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Fomento Economico Mexicano S.A.B. de C.V. (FMX -0.68%)
Q1 2021 Earnings Call
Apr 29, 2021, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to FEMSA's First Quarter 2021 Financial Results Conference call. [Operator Instructions] During this conference call, management may discuss certain forward-looking statements concerning FEMSA's future performance and should be considered as good faith estimates made by the company. These forward-looking statements reflect management's expectations and are based upon currently available data. Actual results are subject to future events and uncertainties, which can materially impact the company's actual performance.

At this time, I will now turn the conference over to Juan Fonseca, FEMSA's Director, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

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Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Good morning, everyone. Welcome to FEMSA's First Quarter 2021 Results Conference Call. Today, we are joined by Eduardo Padilla, our Chief Executive Officer; Eugenio Garza, our Finance and Corporate Development Director; and by Jorge Collazo, who heads Coca-Cola FEMSA's Investor Relations effort. Paco Camacho, our Chief Corporate Officer, is traveling this week and wasn't able to dial in today. So let me turn it over to Eugenio for some opening remarks.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Thank you, Juan. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. We hope your families and yourselves are doing well. The first message that jumps out in the data for the first quarter is that things are getting better. Most importantly, they are getting better on the health funds, gradually, in some cases, painful so. And there have been setbacks, of course, such as the big COVID wave we recently saw in Brazil. But little by little, and following the trends on the health front, our numbers also tell a story of sequential improvement, not just quarter-over-quarter, but month-over-month.

This is happening across all of our business units, and it's encouraging. Another thing to keep in mind as we look at the numbers, is comparability. While the first 10 weeks of the year, we faced demanding comps from a strong start in 2020 and an extra calendar day in February. After that, as you all know, we wanted to severe lockdowns across all our markets that remain in place one way or another for a full year. This will make for a low comparison basis in the next few months and quarters to come, so we must not get complacent. In fact, internally, we are using 2019 numbers as a useful reference to measure our progress across different units.

On the disclosure front, we're also happy to present the logistics and distribution segment, providing much needed visibility into this part of our company. And I take this opportunity to reinforce our message that we now have a solid presence in the business verticals that we have identified as attractive and that importantly offer a clear and compelling fit with our current capability set. The task now is to keep growing in every vertical and to drive incremental returns. Before we dive into the numbers, I just want to mention the EUR1.2 billion bond issue we announced yesterday.

As you probably know, this was the first sustainability-linked bond ever issued by Mexican Corporate, the largest one ever issued by Latin America corporate. We also achieved the lowest all-in yields ever for a Latin American insurer in the Eurobond market at 0.55% and 1.07% for the seven and 12-year tranches, respectively. This issuance will allow us to comfortably refinance our currently outstanding 23 eurobonds, improving our maturity profile and further strengthening our balance sheet while generating a positive NPV of approximately EUR20 million under reasonable assumptions. And just as importantly, it reinforces our commitment to deliver on ambitious ESG targets that are an integral component of our long-term business strategy.

Starting with FEMSA's consolidated quarterly numbers. Total revenues for the first quarter increased 1.8%, while income from operations remained flat. On an organic basis, total revenues decreased 3% and income from operations decreased 2.4%. For this quarter, the difference between reported and organic figures reflect the results of our operations in the U.S., all of which came on board during the last 12 months. Still, our figures continue to post sequential improvements, which are encouraging. As we mentioned before, keep in mind that the full effect of the pandemic and the mobility restrictions started in the late part of March 2020. Thus, the comparison basis is still high for this quarter.

FEMSA's net income decreased 31.3%, reflecting a demanding comp base in the first quarter of 2020 that benefited from a noncash foreign exchange gain related to FEMSA's dollar-denominated cash position. This was partially offset by lower interest expense and an increase in our participation in associates, which mainly reflects the results of our investment in Heineken. In terms of our consolidated net debt position, during the first quarter, it decreased 5% to MXN72 billion at the end of March, reflecting high cash generation at Coca-Cola FEMSA that offset a slight increase in our debt balance during the quarter. For its part, capex was down 37% as the operation continued to rationalize noncritical investments.

Moving on to discuss our operations and beginning with FEMSA Comercio Proximity division. We opened 140 new OXXO stores during the first quarter, which are net of 30 permanent closures that were carried over from last year's store pruning exercise as well as 30 stores that are temporarily closed for maintenance. While we are not yet fully up to speed with our expansion pace, we are on track to achieve our full year targets. In terms of the operating environment, a significant percentage of our store base remains subject to COVID-related restrictions and measures for a good part of the quarter.

However, many of these restrictions were gradually relaxed during March and resulted in better traffic and resilient ticket growth, which together benefited OXXO's overall performance. OXXO same-store sales were down 6.5% for the first quarter, reflecting an 18% decline in-store traffic and an increase of 14.4% in average customer ticket. Gross margin remained flat at 40%, reflecting positive trends in our services category, which offset a decrease in commercial income activity and promotional programs with our key supplier partners. Income from operations decreased 21.1% and operating margin contracted 110 basis points, reflecting operating deleverage. Moving on to FEMSA Comercio's Health division.

During the first quarter, we expanded our drugstore count by 37 net additions to reach a total of 3,405 units across our territories at the end of March and 209 total new stores for the last 12 months. Revenues increased 16%, while same-store sales increased an average of 15.5% in Mexican pesos. We continue to see good momentum at our operations in Mexico, coupled with resilient conditions in South America. Gross margin expanded by 50 basis points in the quarter, reflecting improved efficiency and more effective collaboration and execution with our key supplier partners across geographies.

Operating margin expanded 210 basis points, reflecting increased operating leverage. Moving on to FEMSA Comercio's fuel division. We note that vehicle mobility remains below pre-COVID levels. In that context, we again saw some sequential improvement even as many of our locations skewed toward residential neighborhoods that have recovered more slowly than commercial ones. During the first quarter, we continued to see pressure on our same-station sales, which decreased 22%. Gross margin reached 12.7%, while operating margin was 2.7% of total revenues, reflecting tight expense control that partially offset operating deleverage. Now let me talk a little bit about our logistics and distribution business. As you know, we are reporting its results as a segment for the first time.

In the U.S., we are making good progress integrating the four distinct entities that we have acquired into a single efficient platform that is prime for growth. We have capitalized on the very strong teams that ran the legacy companies and integrated them into a single, highly experienced and motivated organization. However, the U.S. is reopening at different speeds in different regions and some end user categories, such as hospitality and entertainment are still lagging. Therefore, we expect trends to improve further in the second half of the year. For Spark, our 3PL logistics operation is also making good progress across its main Latin American markets of Brazil, Mexico and Colombia, even as economic recovery is expected to be slower in those countries than in the U.S. Finally, moving on briefly to Coca-Cola FEMSA. Mexico and Central America delivered double-digit operating income growth, while currency headwinds in Brazil tempered the benefits of solid volume trends and gains in omnichannel capabilities in South America.

You can listen to a webcast of the quarterly call held on Tuesday. Wrapping up, my final message today is one of cautious optimism. The pandemic has forced us to become a more flexible and agile organization, and those learnings are here to stay. Uncertainty levels in our consumer environments remain high. But relative to last year, it seems every day, we take a small step in the right direction. We have strong -- strong operators that accelerate execution, and we believe that we have the right strategy for the team to execute. This should be a better year. It should be a year of recovery and growth, and we thank you for coming along with us. And with that, we can open the call up for your questions. Operator?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Bob Ford with Bank of America.

Bob Ford -- Bank of America -- Analyst

I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about spin and some of these put to sea in terms of early learnings and the timetable to roll it out nationally. And then when it comes to the changes in the labor law, do the outsourcing elements have an impact? Or should we expect something from the [Indecipherable] floor? Or are there other elements that weren't consideration?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. Thanks for the question, Bob. With regards to Spain, as you know, we launched the initial program back in September in the city of San Luis Potosi. And so far, it is coming along to plan, and we still continue to believe that by the end of the year, it should be rolled out nationwide. So still early to tell, but so far, the rollout is going according to plan. And with regards to the labor law, we have been studying it carefully.

We believe that there will be some administrative changes that we will need to make in company bylaws and some of the other legal requirements of registering companies and whatnot, and we should be ready to implement all these changes before the law comes into full effect in August. And at this point, we don't see any portion of the law affecting our view with regards to profitability or cash flow for this year. So far, we do expect, again, to be in full compliant by August and no major effect in our outlook for profitability.

Operator

Our next question comes from Ricardo Alves with Morgan Stanley.

Ricardo Alves -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

A couple of questions. Just a quick update on the OXXO same-store sales. The evolution throughout the quarter would be quite helpful. We understand in March was a little bit better than January and February, but whatever additional color you can provide on that would be helpful. But even more interestingly, even more interesting, if you could provide some color on April, that will be helpful.

On the margin evolution, second question, if you could comment a little bit more both from the gross margin perspective into the EBITDA margin at OXXO, gross margin flattish year-over-year, certainly positive highlight to us. So just wanted to pick your brand if that's mostly driven by the financial services or if there is anything else there. But particularly on the EBITDA margin, really surprising to us the slower pace of decline. So if you could comment a little bit more on SG&A, that would be helpful. Those are my two questions. I appreciate the time.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. Thanks, Ricardo, for your question. Juan, I don't know if you could provide a little bit more color in terms of the same-store sales trend, and I can talk a little bit about margins?

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Sure, sure, Eugenio. Ricardo, yes, I think it's a very relevant question that you asked because this was -- from what I can remember, one of the most notable quarters, I think, in terms of how different one month was to the previous one. And what I mean by that is, the level of restrictions that we had on our stores coming out of the holiday period was very, very intense, right? And so I think if you just look at the monthly evolution of same-store sales, we actually had a bit of a step back in January, February relative to what we had been doing toward the end of last year. But then in March, things really turned around.

The level of restrictions became much more manageable. If you recall, the color code, the tiers in Mexico had a big improvement. In March, we began to see more states going to green. Probably half of the country went to yellow. I think we stopped having any red states and what we mentioned last time around and when we've had conversations with you over the past few months, what we observe is as soon as people feel like it's safer to go out or they have a reason to go out, they go to the store, right? And I think that reinforces our thesis that structurally, there are no major changes to habits or patterns as soon as people are able to go out and about, they visit the store as they always have.

So what I would point out in terms of actual numbers is that if you look at the March data, same-store sales were flat to previous year. So the number for the quarter, as you saw, obviously, negative 6.6. I believe. If you factor in two significantly worse months than that. And then March is significantly better than that, as I mentioned, going to flat. I'll now turn it over to Eugenio for the rest of the comments.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. Thanks, Juan. With regards to your question on margins, you're right. I mean, part of the reason we've been able to maintain. But margins has been a very good performance by the payments business, which is obviously higher margin. But the other encouraging fact there is that as traffic is coming back, we are seeing the ticket remain high, which is very, very encouraging, basically signaling that the consumer habits with regards to other categories such as pantry items, even liquor and alcohol and the consumer patterns are shifting, so that now they see it as a viable option for those categories as well, which should bode well for margins going forward once the lower ticket items come back.

So that is encouraging. And with regards to the trends on operating margin and EBITDA margin, we are seeing sequential improvements month by month. And it's just basically a factor of operating leverage, as Juan described although we are having a tight expense control still, I mean, more and more, we are getting back to our normal scale levels across all of our operations, and that should bode well for operating margins going forward.

Ricardo Alves -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Appreciate the call very helpful. Very interesting also with thickness of some of the new consumption behavior. I appreciate the time.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Thank you, Ricardo.

Operator

Next question comes from Alvaro Garcia with BTG.

Alvaro Garcia -- BTG -- Analyst

I have a bigger picture question on sort of what's going on internally culturally, let's say, with the rollout of spin and the long-term thinking you have there on the financial services business, because you have this choice, right, of really pushing the digital platform, but you probably don't want to move too fast because it impacts your store economics, and you don't want to go digital too fast. And we saw -- I know that they follow-up the platform a couple of years ago. We saw an Amex fall off as well recently. And internally, I'm just curious to how discussions are going on this front. Is there a push perhaps to maybe lower short-term economic gains or the fees you received for some of these services to really increase the size of the network? Or do you foresee -- or do you plan to keep these fees high for the foreseeable future?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. Thanks, Alvaro. Obviously, an interesting dilemma, an interesting question. First, with regards to just the cultural elements, clearly, to attract the right talent, we are keeping the spin unit a little bit separate from the traditional OXXO business. So we have routing talent from the outside. We're using a lot of agile methodologies to pivot, learn and react quickly to what the consumer wants. And I think the benefit of that going forward, as we get those skills into the mainstream OXXO business and throughout FEMSA has actually been, I mean, very encouraging in terms of other opportunities that we can have to digitally transform the entire enterprise.

So from that perspective, I think that this thing will bring us a lot more value to the table than just what it is with regards to the business. And then with the more interesting question about the broader financial services platform, I mean, clearly, the way we see it is that we want to provide the consumer with as much choice as we can and let the consumer adapt to whatever bodes the best for his usage of the financial services platform in Mexico.

And although we have seen, as you said, I mean, a couple of banks whose target client segment maybe did not match up with our customer -- with our customer segment roll off the platform, we still are operating with 14 other banks. We have 7,000 associated services that's going to still be paid analog through OXXO, and we will be bringing that back to the digital platform as we roll out and bring more functionality and more have the customer decide where he wants to take, where he wants to take this transaction either analog or digital, and we will be reacting to that as a business overall. Sure. Thanks, Alvaro. Obviously, an interesting dilemma, an interesting question. First, with regards to just the cultural elements, clearly, to attract the right talent, we are keeping the spin unit a little bit separate from the traditional OXXO business. So we have routing talent from the outside. We're using a lot of agile methodologies to pivot, learn and react quickly to what the consumer wants. And I think the benefit of that going forward, as we get those skills into the mainstream OXXO business and throughout FEMSA has actually been, I mean, very encouraging in terms of other opportunities that we can have to digitally transform the entire enterprise. So from that perspective, I think that this thing will bring us a lot more value to the table than just what it is with regards to the business. And then with the more interesting question about the broader financial services platform, I mean, clearly, the way we see it is that we want to provide the consumer with as much choice as we can and let the consumer adapt to whatever bodes the best for his usage of the financial services platform in Mexico. And although we have seen, as you said, I mean, a couple of banks whose target client segment maybe did not match up with our customer -- with our customer segment roll off the platform, we still are operating with 14 other banks. We have 7,000 associated services that's going to still be paid analog through OXXO, and we will be bringing that back to the digital platform as we roll out and bring more functionality and more have the customer decide where he wants to take, where he wants to take this transaction either analog or digital, and we will be reacting to that as a business overall. Our strategy, again, from both a top line and a profitability perspective is to be able to solve our customer needs in the best way possible. And whether they adopt quickly or whether they adopt slowly, it will be more up to the functionality that they want. More than a strategy on our part.

Miguel Eduardo Padilla Silva -- Chief Executive Officer and Director

This is Eduardo, Alvaro. I would like to add I think a good thing forward is that how our loyalty program is going to be connected with spin as well. So I think those connections will enable us to provide a very wide base for services to our customers and let the customer really decide when to go to the physical store and when to use the platform.

Operator

Our next question comes from Alan Alanis with Santander.

Alan Alanis -- Santander -- Analyst

A couple of questions. The first one regarding the sustainability bond that you issued. I mean congratulations, I mean getting money for eight years at a 1% rate, fantastic. But what is the use of proceeds, what are you going to do with that money in terms of sustainability? I think we're getting a lot of questions from investors on that front. So you could expand on that. And the second question is the first time that we see the logistics business, but we don't have a history.

And so we don't have a sense of how fast it's growing and how much of that logistics business, for instance, is servicing e-commerce, which is something that, as you can imagine, some of your competitors are doing in Brazil like Sequoia or Traxion in Mexico, and that puts a pretty interesting valuation on those businesses. Could you disclose that, that if logistics is giving any service directly to e-commerce? And what is the growth algorithm for the logistics business going forward? Those will be the two questions.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. Absolutely. And thanks for the questions, Alan. First, with regards to the sustainability bonds, we are -- we just -- actually, last week called or redeemed our notes that were due $20 billion, $23 billion worth of euro-denominated notes. So this was a liability management exercise in that respect. So no effect on the total debt level at FEMSA. Having said that, we -- this is why we chose to do an ESG or sustainability-linked bond rather than a green bond that's targeted of use of proceeds as we are making a commitment regardless of this refinancing and because we are making a long-term commitment as a business to achieve our sustainability targets of renewable energy, 85% by 2030 and 100% diversion of waste to landfill by 2030 as well.

So with these covenants, I think we are committing ourselves to something that is not only -- I mean, good for the environment and good for the ecosystem, but more importantly, good for our business and is in line with our business strategy. So again, not tied to use of proceeds, but definitely tied to our commitment to achieve these targets and putting our money where our mouth is in that respect for 2030 with regards to the logistics business, I think -- I mean, just because we bought the U.S. logistics distribution platform in May last year, comparability would have been very hard to achieve.

So as the quarters roll by, we'll be able to talk more about these kinds of trends. But having said that, and to your point, I think a growing part of our less-than-truckload business and some of our warehousing business more and more is geared toward the e-commerce companies. Remember, what we're trying to achieve with the 3PL strategy is to help our customers be able to be omnichannel, whether it be through digital stores or end-to-end solutions direct to the customer. And our solutions are tailored to that, not only e-commerce, but being able to offer omnichannel capabilities to our customers. I think more and more, regardless of how much is actually delivered or sold to e-commerce in one -- in a lot of ways and in some way shape or form, the 3PL solutions that we're offering will help them achieve, and I think that will become a bigger part of our mix going forward.

Alan Alanis -- Santander -- Analyst

Got it. And could you give us a ballpark figure what we expect the growth of the logistics business.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Yes. At this point, I mean, given -- it's too early to tell and given the mix of U.S. versus Latin American business, I think it's too early for us to make a position. Having said that, we do believe that this will be a prime engine of growth for the portfolio going forward.

Miguel Eduardo Padilla Silva -- Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. And let me add, Alan, this is Eduardo. In the U.S. businesses that we have acquired, we are very optimistic because some of them were selling services to the entertainment business to big restaurant chains, even hospitality. And we see those sectors coming back strongly. And I think we are looking forward for that growth as well.

Operator

Next question comes from Marcella Recchia with Credit Suisse.

Marcella Recchia -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Just a follow-up on the distribution and logistics. Although we understand that the figures are not fully comparable, if we were to compare reported figures for this new division versus the previous other division, we note that sales grew very solid at 25% quarter-over-quarter, opposing 8% decline also quarter-over-quarter. So I just want to like to understand if you can give us some color on the reason on this gap, considering that we saw a material improvement on the decline.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. I think in both the LatAm as well as in the U.S. operations, there was sequential improvement in sales as the lockdown [Indecipherable], specifically the 3PL business on the LTL front this quarter had a very, very strong quarter as mobility begins to take hold of a lot of the regions that have been subject to stricter lockdowns. So part of it is that. And then also part of that is just the acquisition on the U.S. business of Southeastern Paper group and SW Plus, which have, again, on an inorganic basis, help our sales. But nonetheless, the underlying trend month-by-month of our U.S. business continues to be positive as restrictions also in the U.S. open up. So overall, I think encouraging signs that mobility is helping not only our U.S. business, but more importantly, the Latin America business, which have lagged for the better part of the academic.

Marcella Recchia -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Got it. But just to understand what drove the EBITDA decline sequentially?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

What is it, Marcella?

Marcella Recchia -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

I just understood the sales growth and the drivers of that, just would like to understand a little bit better what is driving the sequential EBITDA decline?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. If you go into the numbers, Marcella, because the others division was also comprised of the intercompany eliminations. And then as you probably saw, within the fuel division, we are now reporting the wholesale margins as well. So there might be some profitability that you are assigning to the logistics that was not there. So we're happy to work out the numbers with you, but we did not see a significant decline in profitability in the core businesses within logistics and distribution. So there might be some confusion as we are now reporting different business signs in different buckets.

Operator

Our next question comes from Rodrigo Alcantara with UBS.

Rodrigo Alcantara -- UBS -- Analyst

Two quick ones, if I may. The first one, related a bit about the ticket, which quite interesting in my view. So if we take the 2019 mix, let's say, beers, around 15% of ticket soft drinks and cigarettes, snacks, service around 3%. Now that we have the full base of 2020, how would you say that this year's change in 2020? How do you see this mix evolving in 2021? We have discussed a lot about spirits, some grocery items. But if you could give some numbers there would be extremely helpful. That would be my question regarding the ticket.

Miguel Eduardo Padilla Silva -- Chief Executive Officer and Director

Rodrigo, this is Eduardo. Basically, when we go up, the mobility has to go up also. All the consumer occasions that have to go the people on the street, the people on the go. And so the ones that have been affected strongly have been fast food, for example, let's say, a quick cravings or a quick need for thirst. And I think those are the main effects that we have had because of that mobility has affected us on the prediction stores or the stores are very close to offices or the stores that are very close to business centers.

And same -- well, I think that -- so the impact -- so while mobility is coming back, I think really [Indecipherable] that obviously represents among the Mexican population is coming back strong. So I think I will give you the main framework that those are the consumer occasions that were affected and the competitors related to that. And specifically, I think, Juan, why don't you try to address the specific question that Rodrigo was asking.

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Yes. So I mean in terms of the ticket, Rodrigo, exactly what dynamic would you like to double-click on?

Rodrigo Alcantara -- UBS -- Analyst

So for example, let's say, about spirits, the revenue contribution, how it evolve 2020 versus 2019? Or are there any significant category that you may say that emerge in 2020 as a relevant category for us?

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

No, there's actually been some encouraging developments on that front because what we've been saying in the past few months, really since the pandemic began. I mean if we think about a year ago, we were talking in this very call about how beer -- both brewers had been in order to stop production. And so we were about to go dry on the beer front. What we didn't know at that time was that the consumer -- I mean, I guess we could have assumed so, but what we didn't know was that consumers were going to begin substituting beer purchases with spirits purchases at the store.

And I think this has had some very welcome developments because the -- even though we had a very robust portfolio of spirits from before, a very, very good price points. And in fact, some presentations that are directed to the proximity format. I think a fair amount of consumers discovered that we had such a good assortment of spirits and even wines. And so the spirits category has been growing double-digit or very high single-digit for the past year. And it looks like -- because, obviously, we only went without beer for a couple of months. But the pickup in spirits seems to have remained, right? So we got beer back. And now we have higher spirit sales than we used to.

And I would make a similar statement on some pantry kind of supermarket type items. Where again, I think the pandemic may consumers take a look at OXXO's assortment in terms of things like food, milk and cheese and eggs and diapers and cooking oil and detergent and pet food. We have more than 3,000 SKUS. And some consumers clearly that had been visiting OXXO for the on-the-go transactions, the single serves, the preferred food or the coffee discovered that we carry all these other products. And just as importantly, that the price point at which we sell these items is very much in line with what you would pay at the supermarket because of the purchasing power that we have as a company.

So again, I think we're seeing some of those -- many of those transactions remain. I mean when we talk about same-store sales, obviously, you've seen the composition, right? You have a big double-digit fall in traffic and a big double-digit increase in ticket. And this reflects precisely what I'm discussing. Some categories that were not the typical OXXO categories 18 months ago that now are becoming a little bit more typical. So that's encouraging because we continue to recover, the traffic seems to be the case as mobility comes back, and we were able to hold on to some of the ticket gains, then that bodes well for the future of the same-store sales number.

Rodrigo Alcantara -- UBS -- Analyst

Yes. Totally Agree. And the second one here, quite interesting on the discussions of logistics. [Indecipherable] on the revenue side, just curious about the potential of profitability. I mean, when I look at this 9%, appear me that still, we may see some opportunities for improvement here, perhaps when you absorb the synergies generated savings, you could take this perhaps to the low teens. Would that be for us to assume? Or what could be a normalized EBITDA margin for this division in your view?

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

It's never served us well to actually put a target out there because, I mean, if I take the experience of OXXO, we've always managed to do better than we thought we would. And so hopefully, that is the case again here. But what I would say is the numbers that you're seeing are definitely not of a normal quarter because of pandemic. I think Eugenio was mentioning earlier how and Eduardo, how some of the sectors of the end users in the U.S., for example, are not yet normalized, even though the U.S. has opened more quickly than Latin America because of the vaccination efforts. But you have big sectors.

Eduardo was mentioning, hospitality. We cater to hotels in a big way. Entertainment, we cater to stadiums, for example, that are in many parts of the U.S. are not yet functioning normally. We cater to a lot of government and education facility, so university campuses and government buildings that are not yet back to full occupancy, not even close, right? I mean we're expecting, for example, colleges to go back fully in person in the fall, some of them might ask for vaccination proof.

We'll see about that. What I'm trying to say is, things will get better as the year progresses. And also to Eugenio's earlier comment about acquisitions and nonorganic growth, you know that we've said this from the beginning that a part of the strategy for the U.S. operation is to create a national platform. And we do aspire and hope that we will be able to do a couple of deals between now and the end of the year. And you're correct in pointing out that, that brings a margin expansion opportunity that comes with the scale of the bigger national platform. So directionally, I'm optimistic like you are in terms of actually putting a number out there, I think we just rather let things work out on their own. And hopefully, you're correct. I think, like I said, directionally, we're both on the same page.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

The other thing just to note -- the other thing to add to your point, you have to remember that some of these businesses in logistics are more asset-intensive than others. And we are growing the less asset-intensive one. So even though you might see margins as these lower asset-intensive businesses take part of the mix, you might see margins coming down, the profitability and the return on capital is actually going up. So that's why it's also kind of hard to just look at the EBITDA margins and figure out what's going on, so.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] We will take our next question from Ulises Argote with JPMorgan.

Ulises Argote -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Just wanted to get an update on the OXXO rollout there in Brazil. Any details on how the different business models there on the stand-alone stores and the Select stores are performing on these initial phases? And maybe if you can share some of your expectations for the year there in terms of the rollout and how the business should be expected to kind of perform?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. Thanks, Ulises. As you know, we started the rollout of the physical OXXO stores, the proximity stores in December. By now, we have thinking the teens in terms of the number of stores that are operating, and we're very positively surprised with regards to how they're doing, how we're adapting the value proposition to the local taste. I think Juan mentioned in a prior call, the bread business there, which was an integral part of the value equation is really, really doing very well in attracting traffic as people start to get accustomed to the value prop. So we're very, very encouraged there. And I think we continue to be on track with regards to the openings for the year there.

The other good news, piece of news there is that the select stores that, as you know, are operating together with the Ryzen gasoline business. Those are actually despite restrictions and despite constrained mobility are doing well as they've been able to upgrade, in a sense, the product categories that they're offering and have been seen as a different consumption pattern in the same way that we're seeing in Mexico as customers are taking advantage of their trips to pick up some items that they otherwise would not have. And as you know, most of these businesses are franchise business. We are starting some company-operated stores in the select space as well, but we couldn't be happy with regards to how the numbers are looking at right now for Ryzen.

Miguel Eduardo Padilla Silva -- Chief Executive Officer and Director

Also, Ulises, I would like to add, this is Eduardo that we are very happy with the partnership. I think we found the right partners. We are very fully aligned in terms of culture, in terms of way of doing things. And I think we are really leveraging the best of them and the best of us together, and we are very happy with the partnership. The way it was established. And it was a 50-50 partnership decisions low. We have the right management with people from Ryzen and the right management with OXXO. So we are very happy with the management and the JV, the way things and decisions are made.

Operator

Your next question comes from Carlos Laboy with HSBC.

Carlos Laboy -- HSBC -- Analyst

Congratulations on the green financing. It seems that you had to establish specific ESG targets on key projects to get these projects qualified for funding. But on waste, you did not -- it doesn't look like you qualified refill bottles. Do you need targets of refillable at OXXO and at Coke FEMSA to get refillables qualified for green financing? And do you have those targets? I ask, right, because it seems that it's very important -- an opportunity for you to get these green bonds to lower your cost of capital and the refillable up boosting your ROIC?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Sure. The sustainability targets with regards to waste to landfill are companywide, so they do include Coke, FEMSA, OXXO and the rest of the operations. And the idea is to get to 100% reducing the -- reducing of waste to landfill in that respect. But we don't have the target for refillables at Coke cans as part of the green bond. The -- again, the target is more directed toward diverting total waste to landfill and related more to circular economy. So we are including, for example, with cycle resin and others -- and other components in there.

Nd the other thing to note is that the target has to do with what happens within the store, not post-consumer waste, which is what we can control. But more and more, we are assessing with third parties to include refillables in the future.

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Yes. I think in that sense, Carlos, this is Juan. The role of refillables as part of the strategy has always begun with the affordability strategy. But more and more, and to Eugenio's comment, more and more, it's also becoming a component of the ESG strategy as well. So I think you're going to hear more about that in the future.

Carlos Laboy -- HSBC -- Analyst

Do you see yourselves publishing refillable targets for Coke, FEMSA and OXXO?

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

We -- again, we need to contemplate that. But at this point, we're still in the process of digesting whether that will be a part of the broader sustainability framework.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that is all the questions that we have for today. I will now turn the conference back to Eugenio Garza for additional remarks.

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

I'd like to thank everyone for their participation in the call and your continued interest in the company and hope to see you next quarter. In the meantime, if you have had any additional questions, please feel free to reach out to the IR team or to myself. Happy to take the call. Thanks again, and have a great weekend.

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thanks, everyone.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 45 minutes

Call participants:

Juan Fonseca -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Eugenio Garza Y. Garza -- Director of Finance and Corporate Development

Miguel Eduardo Padilla Silva -- Chief Executive Officer and Director

Bob Ford -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Ricardo Alves -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Alvaro Garcia -- BTG -- Analyst

Alan Alanis -- Santander -- Analyst

Marcella Recchia -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Rodrigo Alcantara -- UBS -- Analyst

Ulises Argote -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Carlos Laboy -- HSBC -- Analyst

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