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Coca-Cola Europacific Partners - Q1 2020 TU

April 28, 2020

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the CCEP Q1 2020 Trading Update Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your phone.

If you require any further assistance, please press star zero. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Sarah Willett, VP Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead.

Sarah Willett (VP of Investor Relations)

Thank you, and good afternoon in Europe or good morning in the US. Thank you all for joining us today. I'm here with our CEO, Damian Gammell, and Nik Jhangiani, our CFO. Before we begin with our opening remarks on our first quarter trading alongside a COVID-19 update, I would like to remind you of our cautionary statements.

This call will contain forward-looking management comments and other statements reflecting our outlook. These comments should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary language contained in this morning's release, as well as the detailed cautionary statements found in reports filed with the UK, US, Dutch, and Spanish authorities. A copy of this information is available on our website at www.cocacolaep.com. Today's prepared remarks will be made by Damian and Nik and will be accompanied by a slide deck.

Following the webcast, a full transcript will be made available as soon as possible on our website. Following prepared remarks, we will turn the call over to your questions. Please limit yourself to one question, and if you have more than one, please ask your most pressing first and then reenter the queue. I will now turn the call over to our CEO, Damian.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thank you, Sarah, and many thanks to everyone joining us today. Clearly, we are all operating in unprecedented and uncertain times. But firstly, I would like to share my sympathies with anybody who has been affected by the pandemic, and I would particularly like to thank everyone who is working to keep us safe and for their steadfast commitment during these challenging times.

We do have a strong franchise with solid fundamentals, and before the crisis took hold, we saw continued good trading momentum into the first quarter, including progress on our sustainability agenda. The crisis, though, has touched every community where we operate and is having a fundamental impact on the way people consume our products today. Our response has been rapid.

Throughout the pandemic, we are prioritizing the well-being of our people, serving our customers, supporting our communities, and critically protecting the long-term future of our business. Despite the uncertainty that surrounds us today, our confidence in the post-crisis future of our business is driving us to take the right actions to respond to the immediate crisis and provide relief to communities while laying the foundations for recovery and then sustained growth.

Importantly, we do come from a position of strength, a solid business built upon great brands, a great route to market, great customer relationships, and of course, great people. We have achieved a lot since the merger, and we delivered on the commitments we made. We operate in an attractive and valuable category. We enjoy scale and a market-leading position across all our markets. We also have a fantastic portfolio of brands, products, and packaging. We are creating a lot of value for our customers, too.

We were by far the largest FMCG value creator in the retail channel across our markets last year, adding over one billion of revenue over the last three years, according to Nielsen. In fact, we delivered more than three times the value to our customers than our nearest peer. We also have a solid balance sheet. We generate a lot of cash, and we have solid access to liquidity. Nik will touch more on these areas in a moment.

Critically, we are more aligned than ever with our largest franchise partner, The Coca-Cola Company. As you all know, sustainability is a key priority for our business at CCEP. We are making great progress with a bold and integrated sustainability action plan, with carbon reduction targets now incorporated into our long-term incentive plans, making us an early adopter in this space.

I'm very privileged to be leading a 23,000-strong business of such committed, talented, and I'm glad to say, engaged colleagues. Now to Q1. Importantly, the good momentum we enjoyed throughout 2019 continued into quarter one, with only the last two weeks of the quarter really impacted by COVID-19. As per our now normal reporting cadence, our Q1 relates only to our top-line performance.

I will keep my comments very brief on the quarter, particularly given the backdrop. Key highlights are pulled out in the release, both by geography and by category. Our revenue declined by 4%, as expected, given challenging comparables and one less selling day in the quarter. Despite these challenges, we gained further market share during the period, according to Nielsen.

We are especially pleased with our performance in the mixers category, which went to gaining a hundred and sixty basis points of category share in GB within the measured channels. Although, as highlighted in February, we did see some temporary disruption that impacted our volumes, I am pleased that we are now being able to successfully agree on our local pricing plans with our customers.

Our priority is, and will continue to be, to lead the category for sustainable value creation for our customers, as I referred to earlier. We also continue to execute our Beverages for Life strategy, with momentum in the newer brands such as Costa, Tropico and Coke Energy. Fuze continued to gain distribution, resulting in a one percentage point increase in category share within the ready-to-drink tea category, and energy also had a strong quarter, supported by innovation.

Impressively, Norway has now joined Spain to become the second market in which Monster is now the number one energy brand, and finally, we continue to make progress on our sustainability objectives, and I'm proud that Sweden became our first 100% recycled PET market as we continue working towards a circular economy for packaging, so unusually, but these are impressive times, let me now provide some insight into recent events and the impact COVID-19 is having on our business.

As lockdown restrictions and social distancing practices were introduced across our markets, there has been a temporary but significant impact on our customers and on our business. The most significant impact has been on our away-from-home channel, which has seen a sharp decline in volumes since the crisis started.

While the exposure varies by market, last year, this channel represented 39% of our volume and 43% of our revenue, with markets like GB and Spain particularly impacted, given higher exposure. Overall, we believe that roughly 75% of our away-from-home channel has been severely impacted by lockdown measures with the widespread closure of restaurants, bars, and leisure facilities.

The remaining 25%, to include independent convenience and petrol stations, while still open for business, has also not been immune to the crisis, given less and less people are on the move. Since the crisis began in mid-March, we've seen our away-from-home volumes decline anywhere between 45%-85% across our markets as restrictions widened and lockdown measures were implemented. Trading in the home channel has also been volatile, with volumes ranging from -10% to +5%. Volumes initially benefited from household stocking.

However, this pull forward in demand has begun to unwind. We continue to see traffic in the home channel decline, as the severity of local social distancing measures is resulting in fewer physical shopping trips overall. In contrast, we have seen a significant spike in shopper demand for online grocery across our markets, although this growth has also moderated more recently in line with what we've seen in the physical stores.

From a pack perspective, single-serve immediate consumption packs, as you expect, are most impacted, with these packs typically accounting for approximately 35% of group volume and 45% of revenue, and actually, roughly 30% of these immediate consumption packs are usually sold through the home channel via front of store, on-the-go concessions, and supermarket convenience formats.

So neither channel is immune, and this trend is particularly impacting our water volumes as we produce a lot of small, single-serve packs in this category. Unsurprisingly, future consumption packs, such as large PET and multipack cans, have been performing better, although this also varies by market. So in summary, we continue to see volatility in both home and away-from-home channels.

This has resulted in a decline in group volumes of between 20% and 40% across the last five weeks, and we haven't benefited from the usual uplift from Easter in April. We expect the second quarter to be the most impacted by these trends, but of course, there still remains a lot of uncertainty around the trajectory of the pandemic. Now I'd like to focus on our response to the pandemic.

As I mentioned earlier, we are prioritizing the well-being of our people, serving our customers, supporting our communities, given the crisis has touched every community where we operate, and critically protecting the long-term future of our business. And while we take action to respond to the immediate crisis and provide relief to communities, we are also preparing for how we enable a swift recovery back to sustained growth.

And naturally, we will do all of this together with our brand partners. These next few slides now go into a bit more detail around how each of our priorities are evolving during the crisis. First, our people. We have implemented comprehensive measures in line with official guidance to keep our people safe.

Large-scale homeworking for all those that can has now been in place for some time, supported by enhanced digital support, with specific measures for colleagues at sites or in the field to support hygiene and social distancing. We are changing work routines and patterns. We are redeploying people to areas of the business that have an increased workload or to help accelerate our recovery.

We are providing emotional and mental well-being support during this highly stressful and uncertain time, providing, for example, a new online coronavirus support hub, and we are regularly communicating via virtual town halls across the business, especially important today when so many people are working from home. Job security is, of course, a concern for our people, and for us, it has been a key priority as we navigate through this period.

We've been working closely with all our partners to ensure we continue to do everything we can to support our customers and everyone they serve. We are continuing to make products during the crisis to help our retailers keep their shelves stocked with the brands people want to buy. Given the fundamental impact the situation is having on the way people consume our products, particularly in the away-from-home channel, we have shifted production by prioritizing core SKUs in larger multi-pack can and large PET packs.

Alongside shifting the portfolio mix away from typical away-from-home innovation and packs, such as brands like Honest and Aquarius Enhanced Hydration, and packs like glass and post-mix or Freestyle. In all, we've reduced SKUs by over a third, and we are continuing to review with a look to reducing further.

All our 48 plants are operational, except one, being a plant in the south of Spain that focuses on away-from-home packs. Of our roughly 220 lines, 25% are non-operational, being mostly glass and post-mix lines. On communities, we are working closely with The Coca-Cola Company to support COVID-19 response in our local communities with substantial financial aid through the Red Cross and other local NGOs.

We've donated over 400,000 unit cases so far of product in the countries where we operate, to food banks, medical workers, and key workers, as well as giving access to our logistics and transportation resources for relief work. We've also produced medical gel and donated equipment for medical frontline, and we have been encouraging employees to volunteer where it is safe to do so. I would now like to hand over to Nik to talk more to the financial actions we've been taking. Nik?

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Thank you, Damian. Damian has talked to our people, our customers, and communities. I would now like to talk to some of the actions we have and continue to take around securing business continuity, maximizing our cash, preserving as much flexibility as possible, and protecting our P&L during this uncertain and challenging period.

We entered this crisis with a strong balance sheet, having delevered quickly since the merger, reflecting our strong free cash flow generation. Our 2019 net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 2.7 times, at the midpoint of our stated midterm annual objective of between 2.5 to 3 times. We have a smooth profile of long-term debt maturities with a 90/10 fixed floating mix, having taken advantage of lower interest rates. The strength of our balance sheet is reflected in our investment-grade credit ratings.

We are committed to maintaining an investment-grade rating, but do recall that we are at the top end of the band today with a BBB+ and an A3 rating with S&P and Moody's, respectively. And importantly, we do not have any covenants in place for any of our debt. We were pleased to secure additional funding in the debt markets in March, taking advantage of relative market stability at that time and providing us with additional financial flexibility during this uncertain period.

We were significantly oversubscribed on this deal, allowing us to upsize the issuance and tighten pricing on our six-year tranche with a 2026 maturity. The proceeds continue to provide us with additional flexibility and liquidity and will allow us to repay maturing debt later in the year. We also continue to have access to other sources of liquidity to support our business going forward.

Free cash flow generation has been a core priority of our business, and we have delivered over EUR 3 billion over the past three years. This has been supported by a strong focus on driving working capital improvements, delivering cumulative improvements of approximately EUR 650 million since 2017. At the end of the quarter, we had around EUR 900 million of cash and cash equivalents on the balance sheet, including the proceeds from the aforementioned bond issuance.

In addition, we have access to a EUR 1.5 billion euro sustainability-linked revolving credit facility, which is currently undrawn, and this is backed up by our EUR 1.5 billion euro multicurrency commercial paper program, of which we've currently issued approximately EUR 600 million.

We have also received confirmation of eligibility to access the Bank of England's new COVID Corporate Financing Facility, although we have not utilized any of this facility to date. So you can see, we have ample liquidity measures in place, providing us with financial flexibility in the current uncertain environment. And as with our long-term debt, our facilities have no covenants attached either. And now to a summary of the measures we have taken to protect our business for the long term.

Despite the uncertainty that surrounds us, our confidence in the future of our business is driving us to take the right actions today to protect our financial performance, conserve cash, and lay foundations for the recovery later on. From a governance perspective, we have implemented business and risk review processes, which we are sharing regularly with our board and The Coca-Cola Company.

We also have been in regular dialogue with the wider Coca-Cola system, incorporating learnings and experiences from other bottlers that are further down the COVID-19 impact timeline. Importantly, we continue to stress test our financials across a range of scenarios, helping us to develop a medium and long-term recovery plan for the business.

Within this context, we're extremely disciplined from a cost perspective on CapEx, as well as our cost of goods sold and OpEx, to ensure all spend is relevant and essential. So starting with CapEx, we have made the decision to defer non-critical projects to focus on ensuring business continuity, including any regulatory requirements and elements of our Business Capability Program.

This has resulted in savings of approximately EUR 200 million, or a reduction of nearly 40%, taking our CapEx for 2020 to circa EUR 350 million, excluding leases. Now looking at OpEx, the largest component is selling and distribution, which typically accounts for two-thirds of our total spend and is essentially 60% fixed, 40% variable. General and admin would account for a further quarter, and D&A, the remainder, both of these being mainly fixed.

Overall, we would see roughly two-thirds of our total OpEx as fixed and a third as variable. Some costs have declined naturally, such as travel and meetings. We have introduced a company-wide hiring freeze and have pulled back on all non-essential costs, such as contractors and consultancy services. We are also reviewing all trade marketing expenses and are pulling back on our promotional spend and seasonal labor. And incentives will naturally be reduced across the business.

Overall, we believe we can reduce our discretionary spend by a potential EUR 200 million-EUR 250 million on a full year basis, and while it does include an element of COGS, which I will come back to shortly, it is mainly OpEx-based. Of course, as we are operating in uncertain times with little visibility on how the remainder of the year will play out, these savings are assuming that the current situation continues for the rest of the year.

If that is not the case, we may take the decision to reinvest some of these savings as we progress into and through our recovery phase. Just to be clear, these savings do not include one-off costs coming into the business, such as bad debts, inventory write-offs, and necessary protective equipment for our colleagues. So now on to COGS.

As mentioned just now, cost savings, such as seasonal labor from a COGS perspective, are more limited, with typically about 85% of our total COGS being variable. This would include our concentrate payments and finished goods accounting for 45%, commodities a further 25%, and various taxes another 15%. The final 15% would include our manufacturing costs and D&A, both of which are largely fixed.

We also anticipate an adverse impact on COGS per unit case from a pack mix as we shift production to meet home customer demand. For example, more multipack cans and less away-from-home focused packs like post-mix and Freestyle. So from a modeling standpoint, please bear in mind that any declines in volumes will adversely impact our COGS per unit case, given the underrecovery of our fixed manufacturing costs, as well as this pack mix shift.

Finally, from a broader finance perspective, you'll remember that we formally withdrew our full year 2020 guidance in March, since we are not currently able to reliably and accurately assess the extent and impact of this crisis on our business. We were fortunate to enter this period with a robust balance sheet and strong liquidity position, as I have just talked to, but we have still moved at speed to review all sources and uses of cash to preserve maximum flexibility.

This included the suspension of our EUR 1 billion share buyback program, which we announced in March. As regards our dividend, the board continues to recognize the importance of cash returns to shareholders, as demonstrated by our progressive dividend policy. However, given the significant uncertainty of the effect of the ongoing pandemic, the board has determined to defer consideration of its twenty twenty half one dividend until visibility has improved.

We are not today declaring an interim dividend payment for June, preserving flexibility until a better informed decision as to the appropriate quantum can be made. As a reminder, we paid our full two thousand and nineteen dividend last year, amounting to EUR 1.24 per share. And with that, I'm now going to hand back to Damian to close. Thank you. Damian?

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thank you, Nick. Let me reiterate that we are confident in the future of our business. We have started preparing for the recovery. When it is safe to do so, we will make sure colleagues can return to their workplaces and feel safe and supported in doing so. We will help our customers and communities get back up and running, particularly those customers who've been hardest hit.

We will need to accelerate our business to more channels than ever before as we look forward to 2021 and beyond, and we will work with our brand partners, like The Coca-Cola Company, to accelerate programs that address the impact of the crisis in our communities. The crisis is also providing the license to accelerate our competitiveness initiatives, so we can become an even more efficient business. We will not lose that opportunity.

Likewise, we will continue to remain focused on accelerating our sustainability agenda. We have created incredible value for our customers and shareholders over the last four years, and we will apply that success to the next phase.

... So in summary, we started the year well, in good momentum before the crisis took hold of our markets. Despite the uncertainty that surrounds us today, our confidence in the future of our business is driving us to take the right actions today to protect our performance, conserve cash, and most importantly, lay the foundations for the recovery, all of which is underpinned by a strong balance sheet.

We are committed to helping society rebuild and recover, creating sustainable value and a better future for our people and the planet. And now we would like to open for questions. Thank you, operator. Operator, we're open for questions.

Operator (participant)

At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. We will pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Bonnie Herzog from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Bonnie Herzog (Managing Director)

All right, thank you. Hi, everyone.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Hey.

Bonnie Herzog (Managing Director)

I had a question. Hi, I had a question on your supply chain. I guess I was hoping you guys could maybe drill down just a little bit further on any potential disruptions you might be currently dealing with in your supply chain, you know, as well as your capacity utilization across your manufacturing footprint today, and then could you give us a sense of the inventory levels right now at some of your different retail partners? Thank you.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Hi, Bonnie. Good morning.

Bonnie Herzog (Managing Director)

Hi.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

So we've actually, on the supply chain side, we've been in good shape since the crisis came along. So we haven't seen, on the supply side, too much disruption. We have been, you know, obviously looking at absenteeism and trying to make sure that, you know, we support our people. But overall, we've been manufacturing really well.

Actually, some of our line efficiencies have improved as we've reduced SKUs, so that's one learning for the future, that we've seen in increased productivity on some of our lines as we've simplified our SKU range. We've been working very closely with our key suppliers on the procurement side to make sure that, if necessary, we need to build any forward inventory. But honestly, that side of our business has worked really well. Our biggest challenge is, as you know, as you pointed out, has been basically-

35% reduction in our SKUs, so, that's definitely helping line efficiencies. But, you know, in markets where we have a lot of away-from-home business like Iberia, we just have shut down some of the lines. So, you know, probably about 50 of our 220 lines currently are stood down, but, you know, those will come back on stream as we see volumes pick up.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Edward Mundy from Jefferies. Your line is open.

Edward Mundy (Managing Director of Beverages Research)

Hi, Damian. Hi, Nik. Two questions from me. The first is around the potential exit rate, coming out the quarter. I appreciate you've given a range of 20%-40% down over the last five weeks, but, you know, should we be thinking about taking the midpoint as a reasonable exit rate as we go into Q2? The second question is for Damian.

I appreciate it might be a little bit premature, given we're sort of still living with COVID-19, but as you think about the medium to longer term recovery plan, are there any structural changes to the industry that you're thinking about over the medium term arising from COVID-19? And the third, again, might be premature, one for Nik.

You mentioned further efficiencies, and this is providing sort of license to accelerate some of the competitive initiatives. As we emerge, do you expect to hold on to a portion of these savings from new ways of working, you know, such as less travel, or will the focus be on reinvesting a big chunk of these savings for high growth to drive that top line recovery?

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thank you, Ed. Three good questions. So let me deal with the first two. So on the exit rate, you know, I think it's too early to say, given that we're still, as I'm sure you are, like living in the U.K., looking at what is the government proposing to do in terms of their exit strategy, as well around social distancing and reopening business.

And I think that will guide all of us and the industry to get a better read on, you know, what will happen to volumes and revenue as we exit. So, you know, we're watching closely, as I'm sure you are, what's happening now in Spain. Germany is talking about lifting some of the restrictions, but it's far too early to translate that into a revised level of guidance on volume and revenue.

I think the ranges that we've given today are pretty much what we're seeing, and I suppose you can assume that they would remain as long as the current lockdown and restrictions remain, and that range will narrow a bit as we see the restrictions lifting. So bit early to say, and obviously, over the next weeks or so, we'll also keep a close eye on some of the external metrics like Nielsen to give us a guide on what's happening in the market.

On the structural change, I think there's a lot of speculation in the market around what this could mean for consumers, for workers, you know, for our category. We're obviously reflecting on that. I think it is important that we take time to really evaluate, you know, what will be a sustainable impact and what may be temporary. You know, I think a couple of things that I've seen that will probably remain with us in some way, shape, or form is, you know, the digital workforce.

We've certainly, thankfully, benefited from, you know, the investments we've made in 2018 and 2019 into upgrading our technology, and that's allowed us to have a lot of our people to continue to be really productive while they're working from home. So I suspect people have used digital tools and adapted a number of approaches that will help structural productivity post-crisis. So I think that will remain.

And operationally, I think there's some opportunities that we're looking at. I just call out one on the SKUs. I think Nik quoted a number we've reduced about 35%. You know, clearly, some of those will add back as we recover, but, you know, I also think that, you know, we've learned that operating a little bit leaner in that space helps productivity. So I think that's gonna be something that we will continue post-crisis to look at.

And obviously, my guidance to the business units has been, please do not add back all of those SKUs. Let's be very selective. So, you know, I think we'll operate a little bit leaner. Online, a lot of people have, you know, shopped more online, we've seen our online business grow during the crisis.

I think there's been some structural challenges around deliveries, but that's just been due to the size of demand, so I think online, you know, will continue to be a bigger part of the category and of our business going forward, and again, our portal, which we set up a couple of years ago, has well positioned us for that, so there's some of the areas that I see.

I wouldn't call anything more material than that at this stage. I think it would be premature, but I do think as we exit the crisis, and we are and have been working on a recovery plan for a number of weeks now, so we were very quick in response, and we clearly know this crisis is gonna end, and we will come out of it.

So we've been spending a lot of time on recovery, and as part of that, we will look at, is there any more significant structural changes that we need to make? And at the right time, we'll share those, with you. And I'll hand over to Nik to answer your third question. Nik?

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah, so I think as Damian said, strong focus as we come out of this on revenue recovery. So clearly, along with our franchise partners, the Coca-Cola Company and Monster, we'll be very focused on working jointly to look at what does that look like and what shape does that need to take. So clearly, that's our priority.

Having said that, I think in some ways, there'll almost be a dual priority, which is around that acceleration of our competitiveness work that we had started. So we continue to look at some of these new ways of working, and I think we're gonna incorporate some of that and really accelerate some of those efficiencies.

So I think while we will reinvest for top-line growth, there will clearly be an opportunity for more of that savings to also come in a faster way to the bottom line. But obviously, we'll give you more update as we go through it.

Edward Mundy (Managing Director of Beverages Research)

Great. Thanks very much.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Lauren Lieberman from Barclays. Your line is open.

Lauren Lieberman (Managing Director)

Great, thanks. Good morning, or good afternoon, I guess.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Morning.

Lauren Lieberman (Managing Director)

Hey, I was hoping we could talk a little bit just with the home channel numbers. They were a little bit surprising to me, despite these first five weeks, I guess. And I was wondering if you could share if you have a sense for what home channel performance would look like excluding that immediate consumption piece. It would really be helpful.

You share that 30% of the business is immediate consumption pack, but I just would have expected to be more of the demand to shift, and I'm wondering if there's something particular about, you know, consumer behavior in your markets versus what we've seen in the U.S. Granted, it was stock up and then falling off here in the U.S., but definitely a bit more demand shifting to at-home channels. Then also just thinking on cooler placements and CapEx.

Just wondering, as you're planning for recovery and thinking about changes in foot traffic and consumer behavior, the degree to which cooler placements can play a role in recapturing demand, given the availability and consumers, you know, perhaps spending their time in different places or in different ways? Thanks.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Hi, good morning, Lauren, thank you for the question. So on the home channel, we, you know, as Nik mentioned, I've been spending quite a bit of time, you know, learning from, you know, the Coca-Cola system and have had conversations with some of my counterparts in, you know, China and across Italy and also North America.

So I think what's slightly different about the CCEP home market business is that we've had a really strong focus on the IC front-of-store immediate consumption business. And as you know from your market visits in Europe, you know, a lot of our big retailers have transformed the front of store into food to go. And clearly, in this environment, that's really the part of the home market business that we've seen being most challenged.

and that reflects in Nik's comments around the immediate consumption. On the balance of the business, we've pretty much seen exactly what you're seeing across, you know, the globe in terms of significant move to large packs, multi-pack cans, large PET. So that part of our business is holding up really well, and we continue to, you know, monitor our share in that segment to make sure, you know, that we're continuing to hold or grow our share.

So we are seeing consumers, you know, wanting to shop less frequently, so visiting stores less frequently and therefore, buying bigger packs, and that, I think, is a common theme across the globe, and we see that in our numbers, and we see our home market business, you know, continuing to stabilize, both online and in store.

It is quite robust. We are working with all our retailers to also help them minimize out of stocks. So, you know, one of the other challenges we've seen, particularly retailers who pick their online orders in store, that's resulting in some out of stocks as they pick online and then leave less stock for the shoppers coming in.

So we're now working with some of our larger retailers to do the online picking back of store and providing full pallets into their back of store, so they can pick online somewhere different. So, you know, we're working closely. In some other areas, we've started to deliver direct to store.

So we've done some DSD to move outside of our central warehouse because they had some logistical challenges there, and we found that as an innovative way to get our product to store. So in summary, absent the front of store immediate consumption decline, you know, the home market business is robust and holding up, holding up well, and we'd expect that to continue.

And obviously, as things open up and restrictions ease, that front of store business will come back. But across, you know, all of our revenue streams, you know, we are a bottler that has developed immediate consumption and on-the-go and HoReCa extremely well, and that has supported our margins and cash flow in good times. Unfortunately, with restrictions, that's the piece of the revenue that suffers the most, and that's what we're seeing at the moment.

But obviously, that will recover as our business does. So, that's on home market. On coolers, you know, clearly, as Nik pointed out, we've taken a number of good decisions to reduce our cash usage for CapEx this year. And that's, you know. We came into the year with some inventory, so we're not losing any opportunity. So if we have the opportunity to place coolers, and we can, we will.

As we look at the recovery, we are modeling a number of scenarios to see where consumers will be spending their time, and where they will be potentially, you know, consuming our products. In the short term, that type of scenario planning has led us to look at channels like forecourts, hardware stores, garden centers.

So we have been modeling where consumers are spending their time, you know, during the restrictions, and there's a lot of places there that we can sell our products, so we're also trying to be a bit more innovative on offering some of our brands and packages in those, let's say, more non-traditional home market channels, so we'll keep modeling it.

We have inventory. Certainly, as we recover, we'll continue to invest in our business for long-term shareholder value, like we always have done, and part of that may well be a shift in some of our equipment profile, you know, as people, you know, potentially shop and consume differently, but certainly more to come on that. Thank you, Lauren.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Sanjeet Aujla from Credit Suisse. Your line is open.

Sanjeet Aujla (Managing Director of Beverages Equity Research analyst)

Hi, Nik and Damian. Just a question on alignment with, with Coke. I mean, clearly, alignment is in a very different place versus, ten years ago, let's say. However, you know, at the same time, the majority of the operating leverage sits within the bottler, who's likely to take a disproportionate hit to profitability through all of this. Does that start to create any tension, with, with Coke, with regards to things like investment levels and innovation, et cetera?

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thanks, Sanjeet. No, I would say at the moment, we've been working as we worked pre-crisis, very closely around, you know, what's right for the sustainable health of the franchise, both from a bottling perspective and from a brand perspective. You're absolutely right. From a P&L structure, the bottlers have a very different P&L structure to the company, with a much higher degree of fixed costs.

So that will impact us during the crisis, and, you know, we're obviously aware of that. So will the Coke Company. What we're both focused on at the moment is preserving, as best we can, our households and our consumers, and then looking at, in the recovery phase, how do we, you know, prioritize and focus a bit more?

I would say the Coca-Cola Company have been extremely open and cooperative around some of the decisions we've made in SKUs, our thinking on recovery around prioritization of brands and investments, and also tapering our NPD and product development appetite, given the crisis. All of those conversations are happening in a very open and collaborative way.

You know, I think the reality is, we will rephase some of our product innovation, certainly out of 2020. We've already done that into 2020, 2021. That will reflect the recovery, but also the need to focus and prioritize, as we, you know, clearly, our goal is to return our business to top-line growth, but also to continue to get back to the financial performance that we've seen pre-crisis. Pretty much in good shape. Nik, I don't know if you wanna comment on that question from Sanjeet?

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

No, I think you've answered it, and obviously, we continue to work with them also, looking at everything on, concentrate, as well as, you know, potential issues with bad debts, product write-offs, et cetera. So as Damian said, it continues to be a very, collaborative working relationship, and I talked about in our governance routines, we've actually, you know, meet with them weekly to make sure that we're in sync. So I think it's working well.

Sanjeet Aujla (Managing Director of Beverages Equity Research analyst)

Great, thank you.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Simon Hales from Citi. Your line is open.

Simon Hales (Managing Director of Consumer Staples & Beverages Research)

Thank you. Good morning, good afternoon, everybody. A couple from me. I wonder, firstly, Nik, I wonder if you could just clarify some of the numbers that you gave in your presentation just around the fixed cost splits of the business around SG&A and the COGS line. I think I got them, but I'd just like to check them. And then secondly, I wonder if you could just talk a little bit more about the revenue per case dynamics that we were seeing as we kind of came to the back end of the quarter and into Q2.

Clearly, the channel shifts that we're seeing, you know, I'd expect to be mix dilutive on a revenue per case basis, but you are, I think, getting some offset from some of the promotional rollback that we've seen in the at-home channel. Be interested in your comments there, and also perhaps your comments around the COGS per case, given the channel shift.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Great. So just to clarify the numbers again, so when you look at... Let's start with COGS. Forty-five percent is concentrate finished goods, which is linked to our incidence model, then you've got about 25% on commodities and essentially about 15% on taxes. So when you look at that whole bucket, about 85%, that is largely variable and linked to, obviously, volume and/or revenue.

Then you've got the remaining 15%, which is essentially your manufacturing and depreciation, which is all fixed. So clearly, that is gonna have an impact on our recovery, as I talked about, given the volume drop-offs. Then when you look at the SG&A piece, we're looking at selling and distribution being essentially about 65%, and about 60% of that is fixed and 40% is variable.

Then you've got G&A and your depreciation, which make up the remaining 35%, and both of those are largely fixed. So, that's just to clarify the numbers. Damian, you wanna talk about the revenue trends, and I can come back on then the impact?

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Yeah, I think we're. As we've outlined, I think we're seeing, you know, pretty consistent trends across all of our markets. So while, you know, some markets probably got into it a bit earlier, particularly Spain, unfortunately, we have seen a remarkable similarity across all of our countries in terms of the revenue trend, and what we're seeing, as

we move through the crisis in that mix between away from home and home market, and then within home market, as I mentioned to Lauren on Lauren's question, we're seeing similar shifts in all our markets to large packs. We are obviously seeing some, you know, revenue opportunities emerging at some of our customers in France and Germany and away from home, as restrictions start to ease, are reopening.

Some of our large QSR franchise customers continue to look to open. A lot of our on-the-go, away-from-home customers are starting to look at how they can reopen for takeaway only. We're starting to see more signs of that, and probably the revenue stream that will come a bit later in the recovery is probably gonna be restaurants and bars, as I think many governments are struggling with how to do that in an appropriate way with social distancing, et cetera.

But you know, as each week goes on, on the revenue side, we are seeing more conversations around opportunities coming out of the easing of restrictions. And then, obviously, we'll be able to share with you over time, you know, how quick that recovery really gets momentum based on how consumers and shoppers respond, but more to come on that. I'll just hand back to you, Nik.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah. So I think, you know, building on Damian's comments, and obviously, these are the trends that we're seeing, which is the way we look at Q2. So clearly, the adverse leverage is on that manufacturing element and depreciation element. So if you look at our cost of sales, you know, just over EUR 7 billion, if you're talking about 15% of that, that is your, you know,

your base against which you've got a much lower volume and revenue impact coming from both the channel mix piece as well as the pack shifts that we're seeing in home. That's what we need to look at from a modeling perspective. As Damian said, clearly, as we see trends change with, you know, some of the lockdowns easing, some of the other-...

Type of outlets that we're looking at in terms of where traffic might start building up and how we can get our product in there. All of those will obviously start helping back if we look beyond, you know, June to the next couple of quarters post that, the recovery piece, and we'll update you as we go along, on that.

Simon Hales (Managing Director of Consumer Staples & Beverages Research)

Brilliant. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Robert Ottenstein from Evercore ISI. Your line is open.

Robert Ottenstein (Senior Managing Director and Head of Global Beverages and Household Products Team)

Great. Thank you very much. Look, obviously, you need to give your customers and consumers what you want, what they want, in this period, and you're clearly doing that. But, you know, in some respect, that's a little bit of a reversal from, you know, the strategy in terms of more premium packs and mini cans.

How can you sort of manage the situation so that, you know, the reversal isn't more permanent and that habits aren't kind of reversed in a sense, and that, you know, when you come out of this, you know, the more positive trend in terms of price mix remains? And then second, do you have any sense, you know, in terms of consumer consumption, you know, as people are more at home, how much of their daily consumption of beverages has transitioned to tap water? Thank you.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thank you, Robert. I suppose on your first question, you know, the analogy I'd give is, you know, what you miss is what you value the most. And I think that the consumer demand and desire for the premium packs and the small packs that has been so prevalent, there's no reason why that won't return. I mean, I think we've spent a lot of time building preference for those packs, and we're still selling them today.

So if you visit any of the large retailers, you will find our small mini cans and our glass packs still available. So clearly in the crisis, stocking up with larger packs is more prevalent, but that's not to say that we're still not offering those premium packs. So we'd expect that habit of preference to come back.

We'll also, you know, in our recovery plans, are thinking about how we will encourage that. So we're not obviously gonna leave it a chance. So with the Coke Company, you know, we are looking at how do we, you know, make sure that post-crisis, the momentum we had in those mini cans, glass packaging, returns as quickly as possible.

And from a consumer perspective, I see nothing that will be different post-crisis than pre, and that's something that we need to avail of. In terms of consumption, as you can appreciate, it's very hard to get accurate data in terms of what people are drinking at home.

You know, from our perspective, our water business is down, but again, our water business is quite different in terms of it's more of a immediate consumption-built business with smartwater, et cetera, more premium. So we would expect that to decline, you know, based on the fact that people are not out and about. But generally, too early to say, you know, what the mix of in-home consumption looks like.

That's something that as household panel data hopefully starts to come through, we'll get a better line of sight on. But I would imagine it's a fair assumption that if people are at home, they would probably, you know, particularly in Europe, drink tap water, which in most of our markets is, you know, high quality and very acceptable.

Won't really affect our business in that space, because as you know, we don't have a large future consumption home water business anyway, so that's how I'd see it. But obviously, a few weeks in, it's hard to get accurate data. That will come out over time.

Robert Ottenstein (Senior Managing Director and Head of Global Beverages and Household Products Team)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Brian Spillane from Bank of America. Your line is open.

Brian Spillane (Managing Director Equity Research)

Hey, thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. So just two quick ones for me. Nik, can you remind us, just mechanically with the incidence price model, how quickly you recognize in your P&L the shift in packaging? Is there any lag, I guess, in between as the packaging mix changes, between when that happens and when you'd recognize it?

And then the second, if you could just touch on, I think you touched briefly on maybe on uncollectible receivables. If you could just talk about maybe the scope or the potential impact of, especially with smaller customers, is there a potential that a write-down or a charge down the road for uncollectible receivables? Thanks.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah, thanks, Brian. So, on the first question in relation to incidence, that is real time. If you recall, that was one of the issues that we had always highlighted pre-formation of CCEP that didn't work very well because there was a one, sometimes a 12- to 18-month timeline. So in this instance, this is fully real time, so we literally do a forecast every month based on what has happened, and then adjust in for the rest of the year.

So no issues there. There's an equal sharing of risk and reward, and that's what really drives the benefit of the incidence model, because it drives the right behavior and everybody's equally incentivized to do the right thing for the market in terms of what the consumer wants. On the receivable side, obviously, we assess that.

Today, our teams, which we have in Sofia, working very closely with the business units, and we put very strong governance routines in place to ensure that anything from an extension of credit, given some of the trading issues with some of our customers, are being approved by the CFO and the head of commercial in each BU, and I get a summary each week to take a look at that.

Clearly, there are customers who are not trading with us, and we're monitoring those balances. Having said that, I would also call to your attention that we have strong credit coverage in place, and we would expect that we should be able to collect that from the insurers as well.

But, at this point, you know, I can't give you a clear number because we do expect every of those customers to come back and want to start trading with us. And, but we're monitoring that. But again, I would call out that we do have solid credit insurance in place against this as well.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Yeah, thanks, Nik. And just one comment, Brian. In that space, I think the work we've done on free cash flow focus since we created CCEP has really helped us because clearly one of the areas that we spent a lot of time on was managing receivables and getting a lot of transparency around the receivable position and reducing it in many cases. So that's certainly helping us as we look at that challenge. Thank you.

Brian Spillane (Managing Director Equity Research)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Fintan Ryan from J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.

Fintan Ryan (Equity Research Analyst)

Good afternoon, gentlemen. It's actually just a follow on, two questions. Firstly, just a follow on from the last question. So in terms of your working capital position for the full year, obviously there's a lot of moving parts around receivables, but would you also expect by the end of the

year, their inventory position to be even with where you are, or are you, with your new business plan going forward, or should your thinking about working capital change? With that, with the reduction in CapEx, as well as the reduction in the operating costs you've highlighted, could you still get to around EUR 1 billion of free cash?

Then just quickly, the second question, how much of your sales in some of your markets, like France and Spain, or Iberia, would be related to tourism trends, particularly as we think of what would normally be the peak summer season in Q2, Q3? Thank you.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thanks, Fintan. Maybe I'll answer the second question first and then hand back to Nik. Yeah. So obviously, tourism is a big part of the economy in France and Spain, and particularly Spain. So, you know, we're factoring that into what we're seeing at the moment. And clearly, that starts quite early, so even in Easter.

So I think the ranges that we've shared with you today are on a base that also includes tourism. So, and you can see from our Spanish business, we've got a, you know, a very high proportion of away from home business, predominantly tourism. So, you know, we'd expect that to be impacted as we move through, particularly the second quarter.

And then, like, I suppose everybody, we're looking to see what will happen with restrictions and potentially people taking the opportunity to take holidays in Q3 and beyond. So at the moment, you know, we're seeing that it's in the ranges we've given today on revenue. And obviously, we're very much aware of that. And Nik, maybe I'll hand back over to you in terms of the working capital question.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah. So, you know, again, coming back to actually Damian's point in terms of the working capital, we've done a tremendous job over the last three years, and I think that's given us a solid base from which we've worked. So there was a lot of work done on making sure that past due receivables, making sure that everything that we could do to clean out in terms of customer disputes, et cetera, have been done.

So I think we're working from a really good base, as you recall, from what we did on the receivable side. So we keep monitoring that risk. It's early to give a clear indication, but I would expect that there will be some drag on free cash flow from the working capital piece this year.

But I don't think something that is permanent. Very much temporary as we look at potentially supporting our customers as we come out of this crisis, but also protecting ourselves to ensure that we don't have any potential additional write-offs, if any, that come from this. So I think we will see some drag on working capital, but it would primarily be on the receivable side.

I wouldn't expect anything on the inventory side because we're managing that today quite well, but obviously wanna be focused on recovery. In terms of your question on free cash flow, I think it's very early to give you any kind of guidance. As we've said, we've withdrawn guidance.

Currently, we're focused on making sure we're preserving cash, so we've taken all the right measures, whether it be around some of the deferrals that we've done on CapEx and everything that we've done also in terms of buyback and, you know, just pausing on dividends for the moment. But we'll come back and give you updates on that.

I think, you know, Damian and I have a very, very strong focus on preserving free cash flow, and that remains a priority alongside everything that we do on the revenue recovery. So I think we'll try and make sure we get that balance right, very much like we demonstrated over the last three years as well. So I don't think anything's gonna change in terms of our focus on that.

Fintan Ryan (Equity Research Analyst)

Great. Thank you. Very clear, both.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Niko von Stackelberg from Liberum. Your line is open.

Niko von Stackelberg (Equity Research Analyst)

Hi, good afternoon, gentlemen. My first question is just with the build of the working capital going into the summer and as well as the difficult trading with COVID-19. I would imagine that this month or next month is probably gonna be the peak demands on your cash. Could you just tell me how much headroom you have in terms of liquidity?

Or whichever month it is that is, you know, I guess, the most severe, just so we know how much headroom you have. Then the next two questions are probably a little bit easier. On the OpEx savings, you know, the EUR 200 million-EUR 250 million, does that include the SKU reduction benefit? I wasn't quite sure.

And then finally, because you've given the COGS breakdown and SG&A in terms of fixed versus variable, we can pretty easily come to a margin impact based on the volumes, but we don't have the margin impact from product mix. Can you at all quantify the product mix headwind as we move away from IC and single serve? Thanks.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Okay.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thank you, Niko. Those three questions are good, and they're good because I'm gonna allow Nik answer all of them. So thank you, Niko. Over to you, Nik.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah, sure. I'm not sure which one to answer than the other, but I'll try and answer them all. So just in terms of your question, I think you're absolutely right. As we typically go into the summer selling season, we're building up stock. That's when we typically have the most impact on the working capital.

Having said that, obviously, we're not in build-up mode as we want to continue seeing what the recovery is. But I would still say to you, April and May are probably those months where we would see that peak. Having said that, our liquidity positions are pretty much what I highlighted to you during the prepared remarks, which is, you know, we have an undrawn revolving credit facility of €1.5 billion.

We have the commercial paper program of EUR 1.5 billion, against which we've drawn about EUR 600 million. So, you know, any access to those are not in any way limited by month, and I can draw on all that I need to make sure that there's ample liquidity, so I wouldn't be concerned from that angle at all.

In terms of the OpEx savings, yes, it does include the benefits of SKU rationalization, and that is something, as Damian very rightfully said, we're challenging the business as we come out of this recovery as well, how fast do we come back with some of those?

Are some of those really things that we require for the long term to bring a lot more simplicity back into our supply chain, because clearly we're seeing some benefits from that as well. Then lastly, on the margin elements, I mean, essentially, if you look at our gross profit in the away from home versus the home channel, it varies by market, as you can imagine, but you're probably looking at, you know, a margin that's about 1.2-1.25 times higher in the away from home channel versus the home.

When you go down to what we call full delivered margin, which also takes into account what would be some of the direct costs, which include obviously some of the elements of our DSD model or deliveries, et cetera, that happen, then that comes down probably to about one point ten to one point fifteen times. So just to give you a sense over that. Hope that helps.

Niko von Stackelberg (Equity Research Analyst)

No, I wasn't asking so much about channel. I'm asking more about product mix. So as we move to away from single serve and immediate consumption products, there's gonna be a product margin headwind, and I was wondering if you can quantify that. The channel headwinds are pretty clear.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah, the channel headwinds are in some ways representative of that as well, because, you know, clearly, typically what you're gonna find is largely immediate consumption packs being sold in the away from home. So if you think about the fact that there are some immediate consumption packs that are going into the home channel, that's a good proxy for now. We don't give any-

Niko von Stackelberg (Equity Research Analyst)

I see. Okay, thank you.

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Detail around that. Yep.

Niko von Stackelberg (Equity Research Analyst)

Okay, thanks.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from the line of Charlie Higgs from Redburn. Your line is open.

Charlie Higgs (Director)

Hi there, it's Chris Pitcher from Redburn. Two quick questions, hopefully. Could you talk a little bit about the promotional environment? And while I appreciate that the gross margin will be lower in home, it looks like quite a lot of promotions being pulled, so whether how much that goes to offset the negative mix.

And then secondly, looking beyond COVID and the recovery, you put out in the German capital markets day, the bigger away from home opportunity. Does that still stand? Do you think it will take longer to deliver on that as perhaps people return to work slower, outlets reduce capacity and the like? Could you talk a little bit about the longer term planning?

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Hi, Chris, thank you. On promotions, I would imagine and what we're seeing is that the initial drop-off in the level of promo intensity is starting to unwind. So I think at the beginning of the crisis, there was obviously a massive peak of demand in retailers, and it made sense at that time to roll back some promotional activity because clearly the priority was to maintain stock on shelf.

And in some countries like Belgium, there was even like an industry mandate not to promote. But all of those decisions now have been more or less reversed, and you see the home market, you know, promotional calendar starting to look more normalized. And as you can appreciate, as the market moves much more into the home market, I'd expect that promotions, as in a normal year, will become, and are becoming more part of the day-to-day business.

So, obviously, we'll continue to look at if we are promoting, what packs we're promoting, how do we do it smartly, how do we get a good IRR, and what makes sense from a financial perspective. But I think the market will continue to operate competitively anyway, and therefore, promotions will pretty much remain as before. There might be some slight decrease, but that's really been at the beginning, and I see that changing as people kind of get used to more normalized volumes in the home market.

On the away from home, I think the opportunity as we laid out in Germany, and unfortunately we were looking forward to our capital markets day this year, where we would have given a bit more color around that opportunity. I think it still remains. I think, you know, the structural opportunity that away from home represents long-term in our business remains. I think it's a fair question on, you know, how much time have we maybe lost in capturing it due to the crisis. So for me, it's more about, you know, will it take a little bit longer to get there?

Clearly, as we look at 2021, and, you know, we would expect a bigger recovery just with the comps that we'd see coming from this year, assuming that restrictions and some of the social measures are eased as we go through the end of this year and into 2021. So I think it's there. I mean, will people eat out less forever?

Will they, you know, not enjoy going to bars or restaurants? I think that's a big call to take at this moment. I think people, in some ways, may value that more, given it's been taken away from them for the last four to six weeks. But, you know, let's see.

But ultimately, you know, the opportunity was immense, so even if it's 5% lower than we originally thought, it certainly still gives us a lot of headroom for value creation based on what we shared with you in Germany.

Charlie Higgs (Director)

Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Your final question comes from the line of Eric Wilmer from ABN AMRO. Your line is open.

Eric Wilmer (Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Hi, good afternoon. One question from my side. A number of European countries have introduced employment benefits, providing partial compensation for labor costs. I was wondering, to what extent CCEP is making use of such benefit schemes? Thank you.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Thank you, Eric. We are, you know, and have looked at that since the crisis began, you know, and we have used short-term working schemes previously in markets like Germany and in the Nordics. So at the moment, we have looked at schemes in Norway, Sweden, Germany, and Belgium. We are currently not participating in schemes in Spain, GB, or France, but it's obviously something that we continue to look at.

It's not a big part of what we're doing to mitigate our costs, and it's something that we look at on a case-by-case basis. But you know, as we look at some of the schemes that clearly being implemented by governments with a view, certainly in some of the larger markets, more towards businesses that have completely ceased trading or are undergoing significant reductions.

I mean, while we're in a challenged situation, we are fortunate that a large part of our business still operates. You know, we're still manufacturing, we're still making, moving, and merchandising product. And as things start to hopefully look more positive with the easing of restrictions, we'll be putting more people back to work, anyway, so we'll keep looking at it.

It's very small for us at the moment. I'd imagine that we'll probably stay in that range, but we'll take it on a case-by-case basis as we see this crisis evolve in the coming weeks, but at the moment, it's not a big part of our plan.

Eric Wilmer (Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Okay, very clear. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Your-

Damian Gammell (CEO)

We got one more question, operator, or was that the last question, I think?

Operator (participant)

One more question did come in. You have a follow-up from Niko von Stackelberg from Liberum. Your line is open.

Niko von Stackelberg (Equity Research Analyst)

Hi there. Yeah, just a sort of a similar follow-up question. Are you making use of VAT deferral schemes? That can be quite material, I imagine, particularly in the UK. Thanks.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

Nik, you wanna take that one?

Manik Jhangiani (CFO)

Yeah, sure. We have looked at those, and that is a part of some of the schemes that we're just looking at to manage our cash flows. But I don't think that comes at really any cost to you know, any of the governments, but we have looked at that to manage our cash flows and our liquidity.

Niko von Stackelberg (Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you.

Damian Gammell (CEO)

So thank you, and operator, we'll now just move to some closing remarks. So again, I'd like to thank everybody for joining our call today. I'd also like to take this opportunity to thank our customers and our employees who continue to support our business. We are very much in response mode and recover.

I think we've responded very quickly, with speed and agility and with full alignment with the Coca-Cola Company. It's a great business, it's a great category, and we're a strong company, and we continue to focus on our great brands, great service, and great people. And as Nik has highlighted today, we've got a very strong balance sheet and very good liquidity.

We are now looking forward to the recovery phase and to the sustain phase, where we can get back to delivering sustainable shareholder value, maintain our strong focus on cash, and continue to build our business for growth, into the medium and long term. So thank you, everybody, and I trust everybody stays well and safe, and we look forward to our next call together. Thank you very much.

Operator (participant)

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating, and have a wonderful day.