Hain Celestial Group Inc (HAIN -4.15%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Feb 9, 2021, 8:30 a.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Greetings, and welcome to The Hain Celestial Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions]
It is now my pleasure to introduce Anna Kate Heller of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin.
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Anna Kate Heller -- Investor Relations
Thank you. Good morning, and thank you for joining us on Hain Celestial's second quarter fiscal year 2021 earnings conference call. On the call today are Mark Schiller, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Javier Idrovo, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. During the course of this call, management may make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These include expectations and assumptions regarding the Company's future operations and financial performance, including expectations and assumptions related to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
These statements are based on management's current expectations and involve risks and uncertainties that could differ materially from actual events and those described in these forward-looking statements. Please refer to Hain Celestial's Annual Report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and other reports filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission and its press release issued this morning for a detailed discussion of the risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward-looking statements made today.
The Company has also prepared a few presentation slides and additional supplemental financial information, which are posted on Hain Celestial's website under the Investor Relations heading. Please note, management's remarks today will focus on non-GAAP or adjusted financial measures. Reconciliations of GAAP results to non-GAAP financial measures are available in the earnings release and the slide -- slide presentation accompanying this call.
As a reminder, beginning in Q1 of fiscal year 2020, the Company changed its segment reporting to focus on North America, International and Corporate, which had previously been reported as the U.S., U.K., and Rest of World segments. This call is being webcast and an archive of it will also be available on the website. I'd also like to note that we are conducting our call today from our respective remote locations. As such, there may be brief delays, cross-talks or other minor technical issues during this call. We thank you in advance for your patience and understanding.
And now I'd like to turn the call over to Mark Schiller.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Anna Kate, and good morning. I hope everyone is safe and doing well in these turbulent times. On today's call, I'll give some color on our strong second quarter results and explain how we continue to position ourselves for sustainable, profitable, long-term growth.
Let me start with the Q2 results. On our last earnings call, I stated for the second quarter, we expected continued mid single-digit top-line growth after adjusting for divestitures and discontinued brands, several hundred basis points of margin improvement and adjusted EBITDA growth comparable to the 25% we delivered in the second half of fiscal 2020. I'm pleased to report that we have met or exceeded all of these projections and again delivered another very strong quarter. For the fourth straight quarter, sales growth was up over 5% in constant currency, excluding divestitures and discontinued brands, for the sixth straight quarter, gross margin was up more than 200 basis points, and for the fourth straight quarter, adjusted EBITDA margin was also up more than 200 basis points.
Adjusted EBITDA dollars was up 38% in the quarter versus last year, while investing 15% more dollars of marketing, that's the fifth straight quarter of double-digit adjusted EBITDA dollar growth. Both North America and International delivered strong sales, profit and margin expansion, further demonstrating that our strategy is working across the globe and we have considerable momentum. If we reflect back on the financial targets we laid out on Investor Day two years ago, we are already delivering at or near the three-year growth and margin targets one year ahead of schedule and we are doing it while increasing our marketing investment. When we started our transformation two years ago, we said that we would begin by showing immediate progress on margins with lower sales, as we eliminated unprofitable brands, SKUs and low ROI investments. The result would be a smaller more profitable company that was ready to grow again. As you know, we have delivered and exceeded on those expectations.
We also said that in order to restore sustainable profit growth, there was four things that we needed to focus on. First, we needed to be a more reliable supplier to our customers. This meant making it easier to do business with Hain, which we've done by simplifying our sales force and supply chain to deliver improved service. I'm pleased to report that our service levels have been strong for some time now and we've distinguished ourselves in this area throughout the pandemic.
Second, we needed to provide the right sizes and price points to make our products more affordable and competitive by channel. We achieved this by doing things like downsizing and lowering the price on many offerings to be more competitive in the grocery channel, creating the right multi-packs for e-commerce in the club consumer and creating trial sizes to get our snacks on the front end of the store near the cash register.
Third, we needed to improve our marketing and focus our dollars on the Get Bigger brands which have the most growth potential. To accomplish this, we've consolidated marketing partners, revamped all our campaigns, refocused our spending on the channels that show the most potential like e-commerce and reallocated dollars from the Get Better brands to the Get Bigger brands. And lastly, we needed to provide breakthrough innovation that would be margin-accretive and attract incremental consumers and drive eating occasions for our brands and categories. We've done that with products like Sensible Portions Screamin' Hot Veggie Straws that brought the young males into healthier snacking. Celestial Seasonings Tea with new category benefits like energy, probiotics, melatonin and Gut Health, and new formats like K-Cups and trial packs. While this work is ongoing, the results so far have been terrific.
Starting before the pandemic and continuing for the last year, we've seen strong sales growth across the Get Bigger portfolio and there are clear indications that those trends are accelerating. In the most recent quarter, the Get Bigger brands, which represent two-thirds of the sales in North America grew more than 10% for the fourth straight quarter. We've gained market share again in snacks behind the continued strength of Sensible Portions, restored growth on Garden of Eatin', and stabilized performance on Terra.
Greek Gods Yogurt again grew double-digits and gained significant market share. Tea held share in measured channels, while growing almost 20% overall, and Personal Care continued its double-digit top-line growth with particular strength in unmeasured channels. In the most recent four weeks, the Get Bigger brands have shown strong momentum with volume growth and share gains accelerating. Household penetration and buying rate grew close to 10% in the second quarter, that's the third straight quarter of growth, as we continue to see new households trying our Get Bigger brands and repeating at a high rate. ACV distribution on the core Get Bigger brands grew last quarter, and average items per store grew by more than 10%.
In fact, 11 of our 13 biggest brands in the U.S. gained distribution last quarter, demonstrating the breadth of strength across our portfolio. Shelf space gains are largely being driven by our innovation, which has delivered strong velocities and high incrementality to our categories. As customers begin resetting their shelves again, starting with Snacks and Baby later this quarter, we expect to see our space continue to grow materially. Importantly, we also have more innovation coming. We just launched Sensible Portions Veggie Puffs, which are so far turning fast as our Veggie Straws and again highly incremental. We also have more Tea, Yogurt and Personal Care launching -- launches happening next quarter. So we expect to see TDP growth be a significant driver of growth as the pandemic wanes.
On the investments needed to profitably drive the sustainable growth, we also needed to continue eliminating complexity and costs from the organization. That journey continues and there are quite a few sizable initiatives under way. First, as you know, we've been optimizing our portfolio by exiting businesses and SKUs that have limited potential within Hain and add unnecessary complexity. Last quarter, I told you we were in the process of selling our fruit business, and in early January, we were able to successfully complete that transaction. This $140 million foodservice-oriented business, which had been declining 25% to 35% during the pandemic was very complex and delivered no profit. By selling it, we not only continue to simplify and focus our Company, we also will see our go-forward companywide gross margins expand by about 150 basis points, and our EBITDA margins expand by roughly 100 basis points.
In the last 20 months, we have now sold or shut down 17 non-strategic businesses which had collective sales in excess of $900 million, but less than $15 million of EBITDA. In doing so, we've generated $430 million in proceeds, which equates to about 30 times the EBITDA. We've used that money to reduce our debt to under two times and buy back some stock. Second, as we've discussed previously, we are currently executing our simplified pricing model, which encourages retailers to order in bigger quantities and fill up trucks. This will increase our capacity by freeing up dock doors in our DCs reducing administrative work for Hain and our customers and reducing costs. In addition, this will also improve our carbon footprint, as consolidating orders means less trucks on the road.
In Q2, we began implementation of this simplified pricing model and have seen some terrific results. The average order size increased by almost 50% and costs have come down materially. As we roll this out to the rest of the customers in the current quarter, we expect to see continued material savings for both Hain and our customers. Third, in both North America and International, we built a robust productivity capability and process and have identified almost $150 million of additional cost savings initiatives that will bear fruit starting this year and continuing over the next several years. One of the biggest focus areas on the productivity list is optimizing our manufacturing footprint.
In Q2, we made the decision to consolidate our Terra and Sensible Portions snack plants in North America and expect that project to be completed before year-end. In doing so, we will be investing in significant automation, further simplifying our operations and reducing costs. In the U.K., we're also simplifying our manufacturing operations and have taken steps to consolidate our soup manufacturing locations, rightsizing our remaining facilities and repatriating some of our co-manufactured volume to drive absorption and efficiency. While there are many more initiatives under way, hopefully, these few examples give you confidence in our ability to drive continued margin expansion. We've built an accountable productivity capability and culture, we have the right team and tools, and importantly, we have a robust pipeline of projects to drive further improvement over the next several years.
In summary, Q2 was another strong quarter for Hain, and I'm very proud of the strong results the team has delivered in the quarter and the profitable growth momentum on the business. Our transformation plan is clearly working, and we continue to believe there is significant upside both in North America and our International business.
With that, let me now turn it over to Javier, who will give you more color on our recent results.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. There are five key aspects of the second quarter financial information that I want to highlight in today's call, that demonstrate continued strong performance from the execution of our transformation plan. First, we delivered strong top-line growth versus prior year for the fourth consecutive quarter with adjusted revenue growth that was balanced across North America and International. Second, our growth was supported by significant continued margin expansion. Third, we're generating much stronger cash flows. Fourth, our balance sheet remains strong with excellent capital allocation flexibility. And finally, our business is well positioned for continued success.
So let's drill into each of these aspects starting with the top-line. Keep in mind, I will focus my discussion on our financial results from continuing operations. Second quarter consolidated net sales increased 4% year-over-year to $528 million, modestly above internal expectations. Foreign exchange benefited second quarter net sales by around 200 basis points, while divestitures and brand discontinuations reduced net sales by 360 basis points. After adjusting to exclude these factors, net sales increased close to 6% versus the prior year period, consistent with the previously provided guidance of mid single-digit top-line growth on an adjusted basis.
As mentioned during our last call, we were anticipating some of the third quarter volume to move into the second quarter, particularly as retailers built inventory largely in anticipation of potential disruptions from Brexit and the impending U.K. lockdown. This sales shift from Q3 to Q2 did materialize during the quarter. On profitability, for the second quarter adjusted gross profit increased 20% versus the prior year period to $134 million. Currency impact on gross profit was a tailwind of about $2 million. Gross margin improved roughly 330 basis points, driven by a reduction in low trade, ROI trade investments, our significant supply chain productivity initiatives, improved product mix from our SKU rationalization efforts and better overhead absorption in our plants. Distribution and warehousing costs as a percentage of sales improved versus the prior year period due to the consolidation of shipping locations and improved utilization of trucks contributing to improved gross margin despite higher freight costs in the U.S. SG&A came in at 16.2% of net sales similar to the prior year period.
The positive impacts to SG&A were driven by lower broker commissions, reduced headcount, as we consolidated our North American operations into one business unit and reduced travel. These improvements allowed us to increase marketing spending to support our North America Get Bigger brands and our U.K. Hain Daniels business. Our marketing support for the North America Get Bigger brands was close to 7% of net sales in Q2.
Second quarter adjusted EBITDA increased to $62 million compared to $45 million in the prior year period, representing a 38% increase versus Q2 last year. Currency impact on adjusted EBITDA was a tailwind of $1.6 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin of close to 12%, represented a significant improvement of about 290 basis points year-over-year, driven by gross margin improvements, while increasing marketing spending. Our adjusted EPS of $0.34 was double the prior year period of $0.17. We benefited from an adjusted effective tax rate of 24% compared to 27.8% in the prior year period. The lower tax rate was mainly driven by the Company's ability to claim deductions and foreign tax credits on foreign taxable income.
Now to provide some detail on the individual reporting segments, where both regions contributed with strong adjusted top-line growth, profit growth and profit margin improvement. Starting with our North American business, on the top-line, second quarter net sales increased 5.5% versus the prior year period after adjusting for currency movements, divestitures and brand discontinuations. Without these adjustments, net sales increased close to 1% year-over-year to $283 million. Foreign exchange impact on the quarter was a small tailwind of 20 basis points.
From a profitability perspective, Q2 results were strong as we delivered year-over-year adjusted gross margin and dollar expansion and adjusted EBITDA margin and dollar expansion. Specifically, our North America business expanded adjusted gross margin by close to 380 basis points, resulting in adjusted gross profit of $81 million or an increase of 16% versus Q2 last year. This improvement was driven by a reduction from low ROI trade investments and lower supply chain costs as a result of our SKU rationalization efforts, productivity initiatives and efficiencies in our supply chain system.
Adjusted EBITDA increased to $40 million, a 31% increase. Currency impact on adjusted EBITDA was minimal. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 14%, represented an improvement of about 330 basis points versus the prior year period, driven by gross margin improvement. Looking into the components of the North American portfolio, the Get Bigger brands, which represented two-thirds of the North American net sales, delivered sustained strong net sales growth of about 11% versus the prior year period. That's the fourth straight quarter of double-digit top-line growth. Notable brand growth call-outs include Celestial Teas, Sensible Portions, and Garden of Eatin' Snacks, Greek Gods, and a number of our Personal Care brands.
Adjusted EBITDA margins for the Get Bigger brands improved close to 100 basis points compared to Q2 last year, yielding a margin of -- of 15%. We achieved this improvement in profitability notwithstanding stronger investment in marketing activity to support innovation launches in core products, as well as increased investment in e-commerce. The Get Better brands, which I will remind you are being managed primarily for profit, showed a net sales decrease versus the prior year period of about 3%, after adjusting for currency movement, brand discontinuations and divestitures.
The Get Better brands consistent with our portfolio role continued to show very robust adjusted profit and margin improvement. Specifically, adjusted EBITDA grew by more than 70% with an improvement in EBITDA margin of more than 600 basis points, yielding a margin slightly north of 12%. This level of profitability is at the high end of our long-term -- long-term target of 10% to 12% for the Get Better brands.
Now let me shift to our International business, where performance for the quarter was a key contributor to the results of the total Company. Net sales versus prior year increased close to 9% on a reported basis and north of 6% after adjusting for currency movement and divestitures. Foreign exchange increased sales by 430 basis points, while divestitures reduced sales by 190 basis points. Net sales growth was driven by the strength over non-dairy brands, such as Joya and Natumi in Europe, most of our Hain Daniels business, including our leading market share, Linda McCartney and Hartley's brands in the U.K., as well as our Ella's U.K. business. Our fruit business was a drag on growth due to its foodservice exposure. Net sales versus year ago for our International segment, excluding the fruit business, increased by close to 14% in constant currency after adjusting for divestitures.
To note, the International Q2 growth was helped by the volume shift from Q3 to Q2, driven by customers' inventory building largely to avoid disruptions from Brexit. As previously communicated, we have successfully divested our fruit business as of mid-January. As a result, it will be adjusted out of our results for the balance of the fiscal year. Given the adoption of the North American playbook in our International business, adjusted gross margin and dollars and adjusted EBITDA margin and dollars were all up considerably in the quarter versus the prior year period.
Adjusted gross margin improved by more than 300 basis points versus the prior year period, driven by a reduction in low ROI trade investments and lower supply chain costs as a result of productivity initiatives and efficiencies in our supply chain system that were implemented in our Hain Daniels and Continental European businesses. Adjusted EBITDA grew by 28% versus the prior year period to $38 million, supported by an adjusted EBITDA margin improvement of close to 200 basis points, resulting in an EBITDA margin slightly higher than 13%, driven by higher adjusted gross margin.
Excluding fruit, the remaining International business delivered an EBITDA margin of close to 16%, up 150 basis points versus a year ago. This level of profitability for the International business ex-fruit is consistent with the long-term target of 15% to 17% announced two years ago. In Q2, due to the classification of our fruit business as an asset held for sale and the agree to final purchase price, the Company recorded an additional non-cash impairment charge of about $24 million. Our U.K. fruit business at trailing 12-month net sales of about $138 million with about negative $4 million in adjusted EBITDA.
Shifting to cash flow and balance sheet. Q2 operating cash flow improved by $43 million to $64 million, and operating free cash flow defined as operating cash flow minus capex was $46 million, close to a $42 million improvement from the prior year period. These improvements resulted primarily from stronger earnings and better working capital management. At the end of Q2, our inventory was $312 million, $19 million higher than the levels at the end of September 2020. This was an intentional inventory deal to ensure high levels of customer service, while avoiding supply disruptions due to COVID lockdowns and Brexit challenges. That said, we expect inventory levels to decrease throughout the second half of fiscal 2021. Our Q2 inventory and other working capital account usage resulted in a 55-day cash conversion cycle that was slightly higher than the prior quarter by one day, but below our target of 60 days due to improvements in account -- in accounts payable days.
Cash on hand at the end of the quarter was $61 million, including the cash in our fruit business, while net debt stood at $234 million, and gross debt leverage was only 1.5 times. Our balance sheet is the strongest it has been in years, and as a result, we have significant capital allocation flexibility. Given our healthy balance sheet, as well as our expectations to continue to generate strong free cash flow, we remain well positioned to both reinvest in the business and return value to shareholders. Consistent with our capital allocation principles and pursuant to the repurchase program authorized by the Board in 2017, during the quarter, we bought back $29.7 million of our shares at an average price of $32.15, leaving us with about $118 million of additional repurchases remaining under our 2017 program.
Looking ahead, given our strong Q2 performance and confidence in managing the controllable aspects of the business, we are reaffirming our fiscal 2021 outlook that calls for gross margin and adjusted EBITDA margin expansion, as well as strong double-digit adjusted EBITDA and operating free cash flow growth. As we move into the third quarter, we expect to continue to deliver strong gross margin and EBITDA margin improvement, as well as adjusted EBITDA growth near 10%.
As Mark mentioned, the business is performing exceptionally well and has tangible top-line momentum. That said, the reported top-line results for Q3 will be impacted by the following. The divestitures the Company carried out including fruit, the Brexit volume pull-forward that was mentioned earlier and discussed on the last earnings call, and the lapping of a Personal Care Club program that we expect it to occur later this calendar year. Excluding these factors, we expect top-line strength that should be evident in the syndicated data.
As part of the second half outlook, we have assumed the following. Foreign exchange translation will continue to be a tailwind versus prior year, cost of goods inflation of around 2%, which has been more than offset by our productivity initiatives, capital expenditures between 4% and 5% of net sales, an increase over prior year to drive multiple productivity projects and to carry out projects that were delayed from last year due to COVID-19, and adjusted effective tax rate between 24% and 25%.
In summary, the momentum illustrated in the prior three quarters has continued into fiscal Q2. We exceeded expectations both on the top and bottom-line, and we continue to believe that we are well positioned to deliver continued strong earnings growth and margin expansion for the balance of the fiscal year.
I will now turn the call back to Mark.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
As you can see, we had another very strong quarter. While Javier just outlined some timing headwinds that will impact the top-line in Q3, we expect continued improvement in our business fundamentals and anticipate continued robust margin and profit expansion. On behalf of the Board of Directors and Management Team, I want to thank the Global Team at Hain Celestial. Our number one priority is keeping employees safe, and I'm proud of the way the team has done so, while continuing to execute in this dynamic operating environment, especially given the robust surge in demand that we've seen.
With that, let me turn the call over to the operator for questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question is coming from the line of Ken Goldman with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.
Kenneth Goldman -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Hey, good morning, everybody.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Kenneth Goldman -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
I wanted to ask about your gross margin guidance for the third quarter. You know the Street's, you're obviously guiding to quote strong, I think is the word you used, improvement year-on-year, the Street's looking for about 150 basis points above the year ago period. This would be the smallest increase in a while, but it's also off the hardest comparison. So I just wanted to get a little deeper if I can, and ask is that 150 basis point improvement, is that kind of in line with what you're considering just on a rough basis for the third quarter, even if we can get any help there on a quantitative level, it would be appreciated?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah...
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
I'll take that Mark. Mark, if you want to...
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
No, go ahead.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
The -- I think the expectation for the quarter will be higher on a -- on a gross margin basis.
Kenneth Goldman -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Perfect. And then my follow-up on a related note, you're guiding, I think you previously had guided to 2% COGS inflation for the year, I think today you said 2% COGS inflation for the back half of this year. We've heard a bunch of companies talk up freight, obviously, some corn and soybeans and other raw materials are up. I know you have quite a different portfolio of COGS that you buy than a traditional food company. But I just wanted to ask, is that 2% number relatively low -- lower than others because you think that you've locked in a lot of -- of your key items or really are your commodities even on a spot basis just not up as much as the Group in general? Just trying to get a sense of maybe the timing if you do have a spike coming in fiscal '22 or something like that?
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
I'll take that Mark, and then you can add some comments [Phonetic]. Yeah, so, we have -- we have five months left into the year, and so we have good visibility as to what we think our basket of different raw materials and finished goods is going to be for the rest of the year. So we feel pretty comfortable about that 2% number. You're absolutely right on the freight cost increases. We have seen double-digit inflation throughout the year and we expect that to continue through the second half of our fiscal year, but that's embedded within our assumptions of that overall 2%. And then on your second point, yes, you're absolutely right, our basket of ingredients is slightly different than the average CPG, so we're not as impacted by some of the inflationary backdrop that you -- that you could say is impacting some of our competitors.
Kenneth Goldman -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Great, thanks. Thank you, Javier.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Alexia Howard with Bernstein. Please proceed with your question.
Alexia Howard -- Bernstein -- Analyst
Good morning, everyone.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Alexia.
Alexia Howard -- Bernstein -- Analyst
Hi. So my first question is really around the numbers coming from better than expected relative to your guidance that you provided last quarter. So, for example, on the EBITDA line I'm focusing on, you came in at 38% growth year-on-year versus the 25% you guided to last quarter. What surprised you in a positive way? And then as I think about the 10% you're guiding to for the third quarter, what are the puts and takes there, what could go better or perhaps worse than expected? And then I have a [Phonetic] follow-up?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so on Q2, I think our execution was very strong, both in terms of service and promotion activity. And we -- I think we are anticipating a little bit more price competition than we saw, which allowed us to get a disproportionate share of the merchandising events which we wanted to do to try and bring more people into the franchise. So I think that was a positive, and we continue to execute exceptionally well on our productivity agenda. So the projects that we have are coming to fruition, they're generating the savings that we anticipate and then some. And, in fact, in Q2, we had a headwind on freight that was more than we anticipated. And so the fact that we were able to deliver the 38% EBITDA growth and cover that extra cost should just again give you confidence that our execution has been very strong.
As you move to Q3, I think obviously, we have the COVID overlap, the surge in March, which is a headwind, and we have some of the timing that we took that Javier talked about in terms of some of the volume in International moving from Q3 to Q2, as they built for Brexit and they built for the impending shutdown that they are now living under, as well as the deferral of a Personal Care program in the club channel because of COVID has been delayed as they're just getting back to merchandising and they are behind schedule, and so it will happen later in the year.
So some of those things obviously impact EBITDA because there's dollars associated with that volume that is some of which has shifted forward and some of which has shifted later. But all that said, what I would point to despite those timing adjustments, despite the overlap of the surge, there is terrific momentum in the business that you see in the syndicated data, we're picking up TDPs at a very high rate, we're gaining market share, we're gaining new households, and we continue to have a very robust productivity agenda. So we're confident that you will continue to see that 100 basis points of margin improvement that we talked about on the last call and the double-digit EBITDA growth that we talked about. So we feel pretty good about our ability to overlap, we feel really good about the momentum that we've got, and hopefully, we can come in and deliver another quarter with some upside.
Alexia Howard -- Bernstein -- Analyst
Great. And then as a quick follow-up, the number of brands that you divested recently, how many have you left with? I think you started with 55, the last I heard you were down to 37. It sounds as though the core is really the 12 or 13 biggest, most strong brands across the portfolio, where are you in that divestment process, and I'll pass it on?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so we continue to reshape the portfolio with the same criteria that we had on Investor Day. The things that we think have mainstream potential that have leading market share, that are responsive to marketing and innovation, those are brands that we're going to invest in for growth and we continue to do so. I -- we've done a good job of shrinking the tail, but I would still tell you that outside of those 13 brands in North America, there are still more in the tail that we would for the right opportunity look at exiting, and we have a few in International as well. So I wouldn't say that we're finished, but importantly, I would also say, we're now pivoting toward conversations around acquisitions and trying to bulk up in the categories that we prioritize.
And in some cases like in Europe where we have a very strong non-dairy business and a very strong meat-free business, there is potential to acquire capacity, so that we can continue to grow at the rate that we have been. So it's going to be more balanced going forward, you'll see some more divestitures, but hopefully, you'll also see some acquisitions as we move through the next couple of years.
Alexia Howard -- Bernstein -- Analyst
Great, thank you very much. I'll pass it on.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Andrew Lazar with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Andrew Lazar -- Barclays -- Analyst
Hi, Mark and Javier.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Andrew.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Andrew Lazar -- Barclays -- Analyst
I guess, first off, Mark, it's obviously been evident for some time the progress Hain is making on the margin side of the business in relation to the Company's long-term goal. On the top-line, there, of course, have been many, many moving pieces. I guess, if we were to take the portfolio as it stands today, adjusting out the announced divestitures and such and knowing the next few quarters are impacted by things like COVID comps and whatnot. Just steady state, what sort of growth rate do you think the portfolio is sort of delivering right now? And, I guess, where in relation is that to, I think with the long-term goal was 5% to 7% on the Get Bigger and maybe was minus 5% to minus 10% on the Get Better? I'm trying to get a sense of kind of excluding all the puts and takes in the year-over-year laps and kind of the divestitures, just where you think this portfolio is now, and do you think there is more room to go from where it is today?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so if you look at the last three quarters that -- and you take out all the divestitures and all that noise, the entire portfolio including International has been growing mid single-digit, about 5%. The Get Bigger brands have been growing around 10%, International has been growing around 10%, the Get Better brands have been flat to slightly declining, although to your point, the long-term guidance we gave was minus 5% to minus 10% on those Get Better brands. So the business has been performing in line with what the long-term guidance has been.
Now the question of course is how much of that is COVID and how much of that is driven by the things that we are creating. And the reason I'm bullish going forward is because if you go back to Investor Day, our main thesis on the Get Bigger brands was always that they had mainstream potential and that we were going to be able to drive distribution and trial in the mainstream channels, where we were very underdeveloped. We've got significant presence in the natural channel with many number one and number two share brands, but we were underdeveloped in the mainstream channels. And what you're starting to see right now in the data is double-digit growth in terms of distribution points on those Get Bigger brands, three straight quarters of very significant household penetration growth, innovation that is working, that's very incremental to the categories and we just need these categories to reset.
And so as we start going through the calendar year 2021 and customers start resetting their shelves again, starting with Snacks and Baby Food at the end of this quarter and into the beginning of April, you're going to see us pick up significant space, and that's the gift that keeps on giving. If you're bringing in things that are turning and that have earned their space, that's going to be very incremental in terms of our growth rate. So I think as COVID wanes, you'll see the distribution gains and the incrementality of that space bringing in new consumers that will offset any losses that we have coming from the waning of the pandemic. So we feel pretty good about where we are. We feel really good about the momentum we have on the core business. And it's just a matter of us getting through the pandemic and seeing where we are on the other side, but all the signs are very positive right now in terms of momentum on the business.
Andrew Lazar -- Barclays -- Analyst
Thank you for that. And I think you mentioned that marketing as a percent of sales for the Get Bigger brands is currently at 7%. I guess where was that -- I'm almost afraid to ask, where was that when on the Get Bigger brands when you sort of first defined the Get Bigger sort of segment? And is 7%, you think probably around the right number or is there a reason for that to go higher sustainably?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so we were in the 2% to 3% range when we started this journey, and we have been adding marketing for, I think four or five straight quarters, and we also redeployed some of the marketing from the Get Better brands to the Get Bigger brands, but we are around 7%. I think that's generally a good number with the exception of Personal Care that tends to have a little bit higher spending levels. So we will look to increase in Personal Care as we start to build that mainstream distribution that I just talked about. We're still very dominant in the natural channel, but not as penetrated in the grocery channel and you don't see it in the syndicated data, the strength in that business that you see in the other ones because it's largely a non-measured channel and natural channel business.
So as Personal Care starts to get that distribution and we're seeing it now, although in the last, I think six weeks is up about 4% on distribution as an example and we have a lot of innovation coming. That will be the catalyst for us to increase the spending there, because we'll have enough of a footprint nationally to be able to make more meaningful investments there, but the rest of the business, I think we're about where we need to be.
Andrew Lazar -- Barclays -- Analyst
Great, thank you so much.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of David Palmer with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question.
David Palmer -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Thanks, and congrats so far in the year. Kind of follow-ups to those questions, I'm wondering if we can maybe go out further and talk about your targets. Sometimes, particularly with this COVID-related comparisons, it's easier to talk about the longer-term than some of the near-term violent quarterly comparisons. And you guys are -- you mentioned you're up toward the higher end of your targets already on Get Better EBITDA margins, your Get Bigger, including some marketing reinvestment and COVID-related expenses, you're in the mid-teens.
And I would imagine that Personal Care business is relatively higher margin or at least could be and that's being held back by COVID-related forces. So I'm wondering if already internally you're thinking that the high end of the 13% to 16% EBITDA margin target for fiscal '23 is very much in sight. Could you comment on that, and I have a quick follow-up?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I think you're spot on. Right now, we are delivering at the mid-end of the three-year guidance at the end of year two, and we expect that we are going to continue to see margin expansion into F'22 and beyond. I mentioned in my comments that we have about $150 million worth of productivity initiatives in North America and International that we're working on, that will more than offset inflationary costs and wage increases and other costs coming our way, plus, we will also have the unwinding of some of the costs related to COVID, the cost of keeping employees safe and quarantining them and the like.
And so we expect that margins are going to continue to expand. And I would again remind you that we are at the low end of the industry in terms of where our margins are even with the 500 basis points of improvements that we've made. So there is more to go. We're not running out of ideas. And I think between the momentum that we're starting to see on the top-line and the continued momentum in the middle of the P&L, I would expect that -- your -- this is going to be a meaningful growth company going forward.
David Palmer -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
And just speaking more directly to the things, the gives and takes with regard to margins as you lap this COVID period, I think post vaccine and herd immunity as we get into that zone, how do you think about the legacy of this year in terms of margin? And what I'm thinking about is, you might have had some tailwinds, some of your at-home products, but you have some headwinds with some of perhaps the Personal Care, your COVID-related costs. So I'm wondering, do you feel like you've maybe -- COVID has given you a boost this year in your margin targets or is it a net neutral? Thanks.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, it's a great question because it's -- the direct costs are easy to calculate, the indirect costs that are hard. So, for example, we have amazing innovation and because customers haven't reset, we haven't got that in full distribution, that's a headwind that is clearly caused by COVID that I can't put a dollar value to. But look, there are some tailwinds here. We do have some absorption that come with higher volume. We do have some competitive opportunities that have materialized because we've serviced our business better than others, and we've been promoting at times when others have not that have allowed us to get more merchandising and more consumers into our franchise, but at the same time, the headwinds are meaningful. And just even in this quarter, this Personal Care program that we mentioned that was very sizable last year because of COVID, it's not going to happen until later in the year because the customers are behind on their merchandising. So I think in Q3, it's definitely a headwind between the March surge, the timing on the Personal Care program and the pull-forward of volume into Q2, COVID is definitely a headwind in Q3. I think it was probably a little bit of a tailwind in the first half, but not nearly as much as it was when the pandemic started March through June last year.
David Palmer -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Rob Dickerson with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Rob Dickerson -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Great, thanks so much.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Rob.
Rob Dickerson -- Jefferies -- Analyst
It's some more to [Phonetic] -- I just -- hey, Mark. I just wanted to touch on pricing. Obviously, it sounds like your cost inflation is not as bad as others, but then I also -- I've heard you before discuss just kind of plans to optimize pricing across sizes, sorry, pack sizes and channels, people still seem to be a little less price sensitive during the pandemic, and then I think today, I heard you say maybe there is a little less price competition than maybe you had foreseen just a few months ago. So maybe if you could just touch on kind of how you're feeling about kind of the price competition within your giving categories, and if there really is a need for you to try to push on increases in list pricing outside of just the optimization and the mix efforts, then I have a follow-up? Thanks.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so on the list pricing, I think with the freight cost surge that everybody is seeing, including us and some of the commodity inflation, we'll see whether others start taking list price increases or not. But we've -- we've been spending a lot of our time and energy again making these products ready for mainstream channels, and what I mean by that is, we've done a lot of downsizing a lot of trial sizes. And so when you look at the syndicated data, you see that our prices are actually flat or down where others have been going up, that's all with intent and it's all in the spirit of getting us the distribution and the trial and the channels that we think are going to be a big part of our growth going forward.
We do have dry powder there. As I said, when we built the plan, we put aside some money for pricing if needed, because we don't want to be late to the party and miss out on all the opportunity if all of a sudden everybody stops dropping -- starts dropping prices. But I think given the pressure that everyone is seeing on the cost side, I think the promotional environment is going to be a lot more subdued than it might be when you come into the overlap of the pandemic. There is cost increases that people are incurring at a higher rate than us, it's going to be hard for them to absorb those costs and drop their prices too. So I think if anything, we'll see prices continue to go up and we will opportunistically look for ways to do that. But the good news is we have enough productivity to offset the vast majority of the cost increases that we're seeing anyway and that's why you see such robust margin expansion.
Rob Dickerson -- Jefferies -- Analyst
All right, yeah, that sounds great. And I guess just quickly just in terms of cash flow allocation, current leverage right now, right, is obviously benign that you just sold [Phonetic] fruit, there are some, I guess, newsflow around or divestment potential around Earth's Best bottom-line, right, is there any decent free cash flow getting excess cash off the divestments to buying back a little bit of stock, not a ton, and then I heard you today, so it may be starting to focus a little bit more on acquisitions, maybe that's more so in Europe relative to the U.S.? So just kind of simplistically as we think kind of the go-forward cash allocation, is it what you're saying, clearly is what we -- instead of potentially paying a dividend, let's say, we are focused more so on looking at some added capacity and capability in some of our core brands that will be remaining post divestments in Europe, not necessarily like meaning more into Yogurt than the U.S., that's it? Thanks.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so let me take a quick shot and then I'll let Javier talk about our capital allocation. We continue to reshape the portfolio. You mentioned Earth's Best, what I would tell you is, we're not going to comment on specific rumors and I wouldn't be distracted by them. If there is something that we are actively trying to sell, we will tell you. We did with fruit, we did with HPP. The fact that there is some rumors swirling around things in our portfolio, we get contacted all the time and there's interest in lots of things that we have. We would be more interested in selling off the tail outside of those core 13 brands that I mentioned. And as we generate more proceeds, we have some optionality, and one I'll let Javier talk about how we've been deploying our capital and how we think about it going forward.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
So on the capital allocation front, one of the things that we look at is where can the Company get its highest adjusted return -- risk-adjusted return across a number of options, and those options are internal investments and external investments and generally, the external investments obviously deal with M&A. There is a consideration about share repurchases and dividends. Share repurchases are looked at through the same lens. We seek to invest our capital to its highest and best use. And so if we think our share price is below what we consider to be an intrinsic share value, we try to move and purchase some shares. So right now, that's the lens through which we look at our capital allocation.
If there were to be the opportunity where after we've looked at internal and M&A activities and our shares are what we consider to be adequately priced, we would consider a one-time dividend, but I don't think we're at that stage and I don't think that's for the foreseeable future, certainly not in the near-term that we would consider a permanent dividend at this point. So those would be sort of the choices and how we look at those choices.
Rob Dickerson -- Jefferies -- Analyst
All right, fair enough [Phonetic].
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
And just one point I would add, Rob, to your comment on International acquisitions, we're looking at acquisitions in North America as well. So it's around bulking up in the categories that we think have the most growth potential and where we have a significant presence that would be the leadership brands here in North America, as well as the categories that I mentioned internally -- internationally.
Rob Dickerson -- Jefferies -- Analyst
All right, great. Thanks so much. Appreciate it.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Michael Lavery of Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.
Michael Lavery -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Good morning, thank you.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning.
Michael Lavery -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
I wanted to swing the pendulum back a little bit the other way from David's question to just the rest of the year or even third quarter, and obviously, you gave pretty specific color on EBITDA and gross margin. But just curious thinking about the top-line, how much should we expect maybe that to be up or not? Is it all driven by margin? I know you've got the tough comps and some of the Brexit pull-forward, but just maybe some color on what you're thinking as you plan internally around where the top-line lands?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so the reported number will be negative, because first and foremost, we have almost 1,000 basis points of overlap on divestitures that have to get adjusted out, right, businesses that we sold that we're no longer selling. And then on top of that, we've got the Brexit/U.K. lockdown pull-forward and the timing of this club program, which has some size to it. So that adds another 500 basis points, 600 basis points, 700 basis points of drag on the top-line.
So we're looking at -- before you just get to how is the business performing between those timing issues and the overlap of divested and closed businesses, it's 1,500 basis points, 1,600 basis points. So that's going to be pretty material. And again versus the other quarters that we've been reporting, remember, we just sold the fruit business, which is $140 million, that's a meaningful adjustment that has to be made on top of the things that we sold over the previous nine months, and then you add the two things that are timing related, it's going to look materially different on the top-line.
That said, the underlying health of the business, which you can see in the syndicated data is strengthening. And so I don't want people to be distracted by timing issues because the data is going to really tell you what the health of the business looks like. And we continue to grow share in tea, snacks, yogurt. We've now stabilized Garden of Eatin' and Terra, which had been struggling previously. We've got significant TDP expansion. We've got significant household penetration growth. So I think if you strip that all out, you've got a very healthy business underneath and it's a very robust growth that we've seen in Europe as well. So -- but the reported number is going to be negative and that's part of why we're making the comments here, so that people are aware in adjusting their models accordingly.
Michael Lavery -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
No, that's helpful. And I'm sorry, I meant to specify organic growth, but -- so you called out some of the underlying drivers. Would organic revenue growth then sound like maybe -- be at least around flat or perhaps slightly up?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, ex the timing issues, it would be in that mid single-digit range again, right. So we've -- for the last three quarters, we've been in the 5% to 6% organic growth rate, but now you've got the Brexit timing and the Club program that are going to drag those down by 500 points to 700 points. So it will be slightly negative to flat on a -- adjusting for divestitures, but, again, ex the timing, we're going to be in the mid single-digits again.
Michael Lavery -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Okay, great, really helpful. And just a quick follow-up, you touched on some of this, but where you call out the uncertainties that, that limit guidance being too specific. Certainly, there's the U.K. lockdowns and some just mobility uncertainty that can spring up that's not yet in hands. But anything else maybe driving that? Are you past any absenteeism issues or is that an uncertainty, or what are some of the key variables that would -- you would call out that keep you from being more specific on the outlook?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, so Brexit, number one. Even though Brexit has been signed, it was signed in secret and then handed over to business after it was done to say, now you guys figure out what this means. And we are seeing some delays at the border, we're seeing increased paperwork. There's going to be some costs, but we think they're manageable, but it's -- we're still sorting through all of that, number one.
Number two, obviously, COVID and what the impact of COVID could be a positive or a negative right now, it's more of a positive in Europe because they're under very strict lockdown and you've got countries like Germany that's saying they're not even going to get close to vaccinating all of their citizens until the fall. So I expect that it will endure longer there. We have freight costs that are escalating at a very rapid rate, and there are significant challenges getting anything from China right now. There's been a number of articles written on that, the ports are backlogged.
Luckily for us in preparation for the lockdown, we went long on things like packaging and raw materials that come out of China, so that we would be ready for the surge. So we're in pretty good shape there, but if that endures for a much longer period of time, if the freight costs endure for a longer period of time, those could be headwinds as well. But, so a lot of the other things we don't really have control over, we can just plan for as best as possible.
The things that we control, we feel really good about, the execution, the customer relationships, the service of the business, the quality of innovation, all of those things that we control, we feel that we have tailwinds on and we'll continue to see momentum. And thus far, we've done a really good job of managing some of these macro blockers, if you will, that create headwinds in the face of the momentum that we're generating naturally. So we feel pretty good about it, but just hopefully, that gives you some color around. There's still a lot of volatility here. We don't know how fast vaccines get deployed here. We don't know how fast consumer behavior changes. And so it's just -- it's -- once we get through it, it will be much clearer, but there's still going to be some uncertainty I think over the next six months in terms of how this all plays out.
Michael Lavery -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Very helpful. Thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is coming from the line of Bill Chappell with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.
Bill Chappell -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Thanks, good morning.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Bill.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning.
Bill Chappell -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Hey, good morning. Just two questions kind of one on the same line of questions. I mean, trying to understand what's your expectations are for category growth not necessarily what you're seeing yourself in the turnaround. And when I say that, I've got to think that the conditions or the comps for this spring are more favorable than you would have thought last July, August, when you were giving guidance and that more people are working from home, more schools are still virtual.
And on that conversely, I mean, I've got to think that even though we had some postponement, as we go look the next fall, which is your fiscal '22, you've got to expect the categories to drop back down as we somewhat return to normal. I mean, is that not the way you're looking at it? I mean, we're -- we just had some kind of postponement of the drop-off or are you really thinking that you're going to grow or the categories will grow through this, this is a permanent level after we get through just the initial stock up of growth?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so the first thing I would tell you is, we look at sub categories within the category. So, for example, in snacks, we share ourselves against natural snacks, not all snacks. We do that because that's where we have the highest interaction indices, and consumers who have made a decision to buy something organic are not as likely to buy something that's not organic as an example. So if you go back pre-pandemic, the natural categories, the categories that we're in that cater toward health and wellness, we're growing mid single-digit, high single-digit in some cases.
And given that this has been a health and wellness crisis, given that we think the return to normal behavior is going to be a long tail, because to your point, I'm not sure anybody is going back to the office five days a week. I think you will still have some level of working from home and other behavior changes that are going to not have this be a light switch where all of a sudden everybody is vaccinated and we just go back to the way it used to be. So I would expect that these categories will continue to be growth categories even overlapping what we've seen.
Now it will be a little choppy as we get through the fourth quarter. We saw a 50% surge in tea in the fourth quarter last year, that will be difficult to overlap. But in general, I think when you get to the back of this, you're talking about categories that are going to grow because that's where the consumer is heading, you're talking about e-commerce that is going to be here to stay, which over-indexes on healthy products. We're talking about consumer behavior changes, both lifestyle changes, as well as where they work and how they travel and all that, that are going to lead to more in-home eating occasions and pre-pandemic. And so we feel like we're still in the right part of the market and that part of the market is going to grow in F'22. Again, it will be a little choppy as we get through the next six months, but we expect that we'll be able to lap this and still see growth in the categories that we compete in.
Bill Chappell -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Okay, no, I appreciate that. And then just on your market share gains, you said they've come despite the inability to launch new products and innovation. So I'm just trying to understand have most of your gains come because you've been able to service clients and your competitors, smaller competitors haven't, and will that flip back as we -- they get kind of their feet under them, and they also haven't been able to launch their new products, so, I mean, do you expect the competitive landscape for everybody to kind of change over these next few months?
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I mean, there's a couple of things that I think have led to us gaining share. Number one, we serviced the business really well as you said. And for a Company that historically had not serviced well, the fact that we went from below average to above average as the pandemic hit has been a feather in our cap with retailers in terms of them looking at us as a real player and partner that they want to work with, number one.
Number two, we did launch a bunch of innovation. We just didn't get it in ubiquitous distribution because of the pandemic. And where we have launched it, the data is so compelling that when you take it to other retailers and say, let me show you how Energy Tea is 80%, 90% incremental to the category and how it's turning in the top half of the category and velocity, you've got to have this thing on your shelf. So I think we've got proof points in our innovation that others don't have because they didn't launch anything at all in many cases. And so I think that's a second tailwind for us.
And then the third is, we've done a really good job with our marketing dollars bringing new people into the franchise. And so our franchisers are much bigger than they were before, and we're not just bringing them in for one occasion and then they leave. We're finding that those that have come in are becoming repeat purchasers and are staying with us, and our three-plus purchase group of consumers continues to grow every quarter because we're turning these people into loyalists.
So I think we're very well positioned to do better than the rest and continue to grow share, but there's no question that the competition is going to be different as the pandemic waves -- wanes, some of it will be on pricing, some of it will be on innovations. But again, I think it feels like because we've been leaning in, we're one step ahead of people and we intend to stay one step ahead with our customers and be the partner of choice. And so we're pretty bullish and optimistic on our ability to continue to grow share.
Bill Chappell -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Great, thanks so much for the color.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I would like to hand the call back over to management for any closing comments.
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
I appreciate everybody's time and engagement today. I know we ran a little bit long. We had some technical difficulties at the beginning and started a bit late. But hopefully you get a sense that the things that we're doing are working, you see it in the results, and hopefully, we give you confidence in the future and the trajectory of the business. And I'll leave it at that. Thank you, guys. And we look forward to the one-on-one conversations throughout the day. Thanks.
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
Duration: 65 minutes
Call participants:
Anna Kate Heller -- Investor Relations
Mark L. Schiller -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Javier H. Idrovo -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Kenneth Goldman -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Alexia Howard -- Bernstein -- Analyst
Andrew Lazar -- Barclays -- Analyst
David Palmer -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Rob Dickerson -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Michael Lavery -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Bill Chappell -- Truist Securities -- Analyst