800-FLOWERS Fiscal 2006 April 27, 2006

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mlou

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1-800-FLOWERS.COM to Release Fiscal 2006 Third Quarter Financial Results on Thursday, April 27, 2006
CARLE PLACE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 18, 2006--1-800-FLOWERS.COM (NASDAQ: FLWS), a leading multi-channel retailer of thoughtful gifts for all occasions, today announced that the Company will release financial results for its fiscal 2006 third quarter on Thursday, April 27, 2006. The press release will be issued prior to market opening and will be followed by a conference call with members of senior management at 11:00 a.m. ET.
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Record Revenues and Still No Profits
1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc. (NASDAQ:FLWS - News), a leading florist and multi-channel retailer of thoughtful gifts for all occasions, today reported record revenues of $180.0 million for its fiscal 2006 third quarter ended April 2, 2006, representing an increase of 14.6 percent, or $23.0 million, compared with revenues of $157.0 million in the prior year period. Online revenues increased 20.3 percent to $110.3 million compared with $91.6 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2005. Telephonic revenues declined 1.7 percent to $51.5 million compared with $52.4 million in the prior year period reflecting the continued migration of customers to the Company's online channels.
Emphasis mine. All this growth plus a significant improvement in gross profit margin and they still lost .02 per share.

Where'd the money go? Look at the large increases in marketing/advertising and general/administrative expenses.

Wall Street was hoping for a .01 loss. The stock has seen a nice run-up during the last few weeks after being highlighted by Jim Cramer. Will be interesting to see how The Street reacts to today's news.

Tune into the conference call at 11 AM Eastern, 8 AM Pacific to hear the spin.
 
Interesting perspective from the FLWS Yahoo! Message Board.
Dial P for Pain: 1800Flowers.com
[OVERVIEW]

The floral business is one tough cookie. Dot-com remnant 1-800-Flowers (FLWS) will report earnings later today, so we thought we'd take a quick look under the hood of this capital-intensive company.

1-800-Flowers (FLWS) 1-800-Flowers markets gifts such as flowers, plants, gourmet foods, candies and gift baskets via the Internet, telephone, catalogs and retail stores. Through its subsidiaries, it also markets home decor and garden merchandise, popcorn, specialty food gifts and children's toys and games.

The company miraculously made its way out of the tech boom detritus and tasted profitability in 2003. But, its stock has been dead money for the last 2 years. FLWS posted losses from 1999 to 2002, having come out of the red vis-a-vis some revenue enhancing acquisitions. Don't get us wrong, market share is great -- but it can generate redundancy for companies like 1-800-Flowers, who've bought their sales at the cost of adding services they already provided beforehand. How many different types of chocolates does your customer need anyway? Silly us, all this time we thought the whole raison d'etre of M&A was to axe overlap.

Margins in the flower business are ugly, not a surprise considering that a flower is the commodity par excellence. In order to de-commoditize its goods, flower companies have to spend a boatload on SG&A, which crushes margins and profitability. We view the lack of differentiation in the floral business as a dangerous detriment to shareholder value. For a young company, it can mean years of tears until investors see returns that supersede the company's cost of capital.

Just to be fair, we like how 1-800-Flowers has increased customer count as well as its repeat order rate. Furthermore, the business has been doing a decent job cross-selling goods to its customers. Insiders own a truckload of stock, which is always nice to see (as long as execs don't treat a company like their personal piggy bank). Lastly, FLWS still has about $60M in cash on the books (roughly $1 a share), so if the firm sees a specialized rival it'd like to snap up, it probably will.

[VALUATION]

FLWS looks priced for perfection -- or an atom bomb, depending on how you like your migraines. Analysts are looking for a 93% jump in 1800Flowers' 06 to 07 EPS. Right now, FLWS trades at 25 x 07 EPS. Sweet deal, right? Wrong. Close rival FTD Group, although it's only going to grow its bottom line by 13%, trades at 14 x 2007 estimates. Here's the monkey wrench: FTD cranks out 2 x the EBITDA (proxy for cash flow from operations) 1800Flowers does. On top of that, FTD's free cash flow/share is 7 x that of 1800Flowers. In other words, paying up for FLWS takes a good amount of guts. Unfortunately, we don't have them.

[SUMMARY]

FLWS has generated some substantial top line growth since the bubble went pop, but we're not happy campers unless a company can attain profitability alongside augmented sales. The intensive nature of the floral business does a great job at dissuading investors like us from touching the stock. Until FLWS gets big enough to enjoy some operating leverage -- or megastores, supermarkets, and e-retailers stop pushing flowers (ummm, like that's gonna happen) -- this is a stock we'll gladly say "next" on. For those with a bit more risk tolerance, the best flower play is ultimately FTD Group (FTD), which has 9% margins, enough surplus cash to buy back its stock, and higher brand awareness in the marketplace.

No time to add comments this morning but the assertion that FTD (with it's $230M in debt) is the more financially attractive company strikes me as a bit odd.
 
A question...

Does anyone know if you buy a company like Fannie Mae, do you get to include the sales from THEIR internet site, as well as your own when you refer to total internet sales??
 
From Jim McCann during today's conference:

"Retail florists, other than those that are a part of Bloomnet, are struggling." He called Bloomnet the 'Elite Network.'

What do you think about that statement?

Griff, one of the questions touched on the YOY organic vs acquisition growth and the response was that organic growth in flower sales was around 10% for the quarter.

1-800 is very pleased the the test market response to its 'Happy Hour' group of products being promoted on CBS Outdoor venues like billboards and buses and is expanding that advertising. McCann emphasized that these were everyday-type, fun, florist-delivery-exclusive products and that the Bloomnet members were happy with the designs and the profit margins.

McCann called Bloomnet a 'classic disruptor' and reaffirmed that it was already profitable and expected to be a strong contributor to the company's bottom line going forward. He also mentioned that Bloomnet had twice the volume of orders as its nearest competitor.

When asked to state what competing wire services were doing in response to Bloomnet's competition, no specific response was given.

They are planning to further expand products offered to Bloomnet members although none were specifically mentioned other than the Fannie May Chocolates and possibly gift baskets products for same-day fulfillment.

Regarding franchising, they do not see it as a growth opportunity but did mention the test with Veldkamp's and the changing LFC agreements that are evolving into hub/spoke franchises.

Will be interesting to see how Wall Street reacts to the numbers and the conference call info. Right now, the stock is trading slightly down.
 
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