DAVIDsTEA Inc. (DTEAF)·Q1 2023 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- DAVIDsTEA’s Q1 2023 showed sharp top-line pressure: revenue fell 29.4% year over year to $14.3M as online demand normalized and macro headwinds persisted; gross margin held at 40.3% despite lower volume, and net loss was $2.0M . Versus the prior quarter (Q4 2022), revenue declined from $31.4M as seasonality and promotions faded, but gross margin improved from 27.4% to 40.3% due to lower freight, shipping and fulfillment costs per unit .
- Channel dynamics: e-commerce fell 40.6% to $7.6M, wholesale declined 11.1% to $2.4M, and brick-and-mortar decreased 8.5% to $4.3M; Canada sales were $12.2M and U.S. $2.1M .
- Management reiterated cost containment (targeting $8–$10M annual SG&A savings) and operational fixes (bringing order fulfillment in-house) to support a profitability path while advancing U.S. wholesale expansion; liquidity remained solid with $19.6M cash and no debt at quarter-end .
- No formal quantitative guidance or consensus estimate comparisons were available; S&P Global consensus for Q1 2023 was unavailable at time of analysis, limiting beat/miss assessment [GetEstimates error].
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Gross margin resilience: Despite lower sales, gross profit margin was 40.3% (vs. 40.5% LY), supported by lower per-unit freight, shipping and fulfillment costs .
- Cost discipline: SG&A fell 21.9% YoY to $7.9M as early cost-containment actions flowed through; management is targeting “between $8 million to $10 million in annual cost savings” from the plan announced in February .
- Strategic focus areas remain intact: “We are encouraged by the early results of our cost containment plan... Aligning our cost structure with a lower revenue run rate... narrows our strategic focus on value creation initiatives that will drive sales growth,” including U.S. wholesale rollout, digital improvements, and selective store refreshes .
What Went Wrong
- Demand softness across channels: Sales fell 29.4% YoY to $14.3M, with e-commerce down 40.6% ($7.6M), wholesale down 11.1% ($2.4M), and brick-and-mortar down 8.5% ($4.3M), reflecting inflationary pressure, higher rates, and lingering fourth-quarter fulfillment issues .
- Operating deleverage: SG&A as a percentage of sales rose to 54.9% (from 49.5% LY) due to fixed cost absorption on lower revenue, pressuring adjusted EBITDA to -$0.9M (vs. $0.1M LY) .
- Macro/operational headwinds persisted into the quarter: Management cited “inflationary pressure and higher interest rates” undermining consumer sentiment and noted fallout from Q4 order fulfillment challenges that impacted online demand .
Financial Results
Channel and Geography
KPIs and Other Metrics
Notes: Adjusted EBITDA and related non-IFRS measures as defined by the company; see “Use of Non-IFRS Financial Measures” in press releases .
Guidance Changes
No formal quantitative revenue, margin, or EPS guidance was issued for Q1 2023 or FY 2023 in the materials reviewed .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are encouraged by the early results of our cost containment plan that should deliver between $8 million to $10 million in annual cost savings.” — Sarah Segal, CEO .
- “Sales decreased 29.4% year-over-year to $14.3 million... E-commerce sales declined 40.6%... Wholesale channel sales... dropped 11.1%... Brick-and-mortar sales decreased 8.5%...” — Frank Zitella, President, CFO & COO .
- “Internalizing our order fulfillment process will help us create that elevated brand experience consumers have come to expect... Beginning next month, the company staff will take great pride in fulfilling customer orders...” — Frank Zitella .
- “We aim to expand our wholesale footprint into the U.S. this fall... we signed a distribution agreement with a large wholesale distributor of health and specialty foods in the U.S.” — Sarah Segal .
Q&A Highlights
The Q1 2023 call consisted of prepared remarks; management directed investors to contact IR for additional color, and no Q&A exchange was provided in the transcript .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q1 2023 EPS, revenue, and EBITDA was unavailable at time of analysis; therefore, we cannot assess beats/misses versus consensus. Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable due to access limits (no estimates returned) [GetEstimates error].
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Revenue reset continued in Q1 2023 with broad-based channel softness; however, gross margin held at ~40% due to lower logistics costs, suggesting underlying unit economics can support margin recovery as volume stabilizes .
- Cost containment is the principal near-term lever: SG&A fell 22% YoY and management targets $8–$10M annualized savings; continued execution is critical to offset deleverage on a smaller top line .
- Operational pivot to in-house fulfillment directly addresses Q4/Q1 customer experience issues and could support online conversion and loyalty into peak seasons if executed smoothly .
- U.S. wholesale entry (with a signed distributor) and expanded Canadian wholesale doors offer medium-term growth vectors; sell-in cadence will be “lumpy,” but scale benefits could aid fixed-cost absorption .
- Liquidity is adequate (cash $19.6M; no debt) to fund working capital and targeted initiatives, but sustained cash burn risks remain if revenue softness persists .
- No formal guidance or consensus comparison reduces near-term visibility; investors should monitor: online order experience metrics, wholesale door additions and reorders, B&M traffic/ticket trends, and realized SG&A savings cadence .
- Corporate actions (Nasdaq delisting/TSXV trading) do not alter fundamentals but may affect investor access/liquidity; ensure trading venue alignment for position sizing .
Supporting documents reviewed: Q1 FY2022 8-K/press release (for prior-year comps) , Q3 FY2022 8-K/press release , Q4 FY2022 earnings call transcript , Q1 2023 earnings call transcript , Feb 2, 2023 cost-structure press release , and April 13, 2023 delisting press release .