Traeger CEO on supply chain: Lowering transitory costs will be a benefit

Yahoo Finance’s Julie Hyman, Brian Sozzi, and Brian Cheung speak with Traeger CEO, Jeremy Andrus, about the company’s first earnings report since its public debut, outlook, and more.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: Shares of grillmaker Traeger are getting hit after the company's first earnings report since going public in July. Analysts have told me, though, the reaction looks overdone as Traeger beat on sales and profits, and guidance was also ahead of estimates due to strong grill demand. Let's check in with Traeger CEO Jeremy Andrus. Jeremy, good to see you again here. Just let's start on the market response here. Are you surprised?

JEREMY ANDRUS: Look. I gotta be honest. I haven't checked our stock since we went public. And so nice to see it up there. Am I surprised? You know what? I'm a big believer you build these things for the long-term, and you do what's right for the business every day. And some days, the market likes you. And some other days, they don't. Apparently, they don't this morning.

But we had a good quarter. I mean, Traeger's about market share. It's about growth. It's about disruption. And there are some natural headwinds that we're facing in the business right now from a macroperspective, which every other company in the world who produces a consumer durable, particularly ships from Asia, is facing. And so I think we're doing a good job working around these pieces. Perhaps the market doesn't like that.

But great quarter. I mean, we grew 39% top line in the quarter. And we guided full year to grow approximately 40%. That's a good company. That's a thesis of this business.

BRIAN SOZZI: Jeremy, if you're not checking your stock price, that means you're not on the Yahoo Finance app. And we're gonna have to take that offline. We'll save that for a different [INAUDIBLE]

JEREMY ANDRUS: No. I check other people's stock. I check other people's, just not my own.

BRIAN SOZZI: OK, fair enough, fair enough. But talk to us about, so you are seeing strong demand, accessories and grills, but can you get enough components? Where are you sourcing your products from? I know there continues to be a lot of bottlenecks coming out of China.

JEREMY ANDRUS: Yeah, look. It's a complicated environment right now. And it's not a single thing. It's components. It's access to port capacity, to vessel and container capacity. And so I think we're doing a really good job in this environment. Our operations team has been very thoughtful around all of the components or the levers that we have access to manage this.

And so I will say that we feel good about our inventory position. We're building at high utilization rates in our factories. We're shipping effectively to the US. There are some bottlenecks, but we've chosen to take on some warehouse capacity in Asia so that we can continue to produce and build up inventories, bring them over as we have vessel capacity.