Gavin Hattersley
President and Chief Executive Officer at Molson Coors Beverage
Thank you, Traci. Good morning, everybody, and thank you for joining the call. We are pleased with our results this quarter, which played out largely as we had expected. We acknowledge that there are a few near-term timing dynamics impacting our quarter-to-quarter performance this year. In today's call, we'll unpack these as well as the drivers of the second half of the year to demonstrate why we are maintaining our guidance for the full year 2024. In second quarter, we essentially held our top line and grew our bottom line while cycling a very difficult year-over-year comparison. If you recall, the second quarter of 2023 was our strongest second quarter net sales revenue since the 2005 Molson and Coors merger. Consolidated net sales revenue was down 0.1%. Underlying pre-tax income grew 5.2%, and underlying earnings per share grew 7.9%, while we continue to invest behind our brands globally heading into peak season. We also accelerated the pace of share repurchases for the quarter given compelling valuation as we see it, amid the strong performance of the business and our confidence in our long-term algorithm. Contributing meaningfully to our results was our EMEA and APAC business due to favorable net pricing, premiumization and brand volume growth. For the first half of the year, we increased net sales revenue by 4.2%, underlying pre-tax income by 20.4% and underlying earnings per share by 23.8%. While this is a very strong performance year-over-year, there are a few timing factors that will impact us in the third and fourth quarters, which is why we are maintaining our guidance for the full year. These timing factors will result in an unwind in the back half of the year and the resulting temporary trends are not reflective in any way of our confidence in our acceleration plan and growth initiatives.
The most important timing factor to understand regarding our performance in the first and second halves of the year is US shipment timing. We made the deliberate decision to increase our US inventories in anticipation of and during the strike at our Fort Worth brewery, which ran 14 weeks during February through May. We did this to ensure we had healthy inventories during the peak summer season. As a result, excluding contract volumes, STWs exceeded STRs by about 750,000 hectoliters in the first quarter and by about 350,000 hectoliters in the second quarter. And we continue to expect this will essentially fully unwind the third and fourth quarters with more weighting to the third quarter. Another factor impacting our results is the continued exit of the Pabst contract brewing volume as we approach the termination of the agreement at year end. This reduced second quarter financial volume by 580,000 hectoliters with declines accelerating from the first quarter, introduced our first half financial volume by over 900,000 hectoliters, which represents a decline in Pabst contact volumes of over 50% from the first half of 2023. To put a finer point on it, Pabst has had a negative 3.2 percentage point impact on both our second quarter and first half Americas financial volume on a year-over-year basis. And while Pabst is a near-term headwind to total volume and net sales revenue, the mix benefits related to the exit along with favorable global net pricing and premiumization in EMEA and APAC drove an increase in consolidated net sales revenue per hectoliter of 4.2% for both the quarter and the first half.
Turning to cash flow. We generated $505 million in underlying free cash flow for the first half of the year, while investing meaningfully in our business. And we returned $564 million in cash to shareholders through both our dividend and share repurchase program. Tracey will cover more on our capital allocation and outlook drivers. But to sum it up, given our strong performance for the first half of the year, we remain on track to deliver our 2024 guidance. This guidance caused the top and bottom-line growth for the third straight year something that has not been done in over a decade. Now let me take you through our strategic priorities, starting with our core power brands. In the US Coors Light, Miller Lite and Coors Banquet with second quarter combined volume share is down 0.5 share point of industry versus a year ago when we saw our peak share gains. However, these brands remain up two full share points compared to the second quarter of 2022. This means that we retained approximately 80% of our peak share gains on our core power brands. Coors Banquet, in particular, is performing extremely well. We have deliberately built on this 150-year-old brand over the last several years building on its loyal consumer base and attracting new Gen Z and millennial legal drinking age consumers. And the results have been impressive. Coors Banquet grew brand volume nearly 13% in the first half of the year and gained dollar share at the fastest rate among the top 15 brands in the beer category, and we see great potential ahead as we continue to close distribution gaps and increased brand awareness. In Canada, Coors Banquet continues to be the number two brand in the country and Molson family of brands gained volume share in both the three months and year-to-date ended May. In fact, in Ontario, Coors Light and Molson Canadian continue to be the number one and number two brand, respectively, in both the three months and year-to-date ended May. In EMEA and APAC, strong results in Central and Eastern Europe have been supported by Ozujsko in Croatia, which has gained nearly two value share points of the core segment year-to-date in June, as well as the extremely successful launch of a new core power brand Kahriman [Phonetic] in Romania, reaching about 150,000 hectoliters since March. And Colleen's brand equity continued to benefit from its partnership with the FA Cup.
Turning to our premiumization priority for both beer and beyond beer, our above premium portfolio was over 26% of total net brand revenue for the 12 months ended June 30th. Our premiumization progress is at different stages across our markets, and we have had success in EMEA and APAC, Canada and Latin America. In EMEA and APAC, our Above Premium share of net brand revenue continues to be over 50%, up nearly 10 percentage points from the full year 2019. This improvement is primarily due to the very successful launch of Madri, which continued to grow revenue double-digits in the second quarter. And it is the number three launch in the on-premise in the U.K. in terms of value. In the Americas, our Above Premium share of net brand revenue was over 21% for the 12 months ended June 30, which is up nearly two percentage points from the full year 2019. This was supported by Canada, where our above premium share of net brand revenue has also grown driven by the success of Miller Lite, Coors Seltzer and Vizzy. Also contributing to the mix is Latin America, where more than three quarters of our net our net brand revenue is above premium. In the U.S., brand revenue share from above premium has improved compared to 2019, but our above premium changes have been more challenged recently. And we have work to do here. Now this is largely due to the strong performance of our core power brands in 2023, but we believe can build from here, and we have focused plans around our key above premium brands and innovations to do just that. This starts with the Blue Moon family performance, and we feel good about our new campaign in packaging, our repositioning at Blue Moon Light as well our line extensions into non-alc.
It's early, but we believe we are moving in the right direction. We are committed to continuing to innovate and scale in Beyond Beer, which for us is all about above premium. Flavor is a key focus area, because it's big and it's growing. Given the flavor consumer evolves and shift quickly, flavor innovation is key to keeping pace with their demands. We believe we have impactful brands with potential in the space. For example, we have built simply spike into a $100 million brand in just two years, illustrating the power of the Molson Coors platform as a launch pad for innovation and growing brands. And while we have seen some softening on our original pack, as we launched into new favors. With the Simply brand in one out of every two households in the U.S., we believe the Simply Spike brand family has more runway. And we have exciting plans for Peroni by on-shoring production in the U.S., we believe we can better ensure consistency of supply and ultimately drive scale and margin for this high potential brand. Before I pass it to Tracey, I'll conclude by saying that we are confident we have the right strategy to achieve our long-term growth objectives, and we are very pleased with our progress against our strategy. We are a much different company today than we were four years ago, and we are most certainly stronger than we were just 16 months ago.
With that, I will pass it to, Tracey.