So we started to boost awareness, and this is starting to yield results. UltraRange revenue grew 34% in Q3, with much more growth to be had. The MTE and Half Cab product lines have similar potential, and going-forward, we will drive these and other promising platforms longer and more continuously.

We will significantly increase our investment in-product innovation, funded by a reduction in costs in lower-value areas, with actions including SG&A reduction and improving store profitability. Vans product development investment as a percentage of revenue lags well behind the company average. We will change that, starting with fiscal year ’24. This will help us aggressively pursue new styles and make our innovation pipeline more consistently strong.

We will also eliminate unnecessary SKU complexity to simplify and importantly amplify the shopping experience. A small test at our Irvine, California store led to a footwear revenue improvement of plus 12 percentage points with 30% fewer SKUs. We will begin to expand this initiative as of fall fiscal year ’24.

We will move our digital spending principal from budget-cap based to flexible and ROI-based to take advantage of available spending opportunities that translate into incremental revenue and profits. It is early days, but we have already seen an improvement in profitable DTC growth rates only a few weeks into this change.

We will sharpen our processes, in fiscal year ’24 we will go-to-market at retail, including wholesale customers, with clearly aligned and integrated product calendars. This will lead to better plans that are more centered around the consumer. And to drive Vans forward, we have made tremendous progress putting a World-class Vans leadership team in-place. Two critical leaders, our new Chief Product and Merchandising Officer and our new Chief Digital Officer, have both joined in December and they’re off to a fast-start.

Vans continues to be a fundamentally strong brand. The number of consumers buying Vans during the last 12 months was up, as was brand advocacy. But many people buy the brand less often. So what we do need to do is to fuel the brand more consistently and give people more reasons to buy more Vans. That is on us, and that’s what we will do.

The momentum we continue to generate with The North Face further proves this point. The brand continues to perform strongly driven by strong consumer engagement and iconic products. And we will keep investing to fuel that momentum. Our XPLR PASS membership continue to grow significantly in Q3, up 2.1 million members to approximately 17 million in total. It’s more than a jacket marketing campaign launched this season and drove strong outerwear growth globally, with the Nuptse jackets and the recently re-launched Summit Series premium product-line leading the business.

Our recent first ever performance-led collab launch with American artist and designer, KAWS, was highly successful. Net, the brand’s momentum is strong and broad-based. The North Face is a solid and transferable execution blueprint for Vans, and frankly, the entire VF portfolio in the Americas, where we must grow with consumers more consistently.

The second near-term priority at VF is to return to the company’s hallmark standard of excellence in the supply chain arena. We are working through a variety of external and internal issues that impacted revenues and profits in a high-volume quarter like Q3. Lengthened manufacturing and freight lead times, larger upfront product buys, unpredicted demand spikes from elevated promotional activity in the quarter, plus higher-than-normal customer order cancellations, add-up to unsatisfactory customer service, elevated inventory, and significantly higher costs. So we’re taking aggressive actions to address these issues.

We expect to be able to work excess seasonal inventory down to more normalized levels by the end of Q4 this fiscal year. Our customer service levels are also improving, albeit still below our own and our customers’ expectations. We have a plan in-place to get back to target levels by the end-of-the first-half of fiscal year ’24.

We will also leverage our logistics partnerships to reduce costs by improving ocean and parcel rates for the next fiscal year. And we will see a return to more normalized and predictable promotional patterns and anticipate moderating inflation, which we expect will contribute to lower-cost through fiscal year ’24. We are committed to serving our customers better. And so getting back to strong supply-chain performance at improved costs. Again, much of this is within our control.

My third message is that we’re taking prudent steps to strengthen VF financial position and build a stronger company. VF is committed to strong financial discipline. This all starts with a strong core, and growth that is profitable and sustainable. And to reinforce this, we are taking significant actions now.

We will focus on near-term growth efforts on our existing portfolio. Smart acquisitions we remain part of the VF playbook, but near-term we believe we are best served to return to strong shareholder value-creation by taking advantage of the many opportunities offered by our portfolio of beloved brands, including those acquired in the recent years. Our growth strategy, laid out in the company’s Investor Day last September, continues to be a solid foundation to achieve this, but we will lean into the consumer even more strongly than in the past.

We will also pursue strategic alternatives for our Packs business. This business is performing well. But we need to make sure that we are the highest-value owner and that we focus our resources against the highest-value opportunities within our existing portfolio. To grow margins and profit while supporting strong investments in the business, we will lean into cost-savings through a more systematic and ongoing cross-functional approach to eliminate costs that do have lower strategic value and are less consumer-oriented.

And we’re making the tough, but what we believe to be a principal and financially responsible decision to cut our dividend by about 40%. We do not take this last step lightly and fully understand the value of a solid dividends as part of a comprehensive approach to total shareholder value-creation. But we also believe that it is prudent to right-size the dividend to accelerate the back to our target dividend payout and debt-to-EBITDA ratios, and to rebuild the dividend from there based on solid expected cash flows and a return to sustained earnings growth beginning with fiscal year ’24. Returning cash to shareholders through a strong dividend remains a key capital allocation priority.

In a continued difficult environment, we are committed to return to a more profitable and consistent growth next fiscal year. Matt will talk you through these actions and the shape of our initial fiscal year expectations in more depth in a moment.

My last message for you is that I’m even more optimistic today then it was two months ago about VF’s future and our ability to return to strong long-term shareholder value-creation. We have significant potential to unlock value from our unique brand portfolio. While not immune to the challenging macroeconomic environment near-term, these brands will benefit from significant long-term category and consumer tailwinds. We will leverage these tailwinds and apply VF best practices, scale, and capabilities, a distinct competitive advantage.

We have a clear set of near-term priorities to inject consistency of execution, which will improve performance across the business over-time. We will sharpen our consumer growth strategies on all our brands and ensure we have the right investments against each of them to realize their full potential funded by cost-savings.

And we have permission from consumers to broaden our reach by taking many of our brands into new financially attractive categories and countries and we are putting in-place strong future plans to do so. We are committed to returning to strong operational discipline, which will help drive predictability, profit, and margin growth, and strong and consistent cash-flow generation. And we will remain committed to the dividend as part of a comprehensive shareholder value-creation plan after today’s adjustments.

Lastly. We have a talented, engaged, and passionate workforce. And we continue to nurture our superb internal talent, and attract great outside hires, reinforcing our confidence that VF remains a top destination for exceptional leaders. Thank you.

With that, I’ll hand it over to Matt to talk through the financials.

Matt Puckett — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Benno, and good afternoon, everyone.

As Benno mentioned our Q3 results, amidst the continued difficult macro-environment, exhibited areas of continued strength, as well as parts of the business with the clear opportunity for improvement. During the quarter, revenue was up 3% with balanced growth across both direct-to-consumer and wholesale. Adjusted gross margin was down 140 basis-points, and adjusted operating margins declined by 280 basis-points, leading to adjusted EPS of $1.12, down 17% or 10% in constant-currency.

Taking a look at our revenue results across geographies. The Americas region was down 1% during the quarter. As Benno alluded to in his remarks, North-America was particularly challenging at Vans, and also at Dickies, due largely to the continued impact of inventory actions taken by the largest wholesale partner as well as softer performance across the value end work consumer. Momentum continued in the EMEA region with revenue up 10%, which marked our 7th consecutive quarter of double-digit growth and represented broad-based strength across brands, with 10 out of 11 brands in the geography growing during the quarter, including the five largest brands.

Looking at the countries, all major markets were growing, with four of the top-five by volume up double-digits. Lastly, in our APAC region. We saw further sequential improvement versus half-one, with revenue up 4% driven by improving performance in Greater China, which was down 1%, coupled with strong mid-teens growth in the rest of Asia, where most countries were up double-digits.

Moving on to gross margin, which was down 140 basis-points during the quarter. As anticipated we saw mix become a tailwind in Q3 for the first time in several quarters, driven by the strength of our international business and channel mix. However, this was more than offset by rate, which was down 170 basis-points, as higher discounts and an increased promotional environment, also impacting our direct channels, were partially offset by strategic pricing actions and FX transaction benefits.

Moving down the P&L, our adjusted operating margin was down by 280 basis-points, reflecting the lower gross margins and a 110 basis-points of deleverage in SG&A, which grew at a 6% rate in constant dollars in the quarter, as compared to the revenue growth of 3%. The primary driver of deleverage was higher marketing spend, which accounted for about 75% of the increase in the SG&A ratio. In addition, deleverage distribution and freight spending and some direct-to-consumer costs were mostly offset by spending reductions across G&A.

As it relates to our cash position at the end of Q3, as anticipated our liquidity increased during the quarter to approximately $1.9 billion, benefiting from the seasonality of earnings and a reduction in working capital. Within the quarter, we paid Timberland tax deposits from approximately $875 million, funded by the issuance of a $1 billion term-loan which will mature in December 2024.

As Benno [Indecipherable] earlier, we are taking clear actions to improve our operating performance while maintaining cost discipline in continuing to support our brands growth opportunities. Turning to the supply-chain environment, we continue to see higher lead times across the supply-chain. During the quarter impact the business. In addition, higher volatility on the distribution logistics side of things, particularly in the Americas, coupled with the higher volumes in the quarter and event-driven spikes in-demand, led to inconsistent on-time delivery performance to our wholesale partners and inefficiencies in support of our direct-to-consumer business in the US during parts of the quarter.

Looking-forward, lead times are improving as anticipated, which will lead to better on-time performance and we’re seeing that with spring deliveries. Importantly, the predictability of ex-factory dates, or when the product leaves the factory is more reliable and aligned with historical performance. This is an important data point that will better position us to more fully serviced the business in fall ’23 and beyond. In addition, we expect to see reduced to more normalized levels of air-freight volumes moving forward, a continued easing of ocean and air rates, and generally more modest FOB inflationary impacts expected for fall ’23 and spring ’24, versus what we’ve seen over the last few seasons.

Let me take a couple minutes unpack our elevated inventory position today and the work we’re doing to reduce that over the next few quarters. Net inventory levels were up 101% versus last year. With growth inventory, excluding the increase relating to change in Eco terms to support the supply-chain financing program, up 67% or approximately $850 million. Importantly, from a makeup standpoint the dollar increase was primarily driven by core and excess replenishment inventory across brands, particularly in the Americas. This is primarily driven by COVID challenges affecting the supply-chain with prolonged lead times leading to earlier and less accurate inventory buys, coupled with higher cancellations and lower demand, as well as the prior year value comparison having been lower than optimal.

We expect to reduce total inventory levels by about $300 million during Q4, but we’ll carry higher levels of core and replenishment inventory into fiscal year ’24 across Dickies, The North Face, and Vans, which are contemplated in the assortment in buy-plans for the next season and which will moderate throughout the back-half of calendar 2023.

Moving on to the outlook for this fiscal year, we are affirming our EPS guidance at the midpoint of, and our revenue outlook within the previous range. Within our revenue guidance of about 3% constant dollar growth, we now expect The North Face to be up at least 14% as the brands broad-based momentum has continued through Q3 and into Q4. In fact, year-to-date, the brand is growing 17%. On the other hand Vans is now projected to be down high-single-digits as the performance in the Americas region decelerated in Q3 and we expect Q4 will be impacted by the high inventory levels in the wholesale channel in the US particularly. On a reported basis, we now see about five points of impact from the translation of foreign currency, which was slightly less negative than our previous outlook.

As a result of higher promotional and markdown activity and also reflecting higher order cancellations, we expect full-year gross margins to be down about 200 basis-points. We expect our operating margin to be around 9.5%. Our tax-rate is expected to be 13% as we have a greater portion of the mix of regional profits from lower tax regimes, mainly in international markets. These changes lead to a tightened EPS range of $2.05 to $2.15, which fits within our previous outlook of $2 to $2.20. Our adjusted cash-flow from operations, excluding the Timberland tax deposit made during Q3, is expected to be about $700 million, as we continue to generate solid cash flows despite near-term setbacks in our operating performance.

As we highlighted earlier in the year, we will be disciplined with our approach to spending on non-strategic areas, and today we’ve moderated our projected CapEx for the year to approximately $200 million from $230 million previously as we sharpen our investment focus on value-creation opportunities, and specifically those things that impact the consumer experience.

In summary, despite the challenges impacting our financial results this year, I’m pleased with the great progress and performance we’re seeing in several of our businesses and geographies, and at the same time, the clear enterprise focus on improving our results in those areas where we are underperforming.

Let me say a few words about the next fiscal year, particularly our mindset and preliminary financial expectations. First and foremost with the heightened intensity on planning, we will sharpen our execution in order to strengthen our operating performance and deliver more profitable and consistent financial results in fiscal year ’24. We are watching very closely. Several factors that will have a bearing on our plans. The macroeconomic environment, impacting consumer sentiment and spending on discretionary goods, particularly in Europe and the US, the recovery trajectory travel and spending of the Chinese consumer as that market now fully began to open back up, the inventory rightsizing that is happening across the marketplace, and finally our own progress in turning around Vans and the timing of an inflection in that business.

As we focus on driving profit margin expansion during the year, we expect continued broad-based growth across much of the portfolio and all geographies. And as a result, we expect revenue will increase in the range of at least low-single digits. As for Vans you heard Benno reference a number of actions to sequentially events or plans to reset and reaccelerate. Some of which will impact the business more quickly, others which will take longer.

In addition, our wholesale partners have adopted a more conservative approach to the spring-summer order book, impacted both by higher inventory levels in the channel and the ongoing challenging macroeconomic environment. As a result, we will continue to see declines in the business, particularly in the Americas through the first-half of fiscal year ’24. We would expect to generate low-double-digit operating earnings growth with an expansion in both gross and operating margin. Our actions to increase earnings will include improving profit margins at Vans while revenue stabilizes, generating cost-savings from a more efficient supply-chain, and continuing to realize the benefits of our ongoing SG&A optimization.

We will also benefit from the efforts to realign inventories over the next few quarters, and coupled with earnings growth, we expect to deliver meaningful increases in both operating and free-cash flows in fiscal year ’24. In fact, we expect operating cash-flow to grow at an accelerated rate relative to earnings. I look-forward to updating you with more details when we provide our full outlook and plans in May.

Our capital allocation priorities in the near-to-medium term will be focused on supporting and driving the performance of our current portfolio, reducing leverage and returning capital to shareholders in the form of the dividend. And today, we announced a number of strategic actions to accelerate the path to our target leverage ratios, while enhancing our focus on value-creation. First, the Board has declared a dividend of $0.30 per share, or a reduction of approximately 40% relative to the last quarterly payment. An action that demonstrates the company’s financial prudence, considering both an uncertain macro-environment and recent inconsistent operational performance, as we look to right-size the dividend to our target payout ratio of about 50% and accelerate the path to our gross leverage target of 2.5 times. In fact, to do a little math for you, based on the adjustment to the dividend and the comments today about earnings growth next fiscal year, the payout ratio would be in the mid 50s percent range in fiscal year ’24. We will then increase the dividend in the future in-line with earnings growth.

In addition, as part of our ongoing active portfolio management, we are announcing our intention to explore strategic alternatives for our Packs business, including the Kipling, East pack, and transport brands as we take another step in streamlining and focusing our portfolio of brands. As an outcome of this process, we are committed to ensuring these brands are optimally positioned to achieve their full potential, while enhancing VF’s management focus on our top strategic priorities.

Also, we are executing a number of asset sales, which are aligned with our strategic priorities and combined will generate more than 100 million in cash proceeds. We will reduce working capital and align inventories to optimal levels over the next few quarters. And finally, we will increase our efforts to reduce costs in order to point resources towards the company’s highest-value creation opportunities. This includes several previously-announced cost-saving actions which have been progressively building towards delivering approximately $225 million in annualized savings once completed in fiscal year ’24.

I am confident these actions will enable us to strengthen our financial position and sharpen our focus, specifically providing the financial flexibility to enable an accelerated path toward our target leverage metric. Ensure, even if facing ongoing macroeconomic challenges we’ll have continued capacity to fully support our biggest organic value-creation opportunities. And finally, to continue returning cash to shareholders through the dividend.

In summary, VF brand portfolio is well-positioned to deliver long-term sustainable and profitable growth. That hasn’t changed. And importantly, in the near-term. I’m confident the steps we’re taking now will lead to elevated shareholder value-creation through improved operating performance and consistent earnings and cash-flow growth.

With that, we’ll open the line to your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions]

And our first question comes from Laurent Vasilescu with BNP Paribas. Please state your question.

Laurent Vasilescu — BNP Paribas — Analyst

Thank you very much for taking my question.

Benno, I’d love to ask about Vans. What gives you the confidence that changes you’re implementing at the brand are the right strategies and will make a difference in turning this business around? And then. I have a follow-up question regarding the dividend.

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thanks for your question Laurent and hello.

Several ways of answering your question. The first one is that we have a role model in-house that does exactly what we’re trying to do at Vans and that’s North Face, and that’s performing exceedingly well as results are evident this last quarter. The second thing that gives me confidence really is that it’s clear that improving the performance is not some obscure concept but is entirely within our control. We know how to do this and the way to do– the way to bring Vans back is by consistently executing against consumers with excellence. What that means is great product, great marketing, great shopping experiences, and of course, the customer service issues that we talked about.

And then when we think about the specific plan in which we indeed have quite a bit of confidence, there are a number of actions that impact of business now. As I said in my remarks, we’re moving to ROI-based digital spending and we’re seeing really strong results behind that. We’re boosting awareness of existing product platforms like UltraRange, and we’re seeing good results behind that. We have new products expanding now like Lowland, and our new school shoes, and also UltraRange VR3, those are going out now and we think that those are attractive new products.

And finally. I have seen the new talent that we brought in to complement our leadership team in action, and I have high confidence in them. And if you add to that some of the more fundamental changes that we’re making, which will begin to impact the business in the second-half of next fiscal year, like the new consumer segmentation, like a digital-first operating model, and a new go-to-market upgrades, which again, we’ve already applied in EMEA and Europe, and that’s working well, the SKU reduction for which we have a store test with really strong results, and then add-on top the increased spending that we’re planning to put in-place behind product innovation, those are all very tangible things.

Those are things that have worked for Vans in the past, it was working elsewhere in the portfolio, and those are all on us, and that’s really the good news here. The good news, bad news, I should say. The bad news is that we’re in the situation, but the good news is that addressing the performance opportunity that we have on Vans is entirely within our control and we’re pursuing a plan that is very specific and very credible with a high sense of urgency. That’s where my confidence comes from.

Laurent Vasilescu — BNP Paribas — Analyst

Very helpful, Benno.

And then, Matt, on the dividend, what’s changed since your last update? Is this an indication that capital allocation priorities has shifted? How do we know there isn’t a bigger dividend cut coming?

And then on the tax business, I think it’s about a $500 million, $600 million revenue business, can you kind of give us some framework? I think you talked about $100 million cash proceeds from non-core assets. Any kind of benchmark or how we think about potential cash proceeds from the sale of these non-core assets?

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Laurent, I’ll get going on a dividend, and I’ll let Matt comment on your second question around tax.

So, as I also said in my remarks, rightsizing the dividend is not a step we took lightly, and– but we strongly believe it’s necessary and prudent. What this does is it strengthened our balance sheet, our gross debt-to-EBITDA right now is about 4.5 times, and this gets us much closer to our target of 2.5 to one. It realigns to our target payout ratio of 50% and we expect to land, close to that in fiscal ’24. Of course, we will continue to offer strong dividends to our shareholders, which is important to us. To answer your question directly as to this one-time adjustment, we remain very committed to the dividends. This is an important part of comprehensive TSR package for our shareholders and we expect to grow it in-line with earnings from here on out.

And then what are we going to do with the capital? Pay-down debt, serve the dividends, and then I would say secondarily, but still importantly, it give us flexibility to invest in our brands and consumers, and as you’ve heard, that’s the core theme for us today, free-up money from within our P&L that we can invest in our brands and consumers. But this will protect us against the potential downside scenario macroeconomically, if there’s a downturn, we will still be able to execute this plan. But in an ideal scenario, we will also invest incrementally in the progress against our plan. As you’ve heard, we have confidence in it, but it’s also early. But what we’ll do is stay agile to invest and when we think we can get a return will also be confident to increase our investment and this dividend cuts will put us in a position to do something.

Matt, do you want to comment on tax?

Matt Puckett — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Laurent. Really both of these announcements, the dividend and PACKS are we believe that the prudent action to take at this time, specific to so the PACKS, active portfolio management, small non-core competency, and strength of VF and remains a priority of our Board. The Evergreen evaluation efforts that are always underway and the process has led us to the determination, we’re likely not the best owner these brands at this time, we need to ensure the focus of our management team and our and the focus of our capital, while at the same time giving these great brands the best opportunity to reach their full potential.

Let me state though, and really to those brand teams as well, these brands are terrific brands and businesses, and they are performing well. We’ve seen strong revenue and margin growth in fiscal year ’23 from all these brands, and this is Eastpak, JanSport, and Kipling collectively, they’re benefiting from a return to the usage occasions that they that they really are leaders in. Travel gear, school packs and school gear, other activities. It’s a process we began is going to take some time. We certainly won’t rush it, don’t need to do that, but we’re very confident we’ll determine find it the right and best owner of these brands.

And as it relates to proceeds, kind of the same the same message that we– that Benno reiterated in terms of the proceeds, in terms of the use of capital, accelerating our path to deleverage, supporting growth and value-creating opportunities in our organic business, and we continue to prioritize return of capital in the form of a dividend and will grow with earnings moving forward.

And lastly in the non-core assets that I mentioned in my remarks, a $100 million, that’s really primarily non-strategic land and real-estate, also includes the previously-announced, at least it’s certainly an external– the sale and leaseback of our headquarter location in Stabio, Switzerland which we felt made infinite economic sense. So that’s all that’s all inside that $100 million, which will all be finished in cash-in the bank, so to speak, by the end of our fiscal year.

Laurent Vasilescu — BNP Paribas — Analyst

Very helpful, thank you very much.

Operator

Our next question comes from Dana Telsey with Telsey Advisory Group. Please state your question.

Dana Telsey — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

Good afternoon, everyone.

As you think about the initiatives for enhancing the business and all the brands frankly, what do you see as the inventory structure going-forward, how that changes, given the wholesale account base and how they’re placing orders go-forward? Thank you.

Matt Puckett — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, hi, Dana. Thank you.

I mean certainly inventory has done, it’s been a challenge, it’s been an overhang for us for a couple of quarters and continues to certainly persist our inventory is, kind of, nearly double on an absolute value if you just look at the balance sheet. Clearly, there’s an impact there of the in-transit inventory on the comparison. If you back that out, we’re up were up about 67% on a gross kind of comparable basis Year-over-Year, with most of the increase in the Americas.

I think as you think about moving forward, we actually think there’s opportunity to get more efficient with our inventory as we get closer to-market. One of the challenges that we faced this year is the elongated lead times led to earlier buys, which ultimately led to lower forecast accuracy, which created excess inventory that’s been exaggerated by the higher-level of cancellations through the fall and even the late deliveries at the same time, which also led to higher cancellations.

So we’ve got a lot of inventory today. Fortunately, it’s primarily in core carry-over replenishment inventory will carry that moving forward into fiscal year ’24, even after a pretty substantial reduction inventory here in Q4.

And we’ve got plans in-place, really is contemplated in the next season in terms of merchandising and assortment plans and we’ll work our way through it. But when you think about where we’re moving forward, our direct-to-consumer business becoming a larger percent of the total. We think that’s a good thing overall. I mean from an inventory management standpoint. Certainly, we love the idea that we have a large outlet network to move through excess inventories and that’s always our first avenue. But the work that we’re doing to more modernize the supply-chain and Benno talked about some of the things that we need to be doing there, we think will allow us to be more efficient from an inventory utilization moving forward, not less.

Dana Telsey — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Michael Binetti with Credit Suisse. Please state your question.

Michael Binetti — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Hey guys, thanks for taking my question here.

I guess just the first one, Benno, the company is known over long periods as a best-in class supply-chain operator, you pointed to a medium-sized list there of items that you think– it sounds like you think got off-track. I’m curious what you think happened in the supply-chain, what do you think has changed there?

And then maybe this one is for Matt, but I think to get to double-digit EPS growth on the low-single digit revenue growth next year, trying to think about how you’re building that? I think we need to pencil out to about 100 basis-points EBIT expansion, EBIT margin expansion. Maybe just trying to help us think about some of the high-level drivers there, I’m assuming it tilts to the back-half of the year given the comments on Vans revenues in the first-half and how to think about the gross margin expanding next year with the inventory up relative to sales in the fourth-quarter heading into the year.

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Michael, thanks for the question.

I’ll take the one on supply-chain. And. I will say, coming into this role, clearly as you say supply chain is known to be a hallmark strength of VF, and I think in general and over a prolonged period of time, that’s a reputation that’s well deserved. But that doesn’t mean that we can see clear-eyed about the issues, and some of the issues, certainly, I think were known before, especially the longer lead times and the manufacturing and freight. But I would say these issues were exacerbated in Q3, given that it’s the high-volume quarter, but also because there were so much volatility.

High-promotions to get rid of inventory, order cancellations from customers, in-part because the consumer, of course, is somewhat cautious, but in part also because we haven’t been able to meet their expectations and therefore they cancellations in anticipation of perhaps further customer service issues. And then you had the strain from a longer lead times, that really gives you a confluence of issues that created a perfect storm in this quarter.

And I would say that part of it maybe that my added perspective coming into the business, shifted the perspective within our team a little bit and our own role in these issues, but the fact is this quarter had a lot of volatility and pressure on the supply-chain and it did expose some of the internal issues and we’ll talk about them. All fixable, but certainly requiring a lot of focus.

So maybe first, where we are as– against the higher manufacturing and shipping lead times, we’re seeing improvement. Those have started to come down and we need to continue to focus on that trajectory. The customer service, clearly is unsatisfactory, and we’re putting a lot of work-in place to be back on-track by the end of the first-half in fiscal year ’24. Matt talked about higher excess seasonal inventory, we’re making good progress and assuming that to be more normalized by the end of Q4 of this fiscal year. And our cost-to-serve, clearly are higher and we’ll see improvements throughout fiscal year ’24, starting with Q1. So this is going to stay with us a little bit, but we are expecting improvements from here on out.

So specifically, what are we going to do about it is, first-off, this is a business-by-business action plan. The businesses that are most affected by this are The North Face and Timberland. So those businesses saw growth in Q3, but they could have frankly seen more growth in the quarter, had we not held them back somewhat through these issues. So we have a high focus on distribution network optimization. We are working on peak warehousing capacity planning, so we don’t have to use as many external facilities, which gives in flexibility and also it gives you higher-cost. We need greater agility to react to short-term changes. So the business-by-business action plan is very detailed and there is a little bit by business.

We’re working with our strategic supply-chain partners to address the lead times and costs. Which will include improving ocean freight costs, and we’re starting to see positive movement there and I expect quite a bit of improvement starting in fiscal ’24. Importantly, we need to return to better sales and operations planning. And again, to your question of what happens? I would say that’s an area where the team would suggest that we’ve lost some focus during the COVID period and we’re now getting back to reestablish strong with teams. With teams that this company knows and that this company is well capable of executing, and as a complement also as an executive team, we’re spending a lot of time focusing on this, we have bi-weekly meetings, we are eliminating barriers to getting rid of these problems, and we’re helping with agile decision-making which certainly is going to make a big difference.

So. I would say the overall theme here is operating discipline and that’s something that VF has been very good at and that’s something that we can reinstill in the business. We’re taking aggressive actions we’re seeing improvements and beyond that, we’re also advancing the strategic work to transform us to play chain to be more digitally led, more automated, more agile, and more consumer-centric. That’s work that our EVP, overseeing the supply-chain, Cameron Bailey, outlined in the September Investor Day, and I would say the short-term work that we’re doing gets us to back from where we are to good, and then this more strategic work gets us back from good to great and that’s certainly our aspiration. And again that’s all within our control.

Matt Puckett — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Michael, the second part of your question on the outlook for next year and. I think. Yeah, certainly. We’re in the midst of our planning process. So I’m sensitive here in terms of not getting too far ahead of ourselves, but we clearly wanted to provide some expectations and kind of how we’re how we’re thinking and how we’re seeing next year unfold as it relates to top and bottom-line.

I agree with your kind of sentiment in terms of what it would take my comment today was about double-digit operating earnings growth. I haven’t said anything yet about what it means below EBIT in estimates, but we do need to see a little bit of margin improvement and how I think about that and kind of what the puts and takes there are from us from a margin standpoint, it’s primarily in gross margin I would say, in my view. There are there are tailwinds, we do expect an overall lower promotional environment through the year.

We’ll come into the year with a bit heavier inventory, but remember, most of that inventory is core carryover replenishment product that won’t necessarily need to be marked down or discounted in a significant way next year. We’re biting the bullet pretty aggressively here in Q4 to move through that seasonal excess, which is a bit heavy at the end of December, we’re going to be back at the end of March kind of at a normal level of seasonal excess coming out of our fiscal year, maybe a little elevated but something pretty manageable.

So we think the inventory position while heavy and create some cost pressures in the short-term. We don’t think it’s a huge overhang from a promotional standpoint throughout next year.

Freight, We expect to be a bit of a tailwind that’s both the mode, we’re going to see a lot less usage of air-freight. That’s already happened. We’re not going to see a lot here in Q4 by the way, but as you look throughout the year, we’re going to see we think some moderating cost on the freight side. We do have some targeted pricing actions, less than we’ve seen in prior seasons, but we have some there. And we think we think mix will be a slight benefit and it was good to see mix come back and be a benefit here in this most recent quarter.

There are headwinds for sure they’ll continue to be some FOB cost increase, a little bit more modest than we’ve seen over the last few seasons. We expect FX given our hedging program to be a little bit of a headwind as well. So there’s definitely some puts and takes that we would add on the side of our gross margin expansion opportunity which will flow into operating margin.

Michael Binetti — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Okay, thanks a lot for all the detail.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brooke Roach with Goldman Sachs. Please state your question.

Brooke Roach — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Good afternoon, thank you so much for taking our question. My question is on The North Face. As you exit the following season, can you talk a little bit of the channel inventories that you have for that brand and any initial order books that you’re seeing for calendar 2023? Are there any new innovation or product pipelines that we should be focused on? Maybe said another way, how do you comp the comp following a very strong year for The North Face?

Matt Puckett — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Let me take the first part of that and maybe Benn will talk little bit about kind of innovation pipeline.

Actually the inventories at retail with our wholesale partners are in a pretty good place for The North Face. We had a good selling season. We’ve had good performance in our own channels, our D2C business grew 18% again in the quarter across the world and we’re seeing a similar kind of sell-out results and with our wholesale partners. If anything, we would have probably benefited from having more inventory on the shelves and Benno referenced the challenge that we faced with higher cancellations in The North Face and Timberland as well, certainly The North Face.

So inventories are really in a pretty good position. Now that said, the wholesale partners are taking a really cautious approach in the near-term as we look as we look-forward. We’re not going to disclose anything about the order, but certainly contemplated in kind of the underlying expectations for next year is a cautious environment, a cautious wholesale environment in the US and to some degree in Europe as well.

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, and then to your good question, Brooke, on what we’re doing going-forward, dealing with– first of all, most importantly I’m a product fanatic and I think that’s the backbone for every ongoing business success, and we feel-good about the pipeline. You know, what The North Face does particularly well is to establish platforms– platform innovation that we can drive over multiple years and the Summit Series is one of those platforms that has done well for us for an extended period of time and we’ll continue to drive that because there’s so much growth left. Right now we’re relaunching the platform because there’s a lot of extra awareness and trial we had. There also loyalists that waiting to buy more products within the platform and we’re giving them new apparel and also footwear. So you will see that on our website starting now.

The business also does a nice job sequencing. So obviously the Nuptse jacket is very hot right now, but we have the next-generation of jackets waiting in the wings. This winter we started to see the Sierra jacket, and we expect to ramp-up our efforts and growth on that jacket next season, hoping that can become the next generation of North Face jackets that will excite consumers and we have a successor to Sierra already waiting in the wings.

So this is a strategic and long-term approach to the innovation pipeline that is complemented by more tactical execution that drive excitement. And the KAWS collab that we executed this last quarter was tremendously successful, and is an example of how the brand is able to engage consumers with great product, but also a great marketing content. And in particular in digital, The North Face is the business that has the strongest digital growth among all of our brands and that’s another area that Vans can learn from and where reapplying applying some of The North Face learning on Vans.

Beyond that, what I would say, also reflecting back perhaps, knowing that hindsight is always 20/20, when we saw the particularly strong growth on Vans, one opportunity we perhaps missed was to invest into it. And what we’re doing on The North Face now and what you can expect The North Face in fiscal year ’24 is an increase in our investments towards the consumer and the money will go towards digital performance marketing, the money will go towards brand-building, and the money will go towards innovation.

We fully realize that we cannot take growth momentum for granted, but that we have to keep earning it and we will invest into that. And that coupled with the strong execution and what we know to be strong future plan give us, really, a lot of confidence on The North Face long-term. We have a lot of momentum, but we’ll keep investing in it.

Operator

Thank you. And our final question for today comes from Jay Sole with UBS. Please state your question.

Jay Sole — UBS — Analyst

Great, thank you so much.

You can just talk about the business in China. Can you give us an idea of how the business is China has performed since the country start to reopen, and sort of what’s embedded in your guidance for next year as you think about that market recovery? Thank you.

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, perhaps a detailed– too early to talk about the specific guidance for next year, but what I can tell you is what we’re seeing. The business has certainly seen sequential improvements in Q3, was about flat at minus 1% in constant-currency. And that’s been better than in previous quarter and we’ve seen that momentum carry-forward into January as the country continues to reopen.

So we’re certainly cautiously optimistic, especially for the back-half of fiscal year ’24. But it’s too early to say when and how much the momentum picks up. There is certainly a possibility that we may see more momentum earlier and we’re watching that closely. We should be in a much better place to predict that and give an update in May. But what we do know is first, that there is a long term investment case that’s quite strong. We have a nascent, but a growing outdoor and active markets, and we have leading brands that serve that. It’s a great white space for many of our brands. It’s a great space to apply our digital capability. As we all know that market is very strongly driven by digital capabilities and that’s of course an area of focus for us as a company. And you know what you should also know is that we’re willing to invest in that momentum.

So as we continue to see hopefully a pickup in consumer offtake, we will invest in an increase in brand penetration, which in many cases is quite a bit lower than here in our home market. We have an opportunity to enter new categories and also enter with new brands and Supreme and Ultra are just two examples of brands that have a strong right to win in that market. And we will apply our marketing prowess to drive localized and engaging omnichannel experiences, and the team is doing a nice job there that maybe hasn’t shown in results, just gets given the state-of-the country, but we feel bullish about the long-term prospects and we could be, knock-on wood, at an inflection point that could lead to much stronger momentum, certainly throughout the calendar year 2023.

Jay Sole — UBS — Analyst

Got it, thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you. And with that, I’ll hand the floor back to Benno Dore for closing remarks. Thank you.

Benno Dore — Interim President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, thank you all for joining today. As you hopefully will have heard from us today, our commitment to our consumers, our people, our shareholders, and also purpose in-service of the greater good is what it’s going to continue to guide all of our actions. And the last two months in the CEO role for me have reinforced my excitement in the company’s potential. And add to that that we have a clear view of the areas, which are critical to help us, we’ll analyze it.

And there was our World-class leadership, the company’s executive leadership team and its broader organization is stable, talented, and committed to leading this great company. Improved execution near-term, clearly we have a clear idea of what must be done to improve performance and we’re starting to implement aggressive actions to do so, and that starts with a much greater focus on the consumer to realize our brands full potential. A future with sharpened strategies, the right investments, exciting product innovations, and excellent marketplace execution, and importantly financial strength and predictability. The Board and I are committed to strengthening our financial position and also to returning to consistent value-creation, emphasizing our unique portfolio of core brands.

So in a nutshell, we’re confident we’re taking the right steps to improve the strength and consistency of VF’s performance, to deliver strong shareholder returns over the medium and long-term, and we look-forward to updating you on our progress in May.

Thank you all and have a good rest of the week.

Operator

Thank you. This concludes today’s conference. All parties may disconnect. Have a great evening.

Related Post