Celsius - Q3 2023
November 7, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Greetings, and welcome to Celsius's Third Quarter 2023 Financial Results. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Cameron Donahue, Investor Relations for Celsius Holdings. Thank you. You may begin.
Cameron Donahue (Head of Investor Relations)
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today for Celsius Holdings' third quarter 2023 earnings conference call. Joining me on the call today are John Fieldly, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Jarrod Langhans, Chief Financial Officer. Following the prepared remarks, we'll open the call to your questions at that time. The company released its third quarter earnings press release early this morning, and all materials are available on the company's website, celsiusholdingsinc.com, as well as on the SEC's website, sec.gov. As a reminder, before I turn the call to John, an audio replay will be available later today and can be accessed with the same live webcast link in our conference call announcement press release.
Please also be aware that this call may contain forward-looking statements, which are based on forecast, expectations, and other information available to management as of November 7th, 2023. These statements involve numerous risks and uncertainties, including many that are beyond the company's control. Except to the extent as required by law, Celsius Holdings undertakes no obligations and disclaims any duty to update any of these forward-looking statements. We encourage you to review in full our safe harbor statements contained in today's press release and our quarterly filings with the SEC for additional information. Additionally, management will share operating results on both the GAAP basis and on a non-GAAP basis.
Descriptions of those non-GAAP financial measures that we use, such as non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA and reconciliations of these measures to our results as reported in accordance to GAAP, are detailed in our earnings press release for the third quarter of 2023. With that, I'll turn the call to our President and Chief Executive Officer, John Fieldly, for his prepared remarks. John?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thank you, Cameron. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Celsius achieved record sales in the third quarter that totaled approximately $385 million, up 104% from $188 million for the prior year, third quarter. This was driven predominantly by North America revenue, which increased 107%-$371 million, up from $180 million for the prior year, third quarter. Celsius continues to be the top driver of growth in the energy category, both in dollars and units through tracked channels.
Celsius is the number one dollar and unit growth brand over the last 52 weeks per IRI, Total U.S. MULO Energy category data, ending October 8, 2023, growing approximately $950 million incremental dollars, up 144% versus year ago, while representing 28% of all category dollar growth. In addition, our unit growth totaled 289.2 million incremental units, an increase of 114% versus a year ago, and totaled 39% of all category unit growth. Per IRI, in the 4 weeks period ending October 8, 2023, in MULO, Celsius is the number three energy drink brand in the U.S., with approximately a 10.5 share market share, more than doubling its 4.4 share in the same period last year.
This dollar growth on 10.5% share has not been achieved in the last decade. We continue to see growth across all channels, both tracked and non-tracked, with our club channel sales totaling approximately $63.2 million for the quarter ending September 30th, up 83.3% year-over-year, compared to $34.5 million for the prior period, third quarter. Per Stackline on Amazon, over the last 14 weeks, ending September 30th, 2023, Celsius is now the best-selling energy drink on Amazon, with approximately a 21.4% share in the energy category, ahead of Monster at an 18.6% share and Red Bull at a 13% share. Our third quarter, 2023, Amazon sales total approximately $22.2 million versus $15.6 million for the year-ago period, an increase of approximately 42%.
Celsius is now the number one energy drink brand on Instacart and continues to outpace the category growth as the largest and fastest-growing brand on the platform. We continue to expand our growth opportunities and non-track food service channels and are gaining more distribution points at colleges, universities, hospitals, hotels, eateries, casinos, and more. Overall, food service continues to exceed approximately 10% of our PepsiCo revenues, and we see this area as an opportunity for further growth and scale. We are extremely happy with our PepsiCo partnership, and we believe there is a long runway ahead of growth across a variety of channels, including expanding at retail, convenience, and in food service.
During the quarter in food service, I'd like to highlight that Celsius is now available in over 2,000 Jersey Mike's locations across the United States, and we've now gained authorization in over 3,000 Dunkin' Donuts nationwide. This illustrates the many unique usage occasions that we are seeing and our customers are enjoying our Celsius products. As highlighted in earnings supplement, per IRI, for the four-week period ending October 8, 2023, we have increased our market share in MULO by approximately 138% to a 10.5 share, which has not been achieved in the energy category over the past decade, versus a 4.4% share in the prior year period. In MULO, Celsius grew its ACV to a 95.6% versus 72.1% year-over-year....
In convenience, Celsius gained an additional 22.6% of ACV growth versus the prior year period ending and resides at approximately a 95.6% of ACV, compared with a 73% of ACV in the prior year. This provides tremendous opportunities as we continue to grow customer awareness and our national availability. International sales grew approximately 56% in the third quarter, totaling $13.6 million, compared to $8.7 million in the third quarter of 2022, driven in large part by successful innovation launches, increased velocity, and brand awareness. The first major international market in which we plan to expand to under the PepsiCo umbrella is Canada, expected to launch in the first quarter of 2024.
We believe there are significant opportunities for incremental growth over the next 3-5 years as we execute our international expansion blueprint in a handful of countries in 2024, with opportunities for further expansion in 2025, 2026, and beyond. We expect to provide additional details as we get closer to these dates. Beyond new markets, we are very excited about a number of our innovative launches that our team has created and been working through, including our recent launch of our newest Vibe flavor, Cosmic Vibe, a great-tasting, sparkling fruit punch flavor, which is out of this world and is now available at Circle K. In addition, just recently in November, we launched a new 16-ounce line, Celsius Essentials, which is exclusively available initially at 7-Eleven through the remainder of 2023, with a nationwide rollout planned in 2024.
Celsius Essentials is formulated for fitness enthusiasts looking to elevate their performance. Each can of Celsius Essentials contains 270 milligrams of caffeine, our essential aminos, as well as our proprietary blend, providing you with a combination of enhanced physical performance and cognitive benefits. This new line comes in four great-tasting flavors: Blue Crush, Cherry Limeade, Dragonberry, and Orangesicle. Net income attributed to common shareholders totaled $70.5 million in the quarter, or $0.89 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $186.5 million, or a net loss of $2.46 per diluted share. The prior year losses were primarily driven by termination expenses as we moved from our prior distribution network to the PepsiCo distribution system.
Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA increased 318% to approximately $104 million in the quarter, compared to $25 million in the prior year period, driven substantially by revenue growth and increases in margins and our continued leverage across our SG&A. Our record non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter represented approximately 27% of sales. This was driven by gross margin improvements of 860 basis points from the prior year ago to approximately 50.4% gross profit versus 41.8%. In addition, we saw a combination of leverage across our sales and marketing, totaling approximately 19.1% of sales in the third quarter, compared to 23%, adjusted for distributor termination expenses in the prior year period.
G&A, general and administrative expenses, totaled approximately 6% in the third quarter, compared to 14.6% of sales in the prior year period. Jarrod will cover these items in more detail shortly. Our distribution partner, PepsiCo, continues to facilitate ACV expansion, supporting new customer acquisitions across broad demographics and new usage occasions. Going forward, we expect that our key incremental growth drivers are expected to be increasing our SKUs, our flavors, and facings at retail, improving shelf placements, more placements in stores, secondary placements, and Celsius-branded cooler placements, as well as expanded the independent convenience expansion initiatives, as well as food service and increasing our velocities at shelf. In recent calls, I've also cited South Florida as an example of what a more developed, mature market can look like.
Over the last 4 weeks, as of October 8, 2023, per IRI, Celsius in South Florida market share was approximately 24.1%. At the beginning of January 2023, our market share was 17.7%. This shows the strong market share and growth the Celsius brand has achieved in the South Florida market, as well as the opportunities that we see in a broader market as we look for national U.S. availability, as we continue to roll out into further locations and improve our placements at retail as well as our velocities. To conclude my prepared remarks, Celsius continues to lead both on a dollar and unit growth basis in the energy category.
The leverage in our operating model is becoming more apparent, with incremental growth highlighted by our 104% sales growth in the third quarter, delivering over a 300% Adjusted EBITDA growth. Our customers have been growing the category, both in demographics and usage occasions, increasing their dollar spend on Celsius. I also want to highlight the Celsius team and the amazing job they're doing. We have added over 200 new full-time and part-time employees during the third quarter. Developing our world-class team continues to position Celsius to execute against our growth opportunities that we see in front of us while driving operational leverage to unlock greater shareholder value. I'll now turn the call over to Jarrod Langhans, our Chief Financial Officer, for his prepared remarks. Jarrod?
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Thank you, John, and thank you all for joining us this morning. It was another great quarter where we continued to exceed both internal and external expectations. Not only are we continuing to benefit from the distribution system of Pepsi, but we are also delivering on increased SKU count, improved placement, increased displays, and continuous improvement within velocities. We plan to continue investment in our growth in Q4 and beyond. In addition, we have seen the benefits of leverage across our business with gross margins, operating margins, and EBITDA margins all improving. As we announced last week, the company initiated a three-for-one forward stock split, and we expect that the common stock will trade on a split-adjusted basis, commencing with the opening of trading on the Nasdaq Capital Market on November 15th, 2023. Turning to our third quarter financial highlights.
Revenue for the three months ended September 30th, 2023, was approximately $385 million, an increase of 104% from $188 million from the same period in 2022. North American third quarter revenues were $371 million, an increase of 107% from the same period in 2022. International revenue grew 56%-$14 million, as we saw a recovery from the challenging environment that existed in the prior year. We attribute our sales volume growth for the quarter compared to 2022 to several key drivers, including a successful integration into the Pepsi distribution system, which has resulted in broader availability, increased SKU mix, and improved placement.
We're also benefiting from robust expansion in our traditional distribution channels and club channels, with SKU increases and placement improvements, all contributing. Moreover, our products are now found in several new channels within C&G and food service. As discussed in the prior year, there was a pipe fill in Q3 2022. We also had growth in inventory at our distributor in Q3 of 2023, which was an offset to the prior year pipe fill. As a result, inventory was not a significant component of the year-over-year percentage increase. Increased product availability has improved the success rate of our promotional activities. For the third quarter of 2023, the company received updated information related to promotional activity across our footprint and evaluated this data in conjunction with recent trends and activity, which resulted in improvements and adjustments to our promotional allowance accrual.
As a result, despite increasing our promotional activity during the 100 Days of Summer campaign as a percentage of revenue, the promotional spend was consistent with the prior year period. Gross profit for the third quarter increased 147%-$194 million, up from $79 million in the prior year period. Gross profit margins in the quarter were approximately 50% of revenues, compared to approximately 42% for the prior year third quarter. The improvement is attributed to lower package and raw material costs, as well as improved waste and freight lane efficiency. Sales and marketing expenses for the quarter were approximately $73 million, a decrease of approximately 63% compared to the third quarter of 2022.
The decrease was due to prior year costs associated with the termination of legacy distributors as a part of the transition to the Pepsi network. Adjusting for last year's termination expense, marketing and sales investment increased in the quarter, while SKU count, distribution, and velocity budgets outperformed, delivering good leverage across the sales and marketing expense lines. As a percentage of sales, sales and marketing was 19%, compared to 23% in the prior year, adjusted for distributor termination expenses. We plan to continue investment in our sales and marketing, with increased planned spend as a percentage of sales in the fourth quarter to execute strategic seasonal investment programs with our distribution partner. General and administrative expenses for the quarter were approximately $23 million, a decrease of 17% relative to Q3 2022.
This decrease was due to the impact of timing of legal settlements and the Func Food's brands impairment in Q3 2022. Moving to a few comments around quarter-over-quarter activity to provide some additional insight into our recent activity. Revenue for the third quarter increased sequentially by 18%, driven by distribution gains across tracked and untracked channels, as well as SKUs per location and SKU placement. In addition to these drivers, we benefited from some inventory building within our primary distributor, as well as from adjustments to our promotional allowances, with some offsets to our growth as a result of mix within our SKUs and channels. An estimate of the impact of inventory, promos, and SKU channel mix compared to Q2, would have been roughly $20 million.
Gross profit dollars increased by 22%, and gross margin improved by 165 basis points sequentially from the second quarter, driven by positive adjustments to our promotional allowance accounts as we maintained our leverage across raw materials, freight, and scrap rates. Excluding the promotional allowance benefit, we would have had gross profit margins consistent with Q2. Looking at the first three quarters of the year, revenue for the nine months ended September 30th was approximately $971 million, an increase of 104% from $476 million for the nine months ended September 30th, 2022, driven by our North American business. North America year-to-date revenues were $931 million, an increase of 108% from the same period in 2022.
International revenue grew 46%-$40 million in the first nine months of 2023. Gross profit for the first nine months of this year increased 143%-$467 million, up from $192 million in the prior year period. Gross profit margins in the first nine months were approximately 48% of revenues, compared to approximately 40% for the prior year period. The improvement in gross profit margin is attributed to lower package and raw material costs and improved freight lane efficiency. As things stand today, we would expect Q4 gross profit margin to be consistent with the Q2 and full year margin profile.
As a percentage of sales, sales and marketing was 19% in the first nine months of 2023, compared to 22% in the prior year period, adjusted for distributor termination expenses. G&A expense as a percentage of sales was 8% for the first nine months of 2023 versus 11% in the prior year. Focusing now on liquidity and capital resources. As of September thirtieth, we had cash in excess of $760 million and net working capital in excess of $879 million. Cash flows provided by operating activities totaled $136 million for the nine months ended September thirtieth, which compares to $171 million in net cash provided by operating activities for the same prior year period.
The change in cash generation was driven by an increase in net income, offset by working capital and timing benefits of transactions associated with the Pepsi share purchase and distribution agreement in 2022. Looking at inventory, total inventory in the third quarter of 2023 ended at $199 million, up approximately $46 million from the quarter ended June 30th, 2023. This was driven in large part by increases that we saw in our sales volume, in addition to increases associated with innovation inventory building ahead of January launches. Going forward, we will continue to monitor inventory to ensure we are able to keep up with the growth we are expecting. At the same time, we do see opportunities to drive efficiencies in our DIO as we move into 2024. This concludes our prepared remarks.
Operator, you may now open the call for questions. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, you may press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. Our first question comes from the line of Mark Astrachan with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
Mark Astrachan (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Yeah, thanks. Morning, everyone. I guess maybe to start, just on distribution points, any sort of benchmark you can give? Obviously, the growth has been significant, but how do we think about it in terms of where it can go? Like, if you look at where Celsius' total distribution points are versus Monster and Red Bull, they're about 50% of those two brands. If you look at convenience stores as an example, your current distribution footprint is about 20% less than where Bang was at peak distribution.
You know, so, so any sort of color you can give on kind of where you think the right level of distribution can be, maybe longer term, holistically and, and in a sort of shorter term line of sight as you head into 2024, particularly given fall and, and then spring resets? Thanks.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah. Thank you, Mark. I, you know, when you look at the distribution points, we look at kind of the peers that we're looking up to. Obviously, it's Monster and Red Bull. So, you know, over time, that is our goal, and objective is to achieve those maximum distribution points, which the two leaders have in the category. I think we're still in the, you know, an earlier phase in the, as we in the growth cycle, and the opportunities will continue to evolve upon resets, as we continue to evolve through 2024 and beyond. I think when you look at, you know, the, the average points of distribution, when you look at we're right around 95.6, really need to continue to work on the total breadth within the distribution points.
We just got done, finished with NACS last month, which was a great show, probably the best show in company history. A lot of excitement around some of our new innovation of our core flavors, as well as further expansion upon our VIBE flavors, as well as the launch of our Celsius Essentials line. So, that's our peer group. We expect over time, and our goal and objective is to have the same points of distribution as Red Bull and Monster.
Mark Astrachan (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Okay, that's helpful. And then looking at the Amazon and Costco sales in the quarter, you know, they were a little bit slower, I think, sequentially, in terms of rate of growth than they were in 2Q. I get it's a bit of a challenge to try to model that from where we all sit, but anything that you can call out there that may have played into that would be helpful too, please.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah, I think, I mean, you got to look at each customer differently, somewhat differently in different channels. They also... You're looking at a singular customer versus, you know, a category or a channel. So I think, modeling it out, it does get a little bit challenging. In regards to Amazon, when you look at the lumpiness that was in the quarter, from Q2-Q3, when we dove into the data, it really was looking at a Prime, you know, somewhat of a Prime build in Q2, due to Prime taking place June eleventh and twelfth, which was really successful for us. So we did have some lumpiness there, when looking at Amazon specifically.
Then when you look at the, you know, the club channel, which is mainly Costco and Sam's, because these days we reported through IRI. When looking at that specifically, there is some lumpiness between the two customers on load-ins. This could be some seasonality at the end of the quarter. But both of our businesses are extremely strong in both those channels. And on Amazon, we actually gained over 2 points of share, which is, you know, last quarter, when we reported on the second quarter, we finished our share number at 18.6, and we just came in at 21.4. So almost within a quarter, we gained over 200 basis points in share. So that's a really great achievement.
The teams have been working really hard, and we had a great Prime Day as well, so that's great to see. Also on, on the club business continues to be a really strong business, and we don't really see that slowing down. We see great opportunities to further leverage additional pack sizes as we continue to scale within the club channel.
Mark Astrachan (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Thank you.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thank you, Mark.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Gerald Pascarelli with Wedbush. Please proceed with your question.
Gerald Pascarelli (SVP)
Great. Thank you very much. Good morning. I just had a question on Pepsi's current inventory levels. You've been in the system for a little over a year now. It looks like you've built inventory in Q3. Just some color on what you expect to happen with these inventory levels, you know, in the fourth quarter as we approach a low seasonality quarter ahead of winter. Do you expect any changes in their number of days on hand, or is there nothing to suggest that, you know, there will be any incremental changes, you know, in their current inventory levels? Thank you.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
... Yeah, Gerald, that's a great question, and we're really cycling our first, you know, full year with them, with the PepsiCo selling their first case in October. But I'll turn that question over to Jarrod.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, good morning. You know, as we look last year, it was, it was difficult to really, kind of peg whether inventories were, were pulled down or it was just a matter of seasonality. You know, as we look now, we do have some innovation that we've filled the pipeline with, so we are ready, from that perspective. But at the end of the day, the, the Pepsi team would have to determine if they're gonna do any kind of management around the, the inventory as they're going into Q1. I will say we are excited as we move into 2024, but there's no guarantees in terms of, of the inventory management from that perspective.
Gerald Pascarelli (SVP)
Understood. Thank you. Next question is just on gross margin. Obviously, it looks like you're gonna end the year in the high 40s%. Jarrod, I know you've previously referenced, you know, a mid- to high 40s% kind of medium-term outlook. Does this outperformance that we've seen in the last two quarters maybe change your medium-term outlook on how to think about gross margin, or do you still expect it to remain volatile, given that, you know, the focus is to continue to gain market share and stretch rate, if you need to, in certain instances? Any color there would be great. Thank you.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, I think, you know, as things stand today, knock on wood, from a raw material perspective, we have captured a lot of savings this year, and so that's, that's been pretty consistent for the last few quarters. We have also maintained our outbound freight number for the last few quarters. Obviously, we know that fuel costs can spike at any point in time. That can cause some some pain down the road. So, I, I don't know that I'm ready to call the the fuel or the outbound freight line as a a lock. We are pretty comfortable where commodities stand today with what we've seen from a raw material perspective. So I think our raw material costs in kind of Q2 and Q3 should remain steady as we go into 2024.
There is still that freight line, though, that could cause some fluctuations. I think the operations team, you know, did a fantastic job this year in really cleaning up the scrap and any kind of waste. Really have done a great job with the aged inventory. Really did a great job really tightening up the cost of raw materials, and they've really managed the freight lanes, especially the last two quarters, superbly. So hats off to those guys for that. And, you know, our goal is to keep it up. Not sure how much more we can squeeze out of where we were going into 2024. We'll definitely shoot for it, but, you know, there's no guarantees. But we are really in great shape as we're moving into 2024.
Gerald Pascarelli (SVP)
Super, super helpful color. Thanks a lot, guys.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Vivien Azer with TD Cowen. Please proceed with your question.
Vivien Azer (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hi. Thank you. Good morning. Earlier in the Q&A, you commented on the importance of resets as one of the factors to drive continued growth and leverage the Pepsi relationship. Last quarter, you commented that the conversations were early into 2024, and you talked about a couple of different categories where energy might be sourcing share. I was hoping you could just provide an update on your conversations with key retailers around shelf resets for 2024. Thank you.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah. Yeah, Vivien, morning. And it's, you know, we're still, you know, retailers are still defining their sets for next year, but we had probably one of the most successful NACS, you know, that the company has had in history. There's a lot of great excitement. I think when you look at what just happened, currently this week, when you look at 7-Eleven taking four SKUs of our Celsius Essentials line, it just shows you nationwide, chain-wide. Also, if you go to a 7-Eleven right now, you'll see signage in front of every 7-Eleven, as well as gas pump activity as well. So really excited with the way the partnerships are going with our key accounts. You know, we've been...
So we have a great key accounts team, best in class. We've had early conversations with every one of our major retailers. So, we're pretty excited on where we sit heading into the new year on resets. We expect to gain distribution, expanded distribution in our existing flavors, as well as further expanding the new innovation we have in store for 2024. So the team's been working really hard. We've been working really closely with Pepsi as well to make sure we're gonna have really our - this is really heading into our first year of a strategic partnership, really launching our innovation on a nationwide basis, versus if you go back last year, keep in mind, we just started with Pepsi late in Q4. You know, our plans and strategies weren't really aligned with their AOP process.
We came in on the very tail end of that, so we were really trying to make up ground all year on the innovative launches. So we're looking to have strategic prioritization periods within PepsiCo focus within quarters and months. So I think it's gonna be really successful. You know, time will tell. We'll have to wait until probably about March, April, to be able to start to see the additional expansion show up in the IRI scan data. But the team feels pretty, pretty excited on where we stand, and there's a lot of great excitement. Being the number one driver of both dollars and units in the category is really impressive to see in a brand like Celsius.
Vivien Azer (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Absolutely. Thank you for that very comprehensive response. Just as a follow-up, 2023 was supposed to be back-half weighted in terms of expanding your headcount. Can you just update us on the hiring, kind of were you guys on plan in the third quarter? Should that accelerate in the fourth quarter? Any incremental detail would be helpful. Thanks.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
... Yeah, we actually, we have actually, our national sales and marketing conference is taking place this week in Miami. We'll have all of our team members are currently, Jarrod and I are heading down right after our earnings call, and we have about three days of great presentations, really getting all of our team members excited. Our plans and budgets for next year is to continue to bring on talented team members, really building out the breadth within our organization, within all departments, within HR, further expansion in finance, logistics, operations, sales, marketing, and really focusing and expanding upon our Drill Deep Markets as well.
I know we've talked about that over the years, and currently, we're focusing on a drill deep strategy within 23 markets, and we'll be expanding that next year to over 30. So we're building out our field teams, our sales teams, and we're seeing great results in ROI return when we place these individuals and expand these positions. So that's another thing we're monitoring really closely as well: is as we are applying assets, making sure we're driving that value, and that overall return. So, you expect us to continue. We are hiring, and we have a lot of job postings up on LinkedIn as well. So, we expect that to continue. We're monitoring it closely, though.
Vivien Azer (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Terrific. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Michael Lavery with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.
Michael Lavery (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Thank you. Good morning.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Good morning, Michael.
Michael Lavery (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Just was wondering if you could unpack some of the margin drivers. You had called out last quarter the sequential dip you were expecting from the higher promotional activity and higher marketing spending. This is EBITDA margins, obviously. But then, you know, it went up instead. You touched a little bit on some of the promotional dynamics not coming through quite as you had expected and being, you know, a minimal or not a tailwind, I mean, a headwind. But can you just help us understand some of the other factors, in part, just to get an idea of what is sustainable and how to think about looking ahead?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah. I'll let Jarrod dive into some details there. But, you know, I think on a higher level, when you look at, you know, some of the expanded distribution that we've had, we've expanded into, you know, really, like food service and some other independent locations that just, you know, has historically, when the cases come through, are somewhat of a lower promotional allowance or cost of doing business in those channels. But we did see some leverage there, and there was also... We had some timing in the quarter as well, but I'll throw that over to Jarrod to further provide additional details and answer that question.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, so there's a, as you said, a handful of things to unpack. I'm gonna start from the bottom and work my way up, but I'll start within the, you know, the kind of... Well, I guess, the middle of the P&L. So if you look at G&A, we did see some really good leverage there. You know, we benefited from some of that outsized top-line growth relative to the spend we have. As we look out into 2024, you know, we on a 9-month basis, I believe our G&A is about 7.9%. You know, I think we were paying roughly 8% for the year, so we did track a little bit better in Q3.
You know, probably where we land on a full year basis next year, obviously, this year, it'll be somewhere in between those two. But next year would be, you know, kinda in between there. You know, is it gonna be in that 7-8 range, on a full year basis in 2024, where we'll see some leverage come through? But, good leverage coming through on the G&A line. You know, I think, a lot of that's sustainable. There, there's probably a little bit as we continue to build out our teams, that will give back, as we continue to scale and, and really try to set our business up.
There's also some international expansion we've been talking about and things like that, where there'll be some investment upfront that'll drive some costs, and so you won't see, you know, the full leverage, but we'll see good leverage in the G&A line. On the sales and marketing line, we've been averaging kind of that 19%-20%. This year, historically, we've probably been in the 22%-24%, so we've seen a bit of leverage there. You know, as we look out into next year, we don't think that the competition's gonna get any easier, so we will continue to invest into the market and look to continue. You know, we don't have exact numbers.
We do have our budget, but we don't really give out specific numbers along the way, especially since we don't give the sales guidance out. But we would look to continue to invest into the business and really drive the growth of the business. But we have seen some leverage there throughout the year. If you go up to the gross profit line, we did just talk about that, where you know, after Q1, you saw the benefits of really the improvements you've seen in commodities across the board, across both us and our competition. Also, we had rolled off of the international cans, whereas in Q1, we had international cans still in the system. By the time we got to Q2, it was a clean view.
And so we've really seen some benefits come through the raw materials. And also, you've seen really the benefits of the freight lanes that were established. I think we were running about, on a year-to-date basis, 4.9%, whereas last year it was 5.9%. So we got 100 basis points just out of running better from a freight lane perspective. And actually, if you look to Q3 and Q2, it's been a little bit better than that number. So we've seen kind of benefits on each line along the way, really driving that EBITDA margin across the year.
Michael Lavery (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
That's helpful. Could I just also follow up on the Canada launch? And I know you said it's in the first quarter. Should we expect-
... pipeline fill for that in 4Q, or would it be a little bit later in the first quarter? I guess the follow-up's really kind of 4Q-minded. Maybe one, is there a Canada impact we should keep in mind? And then maybe any color on how it's looking quarter to date that you can give us?
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, I mean, Canada will be. It'll—from a build and impact in 2024 will be, it'll be kind of inconsequential. It'll, we expect good growth. You know, we expect to get in there and start capturing market share. We expect to put forth the investment that's needed to really kind of seed in and grow fast in 2024. But it won't be a huge driver of inventory or growth in Q4 or Q1. And the rollout will happen in Q1, but it won't be a one-one launch.
Michael Lavery (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Okay, thanks so much.
Operator (participant)
Our next question-
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
comes from the line of Peter Grom with UBS. Please proceed with your question.
Peter Grom (Executive Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thanks, operator, and good morning, everyone. So, you know, I, I kind of wanted to follow up on that, just kind of the international expansion plan, you know, Canada in Q1. I, I think you mentioned a few other countries. You know, can you maybe just help us understand how you evaluate the various international opportunities, you know, which markets, timing, et cetera? You know, are these markets where you're going to be fully aligned with, with PepsiCo and their partners, or are there, you know, other partners you're, you're considering? And then I, I guess I, I would be curious from a profit perspective, as, you know, you start to expand, you know, further outside the U.S., how should we think about the impact to margins?
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah. Thank you, Peter. You know, we've talked about this on a variety of other calls in the past as well. I mean, we're looking at the largest energy drink markets in the world, so that's those are the biggest opportunities we see. When you look at those, you're looking at the U.K., you look at, you know, you look at Germany, you look at Japan, Australia. A lot of big opportunities out there. And, you know, Pepsi partnerships are, are, are really our, our priority. There will be other markets where we do see other opportunities with other partners, so we can evaluate those as we continue to move forward. The first market that we're partnering with is in Canada, so the teams are really focused on that.
And we have spoke about other markets that we're working on to further roll out into 2024 and 2025. So I think we're a little bit too early to talk about, you know, a lot of those structures. There's a lot involved to make sure you have the right value chain, the right opportunity for exactly what you're talking about, the longevity of profitability as we go forward in these markets. So, you know, we're using Monster international structures and P&Ls as a guideline for us as we look forward to really partnering with our partners and expanding together in these new markets. But, you know, that's...
We have a variety of markets we're looking at, but currently we're rolling out into, focused on Canada as the biggest opportunity at our hands at the moment.
Peter Grom (Executive Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Then, Jarrod, I apologize, you were kind of running through some of these items a bit quickly, but I think you mentioned there was a, call it a $20 million benefit to Q3 revenue. Can you maybe just run through that again? Like, how much was a promotional allowance? Did you build inventory ahead of what you were last year ago? So, yeah, if you can just unpack that a little bit, I think that would be helpful. Thanks.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, so it was. If you look at Q1, or sorry, Q3 of 2022 versus Q3 of 2023, we talked about there was a bit of a pipe fill from inventory last year. And then if you look this year, we had a bit of a pipe fill, probably somewhere in between that $10-$15 million range. And so it wasn't a significant factor in terms of the year-over-year growth percentage from an apples to apples perspective. If you looked at Q2 to Q3, it was a benefit from Q2-Q3, you know, within the revenue figures. So that's the inventory piece.
On a-- you know, we're, we're starting to see leverage come through the promo line, so we did see a benefit, and we, we have updated our estimates around promotional allowance. Just a lot of that John mentioned is about the... We've had significant AC growth, ACV growth. We've been moving into a lot of, call it, non-track channels, but a lot of areas where you don't see promotional activity as deep, and so you, you start to see that benefit. And if you look at Monster, as an example, historically, you, you know, you can see where their promo as a percentage of gross revenue or gross dollars improved over time, and so we're starting to see that as well.
Now, we did invest or add additional incentives in Q3, but the leverage allowed us to, you know, more or less, have a percentage of revenue or a percentage of gross revenue consistent year-over-year when you're looking at Q3 2022-Q3 2023. And so that's where that was called out.
Peter Grom (Executive Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Thanks so much. I'll pass it on.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Thank you, Peter.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Jon Anderson with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.
Jon Andersen (Partner and Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning, everybody. Thanks for the question. I wanted to ask first about the rollout food service. You mentioned the 2,000 Jersey Mike's, and then I think you mentioned authorizations in over 3,000 Dunkin' Donuts nationwide. What's the timing of that with Dunkin' Donuts, and, and what are your expectations for further rollout in eateries as you move forward this year and next?
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, Jon, great question. I think, you know, we do see a huge opportunity in food service. I think when you look at, we've talked about this with Celsius, which is unique, is that consumers-
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
... really, you know, are enjoying Celsius and consuming Celsius outside of that traditional energy drink consumption occasion, which I think is a huge unlock for the brand and the portfolio. When you look at Jersey Mike's, we're really using that and really focused on that as a proof of concept. You know, this is really our first nationwide fast casual chain. So, and initial feedback has been positive, but we're really, really early. I mean, you look at it, probably only about four weeks in. But initially has been fairly excited on the partnership, and we're gonna continue to see how that goes. I think that's if that's successful, we'll be able to roll that out to other fast casual restaurants and eateries that Pepsi has access to.
Pepsi has vast access to a large portion of food service. So, Dunkin' Donuts was a great addition. Unfortunately, we only have one SKU currently that is authorized, and that's our orange flavor, which tastes great and refreshing. I have heard feedback from a variety of new customers to the portfolio that they've actually found Celsius and learned about Celsius because of the distribution gains in Dunkin' Donuts, which was great. So I think the food service could be a great way to also bring new consumers into the franchise and the portfolio. We are in about 3,000-4,000 Dunkin' Donuts currently. There's a lot more Dunkin' Donuts to further leverage and grow upon. So it's really that proof of concept and also getting more flavors in.
Jersey Mike's, we have about three flavors right now, and Dunkin' Donuts is one. So we're still in the early phase, but I think when you see the success of our revenue, our PepsiCo revenue, approximately 10% is food service, which is universities and hospitals. I think we're all really excited about the opportunity that lies ahead.
Jon Andersen (Partner and Research Analyst)
Absolutely. On, you've mentioned essentials as a key innovation for 2024. How is that product line differentiated within your portfolio? And is that really a key element of achieving the greater shelf space and facings that you talked about that you expect in 2024? Or is that gonna be more limited to, you know, select retailers such as 7-Eleven initially?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah, it's gonna, the essentials, Celsius Essentials line, is gonna be limited to particular retailers initially. We're really focused on further building out our core portfolio. So that's a, that's our priority when you look at prioritizations, our prioritization is, number one, our core and Vibe offerings, flavor profiles, and then secondary will be our Celsius Essentials that's going after that performance energy segment. Initial feedback has been extremely positive, and it is designed to be incremental on top of the gains that we're already anticipating we're getting in 2024. And we've aligned with our partners on this as well, so, and, and feedback has been initially well-received.
Jon Andersen (Partner and Research Analyst)
Last one for me. As you think about, you know, you mentioned kind of the secondary placements, and I think part of that is leveraging, you know, your relationship with PepsiCo in terms of coolers, and part of it is your own effort to establish branded cooler locations. Where are you with respect to Celsius coolers this year? I know you had set a target earlier in the year. Are you on track to deliver that? And how much more opportunity is there on that front as you look ahead? Thanks.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah, no, John, that's a great, great question and something where the teams are extremely focused on. We not only within our core team members, but also within the PepsiCo sales organization. So our cooler initiative and program is part of our perfect stores, our strategy. So and that's a way we KPI the team as well. So you're gonna get, warm placement, your cold placement, secondary placement at, can include an end cap, and then most important and then also cold placement upfront, as well as the perfect store has a Celsius branded cooler. So, you know, our goal was approximately around 15,000 to be placed this year. We're working towards that. You know, we'll see if we're gonna be able to achieve it. We only have a few months left.
The coolers, you know, the biggest win we're working on now is gaining chain-wide national authorization and front checkout coolers at major retailers, where we can really close 1,000, 2,000, 3,000 store locations. As an example, we just entered Publix stores with expanded distribution in the front end cap front checkout coolers. So that was a big win. Although not a Celsius branded cooler, we do have great placement in those checkouts, and that's gonna allow us to continue to increase our availability, increase trial, and take advantage of those impulse purchases that we know Celsius can capitalize on.
Jon Andersen (Partner and Research Analyst)
Thanks so much.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Eric Serotta with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Eric Serotta (Equity Analyst)
Morning, guys. First, a quick housekeeping question. I know you talked about selling and marketing expense as a percentage of sales being up in the fourth quarter. What about promotional allowances? Are you guys, in the short term, looking for any material changes in promo allowances versus where you were in the third quarter, post the adjustment that you made? And then I'll have a bigger picture question.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, for the promos, I'd look more to the year-to-date percentage, as we look to Q4. But, John, do you want to jump on the sales and marketing, or you want me to jump on that one?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah, I think that... Go ahead.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Yeah, so sales and marketing, you know, obviously, it's a little trickier in October, November, December. You've got Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, so you have to come up with a little bit different incentives and different programs. So we're working those through the system. And then, you know, obviously, we're looking to hit the ground running with a number of the sponsorships that we've picked up that, you know, that we've press release over the last six months. So we are looking to continue to spend into the holiday season. We found it to be very successful last year, when we spent into the holiday season. Part of that was also 'cause our ACV, you know, went from a 65 to a 90 pretty quickly.
You know, we've been sitting at that 90 all year, so the goal is to really help build those velocities as we work our way into 2024 from a sales and marketing perspective.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
And especially also leaning into, you know, buyer reset window, so.
Eric Serotta (Equity Analyst)
Great, and that sort of leads into my next question, which is on velocities. I think, you know, one of the big positive surprises over the past year, or certainly the past 6-9 months, has been the acceleration in velocities as you've rapidly expanded distribution. How are you thinking about the scope for velocity growth over the next, you know, call it 12-24 months? You know, on the one hand, some new distribution you're adding may be a little bit less productive, but you seem to be getting some billboard effect and some broader awareness. So, you know, big picture, how are you thinking about potential for velocity over the coming year or two?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah, I think, you know, Eric, when you look at it, that's something that, we're really focused on, and it's gonna come from a variety of different areas, in order to continue to drive forward. We are entering uncharted territories at north of a 10% share, which hasn't been achieved in the energy category in over a decade. But when you look at some of the great, you know, what has taken place over the last nine months, this year, it's just a, really a great achievement to the team and our partners. I think one exciting news, piece we just got recently is from Numerator and the way we're tracking household penetration. And our household penetration, more than doubled.
So we were right around a 25%, household penetration versus an 11.1% in the year ago period, when we tracked it last time per Numerator, and Celsius was the number one growth brand in all of sports and energy. So, you know, we're getting some really good traction there. The teams have been doing really great on, you know, leveraging our marketing strategies. I think there's a lot of opportunity to further drive ROI out of our marketing programs, within our sales programs as well. So, you know, where velocities go from here? That is, you know, that's really, somewhat an unknown, but we're working to continue to drive that forward.
I think on the resets coming in, when you look at the expansion, that we anticipate gaining additional shelf space, that's gonna allow us to have better presence. That's gonna further build out that billboard effect, to be able to, you know, engage with the shopper at the point of purchase, which is super critical. So, time will tell. I guess we'll find out as we continue to evolve quarter over quarter on future calls.
Eric Serotta (Equity Analyst)
Great. Thanks. I'll pass it on.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thank you.
Jarrod Langhans (CFO)
Our next question comes from the line of Jim Salera with Stephens. Please proceed with your question.
Jim Salera (Equity Research Analyst)
Hi, everyone. Congrats on the good quarter, and thanks for taking our question. I wanted to follow up on the food service piece, because it seems like, you know, that would be an end market that would traditionally be for kind of carbonated soft drinks or teas. Do you have a sense for... Are those consumers in food service switching from, you know, drinking a Pepsi to drinking a Celsius or drinking a tea to a Celsius? And if that's the case, are you able to track that into switches from soft drinks or tea at retail as well?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Jim, that's the great question. That's a huge unlock that we're working on. I think we need a little bit more data coming in as we expand into food service. What we're seeing with the Celsius consumer, what I think is fascinating, we saw this in convenience, and we see this where our consumer is, you know, number one, we're incremental to the category, and also our consumer, we've seen them have a bigger basket ring, i.e., purchasing Celsius with a water or a food item or a snack, which I think is another competitive advantage when looking at the Celsius consumer. Within food service, we have a hypothesis that our consumer is actually getting water or not getting a beverage, because they're ordering on potentially Delivery Dudes or another platform, where they're not getting the fountain drink.
We're not competing with the fountain, but we need more data on that. What we do see is, within some of the apps that initial feedback has been on our set, is that we are being incremental to these eateries and fast casual restaurants within the beverage purchase.
Jim Salera (Equity Research Analyst)
Great, that's helpful color. And you might have already kind of addressed this, just saying it's still early days, but just thinking about the implications that that has moving forward, do you think there's a possibility that if you do see those, you know, tea or, or carbonated soft drink consumers buying Celsius but not participating in other energy buys, that you could find yourself outside of the energy category in retail and really be placed kind of throughout the store, unlike, you know, some of the other traditional energy drinks?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
We're seeing that now in certain locations within our given stores, like Ralphs, they're placing us, you know, where you have grab and go. I know in several Publixes and Krogers, we're placed in, we have secondary placements in the grab-and-go section, so where people are getting food and grabbing food items. So I think that's a huge opportunity for us. You know, when I see tons of people, we have a cafeteria or a small eatery right next to our office, and you see people having sandwiches and bowls, and they sell a lot of Celsius there. So I think there's a huge opportunity and unlock as we grow forward, just that Celsius plays outside of traditional energy, and that opens up a bigger TAM opportunity.
Also, when you look at some of the latest data points coming out, and you look at, you know, total beverage brands, Celsius just made it into the top 10 within total beverages, within the LRB, which is liquid refreshing beverages in the overall category, which is another great achievement that the portfolio has been able to achieve in the third quarter.
Jon Andersen (Partner and Research Analyst)
That's great. Thanks, guys. I'll pass it on.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Van Sinderen with B. Riley. Please proceed with your question.
Jeff Van Sinderen (Senior Analyst)
Good morning, everyone. Just wanted to touch on sort of the fact that you've got ongoing distribution and elevation and SKU expansion, and I guess, how are you thinking about seasonality for Q4 this year, keeping in mind the comparison to the Pepsi launch last year?
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thanks, Jeff. You know, when you look at seasonality, it is something in the category that you know has happened. We saw that last year. There is gonna be some seasonality. We should all anticipate some seasonality within the quarter. And you know, what that looks like as we go into two finalize the quarter, you know, we need to evaluate that. But also, you have another. We've talked about it earlier, potential inventory you know reduction of inventory within our Pepsi partner, which is their you know our main supplier at this point. So in addition to that and the seasonality, you know, we anticipate some type of pullback in the fourth quarter that's just with traditional seasonality levels.
Jeff Van Sinderen (Senior Analyst)
Okay, that's helpful. And then, aside from the Essentials line, is there other substantial innovation you have planned for 2024, or is the main innovation mentioned Essentials for 2024? Maybe if you could just touch on further innovation plans for 2024.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Yeah, absolutely. Innovation for 2024, we have been working really hard. The team's been working really hard. We're gonna continue to build out our portfolios, between our core Fruit Punch flavor offerings. We have some new great flavors coming in. We'll announce those shortly. We have new VIBE flavors coming out, where we're going, due to the success is Cosmic Vibe. We're gonna continue with that theme through a trilogy, so we'll have some great flavors on that. Did talk about on the call, our Celsius Essentials line, our 16-ounce line, really going after that performance energy category. And then a great opportunity we have, and it's something we don't really talk about too much, is our powders and on-the-go and really going beyond the bottle or beyond the can. We think that's a great opportunity.
We have been getting a lot of interest, further interest from retailers on that portfolio, and we will be bringing out our Vibe flavors into our, powder product offerings, into 2024. So we'll see further expansion with all of our portfolios, and, the team's really excited. We got some great flavors, and I know you'll enjoy them, Jeff, as you, you've always been a big fan. So, but we're excited where we stand.
Jeff Van Sinderen (Senior Analyst)
Can't wait to try them. Thanks for taking my questions.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thanks, Jeff.
Operator (participant)
That is all the time we have for today. I'd like to hand the call back to John Fieldly for closing remarks.
John Fieldly (President and CEO)
Thank you, Doug. On behalf of the company, I'd like to thank everyone for their continued support and interest. Our results demonstrate our products are gaining considerable momentum and capitalizing on today's global health and wellness trends, expanding the energy category, and driving growth in both dollars and units. I'd like to take this time to thank our investors for their continued support and confidence in our team. The company will be attending several upcoming investor conferences throughout the month of November and December, including Stephens, Jefferies, Morgan Stanley, Roth Capital investor conferences. We look forward to seeing many of you there. Thank you for your interest in Celsius. Stay healthy and live fit.
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and have a wonderful day.