PROCTER & GAMBLE Co (PG) Q2 2016 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Net sales $16.9B, down 9% YoY on an 8pp FX headwind and 2–3pp from Venezuela deconsolidation/divestitures; organic sales +2% as +3% pricing offset -2% organic volume .
- Core EPS $1.04 (+9% YoY); currency-neutral core EPS +21%; diluted net EPS $1.12 (+37% YoY), aided by lapping prior-year battery impairments in discontinued operations .
- Core operating margin +350bps (currency-neutral +390bps) on productivity savings; core gross margin +210bps (currency-neutral +290bps); SG&A -140bps core .
- Guidance: maintain FY16 organic sales “in-line to up low-single digits”; FX headwind to all-in sales now ~7pp; core EPS including FX lowered to down 3–8%; adjusted FCF productivity raised to 100% (from 90%) .
- Cash return: Q2 adjusted FCF productivity 117%; repurchased $2.0B and paid $1.9B in dividends; plan $8–9B share retirements and >$7B dividends in FY16 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Margin expansion from productivity: “Core operating profit margin was up 350 basis points… including 270 basis points of productivity cost savings” .
- U.S. reacceleration and product innovation: U.S. organic sales moved from -2% (Q1) to +3% (Q2), supported by new Gillette ProShield and stronger NA marketing budgets (+~100bps) .
- Strong cash generation and returns: “Adjusted free cash flow productivity was 117%… repurchased $2.0 billion… returned $1.9 billion… as dividends” .
What Went Wrong
- Volume declines and emerging market pressure: organic volume -2%; developing markets organic volume -6% with flat organic sales due to pricing to offset FX; China organic down high-single digits .
- FX worsened materially: “Currencies are weakening… nearly $300 million after-tax in the December quarter… now expect FX will have a 7 percentage point impact on all-in sales and ~10% on core EPS” .
- Back-half EBIT comparison challenged: disproportionate impacts from Venezuela deconsolidation, beauty transition costs and lower non-operating income hit EBIT in H2 despite ongoing constant-currency margin strength .
Financial Results
Quarterly trends (oldest → newest)
Q2 YoY comparison
Segment breakdown – Q2 FY2016
KPIs
Estimates vs Actuals
Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q2 FY2016 was unavailable due to an S&P Global request limit. As a result, estimate comparisons and beat/miss determinations cannot be provided (values unavailable from S&P Global).
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are encouraged by our return to organic sales growth in the quarter… delivered solid core operating income and EPS growth in the face of significant macro-economic and geopolitical headwinds.” — CEO David Taylor .
- “Core operating profit margin was up 350 basis points… on a currency-neutral basis… up 390 basis points, including 270 basis points of productivity cost savings.” — CFO Jon Moeller .
- “Currencies are weakening… nearly $300 million after-tax versus year ago… FX has been a $3.5 billion impact over three years.” — CFO Jon Moeller .
- “We will not cut smart investments to offset foreign-exchange impacts… we’re reducing our core EPS guidance to down 3%–8%… adjusting for items, guidance translates to modest core EPS growth with meaningful growth excluding FX.” — CFO Jon Moeller .
- “We’ve added nearly 100 basis points to advertising and in-store merchandising budgets in North America since we started the fiscal year.” — CFO Jon Moeller .
Non-GAAP adjustments: Core EPS excludes incremental restructuring and certain legal items; Q2 core EPS reconciles GAAP diluted EPS from continuing ops $1.01 to core $1.04 (+$0.03), and currency-neutral core $1.15 (+$0.11 from FX) . Core gross margin and operating margin similarly adjust for restructuring and legal charges .
Q&A Highlights
- Top-line vs scanner data: U.S. organic accelerated to +3% (sales ~1pt ahead of consumption from ProShield shipments); scanner coverage misses e-commerce and shave club contributions .
- Pricing sustainability: Pricing remains a positive contributor even as commodity benefit is less than crude suggests; companies price for FX where possible; P&G expects lower pricing recovery than history, offset by productivity .
- Reinvestment: Media spending to be up double-digits in H2; NA budgets raised by ~100bps to support growth .
- Back-half EBIT deceleration: H2 comparisons pressured by Venezuela deconsolidation, beauty deal transition costs, and lower non-op income; FX relief limited .
- Market share stance: Will accept some share loss while restoring structural economics and cleaning portfolio; ~45% of global business holding/gaining share (~60% in U.S.) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q2 FY2016 EPS and revenue was unavailable due to an S&P Global request limit. As a result, we cannot determine beat/miss versus Street. Values unavailable from S&P Global.
Where estimates may need to adjust:
- FX headwinds increased (sales -7pp; core EPS ~-10%); non-operating income and tax headwinds concentrated in H2 suggest lower back-half EPS trajectory vs prior expectations .
- Constant-currency margin expansion and U.S. growth reacceleration may support upward revisions to constant-currency profitability assumptions .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Constant-currency earnings power intact, but stronger dollar and EM FX materially dampen reported EPS; expect continued FX volatility to drive guidance conservatism .
- U.S. topline momentum (Fabric Care, Baby Care, Grooming) and stepped-up H2 media spend are catalysts for continued organic growth improvement .
- Margin expansion from productivity is durable; core operating margin +350bps despite FX, implying a favorable cost trajectory .
- China remains a watch item: premiumization, e-commerce partnerships, and wholesale inventory normalization underway; expect gradual recovery rather than abrupt inflection .
- Portfolio actions (Duracell close in Q3; Coty in H2 CY16) and related transition costs will pressure H2 EBIT; non-operating income tailwinds from prior-year divestitures will not recur .
- Cash return remains robust (FCF productivity 100% target; $8–$9B share retirements; >$7B dividends), supporting TSR even as reported EPS faces FX headwinds .
- Near-term trading: sensitivity to FX headlines (Argentina, Russia, Mexico) and any updates on Venezuela import dollars; medium-term thesis centers on productivity-driven margin expansion and innovation-led organic growth normalization .