Sonos Inc (SONO 1.22%)
Q1 2022 Earnings Call
Feb 09, 2022, 5:00 p.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Good afternoon. My name is Emma, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Sonos' first quarter fiscal 2022 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise.
After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions] Thank you. Cammeron McLaughlin, you may begin your conference.
Cammeron McLaughlin -- Vice President of Investor Relations
Thank you. Good afternoon, and welcome to Sonos' first quarter fiscal 2022 earnings conference call. I am Cammeron McLaughlin, and with me today are Sonos' CEO, Patrick Spence; and Brittany Bagley, CFO. The chief legal officer, Eddie Lazarus, will also be available during the question-and-answer session.
Before I hand it over to Patrick, I would like to remind everyone that today's discussion will include forward-looking statements regarding future events and our future financial performance. These statements reflect our views as of today only and should not be considered as representing our views of any subsequent date. These statements are also subject to material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements. A discussion of these risk factors is fully detailed under the caption Risk Factors in our filings with the SEC.
During this call, we will also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. For information regarding our non-GAAP financials and a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures, please refer to today's press release regarding our first quarter fiscal 2022 results posted to the Investor Relations portion of our website. As a reminder, the press release, supplemental earnings presentation, and conference call transcripts will be available on our Investor Relations website at investors.sonos.com. I will now turn the call over to Patrick.
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Cammeron, and hello, everyone. Our record first-quarter results illustrate the continued strong demand for our products. Yet again, we have proven the power of our model as we scale and our continued ability to execute better than most in a challenging supply chain environment. Our team continues to go above and beyond, successfully navigating everything from constrained ship supply to logistical bottlenecks to deliver on behalf of our customers and stakeholders.
Our record results are a testament to all of the hard work our team puts in every day, and I would be remiss if I did not thank the entire Sonos team for their dedication and commitment toward building the world's leading sound experience brand. Our fiscal 2022 is off to a strong start, and we are increasingly confident in our ability to deliver another record year. Demand remains strong, driven by the continued appeal of our industry-leading products, and we delivered a record $664.5 million in revenue during the first quarter. As we discussed last quarter, we expected heavily constrained product availability to offset our potential growth in the first quarter.
We are pleased to have modestly exceeded our own expectations. As a result of our strong performance in the first quarter and our outlook for the remainder of the year, we are on track to deliver our 17th consecutive year of revenue growth and have raised the low end of our fiscal 2022 revenue guidance range. We now expect to deliver 15% revenue growth at the midpoint. This raises the midpoint from our prior outlook as we were able to deliver more than we were expecting from a supply standpoint in the first quarter and remain confident as we look to the remainder of fiscal 2022.
We continue to invest in our business to drive our long-term growth and fuel future product innovation. This is reflected in our outlook. As a result of our increased fiscal 2022 revenue guidance, we have also upwardly revised the low end of our adjusted EBITDA outlook and see a clear path toward delivering adjusted EBITDA margins in the range of 14.9% to 16.2% this year. Consistent with what we shared last quarter, we remain ahead of schedule toward achieving our fiscal 2024 target.
We are well on our way toward delivering a 13% revenue CAGR thereby achieving approximately $2.5 billion in revenue in fiscal 2024, as well as adjusted EBITDA margins in the range of 15% to 18%. Our brand has momentum. We have an exciting and expansive product road map, and we are confident in our ability to continue to drive sustainable, profitable growth over the long term. I would like to spend a few minutes on why we believe our model is such a powerful and differentiated one and how we are well-positioned to drive growth for the long term even in challenging times.
First, and really the most important thing for people to understand about Sonos is that our flywheel of strong new household acquisition and existing customer repurchases is core to our growth. We've added approximately 3.5 million new households over the last two years and have more than doubled our total households since fiscal 2017. Today, we serve only 10% of the more than 116 million homes, we believe, are addressable for us and services and new geographies. Sonos is not a typical one-and-done purchase.
It is a unique system that you build over time. This system-based model is proven and predictable and core to our success. Importantly, each and every year, we see strong repurchase trends from our existing households. And with every new household we acquire, that flywheel begins again.
With an installed base of over 12 million households at the end of fiscal 2021 and incredibly strong repurchase rates, coupled with continued robust new household growth, we have a powerful and time-tested engine for fueling growth. In fiscal 2021, we saw 46% of our existing households come back and add additional Sonos products to their system. This repurchase behavior has been long-lasting and is a unique and critical element of our growth. In fact, customers who purchased products in 2005, the year Sonos shipped its first product, have continued to return to this day to add additional products to their system, illustrating the power, predictability, and longevity of our model.
The other important thing to remember is the continued expansion of our product offerings. We have a terrific product road map ahead to delight existing customers and attract new ones. While our existing product offering can effectively fuel that Sonos' flywheel, our unwavering commitment to innovation and the expansion of our product offerings is a key driver of growth. We have a long-stated annual goal of launching at least two new products a year, which we have executed on consistently.
This enables us to interest new customers in getting started with Sonos and encourage those existing customers to repurchase and add additional products to their system. As we look forward, we have a robust and exciting future product road map. As a reminder, we refresh existing products, release new price points in existing categories, and also have opened up new categories and services over time. With general availability in early 2021, Beam (Gen 2) marked our first product introduction of fiscal 2022.
Beam (Gen 2) is the newest version of our industry-leading compact smart soundbar for TV, music, gaming, and more. The new Beam delivers a refreshed and upgraded more immersive sound experience with greater depth and clarity, as well as support for Dolby Atmos. Given our commitment to launching at least two new products per year, you can expect to see at least one additional product launch from us later this year. In fiscal 2022, we are focused on launching new products in our existing product categories.
Lastly, we operate in a large and growing addressable market, of which we have barely scratched the surface. Sonos has less than 2% of the broader $89 billion global audio market that we expand into over the long term as we enter entirely new product categories and new geographies. That being said, we still have a tremendous runway to capture increased share in our existing product categories. Today, Sonos accounts for less than 10% of the total spend in the $18 billion premium home audio market, primarily inclusive of the premium price categories such as the $100 and higher wireless speaker category and $200 and higher soundbar market.
As one of the leading brands in the premium home audio category, we are incredibly well-positioned to continue to capture share. On top of the core growth pillars of our model, there are near-term macro tailwinds that we've talked about previously, which further underscore our growth. As we look forward, as the leader in premium home audio, Sonos is extremely well-positioned to continue to benefit from the growth in both audio and video content consumption, which we have coined both the Golden age of audio and Hollywood at home trends, as well as capitalize on the evolution of remote work and how that has enabled people to reevaluate how and where they want to live. These are multi-year tailwinds that continue to point in our favor.
As we look out beyond fiscal 2024 and to the longer term, we see an ability to add additional growth pillars such as geographic expansion, further category expansion plus the addition of meaningful service offerings for both consumers and enterprise customers. We see a long runway ahead and have just barely scratched the surface. In conclusion, there remains tremendous opportunity ahead. Our growth pillars are proven and strong.
The Sonos' flywheel of strong new household acquisition and existing customer repurchases continues to gain speed. We have a robust product road map and track record of at least two new product launches annually. And we have an addressable market that is large and growing, as well as macro tailwinds that even further underscore the opportunity ahead. We have a proven ability to deliver sustainable profitable growth and have illustrated the true power of our model as it scales.
Now, I'll turn the call over to Brittany to provide more details on our results and outlook.
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Patrick. As you can see from Patrick's comments and our first-quarter results, we continue to be proud of the strength of our business, driven by the fantastic products that our new and existing customers enjoy. We are off to a strong start for fiscal 2022. Let me first focus on our Q1 results.
Revenue in the first quarter increased 3% or 3.5% on a constant-currency basis to a record $664.5 million. Demand remained strong during the quarter, but we continued to be supply constrained on most of our products. These constraints were the main reason we didn't run our typical holiday promotion, and they also impacted our results, especially in our core Sonos' speakers product category. Clearly, our revenue growth during the quarter would have been higher, if not for supply constraints.
While we continue to have a significant backlog and low channel inventory, we were able to do slightly better than we expected during the quarter. This was the result of strong logistics, which allowed for better supply timing at the end of Q1. The Americas and EMEA both grew by 2% during the quarter. Adjusted for currency, EMEA increased 5%.
APAC increased 18%, primarily driven by available supply to support the strong demand. Sonos' speaker revenue was down 5% year over year as this category was most impacted by the industrywide component availability challenges. Sonos' system products revenue increased 38%, driven by the continued strength of our installer channel and improved availability of our component products. Partner products and other revenue increased 37%, primarily driven by our partnerships with Sonance and IKEA.
Gross margin increased 140 basis points to 47.8%. The improvement in gross margin was driven by the reduction in holiday promotional activity and product mix, somewhat offset by higher shipping and logistics costs. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $163 million and adjusted EBITDA margin of 24.6%. This is our second highest Q1 EBITDA ever even as we made additional opex investments to support our long-term growth.
As we've been discussing for the last couple of quarters, these investments were in our product, our brand, our infrastructure, and our people broadly, which resulted in deleverage across all our opex items -- all our opex line items in this quarter. Our model continues to generate strong free cash flow, and we generated cash flows from operating activities of $180 million and free cash flow of $174 million. We view this as very attractive free cash flow. We have a healthy balance sheet from which we will deploy capital back into the business to drive future growth.
This includes M&A, as well as returning capital to our shareholders. You can see us executing on this strategy. As in addition to the investments in the business, we deployed $30 million through share buybacks out of our $150 million authorization and $27 million into two small acquisitions. Now, turning to our fiscal '22 outlook.
We see a clear path toward delivering record fiscal '22 results, and our first-quarter results further solidify that view. We now expect to deliver revenue in the range of $1.95 billion to $2 billion, up from our prior range of $1.925 billion to $2 billion. This represents growth in the range of 14% to 16%, compared to our prior range of 12% to 16% growth. Let me provide details on the key drivers of our fiscal '22 revenue outlook.
First, we expect continued strong demand for our products. We do still expect supply constraints throughout the year, but that is factored into our guidance. We are also working hard to mitigate supply shortages where we can and do expect it to improve over the year. As we do this, we'll continue to work through our backlog and fill our retail channel in fiscal '22.
Second, we have consistently committed to the introduction of at least two new products a year. As Patrick stated earlier, we expect to launch at least one new product in an existing category later this year. Lastly, as you know, we did take price increases in September to offset the gross margin impact of rising component and logistics costs. These price increases are also supporting our fiscal 2022 growth relative to last year.
Now, turning to gross margin. We are maintaining our gross margin outlook of 46% to 47% in fiscal '22. As discussed last quarter, this outlook continues to reflect everything we know about the supply chain situation today across shipping, logistics, and components, as well as a smaller benefit from product and channel mix as compared to last year. Gross margin for the year also benefits from the lack of promotions in the first quarter and the pricing increases help offset the cost of the supply chain.
With the higher revenue range, we also expect an improved EBITDA outlook. We have increased the low end of our adjusted EBITDA to a range of $290 million to $325 million, up 10% from fiscal 2021 at the midpoint. This adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 14.9% to 16.2% reflects the gross margin factors noted previously, as well as the continued opex investments we've been talking to, to support our long-term growth and road map. Looking beyond fiscal '22, we remain ahead of schedule toward achieving the fiscal 2024 targets outlined at our investor event last March.
We are confident in our ability to deliver revenue of approximately $2.5 billion, which is a 13% CAGR by the end of fiscal 2024 and ahead of the $2.25 billion target communicated at our investor event last year. We are well-positioned to deliver industry-leading gross margins in the range of 45% to 47% and adjusted EBITDA margins in the range of 15% to 18% through fiscal '24. We are confident in these fiscal '24 targets because of our business model, the flywheel of new household generation and existing customer repurchase remains a powerful driver of growth. We also have a terrific product road map ahead of us, which we'll be excited to share over time.
Furthermore, and only 2% market share of the $89 billion global audio market, we have plenty of opportunity in front of us to gain share in a large and growing category. Our brand is strong. Our customer base skews more affluent, and we believe we are well-positioned to deliver tremendous shareholder value over time. In summary, we continued to execute and delivered strong results in the first quarter.
We expect a strong fiscal '22 from a double-digit topline growth perspective, coupled with attractive profitability and free cash flow. We continue to see an opportunity to deliver strong returns on invested capital and are on a great path to deliver on our fiscal '24 targets. Overall, we continue to feel very good about our execution and the opportunity in front of Sonos. With that, I would like to turn the call over to questions.
Questions & Answers:
Operator
[Operator instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Brent Thill with Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Brent Thill -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Good afternoon. Patrick, many are exploring the reopening theme, and many ask how Sonos will benefit through the reopening as we shift from our homes back into the world. And Brittany, many are still asking about the supply chain. There's been recent news about ports starting to open and things start to move a little bit better.
Can you just give us a sense on that side on the supply chain side?
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Hey, Brent. So, I'll take the first one on the reopening, if you will. Look, I think there are -- one, we have products like Roam and Move, which are well-positioned as people leave their homes as well.
So, I'd remind everybody that Sonos is well positioned and more and more becoming a company that delivers the ad experience throughout your life, not just at home, and that we have some big macro tailwinds around the Golden age of audio, Hollywood at home. And Hollywood at home, for instance, I think we all know the streaming companies are investing tens of billions of dollars in new contents, and people are going to continue to consume that content, and we're very well positioned with our home theater play, and then the work from home as well. Remember, our -- I think our lives have changed forever. And there's going to be more and more people that are working from home.
And they're going to improve their homes, they're going to be moving and Sonos plays a role there. And I think we can play a bigger role over time. So, there's a lot there, and then I would point back to our model and the fact that through all the different times we've gone through and now 17 years of shipping products. And the thing that I always come back to is the fact that we have a strong customer base that adds products every year, and they tell their friends and family to get Sonos, right? And so, we know the No.
1 driver of new homes continues to be existing customers telling their friends and family, and we just added a lot more in the last two years. And so, we expect that to continue even as the world starts to reopen. Brittany, I'll turn it to you on supply chain.
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Thanks, Patrick. And, Brent, I would just -- I'd really hit that last point Patrick made in terms of looking forward. We got a lot of great new homes in over the last few years, and those new homes will continue to drive repurchases for us going forward.
So, as we talk opex, you'll also hear us continuing to invest in brand and marketing to go out and drive more new homes as we go forward. But the new homes we've gotten over the last couple of years continue to be really powerful for us as we go forward. So, I just wanted to double underscore that for people. From a supply chain perspective, I mean, it is definitely still challenging out there.
Component shortages especially continue to be pretty difficult. I think as we called out, one of the reasons we did better than we expected in Q1 was really because we did a better job from a logistics standpoint. So, as you mentioned, ports and stuff like that, I mean, they're certainly still challenging. But I think what we saw is we did a little bit better at ports.
We did a little bit better in terms of getting product in with airfreight. We did a little bit better with shipping times and all of that allowed us to have a stronger Q1 as those logistics really helped us overperform in Q1. I think we're going to be talking about supply chain for the rest of the year. But hopefully, as we get out into the end of the year, we start to have some signs of improvement, and we're talking more about that story.
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
And the one thing I'd just layer on that as well is I think we've really shown over the last six quarters, and really over the 17 years, unique ability to manage some of the challenges that come along on the supply chain side. And so, as we saw, once again, in Q1, our team did an incredible job at figuring out how to deliver more product than initially expected to our customers, which just bodes very well for how we handle any of the challenges in the future. Thanks, Brent.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Rod Hall with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Rod Hall -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the question. Patrick, I wanted to come back to the homes growth trajectory and just kind of that homes growth has been slowing, and I would have thought that into pandemic.
If anything, you guys would have maintained kind of that 20% annual growth rate, especially with the Roam because I thought that would help to penetrate more homes. So, I just wonder if you could talk a little bit about where you're at now with homes passed, which is 12.6 million. And where do you think, you could get to and what may be some of the strategies for increasing home penetration or whether you think this is the right number of homes and kind of all things are firing on all cylinders from a home penetration point of view. Thanks.
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Rod. I don't think all things are firing on all cylinders because we've still been supply constrained in some of the channels at which we see greater new homes have actually been the most constrained as we go through this. So, I think largely, there's a few different factors that go into it. And that comes along with product portfolios.
So, the different types of products we're introducing at different times will have an impact on that for sure. And I think we can do a lot more than the 12.6 that we mentioned at the end of last quarter. The number I look at is the 116 million homes that even in existing categories today that we think we can address. And so that's what we're very focused on and how we reach those.
And we balance that and balance our product road map with thinking about how we attract those homes and then how as well we're adding to the lifetime value of the existing homes. And so, those are the things that we're looking at. We continue to think about different levers. One of the things we didn't do, as you heard from Brittany in Q1 is a promotion either.
And so, that's often helpful in terms of new home driver as well. But I think it really comes back to some of on that supply front. And then keeping in mind, we have doubled the number since 2017. And I think we'll continue to be able to do that.
And as always, we'll update on the new homes at the end of the fiscal year.
Rod Hall -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
OK. And then kind of follow-up with a question of Brittany on the just kind of inventory levels. I know they're depleted now. But I wonder, is it reasonable to think Brittany, that channel inventory is kind of back to a normal level by the time we get to the fall? Or do you think that's unreasonable given where we are with supplies?
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Getting out my crystal ball. I think we'll certainly be in a better position from general inventory as we get to the fall. I don't know if it will be fully back at normal levels, but we do see it improving from where we are today. So, knowing what I know, I would say it improves, but it's not sort of like magically all better at that point.
Rod Hall -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
OK, great. Thanks a lot.
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Erik Woodring with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Erik Woodring -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Thank you, and congrats on the quarter, guys. Obviously, really strong gross margin performance. And obviously, you went through some of the puts and takes. Any way you can kind of frame the impact of which had the most significant impact, channel mix, promotions, product mix, logistics? Just trying to understand what was the bigger factor in driving the better performance.
And then I have a follow-up. Thanks.
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I think that we called out that the impact from product mix and channel mix has been lessening as we look at this year and that in Q1, the impact from not having promotions was a pretty big driver for us. So, you look at the promotion, lack of promotions, you look at the price increases and we're more than sort of offsetting the cost increases and challenges from a price standpoint that we see in the supply chain.
Erik Woodring -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
All right. And then maybe I'll direct my follow-up at Eddie, give Eddie a chance. Any comments he can share on the ITC news from last month, what are the next signposts that we should be looking for either in the U.S. or internationally as it comes to legal action? Thanks.
Eddie Lazarus -- Chief Legal Officer
Well, thank you. So, we were certainly pleased to see that the ITC affirmed the administrative law judge's ruling that Google infringed all five of the patents that we had an issue in the case and issued a limited importation ban that we expect to go into effect on March 8. So, we're certainly looking forward to that moment. And we do have a case quite active in Northern California against Google based on a second generation of Sonos' innovations that is moving forward at this time.
That's really where the action is right now, and we'll see how things play out.
Erik Woodring -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Thanks, Eddie. Congrats again, guys.
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Erik.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of John Babcock with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
John Babcock -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
Good evening, good afternoon. Overall, I guess I was wondering if you could talk a bit about labor costs. Obviously, this is something that we're seeing a bit more these days than has been the case over the last number of years. And so, could you just talk about the extent to which you're seeing inflation there? And also, if it is material, what you are doing to ensure it doesn't weigh too heavily on results?
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I would say we see similar trends as sort of the rest of the market broadly and have factored all of that into our guidance as we look at the year.
John Babcock -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
OK. And then just on R&D, spending was up a decent bit year over year, albeit largely in line with where you were last quarter. Can you talk a bit more broadly about where that investment is going?
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Obviously, we spend a bit of time talking about product road map and how excited we are to have a strong product road map, not just for this year but in the future, and continuing to deliver on that two product a year cadence. And beyond that sort of two hardware product a year that people focus on, we are continuously updating our software, our app, our user experience, bringing new things like Sonos Radio. So, we just really continue to invest in the customer experience and the product road map and that future of our business.
And so, we've talked for the last, gosh, a couple of quarters at least about how continuing to invest in R&D and the product road map is something you're really going to be seeing from us. And again, not a big deal quarter over quarter. So, you're seeing it a bit more year over year. So, you're just seeing the impact of those investments we've been talking about and have been making.
John Babcock -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
OK. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Victoria James with D.A. Davidson. Your line is now open.
Victoria James -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst
Thanks for taking my call. I've got just the one question based on a comment that Brittany just made regarding the software app user experience stuff. Is there anything that you can tell us at a high level about the anticipated mix of services to product revenue going forward?
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
We don't have anything we're going to be breaking out on that at this point. I can say that we've talked about Sonos Radio in the past. It continues to be the third most listen to service. It's the fastest-growing service.
So, we're very happy with the consumer experience we're delivering through some of these investments. And when it gets material, we'll start breaking it out financially, but that's not at this point.
Victoria James -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
There are no further questions at this time. Patrick Spence, I turn the call back over to you.
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
Great. Thank you, and thanks, everybody, for joining us. We appreciate it and look forward to talking to you next quarter. Thank you.
Operator
[Operator signoff]
Duration: 40 minutes
Call participants:
Cammeron McLaughlin -- Vice President of Investor Relations
Patrick Spence -- Chief Executive Officer
Brittany Bagley -- Chief Financial Officer
Brent Thill -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Rod Hall -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Erik Woodring -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Eddie Lazarus -- Chief Legal Officer
John Babcock -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
Victoria James -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst