The ODP Corporation
Q4 2020 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Good morning and welcome to the ODP Corporation's Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2020 Enhanced Earnings Conference Call. All lines will be on a listen-only mode for today's call, after which instructions will be given in order to ask a question. At the request of the ODP Corporation, today's call is being recorded. I would like to introduce Tim Perrott, Vice President, Investor Relations. Mr. Perott, you may now begin.
- Tim Perrott:
- Good morning and thank you for joining us for the ODP Corporation's enhanced earnings conference call. This is Tim Perrott and I'm here with Gerry Smith, our CEO and Anthony Scaglione, our Executive Vice President and CFO. Also joining us today is David Bleisch, our Executive Vice President and Chief Legal & Administrative Officer.
- David Bleisch:
- Thank you, Tim. Before we turn to our performance for the most recent quarter, we will begin today with the summary of where we stand with regard to the public proposal made by Sycamore Partners, the owner of Staples to acquire the ODP Corporation. On January 11, a Sycamore partners subsidiary, USR Parent, which I will refer to Sycamore issued a press release published in the contents of letter it intent to the Board of the ODP Corporation proposing to acquire 100% of the issued and outstanding stock of the company for $40 per share in cash.
- Gerry Smith:
- Thank you, David and good morning to everyone joining our call today. We appreciate you joining us this morning and we hope that all of our listeners and their families are safe and healthy. I'm very happy to be here with you today to discuss the results for 2020 and the progress that we have made in our B2B Pivot and digital transformation. We are building a very exciting future as we expand our value proposition and continue to position ODP to provide greater value to our customers and pursue growth in higher value markets. I would like to begin by discussing the performance in 2020 in the light of the significant challenges that were posed by the pandemic highlighted on Slide 5. 2020 was a year of unprecedented change as a rule was turned upside down as the COVID-19 pandemic raged across our nation and the world impacting the daily lives of us all. Conditions caused by the outbreak resulted in local restrictions and stay-at-home orders across the nation. And the operations in many businesses were paused, employees were sent home to work and schools were closed for in-class learning. People quickly were forced to adapt to how they interacted with one another, how they worked and how they learned. Businesses and consumers needed to be supported in multiple ways with different products and services and in many cases different environments.
- Anthony Scaglione:
- Thank you, Gerry and good morning everyone. I'm happy to be here today to discuss our financial results for the fourth quarter and full-year 2020 and the progress we are making on our B2B Pivot and digital transformation. As I begin, I'd like to say how proud I am of our entire team for remaining focused against a very difficult economic backdrop. As I reflect on the year delivering on one of the key priorities that I outlined when I joined as CFO, our low-cost model approach helped to offset many of the challenges of the pandemic, while we continue to support our key initiatives across our platform in support of our B2B Pivot, improving our position to drive long-term growth and it's not only what we achieved, but how we achieved it. As our team live the 5C culture, a dynamic and innovative culture that cares about people and the communities we serve. I want to thank all of our associates for delivering in 2020. Turning to the highlights of our financial results as shown on Slide 28, consistent with previous quarters, we have provided our results on both a GAAP and adjusted basis. Our financial results in the fourth quarter continued to be impacted by conditions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the effects of which intensified during the quarter. A rise in COVID infection in the fall resulted in continued local and state restrictions and a reduction in business activity overall. The rising cases also impacted the pace of school re-openings which was slower than expected with half of the school systems across the nation remaining close to-in-class learning. As you heard from Gerry, school systems represent one of the largest industry categories in our BSD contract channel. All of these factors impacted our top line revenue results. However, our cost discipline helped to partially offset these impacts and helped us drive quarterly cash flow results in line with our expectations. In addition, by managing our inventory and key categories with added discipline given the headwinds, we were able to keep key products in stock with the right sales throughput, reducing the need for significant price adjustment. Turning to the quarterly results, total revenue of $2.3 billion in the fourth quarter was down 9% over last year, largely driven by the effects of COVID-19 resulting in lower sales in all three of our reporting divisions, as well as 153 fewer retail stores in service relative to last year. Included in the total store closure amount for the year, we closed 90 stores during the fourth quarter. Additionally, as the pace of school re-openings were impacted due to COVID, the demand shift for some of the back-to-school selling season from the third quarter did not materialize as anticipated during the fourth quarter. Partially offsetting these impacts was our balanced channel approach and broad product assortment, both helping us address evolving needs of our customers. This approach gave us the ability to handle changes in our channel and product mix, with strong demand for work and learn from home products driving increases in our eCommerce and omni-channel sales year-over-year. For the quarter, GAAP operating income was $21 million, down from $74 million last year. Included in operating income was $15 million in merger and restructuring charges, primarily associated with our Maximize B2B restructuring plan and $8 million of non-cash asset impairment charges, mostly related to operating lease, right of use assets associated with planned retail store closures. Excluding these and other items, our adjusted operating income for the fourth quarter was $44 million compared to $92 million in the same period last year. Unallocated corporate expenses were $30 million in the quarter, up versus the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA was $89 million for the quarter compared to $156 million in last year's pre-COVID fourth quarter. This includes adjusted depreciation and amortization expense of $45 million and $50 million in the fourth quarter of 2020 and 2019 respectively. Excluding the after tax impact from the items mentioned earlier, adjusted net income for the fourth quarter was $30 million or $0.55 per diluted share. Despite the continued challenging conditions, Q4 free cash flow was in line with expectations. Cash used from operating activities was $4 million in the quarter, which included 15 million in restructuring and integration cost, as well as a cash tax payment of approximately $15 million. This cash tax payment is in contrast to a $44 million AMT tax refund that we received in last year's fourth quarter. For the full-year normalizing for timing, the year-on-year differences in cash taxes was an inflow of $46 million in 2019 versus an inflow of $14 million this year. Going forward, we do not expect tax refunds to be material. Capital expenditures in the quarter were $14 million compared to $27 million in the prior-year period, reflecting lower investment in our retail channel, while continuing investments in our B2B platform and eCommerce. Turning to Slide 29, I've highlighted some key performance measure for the full-year 2020. We delivered impressive results against an extremely difficult backdrop caused by the pandemic. We leveraged our low cost model, utilized our diverse channels to market and expanded our product portfolio to help offset the COVID impacts, resulting in solid operating results and very strong free cash flow. Customers look to ODP for more than just their core office supply needs, resulting in our adjacency category growth, as well as expanding supply chain reach. We also maintained and further enhanced our balance sheet throughout the year, repaying our term loan and refinancing our line of credit. Total company sales for the year totaled $9.7 billion, a 9% decrease compared to the prior year. The decrease is primarily due to lower sales in our BSD and CompuCom divisions related to the conditions caused by the pandemic, as well as fewer retail stores in service. More specifically, sales in our BSD contract channel were impacted by business and school closures throughout the year and CompuCom sales were impacted by business disruptions and project delays, including our technicians access to key client sites. Our diverse distribution channels and broad product portfolio helped to offset some of these impacts. As reflected on a full-year GAAP basis, we recorded an operating loss of $252 million compared to operating income of $191 million last year. The difference compared to last year was driven by $375 million increase in non-cash asset impairment charges, including $363 million in non-cash charges related to goodwill and other intangible assets that we recorded in Q2. Excluding these and other items, our adjusted operating income and EBITDA for 2020 was $300 million and $491 million respectively, an impressive result given the challenging business conditions. Excluding the after tax impact from the items I mentioned earlier, 2020 adjusted net income from continuing operations was $189 million or $3.50 per share compared to $228 million or $4.13 per share in the prior year. All amounts have been adjusted for the reverse split we enacted during Q2 of last year. Finally, for the year, we drove very strong cash flow results, with cash provided by operating activities of $485 million which included $57 million in cash costs associated with our restructuring programs. Including the $68 million in CapEx investments in the year, we generated adjusted free cash flow of $474 million for 2020 compared to $310 million in the prior year. I would like to cover our business unit performance, starting with our BSD division on Slide 30. As a reminder, BSD is the primary component of our B2B integrated distribution platform, serving large enterprise customers, including education customers to small and medium-size businesses. The business consist primarily of serving customers through both our contract and direct eCommerce channels. As we discussed the outbreak of COVID 19 caused significant business disruption for our business and education customers. As we exited Q3, there was some optimism that business conditions would improve heading into the holiday season. However, we saw conditions that intensified in the fourth quarter as the infection rate rose impacting businesses and further delaying school re-openings. Reported sales in the quarter for BSD were $1.1 billion, down about 10% relative to last year. Total 2020 BSD sales were $4.7 billion, down 11%. As I stated, our channel mix and product breadth helped offset some of the negative impact from COVID. In the quarter, demand increased over 15% in our eCommerce channel, demand also increased for product supporting work and learn from home with technology sales up over 33% in the quarter versus last year. Our total adjacency categories grew relative to last year and comprised approximately 45% of total revenue in our BSD division. This balance helped to partially offset the impacts related to the pandemic, which negatively impacted core supply categories. While we expect these effects to continue through much of the first half of the year, we remain optimistic with the rollout of vaccines and through conversations with our business and education customers. The key is we are continuing to monitor the pace of business re-openings and importantly school re-openings, as this will have an impact to the speed of our top line recovery in 2021. As we stated earlier, the pace of school reopening is crucial as this is one of our largest industry sectors we serve today and currently many school systems continue to remain closed for in-person learnings. Operating income was 18 million in the fourth quarter compared to 69 million in the prior year period. The decrease in operating income versus last year was related to the impact of COVID impacting sales and product mix, partially offset by SG&A cost improvements related to our cost efficiency programs and the contribution of our eCommerce channel, which continues to perform well. Turning to Slide 31, our retail divisions performance in the fourth quarter and for the year was terrific. During the COVID pandemic, our retail presence has played an important role in reaching customers for their essential needs, be it work and learn from home setups, technology or PPE. Our retail team also quickly enacted curbside pickup option and implemented measures to safely serve customers during the pandemic and served as an important access point for our business customers. Reported sales in the quarter for our retail division was $951 million, which was down 6% from the same period last year, largely driven by 153 fewer stores in service as compared to last year. Included in this amount was 90 store closures during the fourth quarter of 2020. In Q4, as most of the school systems in the US were not open for in-person classroom learning, we didn't experience a strong of a shift in back-to-school demand from the third quarter as we had anticipated. Offsetting lower store traffic with higher average order volume and sales per shopper, helping drive stronger performance during the quarter and year. This lift in sales per shopper was driven by increased demand for work and learn from home products, supporting business customers and consumers, as well as essential cleaning products including PPE to address customers' needs posed by the pandemic. Categories such as furniture, technology, peripherals and cleaning products saw increases in demand in the quarter and year, which helped to offset lower demand in office supply categories and in copy and print. The combination of our curbside pickup option in both this offering remain popular, with both this demand up over 50% in the quarter as customers chose the convenience of this option to limit time spent in the store. Ship from store and same-day deliveries were also up highlighting the flexibility in our delivery capabilities. We once again delivered strong operating performance. Operating income was $15 million in the fourth quarter, up 47% compared to the same period last year or as a percentage of sales, a 190 basis point improvement in margins. Operating income was up 42% for the full year highlighting strong performance throughout the pandemic. Helping to drive this performance was an improved labor operating model that was implemented at the beginning of 2020, driving cost efficiency, while enhancing customer service as evidenced by our improvement in our net promoter scores. These helped to lower our cost to serve. The efficiency initiative along with the improvement in distribution and inventory management costs and lower operating lease costs as a result of store closures, all contributed to our improved operating performance. Looking at Slide 32, we highlight the performance of the CompuCom division. Sales in the fourth quarter were $207 million down 13% over last year and $854 million for the full-year 2020. The conditions related to the COVID pandemic continued to negatively impact CompuCom's revenue performance in the quarter and year, affecting service volumes and product sales, but we saw incremental improvement as we closed out the year. The CompuCom division reported operating income of $4 million in the fourth quarter of 2020 compared with $9 million in the prior year period. Cost efficiency measures help lower SG&A, partially offsetting the reduced pull-through of lower sales. Despite the performance challenges, CompuCom support for its customers during the pandemic has been stellar and their core competencies and support platform has been well-positioned for the future. CompuCom's pipeline of new business remain solid and the support they have provided to customers can be seen in their strong contract renewal rates of 93% in addition to 10 new logo customers gained in 2020. And as we recently reported, our Board of Directors announced that as a result of business review of CompuCom, management has initiated a process to explore a value maximizing sale of our CompuCom division to help maximize CompuCom full potential and drive forward its future value and success. We are still in the early stages of that process and the interest thus far has been high. We plan to further communicate our progress as appropriate. Now turning to the balance sheet and cash flow highlights as shown on Slide 33. We ended the quarter with total available liquidity of approximately $1.7 billion, consisting of $729 million in cash and cash equivalents and $934 million of availability under our asset-based lending facility. Total debt at the end of the quarter was approximately $378 million, primarily comprised of our long-term IRB bonds. Our balance sheet remains a source of strength and provides us flexibility as we execute our strategy and pursue growth. As I mentioned earlier in my remarks, cash flow was in line with expectations in the fourth quarter despite the challenges in the business environment and the investments we are making in the business. I will point out that despite the challenging conditions in the year, we prudently managed cash through strong working capital improvements including solid inventory management, resulting in adjusted free cash flow generation of $474 million in 2020 versus $310 million in the prior year. Now I would like to spend a few moments and share more insight with you on our Maximize B2B retail optimization plan as shown on Slide 34. As you heard from Gerry earlier, we are accelerating our B2B Pivot and digital transformation, expanding our value proposition and driving new growth engines for the future. This evolution leverages the strong set of assets that we have developed and the relationships that we have built over many years, creating the opportunities extend our digital platform to a much larger and growing market. One of the foundational components supporting our growth strategy is our Maximize B2B restructuring plan. This plan which we announced earlier in 2020 is a multi-year effort designed to optimize our retail footprint, unlock underperforming assets and shift these resources into our B2B business, generating higher longer-term returns. Through this plan, we will derisk our balance sheet by reducing the average duration of our retail lease exposures, while generating significant cash flow to help fuel investments in our B2B growth strategy and provide opportunities to enhance future capital returns to shareholders. The evaluation criteria in KPIs are shown on Slide 35. Maximizing cash flow and reducing lease liabilities are at the center, driving our evaluation criteria. We evaluate each location with a store level, 4-wall cash flow maximization review. Our decision-making process evaluates lease terms and conditions, working capital opportunities including inventory and the percentage of sales recapture at adjacent stores. The decision to keep a store open or close a location is then based on which passed maximizes cash flow on a risk adjusted basis. As you might expect landlord negotiations dictating lease terms and conditions may affect these variables. Therefore, the number and pace of store closures may vary based on these and other factors. The long-term KPIs that we will focus on are overall lease liability, duration of leases and cash flow expectations over the course of the next 12-24 and 36 months. We will provide more clarity on these KPIs during our Investor Day meetings that we are planning to host later in the year. Before moving to Q&A, I wanted to touch on capital allocation and provide color on our decision to not provide guidance at this time. Regarding capital allocation as discussed by David Bleisch earlier on the call, we are currently continuing to evaluate the situation with Sycamore including the proposed tender offer. As a result, we do not anticipate initiating any share repurchases at this time. However, we remain committed to returning capital in the form of share repurchases under our current share repurchase authorization or a larger revised authorization if approved by the Board once there is further clarity on the situation. Additionally, because of the continuing challenges posed by COVID and recent events including the public proposal and the strategic review of our CompuCom division, we are not issuing guidance for 2021 at this time. That said 2021 is an important bridge year to our future. We've been systematically and methodically executing our digital transformation which benefits each of our businesses and furthers our core strengths. Our digital transformation focuses on providing our customers a complete B2B commerce platform designed to meet the needs of both buyers and suppliers. We are thrilled with the team we've built attracting Prentis Wilson, a proven industry veteran coupled with the team he is building, our steady investments and world-class technology resources and the acquisition of BuyerQuest enables our transformation to address key customer pain points in their end to end B2B commerce needs. Furthermore, we will leverage our strong customer relationship, deep knowledge of B2B commerce requirements and robust suite of physical logistic assets to create compelling value for both suppliers and buyers on our platform. While the revenue contribution in 2021 from BuyerQuest is not expected to be material, this acquisition is an important component of providing a better experience to our customers and a key ingredient in our digital B2B platform in the future. It is also important to note that the investments that we are making in our digital transformation are consistent with our historical CapEx amounts allocated to our growth initiatives and fit within the framework of our traditional total company CapEx investment. We are re-prioritizing our capital expenditures to build out our digital platform and strengthen our core eCommerce and supply chain platform. And as we mentioned in our earnings release in 2021 we expect to make growth investments in the company's digital transformation initiatives in the range of $20 million to $25 million in capital expenditures and $30 million to $35 million in operating expenses. In summary, we've made progress on our overall transformation strategy. We are accelerating several elements including our focus on digital and omni-channel sales, improving customer value and building the digital platform to support the growth of our business. We believe these actions position us well for the future. With that I will open the call for Q&A.
- Operator:
- Our first question comes from the line of Chris McGinnis. Please state your company name and then proceed with your question.
- Chris McGinnis:
- Good morning, Sidoti & Company. Thanks for taking my question. Just got a few questions on the B2B pivot and transformation, can you just talk a little bit about the recent announcements, the Microsoft agreement, why do they choose ODP? And can you talk about how the acquisition changes maybe the way you service the market prior to that acquisition and how that fits within the portfolio a little bit more? Thanks.
- Gerry Smith:
- Sure thanks, Chris and good morning. So from a BuyerQuest perspective, it obviously accelerates our ability to as we build out our digital platform. The digital platform has a procure-to-pay piece, it has a supply chain piece and eCommerce piece. And all that is obviously addressed to the market. The BuyerQuest acquisition Jack and team have a world-class product, it’s rated very high I believe by Gartner. What it has done, is it accelerated our ability to really get into that procure-to-pay marketplace and we think that's a huge opportunity, especially as we have announced relationship with Microsoft. Microsoft is excited to partner with this from both an Azure perspective. We thank them for their support, as well the ability to move in that procure-to-pay - easy procure-to-pay element of their Dynamics 365 ERP bracket. So obviously, we think that's a huge opportunity for both companies especially being on that front end of procure-to-pay more to come on that. Because obviously once we have that procure-to-pay platform in Dynamics 365, there is huge opportunities of, having all those customers have the ability to buy on a marketplace or a platform to go off and buy and more to come on that Investor Day. And obviously that's a huge market opportunity in the future partnering with Microsoft. And obviously, we're going to help Jack and the BuyerQuest team, accelerate their existing customer base, open up a broader opportunities of procure-to-pay and really work on the go-to-market activities around that as well.
- Chris McGinnis:
- Okay, thanks for that. And I guess just, is this intended to be an open marketplace like the Amazon business or Alibaba and you have an agreement with Alibaba. Is there something you've taken from that, they can help you build on the transformation? Thank you.
- Gerry Smith:
- I think it's actually really different than Amazon, Alibaba. Think of a curated platform, defined by contractual agreement, source to settle from a B2B perspective where you're not looking at loose spend or some of that tail spend. But it's really contractual relationship connecting buyers, B2B buyers and sellers. And we're trying to give a simpler and as far BuyerQuest comes into this, very effective world-class, eCommerce procurement platform. But also very important Chris, leveraging our supply chain assets as well. We think we have a huge capability with our supply chain. We deliver the next day to almost 99% of Zip codes to the back dock. And so, we can leverage our physical assets with the digital assets. We think it's a market that is very under-penetrated, there is only 20% of B2B has a $8 trillion market that digital now. But there is no real force to settle procurement curated marketplace that exist. And we think we have a huge opportunity especially with Prentis and Terry and the team that we've built. They have that capabilities and know how to be very, very successful in the marketplace.
- Chris McGinnis:
- Great, and just one last question and a follow-up on that. What's the cost to kind of compete in this, is the asset largely in place now, or is there going to be more cost to kind of pursue that the $8 trillion market?
- Gerry Smith:
- Anthony said it in his - at the very end of the script, but it's about $20 million to $25 million in CapEx this year, about $30 million to $35 million in OpEx. But we will stay within the confines of our traditional capital spends anywhere between $150 million to $180 million across our entire business. But we reallocated some of the other investment, but this is not a massive investment. It's an investment within our confines of what you guys have seen traditionally from an Office Depot perspective. And obviously again having people who have done it before and successfully, obviously, it will help our ability to be - very efficient with our investment of those dollars as well. Anthony, anything else you'd like to add on that?
- Anthony Scaglione:
- No I would just say, as we approach the go-to-market later this year, it will dictate future capital investments we plan to make going forward. As Gerry mentioned, it's really a reprioritization of our capital spend and it will ensure that it's throttled with a return that we're going to see from an ROI perspective, and to the point of this is an investment year. So, as we build out the capabilities and we look at the future, we will be - providing more details around returns that are expected from that platform.
- Operator:
- Our next question comes from the line of Michael Lasser. Please state your company name and then proceed with your question.
- Mark Carden:
- It's actually Mark Carden on today for Michael, company is UBS. Thanks a lot for taking the questions. I guess first, delving a bit on the last question. How fast do you expect to see a return on the $30 million to $35 million investment in incremental operating expenses in 2021? And then are you expecting us to be pretty evenly spread across BSD supply chain in digital or are there other sizable buckets toward these investments could be going? Thanks.
- Gerry Smith:
- Well, from a 2021 perspective, this is an investment year as we've said in our presentation and obviously we're building a foundation and the platform for the future. So as - the first thing I want to answer your question on, this is a much better business model, it's a low cost model. Once we have the platform built, it's very scalable and very accretive. And so, relative to our strategy tenants of low cost model, ability to enter high value market, ability to enter high growth market and obviously making sure if it's with our culture. This is perfectly aligns with that, because longer term it’s a superior business model and that's where Anthony, myself and the team focused on as we - and with Prentis as we built this out. So nothing material in 2021, but obviously building on the future and more to come as we make more announcements I think it will make lot more sense in the future. Anthony, I'll let you add a little bit of color too.
- Anthony Scaglione:
- Yes thanks, Gerry. Yes Mark, if you look at the reduction in CapEx in 2020, most of that was deferral based on the impact that COVID had on the business and us deferring projects and most of the project that we worked on were what I would characterize as maintenance based project. So as we look into 2021 one, while we're not providing specific guidance, the way I would characterize we're going to be moving more towards levels we've seen in previous years and probably between the level that you saw in 2019 and 2020.
- Mark Carden:
- And then more in the quarter, what was primarily responsible for the change in the trajectory of adjusted SG&A dollars. It's been declining double-digits, in recent quarters was only down 5% in 4Q, so any additional color there would be great? Thanks.
- Anthony Scaglione:
- Yes, we had additional SG&A associated with the investments that we're making. So, we were starting those investments from a new business platform perspective. We also had some additional accruals associated with true-up at the end of the year, related to some legal accruals as well as bonus accruals. So, there is some one-time item that impacted the quarter when you compare it on a year-over-year basis.
- Operator:
- We have time for one more question. Our final question comes from the line of Christian Carlino. Please state your company name, then proceed with your question.
- Christian Carlino:
- Hi good morning, Christian from JPMorgan. I was wondering more on the BSD division, can you talk about the gap between adjacency categories and your core product. And whether or not that's contracted a bit over the quarter whether that be, from adjacency slowing or core product improving?
- Gerry Smith:
- While we saw a continued strength in our adjacency category as we mentioned on the call, our core products continue to be challenge given the back to work and back-to-school and the impact of having specifically on our BSD channel, but we saw continued strength and the adjacencies, strength around our PPE, things around furniture, tech. So our broad channel mix as well as our broad distribution capabilities allowed us to bridge some of the gaps that we saw in our core supply and office supply categories.
- Christian Carlino:
- Got it. And then for operating margins, they seem to decline more year-over-year than in 3Q. Could you talk about what the differences, where you called out higher supply chain costs within BSD, but that was actually a good guy within retail. So yes, could you speak to what drove beyond the negative flow through what drove the - operating margin declines in B2B?
- Gerry Smith:
- Thanks. So when you look at our supply chain costs, we continue to see favorable mix shift to retail locations, the cost has served to a retail location on a relative basis cheaper than the cost to serve in the BSD channel. This is offset by some cost that we saw incrementally as there were higher residential delivery so from a supply chain perspective, residential deliveries that are coming through impacts our BSD channel. And we were also impacted what you've seen probably in many other industries higher overall third-party logistics costs. Now one of the things that we have the benefit for as we have our privacy, we were able to mitigate many of the challenges that we saw other eCommerce providers have and many of those challenges were mitigated by our own private fleet, as well as having relationship with local third-party logistic firm reducing overall supply chain on a relative basis.
- Christian Carlino:
- Got it. And if I could just ask one more, on the recent BuyerQuest acquisition, could you just talk through thought that drove the purchase of the company itself, what synergies do you think could come out of it, what could you potentially add to the business to make the asset better and what needs it sells within your B2B platform?
- Gerry Smith:
- Yes, I think as I said before it's a world-class business from a customer feedback on the software package, that was excellent. Gartner had ranked its extremely high, but a very high level strategically it’s an acceleration of our ability to get our platform to market faster, that's one of the primary reasons. And obviously we've already announced significant partnership with Microsoft with the BuyerQuest software as a platform around that. And so, very significant, Jack and his team have done a great job of building the key market, a key platform. And we'll integrate that into our overall digital platform and obviously we believe we can take that product and with our reach and our capabilities and across our business and make that even more a stronger go-to-market in the future. And we're excited to have Jack and his team on board. But it's a great platform and a great acceleration of our ability to get to market faster.
- Operator:
- And that concludes the Q&A session for today. I will now turn the call back over to Office Depot CEO, Gerry Smith for any closing remarks.
- Gerry Smith:
- Yes, thank you everyone for joining the call today. I just want to point out and thank our team again across the company of outstanding performance across 2020. We did well from and operating results and free cash flow. The way I like to look at it, we are in a stronger position today than we were before the pandemic and we expanded our value proposition. We are building our digital platform for the future. We have made significant progress on our evolution and we have a very, very strong balance sheet and very excited for our future. We will have an Investor Day later in this year and we're looking forward to giving more details around our digital platform and that great team we've built and the opportunities in the future. So, thanks everyone for joining the call today. Stay safe and have a good morning.
- Operator:
- Thank you for your participation. This concludes today's call. You may now disconnect.
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