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DATE

Wednesday, May 6, 2026 at 5:30 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chairman & Chief Executive Officer — Stephan Paulo Gratziani
  • Chief Financial Officer — John G. DeSimone

TAKEAWAYS

  • Net Sales -- $1.3 billion, up 7.8% year over year and up 5.4% on a constant currency basis, both exceeding guidance.
  • India Performance -- India net sales reached $275 million, up about 32% year over year, delivering record sales for the second consecutive quarter fueled by a GST rate reduction.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $176 million, above guidance, representing a 13.3% margin; constant currency adjusted EBITDA was $180 million.
  • Cash Flow -- Operating cash flow was $114 million for the quarter, with approximately $75 million of distributor bonuses paid and employee bonuses shifted to April.
  • Gross Profit Margin -- 77.9%, down 40 basis points year over year, with 50 basis points from input cost inflation, 30 from sales mix, 20 from other cost changes, and 50 from FX, partially offset by 70 from pricing and 40 from reduced inventory write-downs.
  • Adjusted Net Income -- $69 million, with adjusted diluted EPS of $0.64, including a $0.03 FX headwind; adjusted effective tax rate rose to 27.3% from 21.8%.
  • Regional Results -- Asia Pacific reported net sales up 17%; EMEA up 1% (constant currency down 6%); Latin America up 17%; North America down 3%; China down 12%.
  • Volume Performance -- Global volume increased 4.1%; India volume up 37%; Latin America volume down 2%; EMEA volume down 11%; North America volume down 5%; China volume down 18%.
  • Debt Refinancing -- $1.45 billion senior secured debt refinanced in April, reducing annualized cash interest by about $45 million, extending maturities beyond 7 years, and lowering coupons and spreads by 300-450 basis points.
  • Leverage Metrics -- Total leverage ratio was 2.7x; new net leverage ratio, defined as net debt over trailing twelve-month credit agreement EBITDA, was 2.1x, with a target below 2x by year-end.
  • Capital Expenditures -- $11 million for the quarter, at the low end of the $10 million to $20 million range, with $10 million in capitalized SaaS costs; annual CapEx guidance remains $50 million to $80 million.
  • Guidance Update -- Second-quarter net sales growth expected at 1.5%-5.5% reported and 1%-5% constant currency; adjusted EBITDA guidance for Q2 at $150 million to $170 million.
  • Annual Outlook -- Full-year reported net sales growth expected in the 1.5%-5.5% range (constant currency 1%-5%), with adjusted EBITDA of $675 million to $705 million; adjusted effective tax rate guided at 30%.
  • Acquisitions -- Vionic acquisition completed April 30 for $55 million base consideration over five years, with up to $95 million in contingent payments; Link Biosciences, Prüvit, and Protocol highlighted as strategic pillars for personalization.
  • New Product Rollouts -- Vionic personalized supplements launch in 11 European markets in June and the U.S. in July, leveraging distributor network; Link Biosciences product targeting Q1 2027.
  • Packaging Redesign -- Global packaging update began in March; current feedback positive but rollout in early stages and not yet reflected in results.
  • Distributor Trends -- New distributor growth increased 13% on a two-year basis in Q1 post-Herbalife Premier League launch; network now includes over 2 million distributors and 60,000+ nutrition clubs in 95 markets.
  • Digital Innovation -- Protocol beta expanded to 10 EMEA markets, with further enhancements and U.S. release planned at July North America Extravaganza; subscription business initiated, with initial uptake described as "very positive."

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RISKS

  • China region contributed less than 5% of sales and showed a 12% reported net sales decline and 16% local currency decrease, as John G. DeSimone said, "does not really contribute to profit in any meaningful way."
  • North America reported a 3% sales decline, with weather-related closures negatively impacting distributor-owned clubs; revenue deferred due to higher shipments in transit.
  • EMEA constant currency sales dropped 6% due to an 11% volume decline, more than offsetting favorable pricing, with management attributing continued weakness to market evolution.
  • Adjusted effective tax rate rose to 27.3% from 21.8%, creating a $0.04 negative impact to EPS primarily driven by fewer tax benefits from discrete events versus the prior year.
  • India GST-related incremental cost guided as a $20 million to $25 million headwind to full-year adjusted EBITDA and a 40-50 basis point drag on adjusted EBITDA margin.

SUMMARY

Herbalife Ltd. (HLF +1.11%) reported its highest year over year net sales growth since 2021, driven by a record-setting performance in India and a broad-based increase in global volume. Management successfully completed a $1.45 billion debt refinancing, lowering annual interest expense and extending maturities, while introducing a net leverage ratio metric to track deleveraging progress. The company maintained momentum in personalized nutrition, launching new products and digital tools, notably expanding the Protocol beta and planning further product rollouts in Europe and North America in coming months. Pricing contributed a $40 million benefit despite mixed regional dynamics, and a new global packaging initiative was set in motion with initial distributor feedback characterized as positive. Despite these operational achievements, management acknowledged rising input costs, reduced tax benefits, and targeted cost headwinds in India, all of which were incorporated into reaffirmed 2026 guidance.

  • Subscription-based business models, including for Vionic personalized supplements, are being deployed for the first time, with positive early subscriber metrics noted by management.
  • Capital allocation priorities remain focused on reducing gross debt to $1.4 billion by 2028, with no change expected following refinancing.
  • Management stated that new strategic initiatives, such as Protocol and personalized products, are not yet reflected in revenue forecasts for 2026, suggesting potential future upside.
  • Distributors from Greater China are now allowed to attend market events for the first time, with approximately 500 expected at the upcoming Extravaganza, representing a shift in engagement strategy.
  • Management signaled that price modifications and commission structure adjustments are being actively tested in major markets following positive volume response to GST-driven price reductions in India.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Constant Currency Basis: A method of measuring financial performance that excludes the impact of exchange rate fluctuations to reflect true operational growth or decline.
  • GST: Goods and Services Tax; in this context, a consumption tax in India impacting product pricing dynamics and cost structure.
  • Protocol: Herbalife Nutrition Ltd.'s digital platform for personalizing consumer guidance and supplement formulation, integrating health data and behavior recommendations.
  • DMO: Distributor Method of Operation; distinct business models or approaches used by Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. distributors to serve customers.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Thank you, Erin. Thank you all for joining us today. We delivered a strong start to 2026, with first quarter net sales and adjusted EBITDA exceeding guidance as we continue to build momentum. Importantly, these results reflect the underlying stability of our business and reinforce our confidence in the strategy we are executing. We are building a more connected, personalized approach to health and wellness by bringing together innovation, science, and the strength of our distributor network to better serve customers around the world. On April 14, as part of our debt refinancing, we released preliminary net sales growth expectations that exceeded the high end of our guidance on both a reported and constant currency basis.

We also indicated that reported adjusted EBITDA was expected to be at or above the high end of our previously issued guidance. Our final reported results are in line with that release. Let's review a few of the financial highlights from the quarter. We delivered net sales of $1.3 billion, up 7.8% year-over-year and up 5.4% on a constant currency basis, exceeding guidance on both measures. This was our third consecutive quarter of year-over-year net sales growth on both a reported and constant currency basis. India achieved record quarterly net sales for the second consecutive quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was $176 million and above guidance, and we generated $114 million of cash from operations in the quarter.

In addition to our first quarter results, we successfully refinanced and strengthened our capital structure in April, which we expect will result in approximately $45 million in annual cash interest savings. We executed this transaction in a highly volatile market and geopolitical environment. We achieved our pricing objectives, extended our maturity profile, and meaningfully reduced our borrowing costs while also enhancing our financial flexibility. This outcome reflects the financial and operational results we have delivered over the past two years. As we build on this momentum, we remain focused on executing against our vision, with personalization at the center of our strategy.

Personalization has always been a foundational strength of Herbalife Nutrition Ltd., with our distributors delivering tailored recommendations through direct relationships and a deep understanding of individual goals. What is evolving is the level of precision we can now bring, which is enabled by enhanced data insights and technology. This evolution is especially important as consumer expectations continue to rise, driven by greater access to AI, wearables, and at-home diagnostics, which are increasing demand for guidance that is not only personalized, but also more actionable and continuous.

We are evolving from personally curated recommendations to an approach that combines both personally curated and formulated solutions, extending our ability to deliver individualized outcomes at scale through better tools, better data, and expanded manufacturing capabilities, all delivered through our distributors. This builds on four core actions that have long guided our business: what to measure, including key health metrics like weight and muscle mass; what to take, which is products from our expanding portfolio; what to do, including daily habits like hydration and exercise; and who to do it with, which is our distributors who provide guidance and support through a variety of DMOs as they go to market.

These actions have successfully built our business over the past 45 years. Our global network includes over 2 million distributors, more than 60 thousand nutrition clubs, and millions of customers across 95 markets. This reach is our differentiator and superpower. Building on that foundation, our recent acquisitions are enabling a more connected, personalized, and data-driven approach that is enhancing these four core actions, making them more precise, scalable, and actionable. On March 26, we announced an agreement to acquire substantially all of the assets of Vionic's core personalized nutrition business, which we completed in April. Vionic is an established UK-based business with an existing supply chain.

Its patented product personalization engine uses an individual's health background and a proprietary database of biomarker data to develop personalized nutritional supplement formulas. This acquisition further accelerates our pathway into personally formulated products. In late June, our distributors will begin offering Vionic's personalized nutritional supplements to customers across 11 European countries. The U.S. will follow in July, with additional markets later in 2026. I'd like to take a moment to explain how our recent acquisitions work together to support the four core actions I mentioned earlier, with Protocol as a central operating system. Each acquisition plays a distinct role, and combined, they create greater value than any one capability alone. Let me walk you through how each contributes.

Link Biosciences is a formulation and manufacturing engine. It translates insight into products by enabling us to manufacture personalized nutritional supplements in a powder format at scale, directly connecting data and recommendations to the finished product. Vionic accelerates our speed to market with a personally formulated vitamin and mineral complex, in a granule format, while broadening availability through a more accessible price point. Prüvit provides the opportunity to expand our portfolio into the ketone category with a channel-exclusive offering aligned with growing consumer interest in performance, energy, and metabolic health. It is an exciting addition to the portfolio; we will have more to share this summer. And Protocol brings it all together by providing the experience and intelligence layer.

It digitizes and scales the four core actions I mentioned earlier—what to measure, what to take, what to do, and who to do it with—bringing greater precision to how distributors support and engage their customers through a more connected, data-informed experience. It translates consumer inputs and health data into actionable guidance that supports more consistent behavior change over time. In March, we expanded the Protocol beta program to include select 10 EMEA markets. That broader deployment is providing valuable feedback that is helping refine the roadmap, platform capabilities, and the digital experience.

To enable integration of Vionic into Protocol, and incorporate feedback from the broader beta group, we are extending the beta program, with the next release planned for the North America Extravaganza in July. That release will include a new user experience, enhanced features, and additional capabilities that support our broader strategy. Part of that broader strategy is a multiyear rollout of new packaging across our global product portfolio. The rollout began in March, and we expect it to be substantially completed by 2027. For context, slide 8 highlights our packaging currently in market, and slide 9 highlights our new modern packaging design. Grounded in consumer insights and analytics, the new packaging reinforces scientific credibility and trust at every touch point.

At a portfolio level, a consistent science-led visual system simplifies navigation and helps distributors and customers confidently build personalized product combinations. The new labels also reinforce product purpose and efficacy, strengthening confidence and differentiation, which are foundational in a competitive global marketplace. In April, we kicked off our first Extravaganza events of the year, which started in India, where we hosted three consecutive events across Delhi and Bengaluru with approximately 46 thousand attendees. We saw firsthand the strong energy and engagement across the market. These events are a critical part of how we operate. It is where we communicate our vision, build skills, share best practices, and reinforce strategic priorities in ways that directly shape distributor execution.

They also drive momentum at the local level, leading to stronger engagement, more consistent business activity, and improved retention. We look forward to that momentum continuing as we kick off our summer Extravaganza events in China, Eurasia, South America, Asia Pacific, Europe, and North America. Before I turn it over to John to walk through the quarter in more detail, I want to take a step back and reflect on what we have accomplished over the past two years. Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. today is a fundamentally stronger company than it was two years ago.

We have stabilized net sales and returned to growth, expanded adjusted EBITDA margins, strengthened our balance sheet by repaying nearly $540 million of debt since 2024, reduced our total leverage ratio from 3.9x in 2023 to 2.7x at the end of the first quarter, completed our debt refinancing, unlocking approximately $45 million in annual cash interest savings, and completed four strategic acquisitions. Importantly, we have done all of this with a disciplined approach, improving operational efficiency while executing against our plan. We are about to reach a major milestone this summer—the launch of our next-generation personalized nutritional supplements. This further strengthens our confidence in the path ahead.

Our continued progress reflects strong momentum and clear direction as we advance towards our vision to become the world's premier health and wellness company, community, and platform. With that, I will hand it over to John to walk through the financials in more detail. Over to you, John.

John G. DeSimone: Thank you, Stephan. Turning to our first quarter financial highlights on slide 11, we delivered another strong quarter, with net sales and adjusted EBITDA both above our guidance ranges, led by continued strength in India. First quarter net sales were $1.3 billion, up 7.8% versus 2025 and above the high end of our guidance range of 3% to 7%. This was our third consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth and our strongest year-over-year growth since 2021, building on the momentum we saw in 2025. On a constant currency basis, net sales increased 5.4% year-over-year, also exceeding guidance. We have now delivered year-over-year constant currency growth in eight of the last 10 quarters.

Our first quarter net sales outperformance was driven primarily by India, where net sales reached a record $275 million, up approximately 32% year-over-year, marking the second consecutive quarter of record sales. We believe demand in the market remains strong following the reduction in the GST rate on the majority of our products in late September 2025. I will provide more details on our regional performance later in the call. Adjusted EBITDA was $176 million, above the high end of our guidance range of $155 million to $175 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 13.3%, down 20 basis points year-over-year, but up 240 basis points on a two-year stacked rate, including approximately 70 basis points of FX headwinds versus last year.

CapEx was $11 million for the quarter, at the low end of our $10 million to $20 million guidance range, primarily due to timing with some spending shifting into the second quarter. Capitalized SaaS implementation costs were $10 million. Gross profit margin was 77.9% in the quarter, down 40 basis points year-over-year. This reflected approximately 50 basis points of input cost inflation, primarily from lower absorption rates; 30 basis points of unfavorable sales mix; 20 basis points from other unfavorable cost changes; and 50 basis points of FX headwinds. These factors were partially offset by 70 basis points of pricing benefits and 40 basis points from lower inventory write-downs.

First quarter net income attributable to Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. was $62 million, with adjusted net income of $69 million. First quarter adjusted diluted EPS was $0.64, including a $0.03 FX headwind versus 2025. Our adjusted effective tax rate was 27.3%, compared to 21.8% in 2025, which resulted in an approximately $0.04 unfavorable impact to adjusted diluted EPS. The higher rate in 2026 was primarily driven by a decrease in tax benefit from discrete events compared to 2025. For full year 2026, we continue to expect our adjusted effective tax rate to be approximately 30%, in line with 2025.

We delivered strong cash generation in the first quarter, which is typically our lowest cash flow quarter in past years due to timing of our annual distributor bonus payments and employee performance bonus payments. Operating cash flow was $114 million, compared to relatively neutral cash flow in 2025. Consistent with last year, we paid approximately $75 million of annual distributor bonuses in the quarter. However, employee performance bonuses were paid in April, rather than in the first quarter. Credit agreement EBITDA for the first quarter was $194 million and our total leverage ratio was 2.7x as of March 31.

Beginning this quarter, we are introducing net leverage ratio as an additional metric to provide greater transparency into our leverage profile and delevering progress. We define net leverage ratio as net debt divided by trailing twelve-month credit agreement EBITDA. At the end of the first quarter, our net leverage ratio was 2.1x, and we are establishing a target to reduce net leverage to below 2x by the end of this year. We believe this metric provides a more complete view of financial flexibility because it reflects debt relative to earnings while also incorporating cash on hand.

For additional details regarding the adjustments between adjusted EBITDA and credit agreement EBITDA, as well as the calculation of net debt, total leverage ratio, and net leverage ratio, please refer to the presentation appendix and the earnings press release. As Stephan noted earlier, in April, we completed our $1.45 billion senior secured refinancing. I will provide more details on that in a moment. Turning to slide 12, reported net sales increased nearly $100 million in the quarter, or 7.8% year-over-year, while constant currency net sales increased 5.4%. Volume increased 4.1% worldwide, marking our third consecutive quarter of year-over-year volume growth.

Pricing provided an approximately $40 million benefit in the quarter, while country mix was an approximately $26 million headwind to net sales. FX provided an approximately $29 million benefit, or a 240 basis point tailwind. Turning to slide 13, we have the regional net sales results for the quarter. As we noted in our April 14 pre-release, results were mixed across the business in the quarter. Strong growth in Asia Pacific and Latin America offset softer performance in EMEA and North America, while China continued to be a headwind.

In Asia Pacific, reported net sales increased 17% year-over-year, while local currency net sales increased 21%, driven by approximately 22% volume growth and favorable year-over-year pricing, partially offset by unfavorable sales mix and FX movements. As I mentioned earlier, India delivered record quarterly net sales for the second consecutive quarter, with reported net sales up 32% year-over-year and local currency net sales up 39%. Growth was driven by a 37% increase in volume and favorable sales mix. Pricing was neutral, as we have not taken a price increase since November 2024, and FX was a meaningful headwind. We continue to believe market demand remains strong following the GST rate reduction on a majority of our products.

Importantly, India has long been one of our strongest growth markets. While year-over-year reported net sales growth began to moderate in late 2024 to mid-2025, momentum began to build again, supported by distributor leadership training in 2025. We expect the GST tailwind to continue through September, with momentum extending beyond September although at a more moderate level. Latin America delivered its third consecutive quarter of double-digit reported net sales growth, with net sales up 17% year-over-year and local currency net sales up 7%. Results were driven primarily by favorable year-over-year pricing and sales mix, along with a significant FX tailwind, mainly from the strengthening of the Mexican peso, partially offset by a 2% decline in volume.

Within the region, Mexico delivered another quarter of growth, with reported net sales up 22% year-over-year and local currency net sales up 5%, driven primarily by favorable year-over-year pricing. In EMEA, reported net sales increased 1% year-over-year, benefiting from FX tailwinds. Constant currency net sales decreased 6%, reflecting an 11% decline in volume that more than offset favorable year-over-year pricing. In North America, net sales declined 3% year-over-year, reflecting a 5% decline in volume, partially offset by favorable year-over-year pricing.

As noted in our April 14 press release, U.S. net sales were negatively impacted by unusually severe weather in January and February, which led to temporary closures of distributor-owned nutrition clubs, disrupted distributors' daily consumption sales, and, in turn, reduced distributor product purchases from the company. Net sales were also impacted by higher levels of shipments in transit at quarter end compared to the prior year, with the related revenue deferred to the second quarter under our revenue recognition policies. Excluding these factors, North American net sales would have been slightly up year-over-year on both a reported and constant currency basis. We continue to expect full-year net sales growth in North America in 2026.

In China, reported net sales declined 12% year-over-year, while local currency net sales declined 16%, reflecting a partial benefit from foreign exchange. The decline was primarily driven by an 18% decrease in volume, partially offset by favorable sales mix. Turning to slide 14, we see the key drivers of the $11 million, or 6.5%, year-over-year increase in first quarter adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA was $176 million for the quarter, with a margin of 13.3%. On a constant currency basis, adjusted EBITDA was $180 million.

Looking at the bridge, we first see the drivers of the year-over-year change in gross profit, including our third consecutive quarter of volume growth, along with pricing benefits, partially offset by unfavorable sales mix and input cost inflation, primarily due to lower absorption rates. Salaries were an approximately $2 million headwind, largely reflecting merit increases implemented in late Q1 2025. First quarter adjusted EBITDA included $5.5 million of China government grant income. Because this grant is typically received once annually, the year-over-year variance is timing-related, as the prior year grant of $4.8 million was recognized in 2025. Lastly, foreign exchange was an approximately $5 million headwind to adjusted EBITDA, and a 70 basis point headwind to adjusted EBITDA margin.

Moving to slide 15, I will provide an update on our capital structure. We ended the quarter with $451 million of cash, up nearly $100 million from 2025. During the quarter, we made the scheduled $5 million amortization payment on the Term Loan B, and the revolver was undrawn as of March 31. At quarter end, our total leverage ratio was 2.7x, and net leverage was 2.1x. In April, we completed our $1.45 billion senior secured debt refinancing. We were pleased to execute this transaction in a dynamic market environment while achieving our pricing objectives, meaningfully reducing our borrowing costs, extending our maturity profile to more than seven years, and enhancing our financial flexibility.

We also have no material maturities until 2028. The refinancing included $800 million of 7.75% senior secured notes due May 2033, a $225 million Term Loan A, and a $425 million revolving credit facility, with both the Term Loan A and revolver maturing in April 2031. At closing as of April 29, $200 million was outstanding under the 2026 revolving credit facility, with approximately $180 million available to borrow. As I noted, the refinancing meaningfully reduced our borrowing cost. The coupon on the senior secured notes was reduced by 450 basis points, and the spreads on the revolver and term loan were reduced by 300 basis points and 375 basis points, respectively, to 3%.

Based on the total senior secured debt outstanding immediately before and after the refinancing, and current applicable interest rates, we expect the refinancing to result in approximately $45 million in annualized cash interest savings. Because the refinancing was completed during 2026, those cash interest savings will only be partially reflected this year. The $45 million represents the annualized benefit based on current conditions. That estimate may change as we pay down debt or as variable interest rates move, but it is reflective of our current expectations for the annual savings from the refinancing. Overall, these actions further strengthen our balance sheet and support our continued focus on deleveraging and financial flexibility.

Looking ahead, we are targeting net leverage to be below 2x by 2026 and remain on track to reduce outstanding debt to approximately $1.4 billion in 2028. Separately, let me briefly touch on Vionic. As Stephan noted in his opening remarks, on April 30, we completed the acquisition of substantially all of the assets of Vionic's core personalized nutrition business, as contemplated by the agreement we announced on March 26. Base consideration was $55 million payable over five years, including $10 million payable subsequent to closing. The agreement also provides for up to $95 million in contingent payments tied to certain future Vionic product sales performance.

We also obtained a call option to acquire Vionic Lab, a separate platform focused on small molecules and peptides. Importantly, this acquisition is consistent with our disciplined approach to selectively pursuing targeted capabilities that complement our business and can be scaled through our global reach. Turning to slide 16, I will review our outlook for the second quarter and full year 2026. We are continuing to provide net sales and adjusted EBITDA guidance on both a reported and constant currency basis, with reported guidance based on average daily exchange rates from the first two weeks of April 2026.

Broadly speaking, since we provided our full-year guidance in February, overall FX impact has moved unfavorably, reducing the tailwind benefit to net sales. For the second quarter, we expect foreign exchange to be a modest tailwind to net sales and neutral to adjusted EBITDA due to timing. On a reported basis, we expect net sales to increase 1.5% to 5.5% year-over-year, including an approximately 50 basis point currency tailwind. On a constant currency basis, we expect net sales to increase 1% to 5% year-over-year. We expect second quarter adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $150 million to $170 million on both a reported and constant currency basis.

This outlook includes an approximately $10 million year-over-year headwind to adjusted EBITDA, or approximately 80 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin, from two items. Approximately $5 million reflects the timing of the China government grant. We have historically received that grant once annually; in 2026, it was recognized in the first quarter, compared to 2025. The other $5 million relates to the September 2025 India GST rate change. As previously discussed, while the GST rate on most of our products we sell was reduced to 5%, the GST rate we pay on services remained at 18%, which created a mismatch between the GST we collect and the GST we pay, resulting in incremental G&A expense.

We have partially offset that impact through a reduction in the sales commission percentage paid to our distributors, reflected in selling expenses. The net impact of those two items is an estimated $5 million headwind to second quarter adjusted EBITDA. Second quarter capital expenditures are expected to be in the range of $15 million to $25 million, above 2026 primarily due to timing as some spending shifted from the first quarter into the second quarter. For the full year, we are increasing the midpoint of our constant currency net sales guidance range while also narrowing the reported and constant currency net sales guidance ranges.

The FX tailwind to full-year net sales guidance has been reduced to a 50 basis point benefit from 100 basis points assumed in our previous guidance. For adjusted EBITDA, we have narrowed the ranges on both a reported and constant currency basis, while increasing the constant currency midpoint. We are reaffirming our capital expenditure guidance. For the full year, we expect reported net sales to increase 1.5% to 5.5% year-over-year. On a constant currency basis, we expect net sales to increase 1% to 5% year-over-year. We expect full-year adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $675 million to $705 million on both a reported and constant currency basis.

Based on India's first quarter sales performance and our outlook for the balance of the year, we now expect India GST-related net incremental cost to be an approximately $20 million to $25 million headwind to full-year adjusted EBITDA and an approximately 40 to 50 basis point headwind to adjusted EBITDA margin. Our guidance also includes a preliminary estimate of the impact of higher oil prices. We continue to expect 2026 capital expenditures of $50 million to $80 million. In addition, we expect capitalized SaaS implementation costs of $35 million to $55 million, which are incremental to CapEx. Lastly, we continue to expect our full-year 2026 adjusted effective tax rate to be approximately 30%.

Before moving to Q&A, I want to close my opening remarks with one final comment. As Stephan said earlier, Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. is a fundamentally stronger company today than it was two years ago, and we remain focused on driving shareholder value. We returned to net sales growth and expect year-over-year growth to continue the remainder of the year. We strengthened our distributor network through enhanced training and other targeted initiatives, including the Herbalife Premier League, which was launched in March 2024. At that time, we had experienced 12 consecutive quarters of year-over-year declines in new distributors. Since that launch, however, the trend has improved meaningfully, with new distributor growth up 13% on a two-year stack basis in Q1.

And as we have now moved beyond the two-year anniversary of the Premier League launch, this metric becomes less relevant going forward. We have also expanded our Q1 adjusted EBITDA margins by 240 basis points since 2024, and we have reduced our total leverage ratio from 3.9x at 2023 to 2.7x at the end of the first quarter, driven by $540 million of debt reduction primarily through cash generated by the business. And lastly, as I have said, we completed our debt refinancing in April, unlocking approximately $45 million in annual cash interest savings. This concludes our opening remarks. We will now open the call for questions.

Operator: Thank you. To ask a question, please press 11 on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press 11 again. Our first question will come from the line of Chasen Louis Bender with Citi. Your line is open.

Chasen Louis Bender: Great. Thanks. Good afternoon, guys. Stephan, I wanted to first ask about Protocol. Now that the distributors and their customers have had some more time with Protocol in the U.S. beta group, could you discuss a little bit more the behaviors you are seeing from that group and how they are shaping up relative to your expectations? For example, are you seeing distributors able to sell more Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. product to their customers, and on the customer side, what are you seeing from the activity and the duration with which customers are interacting with the app and inputting their health data?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Yeah, thanks for the question, Chasen. As you know, we launched beta last year, and the objective of beta is really to get distributor feedback and make sure that it is really fitting with their business flows and how they go out and talk to customers and engage with them. In terms of the distributors and their response, the amount of feedback that we get from different models and leaders that operate in different regions—especially now that we have expanded it to the 10 European markets—is helping us to formulate features, how people are coming into it, and how distributors will work with their customers.

At the same time, there has to be enough there for the distributors to actually bring in the customers. We are really in this beta phase, and we did it on purpose. We have paused beta one, beta two; the phasing is because the more information that we have and the more people providing feedback, the more we can adjust it to make sure it goes across different DMOs with different leaders and the way that they operate. I would say that we continue this phase. For us, this was not a company that is going direct to consumer that has the relationship directly. Our entire business is based on distributors and their engagement with customers.

So we are in the phase still, and we have enlarged the beta phase as we have gotten more countries in, to make sure that we bring the functions that are necessary to allow the impact and bring the value that we need to. So the beta phase continues.

John G. DeSimone: Let me just chime in for a second. Like Stephan said, it is beta. We are seeing performance, getting feedback, enhancing it, and we have an enhanced version coming up with Extravaganza. What we want investors to know: this is an important part of our strategy, but we have not rolled into our forecast any direct revenue from this. So even though we are going to launch Vionic and we are going to launch Protocol, it is still going to be in the beta form. Any results end up being more opportunity to this year than risk to this year because we have not rolled that into the numbers yet.

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Let me just add: Protocol overall is not just a digital application to engage with customers. It really is designed as an end-to-end solution. We believe that the future is in the “what to measure,” meaning that people are going to want to measure more things like bringing their wearables in to inform blood biomarkers, which are going to get launched at Extravaganza, and those are going to come in. Then, personally formulated—or the next generation of personalized nutrition—through Vionic, for example. What ends up happening is it is the overall value proposition which gives it value.

That is why we talked about all of the pieces individually being valuable, but it is all the pieces together that make it incredibly valuable. I think the most important thing—the core fundamental of our business—is distributors need to be able to go out into the market and have conversations, and the people that they are talking to, with what they are going to be offering them, say, “Wow. You can do all of this?

I am interested.” If you were to ask 10 people on the street, would you rather have supplements that are more personalized for you, or would you rather buy supplements that are formulated for many, I believe that most people would respond, “I would be interested in the more personalized ones.” That is the opening of the conversation, but you also have to be able to deliver the products for it. We are really excited to get to Extravaganza and to be launching these 11 markets in EMEA in June and North America in July, to be able to bring this to market. The pieces are coming together, testing is coming.

We are still in beta because there are still functionalities and features that we need to build in. But we are also launching this next generation of personalized supplements, so the pieces are there. This journey for us is really about making sure that our distributors have what they need in hand to go have conversations, bring more people into the company, keep them longer, increase LTV, increase the amount of people that are getting referred, and ultimately increase the amount of people who want to join the business and duplicate a business.

Chasen Louis Bender: My second question is on India. Obviously very strong growth following the GST change. I am curious—given what you have seen—how has your thinking evolved on potential price reduction programs in other markets? And just as a housekeeping related to that, what are you assuming in guidance for India constant currency in the rest of the year? I know you mentioned you are expecting continued momentum, but should we expect that, or does your guidance contemplate the similar 30-plus percent growth in the rest of the year? Thanks so much.

John G. DeSimone: Yes, Chasen. I will take this. Let me break it into pieces. There is a lesson in India. We had effectively a price decrease due to the GST reduction, and that created a lot of momentum. India had started building momentum just prior to that. A couple things I want investors to know. One is that momentum has been incredibly strong. We are going to annualize the GST in September, but we do not think that means we are not going to grow after. We think the momentum carries forward. Granted, we will be comping quarters that have the GST impact, so the growth rate will moderate, but that momentum we expect to continue.

That gives you a little flavor of our thinking of India. India did beat our expectations in Q1. Going forward—if I may break this into buckets—for Q2 through Q4, so the rest of the year, we basically have not changed our sales expectations from where we were in February. They have come up a little, but we had some softness in the quarter in EMEA. We are going to run some tests based on what we learned in India, and hopefully that can work. We also had a price increase in Mexico, plus there was an incremental tax in Mexico, that had a little bit of a volume impact in Mexico on the negative side.

That also supports the thesis we are working with the distributors on—that price matters. I think there is a lot of opportunity for us to affect volume in the future by modifying price and modifying the commission structure. So we are running tests. We have been running tests. We are now running more tests based on the results we have seen.

Chasen Louis Bender: Got it. That is helpful. I will take the rest of my questions offline. Thanks so much, guys.

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Thanks, Chasen.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Next question will come from the line of Karru Martinson with Jefferies. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Karru Martinson: Good afternoon. You referenced higher oil costs. I was wondering how that is flowing through to the consumer, especially here in the North American market?

John G. DeSimone: We are not flowing it through. We are absorbing it right now. At this point, for the rest of this year, that is what is assumed. We did say it is not material to the year, so we are going to cover it ourselves. We have not raised prices because of it. That does not mean it did not have an indirect impact—or does not have an indirect impact—on the consumer in general, but it does not have a direct impact on our price.

Karru Martinson: Okay. So did you see a shift in the ordering pattern when the Iran conflict started and gas prices started going up, or is that too soon to tell?

John G. DeSimone: It is too soon to tell, but we did have—as I said—the U.S., we can explain what happened. There were some timing differences, and there were some nutrition club closures during some really bad weather that we can quantify. We made that available to investors. I think the U.S. is on track. EMEA—Europe—had some weakness, and it is too early to tell if that was tied to the economics from the geopolitical situation or not, but there was definitely some weakness in Europe.

Karru Martinson: Okay. And just lastly, when we look at China, it has been a work in progress for a while now. How should we think about that, and could you remind us where it stands today as a percentage of your sales?

John G. DeSimone: It is really small. It is under 5% of sales—about 4%—so it is relatively small. It does not really contribute to profit in any meaningful way. What I have told investors over the last few quarters is we have a lot of strategies we are going to implement in China. I would wait and see. At this point, we are not rolling in the benefits of those strategies. We are going to wait until we see the benefits. Think of China long term as a huge opportunity for us. We are super underpenetrated. The model does well in China for some of our competitors. The products do well in China. We have not found our footing yet.

We are working on it. I am confident over the long term we will. You will not see it rolled into our forecast until we see it coming through in results.

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: And, Karru, on distributor leadership, we have spoken about it in the past. Historically, it has been really isolated, and we started at the beginning of this year to allow distributors and leaders from Greater China to come into the market. It is the first time they have ever had that opportunity. We see a continuing trend of more of them being interested, and at this Extravaganza that is coming up this month, there are a few hundred—approximately 500—that are looking at potential building business in China. We are seeing it as really positive from that standpoint, but as you said, it is a work in progress. We will update you over time. Thank you.

Karru Martinson: Thank you very much. Appreciate it.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question is going to come from the line of Nicholas Sherwood with Maxim Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Nicholas Sherwood: Hi. Thank you for taking my questions. Kind of going back to the Protocol launch, have you seen any use of the platform in nutrition clubs and any feedback of how it works in that space?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Yeah, Nicholas. Super early. In nutrition clubs, especially here in the U.S., it is really a consumption-based business, and so it is one of the flows and integrations that we are working on because it is obviously a very large and important part of our business. There are millions of people walking in annually into a nutrition club to buy a shake or a tea, and we want to have an easy entrance into Protocol and getting exposure to being able to track and have physical results and move from a transactional to more of a transformational business. So it is one of the areas of focus for us, and it is a major DMO integration—early days.

Nicholas Sherwood: That is helpful. And then looking at the packaging redesign, what sort of early metrics did you see coming out of testing the new design, and what have you seen from the early stages of the rollout of that new packaging?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: The first product was just rolled out in India, and it is very, very early. Overall, as we went through the process, distributor feedback and research were very positive. To see in the real world how it impacts is going to take time, but the initial feedback and research are very positive—again, very early.

Nicholas Sherwood: Okay. And then my last question is, can you provide any color on the transition of preferred members to the new e-commerce platform, and how do you expect preferred members to interact with Protocol or get added to that platform in the future?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: I think you are referring to DS Commerce. That started to happen with a pilot group at the beginning of the year, and then it was just opened up. It is very recent, so very early to talk about it.

John G. DeSimone: If I could step back for a second because we had a lot of questions—just to make sure we are aligned on where we are with a lot of these initiatives. We have launched them in beta form. We are getting the feedback. You get a lot of functionality, including the commerce app where people can buy on the app—or at least have the appearance of buying on the app if it takes us somewhere else. There is some functionality that we are launching where you will start seeing the benefits.

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Correct, John. One thing I think it is early to highlight, but we think it is quite a big deal, is that as a company, we have not really had a subscription business. Product purchases have been—some of them are continual—but we really implemented subscription recently. One of the early indications on the preferred customer on the new commerce platform is that the uptake on subscriptions is very positive. It is still early, but that is a very positive outcome from what we are seeing—early but exciting.

It is also one of the things in terms of the launch of Vionic in Europe: we are going to be having a subscription product for the first time in the history of the company. So we are very excited about that.

Nicholas Sherwood: Alright. Great. Thank you for answering my questions. I will return to the queue.

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Thanks, Nicholas.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of John Baumgartner with Mizuho Securities. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

John Baumgartner: Good morning. Thanks for the question—or, I should say, good afternoon. First off, going back to personalized nutrition, there is a lot of great detail here into the data expansion and products. I am curious—has there been any evolution in your thinking regarding segmentation, the levels of offerings, how you may tier those out, different levels of personalization? Have you heard any feedback from your distributors as to how they think the product-market fit is as you are going forward with this?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Yeah, John. Thanks for the question. One of the reasons why we made the Vionic acquisition is for that reason. When we acquired Link, there is a manufacturing process to it: the equipment and the software take the inputs, create the formula, and then you manufacture the formula in powdered form. The price point for that is really more in a premium area. It also, quite honestly, has more functionality—because of the formatting, you can have other need states.

Vionic gives us the opportunity—not only was it a company that existed with an existing customer base—but it had been in the business of formulating not only premium but also what we would consider a personalized vitamin and mineral complex at a lower price point, so a larger addressable market. That is part of the strategy: we want to hit different price points. We know our business around the world—from India to Switzerland—different demographics. The other aspect, besides making it more accessible to people—because this is a newer concept—is really what are the offshoots?

Where can we go now that we have the capability of personalizing, and with all of the data and the customers for whom we have been personalizing, where does it lead us in the future? Specific product categories where personalization could make a lot of sense—for example, a probiotic that is more personalized than one you are buying off the shelf that has been formulated for everybody, or just for “men 50+,” for example. This is giving us more range and more demographics. I think where this leads in the future is that everything will become—and everyone will want—a more personalized version of whatever they are using today. It is absolutely part of the strategy.

John Baumgartner: Thanks for that. And then coming back to EMEA, to drill down there a bit more, I am curious the extent to which there may be more structural change or softness in the direct selling market given the consistent declines you are seeing in sales leaders, or is it more of a productivity issue you think, or maybe some price adjustments can kickstart growth in that region?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: From a distributor lens—someone that worked in EMEA specifically, which was one of the areas that I spent a lot of time in—I think what has happened is the overall way people look at their health and wellness and make their decisions on what they are going to buy and where they are going to spend money is evolving over time. If you think historically, we started in 1980. The idea of a protein shake in 1980—and I will speak to myself—in 1991, when it came to France where I started, you had to convince someone that the idea of taking a shake instead of having breakfast was actually a thing.

They would be like, “You are telling me I am going to mix this up, and I am going to drink this instead of having my coffee and croissant, and that is breakfast?” Today, we do not live in a world where a protein shake is novel and innovative. It is more of a commodity. It is an accepted form. I think part of what is happening is as the markets evolve and as technology evolves, the offer also needs to evolve.

That is why I am very strong on, as a company, the superpower that we have of these 2 million distributors that are having conversations with tens of millions of people on a daily, weekly, and monthly basis—interacting and helping them with their health goals—that the conversation around personalized nutrition in this next generation is absolutely where the market is going, and we want to lead in that market. We can say, “How can you optimize your current product? How can you optimize with your DMOs?

How can you bring more people and keep them longer and have them buy more and refer more people and want to do the business?” Fundamentally, if you have something novel and innovative to go to market with, and people are saying, “This is where things are going in the future. I want to be a part of it. I want to buy it. I want to use it. I want to tell people about it, and I want to sell it,” that is what we are building for. We do all the work in every area—train them, do everything we need to do—but we also work on the core offer. That is what we are doing.

John Baumgartner: Thanks. And just a bit of a random question—looking at the U.S. market, I am curious to the extent to which you are seeing any benefits or traction from participation in the diabetes prevention program. I know it is not spoken about a lot, but just curious if there is participation and any learnings there thus far?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: We had started that as a pilot, and to be honest with you, I do not have the answer because I have not followed it that closely. My guess would be it has not had a material impact. Good follow-up. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press 11. Our next question comes from the line of Douglas Matthai Lane with Water Tower Research. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Douglas Matthai Lane: Yes, hi. Good afternoon, everybody. On the Vionic nutritional supplements being offered in Europe beginning in late June and then the U.S. in July, are they the same product offerings in both markets, and what actually are the product offerings that you are rolling out?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: They will be essentially the same. Obviously, different markets have different regulatory aspects to it. Essentially, Doug, think of this as your personalized vitamin and mineral complex stack. I do not want to get into too many details, but a man versus a woman, height, weight, age, objectives, personal conditions—then you put in biometrics, potentially blood biomarkers—and it would be clear that you probably would not need the same amount of vitamins and minerals in your individual compound as everyone else. That is the core offer of Vionic. The other thing—everyone is using supplements.

If you ask how you actually buy supplements, even a vitamin and mineral supplement, most people are going down the aisleway at the grocery store or in the pharmacy, or their doctor said something, or someone recommended something to them—they buy it and use it. They might have been using it for a year, two years, three years, five years. We believe that personalization means not only should you have your formula as close to your individual needs as possible today, but also next month—when you have lost five pounds, when you have changed some things in your daily habits and in your diet—and over time as you age and your circumstances change.

The capability to flex that on a monthly basis for someone and to personalize that is innovative and makes sense in the world that we live in today. No one is doing this at scale around the world, and so this is our opportunity. We also know that you can get people into the conversation and they look at Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. and say, “This is unique what you are doing.” We have an incredible portfolio—we are doing $5 billion in revenue currently—that is not Vionic. It is an opportunity to have people go beyond just this personalized vitamin and mineral complex. For us, this is not just a door opener.

It is something that people are going to want, and we are going to be able to deliver it—especially through 2 million distributors that are having conversations with people every single day. More attraction to Herbalife Nutrition Ltd., a value proposition we think is unique, an opportunity in subscription, and an opportunity for the introduction to the entire portfolio so that we become that solution for people for their health and wellness.

Douglas Matthai Lane: Now, Vionic has been around for a little while and has been producing product. Can I get Vionic anywhere else at this point?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: You cannot. As of the transaction, this is going to be sold through Herbalife Nutrition Ltd. distributors.

Douglas Matthai Lane: So will it be rebranded under some sort of Herbalife sub-brand? What will that look like?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: We will do the reveal at Extravaganza, so I do not want to give it away, but the brand is definitely staying.

Douglas Matthai Lane: Okay, fair enough. When can we see Link Biosciences product out in the marketplace?

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Link Biosciences will be Q1 of next year.

Douglas Matthai Lane: Got it. And are you going to operate these four acquisitions as independently as is, or what is the plan structurally on how you are going to run these four acquisitions on personalization?

John G. DeSimone: I will jump in. First, they all work together. I think you heard Stephan talk about Vionic and Link and the different versions of personalized nutrition, and they can work together. Protocol supports that—actually, it supports Protocol. The fourth acquisition, which is Prüvit, is a product line. Because there is a separate product associated with that, that may be a little distinct. But overall, those four are all connected.

Douglas Matthai Lane: Okay, fair enough. And lastly, John, now that you have completed the debt refinancing, is there any change to your capital allocation priorities?

John G. DeSimone: There is not. My number one priority is still to get our gross debt down to $1.4 billion by 2028, which would get our net debt below $1 billion.

Douglas Matthai Lane: Okay, fair enough. Thanks.

John G. DeSimone: Thanks, Doug.

Operator: Thank you. I would now like to hand the call back over to Stephan Paulo Gratziani for closing remarks.

Stephan Paulo Gratziani: Thank you, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We had a great quarter. We completed our debt refinancing. As Doug just mentioned, we have made four acquisitions. We are executing on our vision. Forty-five years of incredible history are behind us, but the future is even more exciting. As a company, we are evolving. We are advancing how we deliver what we do best—greater precision, greater scale, greater impact—and we are focused on the vision. We are well positioned to deliver what we believe is the next generation of personalized nutrition. Thank you for joining today, and we look forward to sharing continued progress next quarter.

Operator: This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.