Sonos Inc
NASDAQ:SONO

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Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2020-Q4

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Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Sonos Fourth Quarter and Fiscal 2020 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Cammeron McLaughlin, Vice President, Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead.

C
Cammeron McLaughlin
Vice President, Investor Relations

Thank you. Good afternoon, and welcome to Sonos fourth quarter and fiscal 2020 earnings conference call. I am Cameron McLaughlin, and with me today are Sonos’ CEO, Patrick Spence; and CFO, Brittany Bagley.

Before I hand the call over to Patrick, I’d like to remind everyone that today’s discussion will include forward-looking statements regarding future events and our future financial performance. These statements reflect our views as of today only and should not be considered as representing our views of any subsequent date. These statements are also subject to material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements. A discussion of these risk factors is fully detailed under the caption Risk Factors in our filings with the SEC.

During this call, we will also refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. For information regarding our non-GAAP financials and a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures, please refer to today’s press release regarding our fourth quarter and fiscal 2020 results posted to the Investor Relations portion of our website. As a reminder, the press release, a supplemental earnings slide presentation, and conference call transcript will be available on our investor relations website at investors.sonos.com.

I will now turn the call over to Patrick.

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Cammeron and good afternoon, everyone. We ended fiscal 2020 on an exceptional note and delivered meaningfully ahead of our expectations. In light of the uncertainty and challenges presented throughout this past year, the entire team at Sonos has risen to the occasion and proven an ability to creatively adapt and persevere. I am extremely proud of what our team has accomplished throughout fiscal 2020, and I am more energized than ever about our future.

Before we get into the results, I wanted to take a step back and remind everyone of the business model that we’ve really built the whole company around. I believe we have hit an important inflection point that proves that our unique model delivers for both customers and investors. You’ll recall that our approach has been to build a system of awesome products and services that deliver a whole home, and now beyond the home, audio experience whether you start with one product, which is what most customers do or start with many. This creates a virtuous cycle where customers return to add additional Sonos products to their home over time.

Obviously what’s important in this model is that we’re able to do two things. The first is that we show an ability to add new homes, and the second is that we get existing customers to add additional products. As challenging as 2020 has been for everyone, our model has proven resilient. In terms of attracting new customers, we just delivered the 15th year in a row where we’ve grown the number of homes we’re in by 20% or more, ending this year with nearly 11 million households globally. Even with this strong growth in new homes, we continued to see 2.9 products per home in fiscal 2020. And when it comes to existing customers adding additional products, we have typically seen 35% to 40% of our annual product registrations coming from existing customers who are adding another Sonos product to their home.

This year it hit 41% as the launch of Move was a particular success with our existing customers. I believe we’re at an inflection point in the fourth quarter because we are seeing the kind of free cash flow and adjusted EBITDA this model can deliver as it scales. In fiscal 2020, we delivered a record 8.2% adjusted EBITDA margin, and that rises to 10.6% if you exclude tariffs. We are on track to deliver 12% to 14% adjusted EBITDA margins next year, which is ahead of our prior targets. We achieved our 15th consecutive year of revenue growth, and we are planning to accelerate revenue growth in fiscal 2021.

We attribute this success to our business model that makes Sonos a system for your whole home, not just a single product solution and to our consistent approach to innovative new products. Our new product launches are resonating with a record number of new customers, as well as with our existing customers who repurchased from us at a record rate. We remain committed to maintaining a relentless focus on innovation in our traditional hardware segment, and you’ll see continued innovation and experimentation in services as we believe there is plenty of opportunity given our highly engaged customer base.

For example, in April we launched Sonos Radio, an ad-supported streaming radio service available free to all of our customers. On Sonos, radio represents nearly half of total listening time globally. Sonos Radio comes pre-loaded in the Sonos app, bringing all streaming radio into one place from the moment you set-up, along with constantly refreshed mix of new and original programming curated by Sonos. We have experienced early customer success and Sonos Radio is now the fourth most listened to service on Sonos.

We continued to experience tremendous demand for our products in fiscal 2020. The strong demand has been especially notable for our newest products Move, Arc, One SL, Sub, Amp and Port and we saw demand exceed our expectations, and our supply, for five of our key products in the fourth quarter. We’ve made progress addressing the strong demand we are seeing, although we don’t fully expect to catch up on demand for Amp and Arc specifically until next quarter.

Our products continued to rank as the leading products in the premium home audio category in fiscal 2020. We have experienced particularly strong growth in our installer channel throughout fiscal 2020 and expect this channel to continue to be a strong contributor as we look forward. The Sonos brand is by far the leading choice amongst installer professionals. In fact, according to a 2020 CE Pro report of the brands sold by the top 100 installation professionals, Sonos is the leading brand in wireless speakers, soundbars and subwoofers. Our 92% share in the wireless audio category among these industry professionals according to the report significantly outpaces our competitors and underscores the strength of our brand, the quality of our products, and our dominant competitive position in the categories we serve.

Furthermore, our commitment to investing in product innovation and new capabilities continues to add to the strength of our intellectual property. We are on track to be granted close to 200 new patents in 2020, up from 147 granted in 2019. According to the most recent 1790 Analytics Patent Scorecard, which measures the strength of patent portfolios, Sonos ranked number three in the Electronics category.

Our gross margin expansion illustrates the value proposition of our products, and we are continuing to drive our product differentiation through investments organically and inorganically. As a premium audio platform, we exited fiscal 2020 with gross margin, excluding the effective tariffs of 45.6%, an increase of 370 basis points from last year. We are getting more creative and more productive in our sales and marketing so that we can leverage our spend to deliver record new customers and continue building a powerful consumer brand.

Sonos is delivering the profitability that we’ve been talking about since our IPO, well in advance of when we thought we would actually achieve it. We are doing that while driving expected 13% revenue growth at the midpoint next year on a comparable 52-week basis. All of you know we have been focused on and investing in direct-to-consumer, and we’ve seen a significant acceleration in our direct-to-consumer channel in fiscal 2020. DTC revenue increased 84% year-over-year and represented a record 21% of total revenue, that’s up from 12% last year. The investments we made in this channel and our marketing strategies positioned us to capture this opportunity and drive strong sales and margin even in the face of retail store closures during the year.

According to a recent Futuresource report, only 25% of audio hardware owners in key markets said they were comfortable buying audio products online prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, but during the pandemic, this has increased to 63%. While some of that revenue may shift back to in-store, we believe a significant portion of sales will remain online and that our direct-to-consumer business will continue to represent a growing portion of revenue over time.

As we look forward to fiscal 2021, we see tremendous momentum and opportunity, and are focused on the following strategic priorities and strategies. First, continuing to deliver innovative new products and beginning to deliver more on the services side. Just last week, we introduced Sonos Radio HD, a new ad-free, high-definition streaming subscription tier of Sonos Radio offered at $7.99 a month. Sonos Radio HD features even more exclusive content directly in the Sonos app, now in lossless, CD-quality audio, the highest quality of any radio streaming service.

With this new service we focused on making one of our customers’ most valued listening experiences, radio, easier and better. Radio HD exclusive content debuted with Dolly Parton and Songteller Radio. The new HD station will evolve with Dolly’s hits, favorite artists, and special commentary on songs and moments throughout her career. Sonos Radio HD is a complementary offering to the 100-plus streaming music services offered on our platform today, and we look forward to developing more direct paid relationships with our households over time.

We are committed to launching at least two new products per year and are well on track as we look out at our fiscal 2021 product roadmap. As you know, we don’t share details of the products we’re working on for competitive reasons, but we’re confident these new products will resonate with customers regardless of whether COVID-19 has us spending more time at home or not. This confidence comes from the resilience we’ve seen in our business model and our customer base this year.

Second, we will continue to focus on the expansion of our direct-to-consumer efforts and engaging even deeper with consumers. We are increasingly focused on direct distribution and engagement to ensure we are delivering a great end-to-end experience for our customers. We have seen consumers are willing to engage and transact with a trusted brand like Sonos and expect that to only continue to increase over time.

We will continue to efficiently evolve our marketing strategies making our brand even more accessible and showcasing content and experiences. This fall, we launched an innovative, multifaceted strategic marketing campaign with Disney leading up to the widely-anticipated premiere of the second season of The Mandalorian. As we spend more time at home, our living rooms have become a hub for entertainment and we worked with Disney to provide an even more immersive experience for one of the best sounding series streaming today. This campaign was an excellent example of two powerful brands coming together to promote their premium products and services to shared fans around the world. We are excited to share more insight into our evolving marketing strategies at our first Investor Day in March.

Third, we will continue to strengthen and expand our partnerships. We have been pleased with the results of our IKEA partnership and the opportunity it has created to introduce new consumers to the Sonos brand and platform. We will look to continue to evolve our partnership with IKEA and you should expect to see additional IKEA products launched this year.

And finally, we remain focused on delivering sustainable, profitable growth and expanding our adjusted EBITDA margins. We believe that our leadership in the category coupled with our strategies to drive accelerated direct-to-consumer growth, position us to deliver strong profit margins and cash flow going forward.

Let me know now turn the call over to Brittany to provide more details on our results and our outlook.

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Patrick. Let me add some additional color on our strong fourth quarter and fiscal 2020 results and fiscal 2021 outlook.

Starting with the fourth quarter, we significantly outperformed on both revenue and profit. Adjusted EBITDA increased dramatically to $46.4 million from a loss of $2.8 million last year. Excluding tariffs, adjusted EBITDA was $48.9 million. We delivered tremendous operating expense leverage and gross margin expansion during the quarter culminating in a record 13.7% adjusted EBITDA margin. We were able to drive this performance through our impressive gross margin expansion and OpEx leverage.

Gross margin increased 530 basis points to 47.5%. We were largely exempt from tariffs for the quarter except for a rate of 7.5% on our component products in September and 25% on accessories throughout the quarter, which are captured in our Partner products and other revenue category. These results show the underlying power of our margins driven by mix shifts into higher margin products and channels, product and material cost reductions, leverage on the higher sales volumes, and no promotional activity during the quarter.

Revenue in the fourth quarter increased 16% year-over-year to nearly $340 million, which was up 36% sequentially as we continued to experience strong demand for our new and existing products. As a reminder, we had an extra week in fiscal 2020, which hit in the fourth quarter.

Excluding the impact of this 14th week, which we believe contributed approximately $25 million during the quarter, revenue increased 7% year-over-year. Our direct-to-consumer channel increased 67% from the prior year, which helped support both revenue and margin in the quarter.

Turning now to our fiscal 2020 results: our outperformance in the fourth quarter, along with our restructuring, resulted in top-line growth and significantly higher profitability than we guided to at the beginning of the year. Adjusted EBITDA increased 22% to a record $109 million and adjusted EBITDA margin increased 120 basis points to a record 8.2%. As good as these numbers are, they still include $32 million in tariffs, of which we will receive a refund of approximately $30 million and largely mitigate the ongoing impact in fiscal 2021.

Excluding tariffs, fiscal 2020 adjusted EBITDA would have been $141 million, or a 10.6% adjusted EBITDA margin. This profitability is meaningfully ahead of our original outlook of 5.3% to 5.9% even on less revenue than expected. The revenue impact was a result of reduced retail partner orders from the effects of COVID-19 and demand outstripping supply. Despite this, the strong adjusted EBITDA margin performance resulted from gross margin expansion and OpEx control, and we delivered this while continuing to invest in our products.

Gross margin for the year increased 130 basis points to 43.1%. Excluding tariffs, gross margin increased 370 basis points to a record 45.6% driven by mix shifts into higher margin products and channels, along with ongoing material cost reductions. In fiscal 2020, we achieved our 15th consecutive year of revenue growth. We delivered 5% revenue growth, or 3% excluding the 53rd week, generating total revenue of $1.326 billion.

As Patrick discussed, the continued strength in our business has been the result of successful new product launches, strong growth in new households as well as increased repurchasing by our existing households. Direct-to-consumer revenue increased 84% and represented a record 21% of total revenue compared to 12% last year. The Americas grew at 11%, and EMEA declined 3%, or 2% on a constant currency basis, primarily stemming from a tougher market environment throughout the year. APAC increased 2% as IKEA slowed down ordering due to COVID-19 and their physical store closures.

Sonos speaker revenue was up 3% year-over-year driven by the launch of new products, but was also negatively impacted by reduced orders from our physical retail partners affected by COVID-19 and supply constraints as demand rebounded. Sonos System Products revenue increased 17% driven by the continued strength of our installer channel and component products, Amp and Port. Partner Products and Other Revenue increased 12% driven by the strength of our other products in this category.

Our operating expenses for the year showed investment in R&D as we continue to support new products and customer experiences, including integrating the Snips acquisition. We showed leverage across sales and marketing and G&A when you take into account the restructuring and legal expenses. R&D excluding restructuring and severance as a percentage of revenue increased 220 basis points. Our software and consumer experience continues to differentiate our products and in fiscal 2020, more than 50% of our R&D investment was allocated to software engineering.

Sales and marketing excluding restructuring and severance costs as a percentage of revenue decreased 120 basis points. This was on top of a 420 basis point year-over-year decrease in fiscal 2019. We benefited from differentiated high impact creative and the adoption of more efficient direct-to-consumer marketing. G&A excluding restructuring and severance, IP litigation and transaction-related costs as a percentage of revenue decreased 40 basis points in fiscal 2020 primarily due to leverage on the higher sales volume in the quarter.

Our model continues to generate strong free cash flow and we saw another significant increase this year. We generated cash flows from operating activities of $162 million and free cash flow of $129 million, up 32% from $97 million last year. We ended the year with $407 million in cash, which puts us in a strong position to invest organically in our business, pursue M&A, and return capital to shareholders through share repurchases.

We completed the $50 million share repurchase authorization that our Board approved in September 2019 at an average price of $13.18. We announced today that the Board has authorized another $50 million repurchase program. We continue to see significant value in our stock particularly in light of our increased profitability, growth and execution. We are confident in the earnings power of our model and believe that there are significant value creation opportunities that lie ahead.

Now let’s look ahead to what we expect to be an excellent fiscal 2021, with ongoing increases in profitability and a rebound in top-line growth on the back of strong demand. While we remain cognizant of the uncertainty in the broader environment and with COVID-19, we are expecting a strong fiscal 2021 regardless, with impressive adjusted EBITDA margin expansion as we reduce our exposure to tariffs and further scale our OpEx.

Our fiscal 2021 outlook is for adjusted EBITDA in the range of $170 million to $205 million. This represents 12% to 14% adjusted EBITDA margins, an expansion of 380 basis points to 580 basis points. This is significantly above prior expectations for fiscal 2021. This also excludes the impact of any refunded tariffs given the uncertainty of timing.

Gross margin is expected to be in the range of 45.3% to 45.8%, with minimal impact from tariffs. We have continued to make progress on diversifying our manufacturing and remain on track to have our full shift to Malaysia completed by the summer. As a result, we do not expect a meaningful tariff expense in fiscal 2021. We also expect to maintain our direct-to-consumer business at similar levels to fiscal 2020, despite our expectations that physical stores will remain open. In addition, we expect stable margins compared to fiscal 2020 as we see limited additional benefit in product or channel mix, offset by increased shipping and logistics costs.

Total revenue for fiscal 2021 is expected to be in the range of $1.44 billion to $1.5 billion, which represents revenue growth of 9% to 13%. Excluding the 53rd week from fiscal 2020, this represents growth of 11% to 15% for the year. The stronger than expected guidance shows how well our business is performing as we look ahead to next year.

Let me share some color now as it relates to the first quarter fiscal 2021. While we don’t give quarterly guidance, we thought it would helpful to provide some additional information especially given the supply chain constraints as demand has continued to outpace our expectations. We are investing in expedited air freight shipments in order to better meet the demand and have as much product available as possible in the first quarter. Even with that, as

Patrick mentioned, we will continue to be low on stock for some key products in the first quarter.

Accordingly, we anticipate that the first quarter of fiscal 2021 will contribute slightly less total revenue as a percentage of the total fiscal year compared to the first quarter of last year.

We have also been expanding capacity in light of the demand and expect that by the end of the second quarter we will be fully in stock across all our products. As you may know, many supply chain constraints are a broader-industry wide challenge and not unique to Sonos. We see impacts on everything from component availability, to container availability and port congestion, as well as higher shipping and logistics costs all of which we are actively working through.

Operating expense is expected to be relatively consistent on a dollar basis as compared to the fourth quarter fiscal 2020, except for the increased sales and marketing investment typical in the first quarter. The first quarter is seasonally our highest promotional quarter. This, along with the fact we will continue to be exempt from the majority of tariffs through the first quarter, should result in a similar gross margin profile as the first quarter fiscal 2020, if you also excluded the tariffs.

The benefit of mix is largely offset by the increased logistics costs in the quarter. We have factored all of this color into our annual revenue, gross margin and adjusted EBITDA guidance and look forward to talking more about the quarter on our first quarter earnings call.

As I reflect on our fiscal 2020, I am impressed by the resilience of our business model. Despite early challenges in physical retail our products continued to resonate with both new and existing customers, and we launched incredibly successful new products. These will drive continued strong performance in fiscal 2021 and beyond. We did all of this while making some hard decisions to lower expenses, still investing in R&D for the future, and delivering record profitability and cash flow.

Our strong growth, margin expansion and significant increase in adjusted EBITDA for fiscal

2021 puts us in a position to continue to deliver profitability and growth. Our strong balance sheet will enable us to invest in the business and return capital through share repurchases.

We have a stronger business than we did a year ago, and a bright outlook. I’m very excited about executing on this in the next year. I am also excited to share that we are planning a virtual investor event on March 9th. We will spend time on our strategy and re-introduce updated long-term financial targets. Be on the lookout for more details in the coming weeks.

With that I would like to turn the call over to questions.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of John Babcock with Bank of America. Your line is open.

J
John Babcock
Bank of America

Hey, good evening and thanks for taking my questions. Starting out, I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about some of the supply constraints that you guys are seeing. I mean, obviously, I think different companies are seeing it in different ways, but I was wondering if you might be able to provide a little bit more color about what exactly is impacting Sonos specifically.

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So, I would say we continue to see demand outperform our expectations, which, continues to put pressure on our supply chain, even as we increase our capacity and then much like other companies in the industry as I mentioned, we’re seeing everything from challenges with component availability, container availability, congestion in port to higher shipping and logistics costs.

J
John Babcock
Bank of America

Okay, thank you. And is there – obviously, like it looks like from the website that you have pretty strong back orders on a couple of your products, and you mentioned that it’s going to take a little while to get those back down to a normalized level. I was wondering, given that, if you could provide any sort of initial color on sort of the holiday season demand that you’re seeing so far recognizing you might be able to – might not be able to say much, but just want to see what I might be able to get.

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

I think that that’s guidance that we can give is that due to the fact that we are constrained a bit on inventory. We’re expecting Q1 revenue to be slightly lower as a percentage of total year revenue than what we saw last year. But we are investing in things like air freight and doing everything we can to get as much supply into Q1 as we can. And then we do keep the website pretty updated in terms of shipping dates and how things are stretching out.

J
John Babcock
Bank of America

Okay. Thanks for that. And then last question before I turn it over, I was wondering if you could talk about the reception that you’re seeing so far for the Sonos Radio HD?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

I think that it’s…

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So, we’ve just launched that one, obviously John, so just last week, we’re excited to really test our first in a new service into the – out into the world. But it is super early at this point. So, we’ll talk a little more about that at our first Investor Day coming up in March and kind of the way we’re thinking about services, but we’re excited about it and have seen a good initial response and more to come on that. It’s early days.

J
John Babcock
Bank of America

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Katy Huberty with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.

K
Katy Huberty
Morgan Stanley

Thank you. Congrats on a really strong quarter. I wonder if we can come back to the holiday season and just hear how you’re thinking about promotions, your retail partners, stocking inventory and linearity of demand, which is typically pretty backend loaded in the December quarter. How is that different this year given what’s expected to be more of a stretched out period of demand and more business going direct versus through retail partners?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

It’s a great question. I think it’s a lot of what you referenced, which is, people are seeing the holiday quarter start a bit earlier this year. We have – relatively good visibility into the holiday quarter and demand from both our retail partners and then with the increased direct-to-consumer business, what we’re seeing on our own website. We ran our first promo last weekend on move. So that was a bit earlier than we normally do and I think that’s consistent with what other partners and retailers are seeing. So, I think you’ll probably see less backend loading this Q1 than you have seen in other Q1s.

K
Katy Huberty
Morgan Stanley

And then as we think about fiscal 2021, I know you don’t give specific quarterly guidance, but should we expect profits to continue to be concentrated in your first quarter or do the strong fourth quarter 2020 results set up as a precursor to smoothing out some of that earnings linearity that has been very frontend loaded in past years?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I mean, I think the best that I can do is we gave a little bit of color on both revenue gross margin and OpEx for Q1. So, any quarter where we have significantly higher revenue, we do tend to have better flow through all the way down to EBITDA. But I think if you take the color and the shaping around Q1 and sort of flow it through the rest of the year, because everything we know about Q1 is factored into that guidance. You’ll see that it’s a pretty nice increase in profitability for the whole year.

K
Katy Huberty
Morgan Stanley

Okay, great. And then just last question, should we think about you being able to lower sales and marketing expenses again, in fiscal 2021 or as you invest in direct-to-consumer and some of the retail channels open up again, will that return to year-on-year growth?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. We had guided to basically flat gross margins at the midpoint for 2021. And so you will see the EBITDA margin expansion coming from OpEx leverage.

K
Katy Huberty
Morgan Stanley

Okay. So, we should think about R&D continuing to grow and really, seeing significant leverage on the sales and marketing in G&A line again?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

We’re not calling the shape of OpEx for fiscal year 2021, but you can see that, because we’re expanding EBITDA so nicely that we have to be getting leverage on our OpEx as we go through the year.

K
Katy Huberty
Morgan Stanley

Okay, great. Thank you so much.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Rod Hall with Goldman Sachs. Rod Hall with Goldman Sachs your line is open. Your next question comes from the line of Adam Tindle with Raymond James. Your line is open.

A
Adam Tindle
Raymond James

Thanks. Good afternoon, and congrats as well on the strong finish to the fiscal year. Patrick, I just wanted to start on the fiscal 2021 plan, where you’re balancing both growth and incremental profitability. company is cash flow positive. You’re in a net cash position. Just curious why pursue further EBITDA margin expansion in fiscal 2021 versus perhaps investing more heavily, acknowledge that you’re still planning for growth, but maybe, just touch on the plans, different plans that you evaluated and why this is the right mix versus a more investment heavy approach.

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Hey Adam, it’s been something we’ve talked about for a long time, as you know, which is this philosophy of sustainable profitable growth as we approach it, and so there’s often things, particularly in the hardware world that companies do that sometimes can run for a quarter or two and you can show good numbers for a quarter or two. but we believe in more sustainably building that and building it in a consistent way, right. We’ve been at this 15 years now, we’ve really built our business and we’re showing the power of our model, whether we had to work through the great recession or through a pandemic, through competitors, coming in and copying our intellectual property and coming into our category. And so we’ve, I think, found a good balance in terms of where we are and we’ve hit a scale point, where I believe that we’re doing what we can to drive the kind of growth that makes sense for us as a company in terms of reaching these new customers, and servicing our existing customers and really making sure we’re doing that in a sustainable way.

We will continue to look for opportunities, where we might want to invest more. We may want to make acquisitions as Brittany talked about too to add to what we’re doing as we go through that. And I think having the balance between what we’re pursuing on the revenue side and then as well on the profitability side, enables us to do that and to do it in a way that builds the company for decades to come, not just a quarter or two.

A
Adam Tindle
Raymond James

That’s helpful. Thanks. And maybe as a follow-up, Brittany, on the fiscal 2021 plan on the gross margin line, I think you talked about it, expecting the flat year-over-year X tariffs. As I think about the obvious kind of moving parts on a year-over-year basis, fiscal 2020 that you’re comparing to had obviously strong mix of highest ASP products that you’re comparing to. I think you’re guiding DTC to the same level in 2021 versus 2020. So, not an incremental tailwind on go-to-market, you also have the Malaysia facility coming on board, and I don’t know if there’s maybe, some incremental costs to that. So, just thought about some – a number of different headwinds, what are the good guides that keep gross margin flat year-over-year?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. it would really be product mix. So, we’re carrying through a pretty nice product mix from our fiscal year 2020, as well as channel mix. Product mix can go up and down for us, depending on what products we have in the market, what’s selling well, what new products be introduced to, that’s always a balance and one of the main drivers in our gross margin, but you’ve got product and you’ve got channels being supportive of consistent gross margins year-over-year. We’re looking at it X tariffs that we’ve really mitigated that as a headwind to our gross margins. And then as I said, we are expecting a bit of an increase in freight and logistics as we go, especially through Q1.

A
Adam Tindle
Raymond James

Maybe, just a quick housekeeping on the Q1 revenue comments, would revenue also decline year-over-year or does it still grow year-over-year?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

I would expect it still to grow year-over-year. You’ve got quite a bit of room to sort of take our comments about the revenue shaping and still end up with growth.

A
Adam Tindle
Raymond James

That’s helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Matt Sheerin with Stifel. Your line is open.

M
Matt Sheerin
Stifel

Yes. Thank you and good afternoon. just another question regarding your guidance for the December quarter on revenue, which is below the seasonality that you’ve seen in recent years due to the supply constraints you talked about. but does that also factor in continued challenges within your retail channel customers, because of COVID-related shutdowns et cetera, and what do you – how do you see that environment? And as we look to the March quarter, does that lessen the likelihood of any inventory overhang that you typically have seen in the March quarter, because of the retailers in the December quarter?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

We’re not assuming a big shutdown of physical retail again, but what we saw as we went through the last wave was that our DTC business was really able to pick up the demand from that. And so that’s how we’re thinking about Q1, in factoring in sort of everything we see right now from the retail landscape. and yeah, given our inventory challenges right now, I really hope we’re not talking about inventory overhang as we get into Q2, but if we were – because we really got our supply chain up and running, and solved some challenges, so…

M
Matt Sheerin
Stifel

Okay. Thank you. And then, Patrick, regarding the early success of the radio, Sonos Radio so far, and then moving that to a revenue generating model, how should we think about your long-term strategy in terms of generating revenue outside of traditional hardware? Are you still sort of in the kicking the tires phase on various projects before we start to see some traction or what’s the thinking there?

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Thanks, Matt. I think it is very much. We’re past kicking the tires. But we’re just getting started, in terms of where we are. And we’ve seen some promising engagement so far from customers on both the ad-supported radio that we launched earlier this year and now Radio HD and we’re learning. And so we’re kind of taking that into account and try and understand what customers like, what kind of experiences we can build that are unique to Sonos. And we’ve got a bunch of ideas in this category. And I look forward to sharing a little more on that when we get together in March for the Investor Day.

M
Matt Sheerin
Stifel

Okay. And just to follow-up, are these initiatives a drag on margins right now? Or is that just part of that the investment in at some point, we see some margin expansion because they’re either cash flow breakeven or profitable?

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Probably early at this – too early, at this point to say, but we’re obviously investing in that. But that’s all factored into what you’re seeing from an R&D investment level.

M
Matt Sheerin
Stifel

Okay. Thank you.

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Matt. I would just note that, when we do our March 9 Investor Day, we’re going to be bringing back our long-term targets and updating them for everything we know right now. So that’ll be a good time to talk about gross margin beyond, the fiscal year 2021 guidance for giving right now.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your next question comes from the line of Brent Thill with Jefferies. Your line is open.

Brent Thill
Jefferies

Thank you. The results with the profitability you mentioned, the direct-to-consumer is doing very well, but when you look at the other factors that are helping drive the margin profile going forward, can you just highlight, where you think beyond DTC? What other big drivers you’re seeing that are helping result in this great progress for it on the bottom line?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

The product mix is the other one that we were calling out. So product mix is always a big driver for us as gross margin. We’ve done some work in ongoing material cost reductions, and that’s really what you’re seeing coming through in addition to the channel mix.

Brent Thill
Jefferies

And is radio in any of the revenue guidance? Or is that excluded because it’s too early to make a call?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Everything we know about all of our products is included in our fiscal year 2021 guidance. So we do not break out anything for that one specifically, because as you can imagine, having just launched. It’s pretty small.

Brent Thill
Jefferies

Great, thanks

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Rod Hall with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

R
Rod Hall
Goldman Sachs

Yes. Thanks for the chance again. Sorry about that earlier. So nice quarter, I guess I wanted to ask about the fiscal 2021 guidance and visibility, and kind of maybe what you’re assuming there, Brittany, when you give that guidance, are you assuming steady state in terms of the economy, do you assume or a rebound? I mean, how do you think about that? And did you consider not giving guidance at all? And then I have a follow-up to that.

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

Yes. It’s a great question. It’s sort of hard to have a crystal ball on the economy or the world right now. And so we always try and share when we know we share what we can share. That’s generally been our philosophy on guidance is why we gave guidance for Q4 when we could, and now we’re giving you our best look at fiscal year 2021. Our guidance is a little bit wider than we would normally give to take into account a bit of that uncertainty. But Q1 is also our largest quarter. And we can see what we can see on Q1 in terms of demand trends, and the underlying demand for our products. As we have looked at Q4, and then as we’ve looked at 2021 is quite high and it’s really the success of Arc, Amp, move our new products plus what we have coming for the year that gives us confidence to come out with a guidance range.

R
Rod Hall
Goldman Sachs

Okay. Thanks for that. And then I wanted to on DTC, you’re indicating a similar percentage to this year and 21% next year, but you’ve had this, obviously a move up because of COVID. I just wondering – and your commentary earlier made it sound like you feel like that’s a sustainable trend. And I think I agree with that. But I’m curious why that percentage doesn’t go up in the guidance. Why not go ahead and increase it? Or do you feel like it’s kind of outpacing what it should be right now and that’s why you’re holding it flat.

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

We had a big benefit in fiscal year 2020 on DTC from the fact that physical retail was closed and e-commerce and DTC was really the best available channel. So I think we’re trying to be pretty balanced as we look at fiscal year 2021, between the fact that consumers are getting more comfortable buying products online. We’ve been investing in our DTC channel. We’ve been deepening those relationships. Those are all the pros. I think the challenges, the physical retailers have also adapted. They are doing curbside pickup and delivery and that continues to be an important channel for us. So we think being roughly flat year-over-year is a pretty nice result for our DTC business. And we expect physical retail to be open and a strong partner in 2021.

R
Rod Hall
Goldman Sachs

Great. Okay. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Elliot Alper with D.A. Davidson. Your line is open.

E
Elliot Alper
D.A. Davidson

Great. Thank you. I just want to follow-up on the gross margin guidance. I guess, what are the assumptions surrounding the promotional landscape for fiscal 2021? And then kind of back to the DTC, kind of curious how that goes into forecasting? And if there’s any correlation you’ve seen between some of the retail openings in your DTC business by geography?

B
Brittany Bagley
Chief Financial Officer

So I would say on our Q1 shaping, we called for our gross margin, if you exclude tariff from both periods to be fairly consistent year-over-year. So you can imagine that that means we’re not doing any sort of big swings from a promotional standpoint one way or the other, given that type of consistency in our gross margins. And then yes, we certainly look pretty closely at our DTC business and how that continued to perform in Q4 when physical retail had largely reopened. And that’s part of what’s giving us the confidence in the 2021 guide on DTC.

E
Elliot Alper
D.A. Davidson

Okay. Great. And then, what does the Disney partnership mean for Sonos and kind of what other similar partnerships could that look like in the future?

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I think it’s a great one that shows our intent to go to an even broader mainstream audience and be able to bring our products to just an even wider array of people. We’ve seen – we’re seeing such trends and such tailwinds around streaming, whether it be audio or video and that plays right into what we’re doing. And so, we think based on what we’ve seen here in the kind of ambition that we have in terms of other new homes we think we can get into, we think this is an excellent way of doing it. We’re obviously very selective in terms of the brands that we want to work with around this. But I think it is one of those effective ways of getting even more leveraged as well out of our sales and marketing investments. So I’m very pleased with that and look forward to doing more in the future.

E
Elliot Alper
D.A. Davidson

Great. Thank you.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to Patrick Spence.

P
Patrick Spence
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, David. And thanks to all of you for joining. As I mentioned, I think we’ve had a real inflection point in terms of our model. Our model is working, it’s working and has worked for 15 years in terms of getting us to this point in terms of really being resilient in the face of the pandemic. And we’re excited about what we have in store for the next year. We’re excited to share more of our strategic thinking as we get to that March 9 Investor Day as well. And I just want to say a huge thank you to the entire Sonos team for what was delivering through a very challenging year, but adapting and being resilient in the face of everything that we were challenged with. So, thank you. And we’ll talk to you again soon. Take care.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.