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Nomad Foods Limited (NOMD -0.11%)
Q3 2019 Earnings Call
Nov 7, 2019, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Thank you for standing by. This is the conference operator. Welcome to the Nomad Foods Third Quarter 2019 Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation there will be an opportunity to ask questions.

[Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to Taposh Bari, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Taposh Bari -- Head of Investor Relations

Great. Thanks Carl. And thank you all for joining us to review our third quarter 2019 earnings results. With me on the call today are Chief Executive Officer, Stefan Descheemaeker and Chief Financial Officer Samy Zekhout. Before beginning, I would like to draw your attention to the disclaimer on slide 2 of our presentation.

This conference call may make forward-looking statements that are based on our view of the Company's prospects at this time, and actual results may differ due to risks and uncertainties which are discussed in our press release, our followings with the SEC and this slide in our investor presentation, which includes cautionary language. We will also discuss non-IFRS financial measures during the call today. These non-IFRS financial measures should not be considered a replacement for and should be read together with IFRS results. Users can find the IFRS to non-IFRS reconciliations within our earnings release and in the appendices at the end of the slide presentation available on our website.

Please note that certain financial information within this presentation represents adjusted figures for 2018 and 2019 and that all adjusted figures have been adjusted for exceptional acquisition related share-based payment and related expenses as well as non-cash FX gains or losses. All comments from hereon will refer to those adjusted numbers.

Finally, users should be aware that 2019 figures have been presented in accordance with IFRS 16, the new standard for leases. As such, certain financial metrics may not be directly comparable to 2018 figures. However, we have disclosed the impact of this change in the press release where the impact on comparability has been deemed material.

And with that I will hand the call over to Stephan.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you Taposh and thank you all for joining us on the call today. Earlier today, we reported third quarter 2019 earnings results and narrowed our full-year EBITDA and EPS guidance. Highlights from the third quarter include organic revenue growth of 2.5% driven by a 4% increase from price, offset by 1.5% decline in volume and mix. Adjusted gross margin expansion of 110 basis points to 29.5%. Adjusted EBITDA of EUR96 million, representing growth of 14% and adjusted EPS of EUR0.25 per share. We are pleased with our third quarter results which demonstrated a healthy balance between topline growth, gross margin expansion, expense discipline and cash generation. Moreover, I'm proud to say that our business has now delivered 11 consecutive quarters of organic revenue growth, reinforcing the strength of our brands, the focus of our people and the sustainability of our business model.

Turning to the details of the quarter. We continue to see strong momentum in our core portfolio, which grew 5% in Q3 and represent 68% of year-to-date revenues. Within our core, fish fingers, spinach and local market categories performed particularly well. Importantly, we continue to effectively manage the rest of our portfolio, part of which is being replaced by core SKUs. In aggregate, the non-core business posted a decline in low single-digits. An improvement versus the mid-single-digit decline during the first half of the year.

Most of our countries grew during the third quarter including UK, Italy and France which each achieved organic revenue growth of 4%. Performance was strongest in Germany, Spain and Netherlands which each grew more than 5% during the quarter. As we anticipated, the Nordics experienced organic revenue decline as with the less -- low margin and non-core products with a long-term objective of strengthening our business model and profitability in this strategically important region.

As you know, execution of our model requires us to make strategic choices, which in turn allows us to invest behind the highest returning areas of our business. [Indecipherable] strategy has been fundamental to our success since day one and we will continue to govern where and how we invest. By nature, this approach will result in positive and negative outliers with a very clear objective, to drive sustained organic revenue growth and market share expansion.

Third quarter organic revenue growth reflected growing contribution from innovation, where our strategy is no more targeted intentional -- and intentional as we invest behind the limited number of big bets with the objective of building sustainable platforms. This year, big bets included Artisan, a new line of fish product with innovative and on-trend coatings, Veggie Power, a modern blend of veggie mixes which launched in 2018 and has since been expanded across the network and Green Cuisine, our plant protein range which recently launched in the UK and will be rolled out across Europe. We're pleased with what we have seen across these platforms, which have achieved solid distribution with retailers and encouraging trial with consumers.

While each innovation will have its own unique proposition, our strategic intent is to introduce new products which are margin accretive, complementary to our core and align with macro trends such as convenience, sustainability and nutrition. Green Cuisine is a great example of the type of innovation that we bring to our consumers.

This range, which was launched in the UK earlier this year is made of peas, the crop in which our brand have incredible results. Further, we have formulated these products which are manufactured in-house, with the goal of delivering on both taste and nutrition. As you may know, our Green Cuisine burgers of a fraction of this saturated fat content of many of the competing products in the market.

We activated Green Cuisine with a great advertising campaign which has driven strong velocity across its three SKUs burgers, meatballs and sausages. It's still very early days, but we are encouraged with what we have seen and have plans to further develop our offering in the UK and beyond. Before turning the call to Samy I'd like to share some updated thoughts on our balance sheet and intended users of capital. As you know, we raised $400 million of capital earlier this year.

As a result, we ended the third quarter with over EUR700 million of cash on hand and leverage of 2.8 times. With that said, acquisitions are a key part of our growth story and an area where we intently focused on driving shareholder value. Over the past several months, we've been pursuing acquisitions which meet our strategic and financial criteria. In fact, we currently have a handful of situation which we are actively evaluating. Our strong cash balance allows us to operate from a position of strength. And we look forward to updating you when the time is right.

In the meantime, it should be clear that we are committed to continuing growing organically and through smart and disciplined M&A. In summary, we are pleased with our third quarter results, which have us on pace to achieve another year of strong growth and cash generation. With that I will hand the call over to Samy to discuss the financials and guidance in more detail. Samy?

Samy Zekhout -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Stefan and thank you all for your participation on the call today. Turning to Slide 6, I will provide more detail on our key third quarter operating metrics. Beginning with revenues, which increased 2% to EUR540 million driven by 2.5% organic revenue growth. Third quarter adjusted gross margin expanded meaningfully by 110 basis points to 29.5%. This was attributable to three factors. First, an improved pea harvest versus last year, which helped our margin and will increase our pea supplies for the forward season. Second, improved gross margins within our recent acquisition Goodfella's and Aunt Bessie's. And third, pricing actions in response to higher fish prices, which we have expensed throughout the year. We are pleased with our gross margin progression through the first nine months of the year and remain on track to achieve modest gross margin expansion for the full year, excluding the impact of M&A mix.

The team has done an exceptional job navigating this year's correction in fish prices mainly in Alaskan Pollock. For the first nine months of the year, these actions have resulted in relatively stable gross margin in our base business combined with a 4% increase in price and a 2% decline in volume. The relationship between pricing, volumes and gross margin is one that we will continue to closely monitor, along with the evolution of our market share and penetration at the consumer level. It is critical that we as an organization remain strategic in our approach through navigating inflation, while maintaining our ability to sustain organic revenue growth and market share expansion of the both the medium and long-term. This will require an increased agility on our part as well as greater contribution from certain area of the business, namely productivity and innovation. On productivity, we have made significant progress over the past year, and we lean more on supply chain as an offset to inflation. This will be achieved through a combination of procurement savings and manufacturing efficiencies.

And on innovation, as you heard from Stefan, we have seen strong early signs from the launches that we brought to the market and we look to further invest in the coming years to ensure that our brands remain at the forefront of evolving consumer trends with convenience, sustainability and nutrition, these three fundamental pillars.

Moving down to the rest of the P&L. Adjusted operating expenses increased 1% year-over-year, reflecting the planned shift in media spend from Q2 to Q3. As such, A&P increased 3%, while Indirect expense were flat to last year. Adjusted EBITDA was EUR96 million and as expected included a EUR4 million benefit related to IFRS 16, the new standard on lease accounting effective this year. Excluding this benefit, adjusted EBITDA grew 10% versus the prior year. Adjusted EPS was EUR0.25 for the quarter, declining 4%, reflecting the offering of 20 million shares in March 2019. IFRS 16 did not have a material impact on EPS during the third quarter.

Turning to cash flow on Slide 7. We generated EUR117 million of adjusted free cash flow for the first nine months of the year as compared to EUR97 million generated in the same period last year. Factors contributing to adjusted free cash flow performance include, adjusted EBITDA of EUR316 million, a 15% year-on-year increase; the working capital outflow of EUR96 million; CapEx and cash taxes of EUR29 million apiece and cash interest and other of EUR45 million due to primarily the reallocation of the lease payment from operating cash flow to financing cash flow as a result of IFRS 16.

Free cash flow conversion was 68% of adjusted profit through the first nine months of the year. This reflects the seasonal nature of the working capital cycle which tends to peak during the third quarter due to the timing of the harvest. With that said, we are pleased to report improved conversion versus a year ago and are making progress on the actions that we've identified to drive improved cash flow efficiency during the remainder of the year.

With that, let's turn to Slide 8 to review our 2019 guidance which is based on foreign exchange rates as of November 5, 2019. For the full year 2019, with two months remaining in the year, we are narrowing our guidance to the upper end of our range and now expect to achieve adjusted EBITDA of approximately EUR425 million to EUR430 million and adjusted EPS of EUR1.20 to EUR1.22. Full-year guidance continues to assume organic revenue growth at the low single-digit percentage rates. Based on current foreign exchange rates, we expect FX translation to represent approximately 30 basis points help on reported revenue growth in the fourth quarter and a drag of 20 basis points for the full year.

That concludes our remarks. I will now turn the session over to Q&A. Thank you.

Operator, back to you.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, sir. We will now begin the question-and-answer session.

[Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Jason English of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Jason English -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hey, good morning folks. Thanks for slotting me in. I wanted to come back to the pricing narrative. You guys have obviously done a phenomenally good job navigating all the cost pressures that you faced for this year and demonstrated a strong ability of price. I heard in your prepared remarks, the emphasis on the need to maybe lean heavier on productivity, lean heavier on innovation. And if we look at some of the Nielsen data, which we know has plenty of imperfections, it does suggest the private label, particularly in the UK in categories like fish is finding another leg of momentum and it begs the question of whether or not you may be reaching some upper limits on the ability to push price even further. So I love your thoughts on that, what you're seeing in terms of need to push more price? I know it's a moving target given the pound volatility. And then your ability to push pricing if needed further in that market.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Okay. Thanks, Jason. So it's obviously -- it's a long question with different aspects. I would first contextualize you on the Nielsen numbers. As you know, it's -- it barely covers something like a bit more than 50% of our total sales. So it's obviously an interesting KPI. But it's just part of it. So that's one thing. This being said, in terms of pricing, to your point, it's a -- it's a never ending story. We always have to find the balance between price, volume, market share and margin. And I don't think it's going to change anytime soon or in the future. So at the same time. I think the private label guys, do have to do the same thing, I think what's going to be key for us and what has been key, and that will be key for us is to remain agile. But definitely we have demonstrated you know overall, obviously, here and there some exceptions, but we've demonstrated interesting pricing power in 2019, which again -- it doesn't come by chance. It's a combination of innovation and investment behind the brands and all the things. But I think the key word Jason is agility and finding the right balance between these different elements.

Long term, it's -- you know the story as much as we do, it's all about the pull for brands and we need to be paranoid, we brand people and, and we need to invest to keep investing behind this brand. It's a never ending story, is obviously private label reinforces which is healthy by the way, forces to raise the game.

Jason English -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay, all right, thank you. I'll pass it on.

Operator

The next question comes from Steve Strycula of UBS. Please go ahead.

Steven Strycula -- UBS Investment Bank -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. Just pick out what Jason was threading on. How do we think about the price gap piece of it Stefan? Given your background and where you're a Board member, you're very familiar with the pricing model and we saw that it didn't work out so well for Kraft, which is, I know you're not a part of, but just wanted to understand, is price gap something you're being very mindful of? And I think the spirit of what people want to know is, should we expect volumes to start improving based of the innovation that you're seeing in the marketplace? Can you help us think about it? I'm not asking about Nielsen, but just more broadly speaking across your business. And then I have a quick follow-up.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

To your first question, the price gap it's absolutely -- it's a-fundamental KPI for us. And we do this, definitely first for our [Indecipherable] the key SKUs and we're checking where we stand. And again, overall, again country by country, channel by channel it may differ. But it hasn't widened. That's the key piece. Sometimes it takes a bit more time because obviously people have different hedging situations. So they obviously -- sometimes the commodity price is impacting them a bit later and they are taking a decision that will impact the consumers on the rest of it. So that's a -- I would believe that's the key piece for us. And to your second question, long term we are committed to volume growth, profitable volume growth obviously. So that's a key -- it's a key consideration for us. Obviously there you might have -- some-bumps in the road, but overall, that's definitely something we want to do. And innovation is playing an increasing role in -- with that. We were talking about Green Cuisine, it's a very important point for us. And we believe that with this kind of products, this kind of new innovations, we have what it takes to win with the consumers.

Steven Strycula -- UBS Investment Bank -- Analyst

Thanks Stefan. And as a quick follow-up, can you give us an update as to what's happening with call it the two acquisitions you've done more recently? Where are we in the turnaround of those businesses or call it the progression of those integrations? And then to your comment on M&A from earlier, do we think that Brexit complicates how you would look at closing on a deal, given some of the cross-border implications or would it be safe to say that maybe we're focused on just mainland Europe where you don't have, maybe as much across UK versus EU exposure? Thank you.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Let me answer the second question first. The answer is no. We didn't have impact -- Brexit didn't impact or thinking process and our potential acquisitions, potential -- let's say opportunities in Continental European and elsewhere. So that's -- that wasn't really a consideration. Beyond, obviously we're not going to comment further. In terms of the future, back to the past and the present with the two acquisitions, I would say we are pleased with both. The integration is moving very strictly by the way, as an example, we have -- I think what, three days ago we now how a fully integrated SAP system for the whole organization. So for Aunt Bessie's, for Goodfella's and for Birds Eye, which is great by the way in terms of visibility for us, because then you have exactly the right set of numbers.

I would believe that's where overall, you know, in terms of results we are really, I mean totally in line with the results, maybe a bit more cost savings, a bit less of topline here and there, we had one de-listing [Phonetic] for example, which is you know, of a temporary nature we believe because we have great brands. But the overall -- we're very pleased with both and they do well.

Oh, I forgot to mention, by the way, something that you never can count in a business plan, as we mentioned Goodfella's I remember someone told me, I mean are you including anything in Continental Europe and the -- remember my answer was at the time, of course not. And you know what? We're doing things now in Portugal and it's doing well. We now have -- after a few months, it's early days, but that's a few months, we have a 4% market share in Portugal with iglo as a brand, and with projects that are coming from Ireland.

Operator

The next question comes from Bill Chappell of SunTrust. Please go ahead.

Bill Chappell -- SunTrust -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Bill.

Bill Chappell -- SunTrust -- Analyst

Stefan, just to go back to your -- good morning, your commentary on M&A. It's a lot stronger both in the press release and what you're seeing than you've said before, usually you're kind of dismissive it will come from time to time. Is it fair to say that you were hoping to have something to announce by today, it were that close to the finish line? And then, any kind of color you can give us on terms of size of deals you're looking at, is there one very large deal or is it more kind of bite-sized deals that you've been doing so far?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

So the answer to your first question is no. We were not expecting to sign anything right now. Obviously, we have different -- we are quite active in terms of pipeline, different level of -- obviously of [Indecipherable] we are with the different files. And in terms of signs, and we not necessarily comment on the size, the only thing I would say is, if you just at this stage, focus on frozen food in Europe basically -- we are really looking at, let's say opportunities on the country basis, category and channel.

Bill Chappell -- SunTrust -- Analyst

Okay. I'll stay tuned. And then in terms of just looking back to the kind of question on price. As we look to next year with volume kind of flattish to down and most of the growth being driven by price, do you expect another round of pricing next year to drive growth or would you expect volume to start to to pick up the slack?

Samy Zekhout -- Chief Financial Officer

Bill, Samy Zekhout, hi. I just want to reiterate the fact that I think were very keen on the market situation, there will be inflation. We are planning for that and what we are trying to achieve let's say in our strategies balancing if you want to focus on pricing, on inflation and effectively making sure that our share is progressing the right way, in a profitable way. So there will be, pricing, but let's say we're going to have to make sure that we continue to grow our business and accelerate our growth and create value I mean through that, for sure.

Bill Chappell -- SunTrust -- Analyst

Got it. And last one for me. Just back on Green Cuisine, any sense of where the plant based meat -- market stands in Western Europe and opportunity and what you think especially going to -- go into 2020?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

We -- by definition we have goals, by definition [Indecipherable] comment about the goal, our internal goals, but we are, what is very interesting to see is that there is a lot of enthusiasm in the across the countries for Green Cuisine, enthusiasm behind the quality of the product, enthusiasm behind you know the quality of the launches, the potential launches. So that's overall very reassuring I would think that way. And the consumer reaction in the countries where we already are ahead of -- ahead like the UK for example, it's very, very encouraging. So -- and still I believe we are very imperfect so that we can do much better. But what we've seen is very good. And then, and quite frankly, congratulation to the R&D team because they've come up with really really good products quite frankly. And then it's starting with that. And beyond the consumers, again, and it is not anecdotal, I can tell you that the retailers are very, very excited. Obviously you're going to have all your -- negotiation, but they're very excited and it's a great starting point.

Bill Chappell -- SunTrust -- Analyst

Great, thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Brian Holland of DA Davidson. Please go ahead.

Brian Holland -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning gentlemen. First question, just a follow-up again on the pricing side of the equation here. It's always been sort of my understanding that given your sort of stated strategy for profitable share capture, that would always lead me to believe that you'd be a little bit more aggressive in pricing, maybe said another way earlier to take pricing than some of your competitors, but it's also been my understanding that, especially on the frozen fish side, I believe you've got some highly levered competitors. I know you're not interested in being in the business of predicting what your competitors will do, but as you look at the landscape and you kind of have some historical context, at least, would you expect that -- and Stefan I think I heard this from what you said earlier, but is there an expectation that the price gaps maybe could narrow, not because you'd be pulling back on pricing, but because potentially some others probably still have some pricing to take? Is that -- is that fair?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

We are clearly -- to be fair, we are monitoring effectively our pricing versus competition, and more importantly as well we are monitoring the reaction of the consumer in line with the balance between the value equation of pricing and quality. What we have seen so far in the pricing, we have realized, which is the focus on your question is that, effectively the consumer elasticity is very much in line with what we had predicted and with the market. So we're not going to comment as to whether or not this will narrow down or not, because at the end of the day it depends as well on the competitor.

But what's important for us is focusing on the value equation and more importantly is win with them. So in other words, making sure that our share is going to grow in a context of inflation is going to be important. And that's going to require agility. And that means that it may not just be straight through pricing, it may be as well other element, which is leveraging our mix, leveraging deep, leveraging PPA, leveraging all of the elements that we have around in nature of the new management, which will make us, if you want, which will enable us to leverage the brand and deliver profitable share growth.

Brian Holland -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

Thanks, I appreciate that color. On the volume side, forgive me if you addressed this already, but any sense just given some of the innovation you're bringing to market or have brought to market, from a cadence standpoint, is that a little bit -- is that a little bit more Q4 weighted, such that maybe that would help the volume at all? Is there any factor in what we would -- what we would see both in Q3 and the softness and maybe how Q4 plays out? Is there anything worth noting there?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Not not really, I mean...

Brian Holland -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

Okay. And last question for me then is on the currency, or I guess just kind of on the overall inflation side. It seems like level of inflation is moderating, pea harvest, as you commented fish, the biggest swing factor, it seems to me would be kind of on the currency side. Is there any thought at this point about how you would manage that, obviously given the uncertainty that still swirls with Brexit? How you might try to mitigate some of that volatility next year?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Well, on the FX, we are indeed I mean monitoring that. This has an effect and this has been effectively fluctuating here and there. Just to make it simple, we do effectively have a hedging strategy as well to make sure that we mitigate the risk moving forward to allow the business to focus on driving effectively the business strategies. The FX still is a effective dynamic factor and we're just taking this into consideration as we establish and execute our hedging strategy. So to answer your question, yes, it is a factor. We are taking into account and we are taking action against that.

Brian Holland -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

Appreciate it. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Robert Moskow of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

Matt Stephens -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hi, this is Matt on for Robert. In case of a hard Brexit, can you guys describe the product lines and input costs that will be most impacted? Is it going to be coming from fish costs or the finished fish products that are imported from Germany? And what about UK vegetables and UK ready-to-eat meals? Thank you.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Okay. So to make it simple, anyway even in a harder Brexit there will be, which obviously is now, we think off the table, but still we are well prepared, obviously. But the first thing is to take into consideration is there will be subsidies from the UK government for a quite some time. So that's the biggest thing. So it's -- overall, where we can have an impact in terms of -- its in more in terms of supply chain, where to relocate some products, so those kind of things we are getting ready. So that's that. But it's not necessarily meat, its not necessarily fish and all you think so, but to make it simple, we are really well prepared. We spend a lot of time I can tell you behind the Brexit meetings and I would be -- right now we share little bit but again ready to reappear -- to come back, if needed.

Matt Stephens -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Great. Is there any individual product that will have more exposure than others?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Let's say, maybe a bit of poultry is a bit more impacted at this stage, but again we are taking measures. Right now, we are thinking about where could we have the right -- the right level. And so again, we're not going to do anything right now which is definitive because, again, things are very fluid, but probably I would be a bit more optimistic than I was probably a few months ago. But again, even for this -- these products, we are ready.

Matt Stephens -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Great, thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from John Baumgartner of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

John Baumgartner -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Good morning, thanks for the question.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning John.

Samy Zekhout -- Chief Financial Officer

Hi, John.

John Baumgartner -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Stefan, I wanted to ask when we speak about your private label, maybe taking it, hi, good morning, maybe taking in a different direction, it looks like even though private label is gaining share in frozen fish, it doesn't seem to be on aggressive pricing. I look at most of your markets and private label pricing is up, at least with the category, if not above it. And it seems that the losers of share are in the secondary brands. So I'm curious, do you see anything in terms of changes in merchandising in the frozen fish case or maybe retailers are looking to keep the market leader in Nomad merchandise more private label, and then squeeze out some of the secondary brands? Is there anything there in terms of the ship in merchandising that we should consider going forward?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

I would say it's really country-by-country basis. For example, in the UK, we still have a very strong competitor like to like Young's and they're doing quite frankly they're doing -- they're doing well. So congratulations to them. I would like to say the other way around, but it's fine. That's life. In other countries, probably, you're right. In some of the countries, it's -- but it's I don't think you should focus too much on fish, I think it's a global phenomenon. Then where -- in the stores increasingly so you're going to have the private label, than the A brands, maybe B brands. And that's it. I think in Europe we're more advanced than in the US where you have -- still have C&D brands. That's -- I would be a bit more concerned if I were a COD brand in the US. But I don't think I would focus on fish. I think it's a global phenomenon. And it's our job obviously as an A brand because we are the A brand to keep investing. We have no choice, we need to keep -- the space between us and the private label so that we can win with the consumers.

John Baumgartner -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Okay, thanks for that. And then just as a follow-up, thinking about net revenue management, 2019 is a year where the whole NRM approach seems to be may be accelerating a bit in terms of capability and that will continue again next year, but it looks like -- across your two main categories of the fish and frozen veggies, it seems like maybe the fish category is a bit more sensitive in terms of the volume response to mid-reductions in promo. And I'm curious as to your observations -- whether it's you're learning anything about -- you had to may be lean consumers off buying on deal in fish, maybe it's positive read across in terms of the resiliency the veggie category. just any kind of high level thoughts in terms of how the NRM is evolving versus your expectations and how it's going to form the strategy going forward?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Overall, again, we're very pleased and we're very please we start early by the way the game with the net revenue management. We started with with promo. We did that very sequentially. We started with promo efficiency and I'm surprised to see, you know that we still have a lot of -- that we still have a lot of potential. It's a never-ending story. So you still have bucket of less performing promo that you can move and again not limited to fish or veg. I think it goes across the categories. Now obviously with net revenue management we have raised the game, probably a bit out of necessity last year with the COGS increase and so we've worked a lot with with them in terms of price elasticity. And again, I think as Samy mentioned, overall, and again you have exceptions, sometimes a bit downs and sometimes a bit up, but overall it worked as expected -- that would be. We're still learning a lot but the level of price price elasticity is overall as an average is very much in line with our expectations. It will continue, I mean, to be a clear contributor to value creation. But as you say, there is an element where the first year is the year where you have a lot of low hanging fruit. And after that, it's not that the outer years are less, but the point after that you are are more in a maintenance strategy, where then it allows you to really balance the equation between volume, pricing and overall share growth in a profitable way. So it will continue to be a key pillar. And to be fair in 2019, it was a really hard resistance, tested to really execute -- and in our strategy in a context of higher inflation [Indecipherable] worked. And as we move forward, we continue to leverage that together with the other activities.

John Baumgartner -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question comes from Jon Tanwanteng of CJS Securities. Please go ahead.

Jon Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Good morning, gentlemen. Thanks for taking my questions.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Jon Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Could you start by giving us a little bit more color on the Nordics. What is the path for top and bottom line growth there? Are you -- do you focusing the region in favor of higher return opportunities, or are you going to come back there and kind of execute on maybe some of the lying fruit?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

I would be that way. The first thing is which is very important, it's a strategic region for us. By the way, the frozen food consumption is higher than the -- in most of the other countries. And so, which is -- which is great for us. And if you believe that you know they are the vanguard of the consumption in the future. It's very encouraging.

Then if you -- I think we're talking about the Nordics, but it would be fair to say that in the Nordics, you have Sweden, which represents around 50% of the business and the others mainly, Norway and Finland, which represent another 50%. And the others are performing well, with good margin recovery, we kept saying that you know, yes, sales in Norway are declining, but quite frankly, it doesn't wake me up at night at at all, I can tell you, because it's really low margin business that we have decided to stop anyway.

So it's a bit spectacular in terms of sales. I can tell you in terms of gross margin, especially knowing that it's not events produced by ourselves. So there is not even fixed cost recovery here. It's much less spectacular in terms of gross profit and it's a low speed organization to really focus behind the SKUs that matter, So it's a perfect -- it's really a good -- good application of the Must Win Battles concept to Norway and you see the dynamics in Norway, it's really -- it's doing well from all the aspects.

Sweden is more complicated. Last year we had a country like Spain that was not doing as expected. They've been through a -- really, a turnaround, which implied obviously refocus behind the key categories, also probably a renewed level of energy. We have now -- have a new leader there. And I'm confident it's -- it's going to work pretty much like in Spain.

But if we take a bit of time and so it's not going to be linear to get there. But if they apply, you know very much into the same -- the same model, we will get there.

Jon Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Okay, great, Thank you for the color. And then I just wanted to dive a little bit deeper into the traction and momentum you're seeing on the new product side, especially healthier options, but first of all, what percentage of revenue are there right now? And where do you see them going over the next couple of years? And maybe from a margin profile, where do they stand versus corporate average and how are you supporting them from a marketing and investment perspective?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

So the first piece is -- as we stand, obviously, I'm not going to comment on the 2020 ambitions, but it's -- it's still small because it's limited to a bit of the UK and a bit more in the Nordics, especially in Sweden. So that's small. Back to the question of margin. Good margin, definitely a good margin. And the thing is, what's important to know is we starting category. So it's important to set the price at the right level, where the category is already more established, it's obviously a bit more difficult to come with a price --that is too different. In most of the countries, we are just starting, so it's a great opportunity and we're working very hard with the teams to make sure that we price -- that we're going to price at the right level.

And what we've seen is -- or margins ambitions are quite frankly are pretty good. And the fact is the brands and we've seen this with Birds Eye, Green Cuisine in the UK, all brands have the credential, the credibility to get there. So it should be incremental. So we're very bullish with this new, let's say this Must Win Battle to be.

Jon Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Got it. And how quickly can you roll them out on a regional basis? Are there puts and takes to the different countries and how accepting or how much it might cost to do that?

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

To your point, I think our model is very much -- it's a very delicate balance between global and local. So every launch is obviously the product of the -- global comes with the products and platform, and then it's really up to the countries to take into the platform because obviously they're going to make it work.

So they need to obviously have the motivation and everything behind. So again, it's psychology, but it's very important to have that kind of things. So with that in terms of investment, it's a sizable investment in terms of A&P which is normal because you have to start. And -- but, that's it. And the good news obviously compared to many -- to most of our competitors is we have the distribution muscle in the frozen area that nobody has.

Jon Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thank you very much.

Operator

At this time we have no more questions. And I will turn the call back to Stefan for closing comments.

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you for joining to review our third quarter results. We had another strong quarter, marking 11 consecutive quarters of organic revenue growth for the company. Our growth model is demonstrating our ability to generate sustained topline growth which should see steady contribution from innovation as we introduce new and onshore end products to the markets. Finally, we have a very well capitalized balance sheet and are actively pursuing several opportunities with the objective of driving additional shareholder value by way of M&A.

Have a great day, and I look forward to updating you on our full year results early next year.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 46 minutes

Call participants:

Taposh Bari -- Head of Investor Relations

Stefan Descheemaeker -- Chief Executive Officer

Samy Zekhout -- Chief Financial Officer

Jason English -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Steven Strycula -- UBS Investment Bank -- Analyst

Bill Chappell -- SunTrust -- Analyst

Brian Holland -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

Matt Stephens -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

John Baumgartner -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Jon Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

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