While $FND has a fragmented base of over ~240 suppliers, many be unaware of $FND's largest & most important supplier & its high concentration in a particularly key flooring category
Some key notes...
Per industry calls, $FND's largest supplier is Creative Flooring Solutions (CFL Flooring), previously known as China Floors
CFL serves as $FND's primary supplier of LVT making key private label brands like Nucor, AquaGuard and DuraLux. These are exclusive to $FND
Per the 10-K, CFL makes up ~16% of $FND sales
CFL only manufactures/sells LVT product. With LVT at ~28%/sales, this implies CFL supplies around ~60% of $FND's LVT
Implied est. from the 10-K of CFL at ~60% of LVT sales aligns with industry call commentary
While high, CFL used to make up nearly all of $FND's sourced LVT at initial product launch – $FND now has at least ~3-4 suppliers for its LVT
important to note here – $FND partnered with CFL to develop its private label LVT product lines (Nucor, AquaGuard, DuraLux, etc.) – while CFL is the manufacturer – $FND owns the IP, making the product lines exclusive to $FND
In addition, IP ownership allows $FND to contract with multiple other mfg. to make/source their private label LVT products
Some more background on CFL
- founded in 2004 in Shanghai by a group of European entrepreneurs
- while many $FND suppliers are small, CFL is large – having ~4,500 employees & five mfg. facilities that generate 70mln sq meters of flooring output
While initially a fully China based business, CFL began diversifying its manufacturing footprint in 2018, with two new facilities operational in Vietnam and Taiwan in 2019 and a US based facility (Dalton, GA) operational in 2021 floorcoveringweekly.com/main/topnews/c…
In total, CFL has five mfg, facilities:
China – 2
Taiwan – 1
Vietnam – 1
US – 1
Sources for the Calhoun, GA plant below
an interesting note is its about ~5mi down the road from a key $MHK plant & close to other flooring manufacturers facilities like Novalis (Dalton, GA)
CFL continues to scale alongside $FND – recently CFL raised capital from private equity (’21) and noted additional expansions of its Vietnam and US mfg. facilities back in April
So, to wrap up, why is the detail on CFL so important – why should you care?
LVT is the most important and fastest growing flooring category – both for $FND and the industry at large
For example, over 2014-2022, $FND LVT sales grew +45%/yr., nearly 2x +25%/yr. growth for all other categories.
As a percent of sales, $FND LVT sales increased from 11% to 28% of sales over 2014-2022
For the industry as a whole – over 2014-2021 – LVT sales grew +31%/yr – ~10x faster than +3%/yr growth in all other categories, going from ~5% to ~22% of total industry sales
LVT’s rapid rise is due to a superior value proposition for consumers:
- half the cost of wood/engineered flooring
- comparable in price to carpet
- attractive aesthetics vs. other categories
- easier to install
- innovative features like waterproofing
All in, the LVT category is mission critical for a growth retailer like $FND
$FND's reliance and high concentration with a single supplier in the category is an important risk that investors should be fully aware of
While $FND has diversified exposure to some extent, ~60% category exposure remains high
it seems highly unlikely that CFL would voluntarily drop $FND as a customer, given its rapid growth and LT potential in flooring,
nonetheless – replacing lost supply from CFL with $FND's other LVT category suppliers would undoubtedly take substantial time and cause material disruption
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Stuffed in the footnotes of their 10-K’s, some may not know that $HD & $LOW actually report their flooring department sales annually…
While their fiscal yr ends do lag $FND by a month, we can still derive good insights from their results
A few highlights…
$FND has massively outperformed $HD & $LOW since 2013…
Using 2013 as a base, $FND sales are up a cumulative +861%, around ~14x $HD (+62%) and $LOW's (+58%) flooring department growth
The bulk of $FND’s outperformance is due to new store growth, as $FND's store base is up nearly 5x from '13 (39) to '22 (191)
Even still, looking at total same store sales growth since '13, $FND's +206% comp growth crushed $HD (+62%) & $LOW (+58%), with nearly ~4x faster growth
$DHR was the first company I came across that had a “business system” – a structured operating framework used to drive continuous growth & improvement
Many other companies have similar systems in place
Often these have proved to be exceptional businesses
Here’s 10 I've found
First up is Fortive $FTV
$DHR's framework unsurprisingly extended to its spun-off industrial business, which has a similar system – the “Fortive Business System”
Novanta $NOVT – a ~10x bagger since 2016 – leverages its Novanta Growth System
$NOVT is a mfg of a wide suite of high precision lasers, sensors, robotics, motion control & other subsystem components used in advanced industrial & medical product applications
$TREX is up +7% today on Q2 results which showed surprising resilience…in contrast to other outdoor living category players like $POOL...
$TREX's better than expected results have a positive read through for names like $FND $SITE $HD & $LOW
My key notes...
$TREX saw revenues decline just -5% (adj), well ahead of street & prior guidance for a -15-16% (adj) decline
Key driver was more resilient consumer demand for composite decking as $TREX saw +MSD growth in channel sell through, leading to higher channel sell in for $TREX
Q2 results are also a notable improvement vs. Q1 which saw a -MSD decline in sell through & a -27% decline in $TREX revenues
$MHK Q2 earnings had some important read through for $FND $HD $LOW & peers
While last qtr mgmt had encouraging comments around a potential bottom in flooring, this qtr mgmt noted they still have yet to see a trough form but remain "hopeful" volumes are near a bottom
Some notes
Investors in $FND should keep close tabs on $MHK as it is…
1) the largest flooring manufacturer (~21% share) 2) $MHK's NA Flooring y/y results have very high correlation (~90%) with $FND total sales and SSS comp sales
While $MHK total sales posted a similar decline to last qtr. (Q2 -6.4% vs. Q1 -6.9%), NA Flooring softened a bit further, going from down -11.1% in Q1 to a -12.1% this qtr.
Unlike last qtr., further deceleration was despite much easier comps (10.6% to 1.7%)…