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Smucker (SJM) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

The Motley FoolAug 27, 2025 1:42 PM
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Date

Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025 at 9 a.m. ET

Call participants

Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Board — Mark Smucker

Chief Financial Officer — Tucker Marshall

Vice President, Investor Relations and Financial Planning and Analysis — Crystal Beiting

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Risks

Elevated Tariff Costs— CFO Marshall stated, "tariff rates have gone above 10%, and we have to react to that. And we now have a net 25¢ impact which is largely coming through our coffee portfolio," directly limiting improvements to the profit outlook for fiscal 2026.

Sequential decline in second quarter earnings— CFO Marshall said, "the second quarter decline is expected to be greater than the first quarter decline," attributing this to the timing of hedging activities and physical receipt of green coffee, impacting margins in the near term.

Takeaways

Coffee segment pricing-- The expected pricing benefit for the segment was raised to the mid-20% range for fiscal 2026, reflecting both the August realization and anticipated winter price actions, with increased tariffs in effect.

Coffee volume impact-- Coffee segment volume is projected to decline in the low to mid-teens percent for the fiscal year, resulting in low-to-mid-teens year-over-year sales growth for fiscal 2026.

Coffee elasticity assumption-- Management maintained a 0.5 elasticity factor for annual planning, with favorable first quarter fiscal 2026 elasticity driving an incremental $100 million to the top line for fiscal 2026.

Net tariff impact-- A net 25¢ per share adverse impact from tariffs is offsetting a 20¢ benefit from better-than-expected price elasticity, resulting in flat profit expectations for the coffee business unit in fiscal 2026.

Sweet Baked Snacks SKU rationalization-- Management will complete SKU rationalization through the second quarter of fiscal 2026, with related $30 million in savings ($10 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026, $20 million in fiscal 2027), and expects sequential profitability improvements across ensuing quarters.

Milk Bone outlook-- CEO Smucker reiterated that Milk Bone is expected to return to growth in the second half of fiscal 2026, leveraging innovation and tactical promotional support, despite cautious consumer spending in discretionary pet categories.

Free cash flow guidance-- Full-year free cash flow guidance for fiscal 2026 was raised from $875 million to $975 million, with the $100 million boost attributed to legislative benefits described as "ongoing annual" and earmarked for debt reduction, targeting three times leverage by the end of fiscal 2027.

Sequential sales acceleration-- Management communicated expectations for sequentially stronger performance across coffee, frozen handheld, spreads, and pet categories, as well as stabilization in sweet baked snacks, as fiscal 2026 progresses.

Hostess business transformation-- The Hostess brand is focusing on growth in leading sub-brands, especially Donette, while offsetting SKU rationalization with profitability and share gains in targeted product lines and occasions.

Summary

The J. M. Smucker Company(NYSE:SJM) management confirmed that the annual profit outlook for fiscal 2026 (ending April 30, 2026) remains unchanged at the midpoint, with positive elasticity in coffee offset by higher tariffs and updated hedging impacts. Segment-level detail indicates that, despite continued elevated coffee costs and tariff headwinds in the first and second quarters of fiscal 2026, full-year coffee profit targets remain on track due to increased pricing actions. Management highlighted an increased free cash flow forecast to $975 million for fiscal 2026, enabled by favorable annualized legislative benefits, and reconfirmed debt reduction as a strategic priority. SKU rationalization in the Sweet Baked Snacks segment is expected to drive a $30 million cost benefit, with the majority materializing in fiscal 2027.No material category-level impact from GLP-1 drugs— The company has not seen any meaningful impact from GLP-1 drugs on its categories to date and will continue to monitor evolving consumption patterns.

CEO Smucker emphasized continued investment in innovation, advertising, and targeted promotions to drive brand recovery and category growth.

CFO Marshall stated, "our strongest non-GAAP coffee margins will be in the fourth quarter, which would be in the mid-twenties," highlighting exit-rate improvement for 2027 planning.

Any change in tariff policy or relief on green coffee would trigger an immediate reevaluation of the embedded $0.50 tariff cost in current fiscal 2026 guidance, with flow-through timing determined by receipt and realization intervals.

Management said that SKUs eliminated from the Hostess portfolio were "It is mostly long-tailed SKUs, and it is SKUs that are not generating the requisite profit impact," and project recapture of displaced sales through core sub-brand growth, led by Donette.

The company expects stabilization and sequential improvement in Sweet Baked Snacks, along with resumed momentum in Milk Bone, Meow Mix, and Uncrustables brands over the balance of fiscal 2026.

Industry glossary

Elasticity of demand: The measure of how sensitive product volume is to changes in its price, especially relevant in the packaged foods sector for planning volume and profit outcomes following pricing actions.

SKU rationalization: A strategic review and elimination of specific product types (Stock Keeping Units), usually to improve segment profitability or streamline operations.

Green coffee: Unroasted coffee beans, sensitive to commodity tariffs and critical in cost structure modeling for coffee manufacturers.

GLP-1 drugs: Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, pharmaceutical products that can reduce caloric intake by suppressing appetite, with potential implications for consumer foods categories.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Operator: Good morning and welcome to The J. M. Smucker Company's Fiscal 2026 First Quarter Earnings Question and Answer Session. This conference call is being recorded and all participants are in a listen-only mode. Please limit yourselves to two questions and requeue if you have additional questions. Turn the conference call over to Crystal Beiting, Vice President, Investor Relations and Financial Planning and Analysis. Thank you. You may begin.

Crystal Beiting: Good morning, and thank you for joining our fiscal 2026 first quarter earnings question and answer session. I hope everyone had a chance to review our results as detailed in this morning's press release and management's prepared remarks, which are available on our corporate website at jmc.com. We will also post an audio replay of this call at the conclusion of this morning's Q&A session. During today's call, we may make forward-looking statements that reflect our current expectations about future plans and performance. These statements rely on assumptions and estimates; actual results may differ materially due to risks and uncertainties. Additionally, we use non-GAAP results to evaluate performance internally.

Encourage you to read the full disclosure concerning forward-looking statements and details on our non-GAAP measures in this morning's press release. Participating on this call are Mark Smucker, Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Board, and Tucker Marshall, Chief Financial Officer. We will now open the call for questions. Operator, please queue up the first question.

Operator: Thank you. The question and answer session will begin at this time. For operator assistance, please press 0. As a reminder, please limit yourselves to two questions during the Q&A session. Should you have additional questions, you may requeue and the company will take questions as time allows. Once again, that's 1 to be placed in the question queue. Our first question is coming from Andrew Lazar from Barclays. Your line is now live.

Andrew Lazar: Great. Thanks so much. Good morning, everybody. Morning. I think last quarter Smucker mentioned that the pricing would benefit the coffee segment sales by about 20% for fiscal 2026. With new tariff headwinds since that time, guess what was your updated expectation on pricing benefit in this segment be now? And was that included as part of the August price increase? Or is there still more likely to come?

Tucker Marshall: Andrew, good morning. Yes, the current outlook for pricing in the coffee segment is going to be in the mid-20s now. That would include additional pricing actions in the early winter associated with the increased tariff rates that we're experiencing on green coffee. And then furthermore, we would likely see an impact of volume in the low to mid-teens. Therefore, having kind of a low to mid-teens overall growth for the segment year over year?

Andrew Lazar: Great. Really helpful. And then last quarter, the company mentioned that first quarter EPS would be the softest quarter and that 2Q and 3Q would be consistent with each other. And now I think the second quarter decline is expected to be greater than the first quarter decline. And maybe more muted in 3Q. So I'm just curious kind of what changed there to sort of cause that shifting in what appears to be a shift in sort of phasing?

Tucker Marshall: Andrew, so as you know, our outlook for the full year has not changed at the midpoint. We still have a $9 midpoint guidance range. We do see favorability coming through our fiscal year as a result of better than anticipated price elasticity of demand assumptions through our coffee portfolio. But that benefit is being offset by increased tariffs we're experiencing since our original guidance. And then to your point, in our first quarter, we did experience some additional coffee costs greater than we anticipated. Always knew that the first quarter was going to be our highest coffee cost quarter. Came in a little higher than anticipated.

The outlook also anticipates that in our second quarter, just due to the timing of our hedging activity along with the physical receipt of green coffee, we'll have some additional costs in the second quarter. That is causing our outlook change for the second quarter. But overall, we do see coffee in line with profit expectations coming into the fiscal year based on where we stand now. After absorbing the incremental tariffs.

Andrew Lazar: Great. Thanks so much.

Crystal Beiting: Thank you.

Operator: Next question is coming from Peter Galbo from Bank of America. Your line is now live.

Peter Galbo: Hey guys, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Tucker, I was hoping maybe we could pick up on the coffee piece there. The elasticity, I think, that you've assumed now is about $0.20 better than you had at Q4. With the additional $0.25 on tariffs, so netting about $0.05 worse. I was just hoping maybe you could help us gross that up to the top line level. I think from an elasticity perspective, you were assuming about a 0.4 or 0.5 before. Want to understand kind of where that number on a holistic basis has moved to now.

Tucker Marshall: Sure. So I think if we took a step back, we really have several pricing actions that are flowing through our fiscal year. The first was in the May time frame. The second is in the August time frame. And then likely in the early winter, there will be a third action as well. And what we did coming into the fiscal year is on average, across our entire portfolio over an entire fiscal year was about a point five elasticity. And what we've experienced through our May pricing is a slightly better factor that enabled us to have a very strong first quarter within our coffee portfolio. Kind of over delivering expectations of about $50 million.

We've taken that assumption throughout the balance of the fiscal year, which is really enabling us to call up coffee about a $100 million on a full year basis due to the implications of price elasticity of demand factors. Our August pricing, we're still kind of keeping at that point five factor, which is the historical elasticity. And then any future pricing actions that we would take in early winter that would largely be at a greater elasticity factor than historical just due to the timing and nature and also the fact that we're taking so much pricing in one fiscal year as we just called out in Andrew's question kind of in the mid 20%. Hopefully, that helps.

Peter Galbo: Yeah. No. Thanks for the clarity there. And then, Mark, as a follow-up, I think in your prepared remarks, you talked about Milk Bone returning to growth. In the second half of this fiscal year. I just want to understand if that comment was really driven by just of the compares and some of the one-offs that happened in the second half of last year or if your expectation is that consumption in Milk Bone actually returns positive growth in the second half as well? And maybe you can just remind us again on some of the dynamics on the year over year. Thanks very much. Sure, Peter. Yeah.

Mark Smucker: You are correct. There are that we will have some strong comps in the back half, which will help. What I would highlight about Milk Bone is that the brand, we continue to the brand, obviously, through advertising, the innovation on the PB Bytes, We have seasonals coming, and we will tactically sharpen some specific price points or use promo where we need to. But we still have high confidence in the brand but acknowledge that because the consumer on in their discretionary categories continues to be a bit cautious, We have seen the frequency of pet parents treating their pets go down a little bit.

But because of all of the actions that I just highlighted, and the continued support that we will provide to the brand, the fact that it has so many different varieties and plays across the value spectrum, we still have high hopes for that brand, and we'll continue to support it all the way through the fiscal year.

Operator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Robert Moskow from TD Cowen. Your line is now live.

Robert Moskow: Hi. Thanks for the question. I was wondering in your discussion about sweet baked snacks and explaining the volume decline in the quarter, I didn't notice any mention of the SKU rationalization impacting the volume. I wanted to know if that impacted it as well. Then secondly, can you give a little more detail on the dedicated sales organization that you're putting in place how is it different from your go-to-market approach currently and what do you expect to get out of it? Thanks.

Mark Smucker: Sure, Rob. It's Mark. First on the sales, you know, we have a dedicated convenience store sales force, which we've had from the outset. And that obviously is a core competency of the business. And then just more broadly, in totality, a dedicated Salesforce is similar to our total Salesforce. It's just focused. It's really all about making sure that we're focused on the right things and getting the execution that we need all the way down to the store shelves. And as it relates to the SKU rationalization, we won't be through the work of rationalizing those SKUs until the through the second quarter.

And we do expect that over time, the remaining portfolio will continue to replace those sales and overall improve profitability in the segment. And then finally, I might just add that although it was in the prepared remarks, I'd love to just emphasize that we are starting to see some green shoots as we are referring to them in terms of things like the convenience channel slightly improving in terms of health and traffic. We've had good share performance at some of our most important traditional retail and mass customers. I mentioned the profit performance. And then just overall, the focus that we're bringing to the portfolio over time will benefit the brand.

And then finally, I think one of the highlights is Donette. And the fact that the breakfast occasion continues to be strong and we have seen good growth out of our donuts brand.

Robert Moskow: And did the rationalization impact volume in first quarter?

Mark Smucker: It did not.

Crystal Beiting: Okay. All right. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Next question today is coming from Tom Palmer from JPMorgan. Your line is now live.

Tom Palmer: Good morning. Thanks for the question. I wanted to follow-up on Andrew's question about the guidance and kind of implications for the cadence. So you reiterated the annual addressed maybe some incremental weakness. For the second quarter. That would seem to suggest that maybe the back half of the year is a bit better than you previously I just wanted to clarify what's driving that, improvement in the second half versus what you expected previously.

Tucker Marshall: Yeah. So I think there's a couple of factors. One is in the first half, we just have timing of coffee costs coming through our first and second quarters, but the profit outlook for coffee remains intact with our original expectations coming into the fiscal year. After absorbing an incremental 25¢ of tariffs but yet experiencing a positive 20¢ tailwind as associated with favorable elasticities. So, really, what we're doing is we're just shifting some of the profit to our third and fourth quarters, but we remain focused on the midpoint of our guidance range at this point in time.

Tom Palmer: Understood. Thank you. And then on the Sweet Baked Snacks, the SKU reduction, when does the actions you're taking start to the earnings line? Is that we should look for sequential improvement as we move through the '26? Or is it more a consideration for fiscal 2027? Thanks.

Tucker Marshall: Yeah. So we've outlined a $30 million savings benefit associated with SKU rationalization and the closure of our Indianapolis bakery. And we'll begin to see about $10 million of that benefit flow through our fourth quarter with the balance or $20 million impacting or benefiting fiscal year 2027. And profitability in Sweet Baked Snacks should improve sequentially as we move through the fiscal year. With the fourth quarter being our strongest. And that would also track with the top line.

Tom Palmer: Got it. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Peter Grom from UBS. Your line is now live.

Peter Grom: Thanks, operator, and good morning, guys. In the prepared remarks, you touched on the sequential momentum that you're seeing that should set up for an on algorithm year or better in fiscal 2027. So just given that we're one quarter into fiscal '26, can you just talk about the level of confidence or visibility you have to that at this stage?

Tucker Marshall: Our visibility into next fiscal year continues to be sort of a work in progress. But I think what we were trying to highlight is as we think about the coffee portfolio, our strongest margins will be in the fourth quarter, which would be in the mid-twenties. So you'd have a nice exit rate within your green coffee portfolio or your overall coffee business. Two is, as you see the ongoing benefits of the stabilization efforts within the Hostess portfolio, and then you see the continued momentum of your growth brands around Uncrustables, Meow Mix, Milk Bone as well. Which just enable us to give some point of view as it relates to how we're thinking about next fiscal year.

And we also continue to navigate the overall tariff environment.

Peter Grom: Great. That's super helpful. And then just a follow-up just in terms of phasing on the top line, but more how you see price relative to volume mix. I think the presentation shows an expectation for 10% price for the year and volume mix down 4%. So just curious how you see that evolving here? And then specifically on coffee pricing, 18% in the first quarter expectation for mid 20% for the year. Any thoughts you can share on what that ramp looks like given the August increase and now the potential winter increase as well? Thanks.

Tucker Marshall: Yeah. So coffee let's begin with coffee. Coffee being in the mid-twenties, We saw 18% come through Q1. You'll feel basically in the mid-twenties in your second and third quarter. And then your fourth quarter, you'd be slightly ahead of that. As you think about the coffee portfolio. And then just in terms of the overall sales ramp for the full fiscal year, just acknowledge that we continue to get sequentially better as we move through the balance of the year. Thank you.

Operator: Next question today is coming from Megan Klatt from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now live.

Megan Klatt: Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking our question. I wanted to ask about the increased free cash flow outlook. It seems like there's a onetime benefit coming through this year. But just wondered if you could talk high level about that, how that what you're expecting to do with that increased cash, how we should think about, you know, maybe pace of deleveraging going forward? Thank you.

Tucker Marshall: Megan, good morning. Yes. We did increase our free cash flow outlook from $875 million to $975 million for the full fiscal year. That increase of a $100 million is largely driven by the benefits coming through the one bit of one big beautiful bill act. And it is not a onetime benefit. It will be an ongoing annual benefit as we move forward into subsequent fiscal years. We plan to use the proceeds or the incremental cash to support our ongoing debt pay down efforts in order to achieve our three times leverage profile by the end of fiscal year '27.

Megan Klatt: Okay. Awesome. That's helpful. Thank you. And then maybe just on the 2Q comparable net sales outlook, I think in the prepared remarks, you said mid-single digit. That's a bit above, I guess, where the scanner data has been tracking more recently. I know we'll get this August price increase in coffee, which will help.

But it does seem like there's, you know, maybe some dynamics with sweet baked snacks and the SKU reduction, you know, maybe some sequential improvement in pet just wondered if you could just help us unpack as we think about tracking the scanner data over the next couple of quarters, which segments we should expect to see kind of sequential improvement how we think about that in terms of the reported sales? Thank you.

Tucker Marshall: Yes. You'll see continued momentum in coffee as we've discussed. Within frozen handheld and spreads, you'll see the momentum coming through the Uncrustables brand, or portfolio. As you think about in our pet segment, you'll see the ongoing momentum in our cat food and then you'll see the ongoing kind of stabilization efforts coming through within Sweet Baked Snacks. And then our away from home business continues to be a bright spot in our portfolio as well.

Megan Klatt: Okay. Great. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Alexia Howard. Your line is now live.

Alexia Howard: Morning, everyone.

Mark Smucker: Good morning. Can I ask on coffee, first of all?

Alexia Howard: Was no mention of, potentially pursuing tariff exemptions in the mitigating activities that you're pursuing. Is there a chance, that, that application for exemption an exemption on the tariffs obviously, coffee can't be grown in The US, could be a possibility further down the road.

Mark Smucker: Thanks, Alexia. It's Mark. We continue to monitor and assess any changes that we're seeing to trade policy and tariffs. And obviously, where we're really focused is working through our industry associations to advocate for policymakers and ultimately are really striving to get the best outcomes for our consumers. But at this point, we don't have any anything to report in terms of any further relief. But as if, you know, if anything does come through, we would certainly reflect that in our guidance.

Alexia Howard: Thank you. And then as a follow-up, on the Hostess business, are you seeing any impact from, GLP-one drugs specifically? And should we be concerned that with pill versions coming out early in calendar '26 that there might be some incremental pressure, over the course of that of next year.

Mark Smucker: Thanks, Alexia. I was expecting that question. And it we know, as we've said in the past, we still monitor this and really take a close look at the impact of GLP ones and what they're having on food generally and more specifically our business. And, you know, we update our outlook monthly on that. And to this up to this point, we still don't see any meaningful impact in our categories. And we will continue to make sure that we're offering the consumer products and variants of products that they're seeking, whether that could be reduced sugar or portion sizes and so forth. So we feel like the portfolio is very well positioned.

To address those types of issues, and we'll continue to monitor.

Alexia Howard: Thank you very much. I'll pass it on.

Operator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Max Comfort BNP Paribas. Your line is now live.

Max Comfort: Hey, thanks for the question. I'm trying to get a better sense for on your updated coffee assumptions. So it sounds like you now expect to see mid-twenty percent pricing this year. Expect to see a volume impact in the down in the low to mid-teens resulting in sales. The low to mid-teens. So it sounds like overall, elasticity is still expected to be about 0.5 x, so in line with what you expected before. I think, Yusanti, that's because earlier price increases are now better than expected. August will be roughly in line with historical of 0.5, and then winter much worse.

If that's all true, how do we square that with the commentary that the combined impact of coffee and tariffs is still gonna be roughly 80 to 85¢ headwind to, or I guess it's no real change in the combined impact despite the fact that volume is gonna be much worse than you expected before. It feels like. Can you just, yeah, give a bit more color on that?

Tucker Marshall: Yeah. So, Max, I think the way that you've framed in the pricing and the volume and the current outlook for growth for the business is correct based on our prepared remarks and some questions I've already answered previously. I would say that what we're seeing is that coffee outlook has gone up by a $100 million for the full fiscal year. Much of that came through Q1, and much of that is sharpening the pencil on early pricing actions and the impact of price elasticity of demand. You kind of factor that in, that is a 20¢ benefit to your guidance range. But, unfortunately, tariff rates have gone above 10%, and we have to react to that.

And we now have a net 25¢ impact which is largely coming through our coffee portfolio, which is just basically that bringing them back to their financial plan at profit for the year. So we do view this as a good story and the resilience of the overall coffee category the strength of our brands in the category, unfortunately, there's just factors beyond our control that are not enabling us to take either the profit up in the business unit or taking up our guidance as a result of increased tariff.

Max Comfort: Great. And then and then, Mark, going back to the last question on GLP-one drugs and your monthly research showing no real impact so far. Can you provide a bit more color on what the what your studies are showing in terms of I assume they are showing that consumers on GLP one drugs are eating less food given we know these drugs are effective at reducing weight. But if that's true, why are you not seeing an impact? Are you saying that your categories are not the categories where consumers are reducing their food consumption, or are there other parts of this story that I'm missing?

Just curious for a bit more color on what you are seeing given you are doing pretty detailed research on this topic. Thanks very much. Yeah.

Mark Smucker: Of course, Max. Thanks. So first of all, the data that we look at is across a very pretty broad variety of sources, and as we all know that these drugs do reduce appetite and cause folks to eat less. I would highlight that our category is, you know, various parts of our category don't really fall into at all. The areas that people might consume less, like coffee, beverages, and, of course, pet. And so where you might see, you know, in our other fruit frozen handhelds and spreads and Hostess, I think everyone likes to focus on Hostess.

The fact is, you know, people who are consuming Uncrustables for the most part are athletes, families with kids, you know, universities. We're now in, you know, have really good performance in convenience stores. And so an Uncrustables standpoint and a spread standpoint, we really haven't seen any impact at all. From the GLP one then as you would expect on Hostess, because it's a suite, people still do look to reward themselves with something small, potentially, and indulgent, you know, throughout the day and the snacking trends still indicate that about 70% of consumers are still snacking twice a day, and that it might be salty. It might be sweet, what have you.

But at the end of the day, as we look at who is consuming our products, we have not seen a meaningful impact from these drugs on the categories that might be affected.

Max Comfort: Great. Thanks very much.

Operator: Thank you. Next question is coming from Scott Marks from Jefferies. Your line is now live.

Scott Marks: Hey, good morning. Thanks so much for taking our questions. First thing I wanted to ask about, just a clarification. The Hostess SKU reduction, it sounds like it's maybe some long tail SKUs, you know, some smaller SKUs. Wondering if you can clarify maybe how much in sales that represents of that part of the business and how we should think about the impact of that for this year?

Mark Smucker: You know, it's a combination. It is mostly long-tailed SKUs, and it is SKUs that are not generating the requisite profit impact. Right? And so really getting focused on the brands, the sub-brands, you will, in under Hostess and the products that are going to drive both growth in top and bottom line are where we're focused. I would not spend too much time focusing on the sales because we do believe that we can offset the sales by growth in the more important sub-brands. So for example, Donette, is three times the size of the next closest brand, which is cupcakes. And so with Donets, growth there is good.

And then, you know, continuing to focus on the other occasions outside of breakfast, will help us support brands like Cupcakes and Twinkies.

Scott Marks: Understood. Thanks for that. Second question comes back to one that was asked earlier just around kind of the tariff situation, you know, on coffee. You know, if for instance, some exemption does come through on that, you know, how maybe should we be thinking about, you know, the pricing actions that you mentioned in the winter or how long might that take to be reflective in your P and L? Just trying to gauge, you know, what the impacts would be and how long they might take to show up.

Tucker Marshall: Yeah, Scott. So we now have embedded net 50¢ negative impact due to tariffs in our guidance range. That is a result of, you know, tariffs coming into place at the end of our last fiscal year, tariffs being in full year effect of this fiscal year and then tariffs going above 10%. There's very much a timing impact. So should we receive relief and whatever the definition of relief is on green coffee would come back and have to revise the impact of the 50¢ for the fiscal year just due to the fact we're realizing it now and timing associated with it.

And then secondly is we could also, at that time, then provide an update as it relates to how that would transition into FY 2027. But the thing that I want to caution is should you read of relief you may not add back to 50¢ to the full fiscal year because of the realization and timing factors that we're experiencing today.

Scott Marks: That's helpful. Thanks for the clarity. For taking the questions.

Operator: Thank you. Thank you. We've reached the end of our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back for any further or closing comments.

Mark Smucker: Well, first of all, thank you everyone for your time and for joining the call this morning. Our first quarter results demonstrate our strategy is working, and we continue to take actions to position the company for long-term growth and manage the things that we truly can control and react to those which may be out of our control in a positive fashion. This includes making strategic investments in the business launching consumer-led innovation, and continuing to shift our portfolio to growth. And as always, I would like to thank our outstanding employees for their continued hard work and dedication to our company.

We hope that many of you will be able to join us in Boston at the Barclays Global Consumer Staples Conference next week. A live webcast of our presentation is on September 2, at 12:45 PM eastern and can also be accessed from our Investor Relations website. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. That does conclude today's teleconference webcast. You may disconnect.

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