Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Retail

Big Lots Inc (NYSE: BIG) Q1 2020 Earnings Call Transcript

BIG Earnings Call - Final Transcript

Big Lots Inc (BIG) Q1 2020 earnings call dated May 29, 2020

Corporate Participants:

Andrew D. Regrut — Vice President, Investor Relations

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Lisa Bachmann — Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising Officer and Chief Operating Officer

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Analysts:

Chandni Luthra — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Peter Keith — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Joe Feldman — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

Paul Trussell — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Elizabeth Lane Suzuki — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

Brad Thomas — KeyBanc Capital — Analyst

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

Anthony Chukumba — Loop Capital Markets — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Big Lots’ First Quarter Conference Call. Currently, all lines are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer portion will follow the prepared remarks. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

At this time, I would like to introduce today’s first speaker, Andy Regrut, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Andy.

Andrew D. Regrut — Vice President, Investor Relations

Good morning. Thank you for joining us for our first quarter conference call. With me here today in Columbus are Bruce Thorn, our President and CEO; Lisa Bachmann, Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising and Operating Officer; and Jonathan Ramsden, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer.

Before we get started, I’d like to remind you that any forward-looking statements we make on today’s call involve risks and uncertainties and are subject to our Safe Harbor provisions as stated in our press release and our SEC filings and that actual results can differ materially from those described in our forward-looking statements. Our first quarter results reported today do not include any non-GAAP adjustments. However, comparisons to prior year are to adjusted non-GAAP results. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP adjusted results are available in today’s press release.

This morning, Bruce will start the call with a few opening comments, Lisa will discuss Q1 results from a merchandising perspective, Jonathan will review the financial highlights from the first quarter and Bruce will complete our prepared remarks before taking your questions.

I’ll now turn the call over to Bruce.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Andy and good morning, everyone. I want to start by saying how proud I am of all that our team here at Big Lots has accomplished over the past quarter. We are certainly pleased with our financial results, which I’ll come back to in a moment, but I am proudest of how we have responded to the unprecedented crisis of COVID-19 and the many ways in which we have grown as an organization.

Across all areas of our business, it has been inspiring to see how we have stepped-up our game over the past 90 days. During that time, we have become more nimble, we have seen new leaders emerge and most importantly, thanks to the incredible commitment of our Store and DC associates, we have continued to serve our customers in as a safe environment as possible. We are particularly grateful to have had the opportunity to serve our country’s heroes working in the medical, first responder and emergency services communities along with active military and veterans.

When the crisis began to unfold in March, we aligned on five key priorities. First, that health and safety for associates and customers would take precedence. Second, that we would batten down the hatches and focus on liquidity and business continuity to enable us to support our associates, our customers and our communities. Third, that we would all lean on each other to successfully navigate this crisis as a team. Fourth, that we would need to make quick and often imperfect decisions. And last, that we would think in stages of now, next, and later and make sure we were communicating regularly to all of our stakeholders. The objective of our focus and actions was to navigate the crisis and come out of it stronger.

We realized quickly that we would need to incur some significant additional expenses to keep our stores associates and customers safe. We didn’t hesitate to do that and look to fund those investments with savings in other areas. We decided to cancel our Friends and Family event for safety reasons and closed on Easter Day to give all of our associates a well-deserved break. We knew these decisions would carry a cost, but we also knew that they were the right things to do. In the end, the result has been that our business has been much less disrupted than we feared. Our stores have remained open to serve our loyal customers and many new ones. And the rapid scaling of our e-com business has been more critical to us than ever, as we have seen e-com penetration grow dramatically, particularly through BOPIS. In addition, the team did a great job of managing our underlying expenses. The net result has been a quarter in which we posted our strongest comp in many, many years and grew our earnings by approximately 37%.

Before giving some more color on those numbers, I want to pause to thank all the associates for their commitment and dedication over the past months. It has truly been remarkable. I also want to thank our merchandising and non-merchandising vendor partners for being with us every step of the way through this crisis.

As you all know, our quarter got off to a slow start in February, driven in part by a pull forward of sales from heavy promotional activity in January. In addition, unexpected choppiness and income tax refunds adversely impacted furniture sales, especially over President’s Day weekend. The world obviously changed in March with the onset of COVID-19 as customers were confronted with a new way of living, which included stay-at-home and shelter-in-place restrictions. Supplies to stock up pantries with food consumables and other staples were critical and our sales meaningfully accelerated in the month. The cancellation of Friends and Family and closing on Easter contributed to a slow start in April. However, the lost business was quickly overcome as stimulus checks were received and many customers focused on spending in categories such as furniture and seasonal to make their stay-at-home experience more pleasant. Many of these products carry higher margins. So this mix shift helped to partially offset the heavy volume and lower-margin food and consumables categories. The net effect was the gross margin rate down approximately 80 basis points from last year’s first quarter rate.

We did a very good job managing expenses during these uncertain times with our expense ratio improving 180 basis points in the quarter despite incurring significant additional costs, the latter included a temporary increase in the wage rate of $2 per hour for in-store and DC associates beginning in mid-March, which we have recently extended through June alongside an enhanced 30% associate discount. Additional bonus pay and also significant additional costs to clean and disinfect our stores and distribution centers on an ongoing basis as well as personal protective equipment for our associates, installing protective plexiglass shields at our cash register areas and other steps. Even with these costs included, we were able to achieve an EPS of $1.26 in the quarter, which compares to $0.92 last year. Beyond these outstanding results, I am pleased to report that we are off to a strong start in Q2. As in Q1, we have limited visibility on how our sales will perform for the balance of the quarter and we know that we will again incur some additional expenses, but we will manage through this with the same mindset we brought to the first quarter.

With that, I would like to talk about some key learnings that we have taken out of the past few months and how we believe we are positioned to win going forward. First, we have a strong balance sheet with plenty of liquidity, which we expect to further enhance when we close the pending sale leaseback transaction for our four own distribution centers. Second, our merchandising mix is exactly what our customers want and need today. Food consumables and stay-at-home assortments with structurally sound margins. Our ability to lean into closeouts in the months to come will further differentiate our assortment and the value we provide our customers. Next, we have a loyal customer base and that has increased in size over the past months. And finally, we have learned more than ever that we have an outstanding team, who have become even more effective during the crisis.

These strengths will further support the pursuit of our existing strategies under Operation North Star where the roll-out of key initiatives remain on track. For example, Broyhill is now available on indoor and outdoor furniture and soft and hard home assortments. This iconic brand emphasizes our better and best offerings with elevated quality and a compelling value proposition. Across the board, whether it be patio furniture, gazebo, sectionals, occasional tables, dining room sets or accent items including window coverings, fashion bedding and home decor, all have sold through quickly, exceeding expectations despite a delayed marketing launch of the brand as customers spruced-up their living spaces with this new collection.

We are increasing the density of the furniture department by adjusting and enhancing the layout of the furniture pattern adding new fixturing. The configuration of our queue lines, which in some stores moves our cash registers into banks, also frees up square footage in front of the furniture department. The combination of all these moves will allow us to explore white space opportunities and furniture, expanding our Broyhill offering or displayed big buyouts and closeouts across other categories in the front of the store to drive higher revenue, increase box productivity and generate more margin per square foot.

In May, we started the roll-out of the Lot and queue lines to existing Store of the Future locations and certain other stores that are in the legacy balance of chain format. Our tests of these programs continue to generate strong results with each one generating more than a point of comp for the store. The Lot and the queue lines will also be included in our new stores and Store of the Future conversions this year and we expect that approximately 750 of our stores will have both before the holiday selling season. The chain-wide roll-out of our pantry optimization initiative will now begin in September. This initiative repositions our food and consumables assortments by moving footage from food staples to food and entertainment and consumables where we have a higher permission to play. The assortment will include national brands at everyday low prices coupled with own brands and closeouts. This compelling offering will allow our customers to find more items on their shopping lists in our stores, which we also believe will result in higher frequency of shopping trips.

We’ve added new signings throughout the store that clearly calls out closeouts, big buy alerts, and other great deals. We know our customers love the value from these offerings and we are making it much easier to find them. Alongside these in-store programs, we expect continued strong growth in our e-com channel, Q1 was our highest volume quarter since launching the platform in April of 2016.

Through yesterday with BOPIS included, e-com sales have exceeded last year’s full year totals, and the business continued to see growth in profits with the direct business excluding BOPIS breaking even for the first time. In addition, we’re making meaningful improvements to the online experience with better search, reduced delivery time and expanded payment options. For example, in April, we added Easy Leasing, our popular lease to purchase program to the e-com platform. LOPIS, that is Lease Online Pickup in Store as we call it, has been very well received by customers with penetration and online furniture sales quickly trending up. And we will also be able to accept the Big Lots’ credit cards and Big Lots’ gift cards online over the summer months.

And finally, the very popular shopping and delivering option, Instacart, will soon be available for our customers. We believe this is a very important next step in our omnichannel experience and we are exploring other same-day delivery services for our larger product assortments, including furniture. The growing popularity of curbside pickup, which we added in Q1 has validated the opportunity we see to grow these convenience options at an accelerated pace to meet the customers’ new demands both throughout the crisis and in the post-COVID-19 world.

Turning to expenses, we have continued to make excellent progress on taking costs out of the business and more broadly creating a culture of frugality. Our original cost reduction target of $100 million will be achieved well ahead of schedule, and we believe there is significant opportunity beyond this figure.

With that, I will hand the call over to Lisa. But I’ll return to make some additional comments later.

Lisa Bachmann — Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising Officer and Chief Operating Officer

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Bruce noted, Q1 sales were significantly stronger than expected with comps increasing 10.3%. From a merchandise category perspective, six of the seven businesses were up in the quarter. Consumables was the top performer, up 27% with positive results in all departments, which is in line with the dramatic shift in consumer buying trends towards the supplies needed for the pandemic.

Paper sales increased nearly 70% in the quarter and household chemicals, housekeeping products and health and beauty were all very strong. Our team has done a very good job working with our vendor partners to keep these critical assortments in stock as much as possible. Food also posted a very strong quarter comping up in the low double digits. Similar to consumables, the strength in food was broad-based with increases across all departments and notable strength in DSD, dry grocery and beverages. Soft Home was up high single digits with very good results in nearly all departments, in part driven by our launch of Broyhill.

Home decor including candles, wall art, mirrors and table-top items along with decorative pillows and fashion bedding were all very strong. Our customers have noticed the quality and value in the Broyhill brand and they have responded in a big way. Electronics, toys and accessories also increased in the high single digits, driven by strong sales in toys and graphic tees which were rolled out in the entire chain during the quarter. Seasonal was up in the mid-single digit range in Q1, which was a very good result considering the puts and takes in the quarter that Bruce described. Our outdoor living assortments, including the new items in Broyhill have remained popular in May and our inventory levels have been selling down quickly. As a reminder, much of our lawn and garden in summer product is purchased a year in advance and directly imported. So, it is challenging to chase the season if we’re experiencing outsized demand similar to this year.

Furniture was also up mid single digits, which was a good quarter, given that it is on top of the increase in Q1 last year, and that February, which is normally a sizable month for furniture sales in the quarter was below expectations. All departments in furniture posted a positive comp with ready-to-assemble and mattresses producing the best results. And similar to Soft Home and Seasonal, our customers love the newness in the Broyhill collection in upholstery and case good items. And finally, Hard Home was down in Q1, which was in line with our expectations as we reduced space in the store and reallocated it to more productive categories.

Before handing the call over to Jonathan, I want to thank our BPARM teams consisting of buyers, planners, allocation, replenishment and marketing for their extra efforts during these unprecedented times. They have been working day and night to secure the supplies our customer needs to get through the pandemic. The dynamics of COVID-19 and the impact on non-essential retailers has created a unique shift in closeout product availability. Over the last few years, our closeout assortment has been highly concentrated in the merchandise categories of food and consumables. Very few large closeouts have been available in furniture and seasonal and the closeout opportunities in Home didn’t necessarily work or coordinate with the quality of our planned assortments in Soft and Hard Home. As you might imagine, the high demand for food and consumables during the crisis has stressed the supply chains and limited the excess product available in these categories, but that is offset by the excess product available in other categories including furniture and other home-related items and apparel. For instance, we have recently secured a very good to closeout opportunity in children’s apparel with girls tops and shorts now hitting stores. We have an experienced team of merchants, planners, and allocators that are well versed in the closeout sourcing model and are quickly pivoting the organization towards these opportunistic buys.

I’ll now turn the call over to Jonathan to discuss the numbers.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Thanks, Lisa, and good morning, everyone. I would like to add my appreciation for the outstanding efforts of everyone across our Big Lots team and for the tremendous support we have received from our external partners.

Turning to the numbers. Net sales for the first quarter were $1.439 billion, an 11% increase compared to $1.296 billion a year ago. The growth resulted from a comparable sales increase of 10.3% and sales growth from new and relocated stores not in the comp base. In terms of the cadence through the quarter, comps were down in the high single digits in February for the reasons Bruce outlined. However, in March, sales accelerated to a low double-digit increase as customers stocked up on essentials. That impact faded in late March and early April, which also got off to a slow start due to the cancelled Friends and Family event and Easter Day closing. Beginning in mid-April, we saw a material improvement in comps that continued through the balance of the month, and has further continued into May. April month-to-date comps turned positive roughly two weeks prior to quarter-end and continue to improve rapidly.

Net income for the first quarter was $49.3 million, up 33% compared to first quarter adjusted net income of $37 million last year. Diluted EPS of $1.26 was up 37% compared to adjusted EPS of $0.92 in last year’s first quarter. Gross margin rate for Q1 was 39.7%, down 80 basis points from last year’s first quarter adjusted rate with the decline resulting from a shift in our product mix towards the lower margin categories of food and consumables and higher shrink. The shrink increases in line with the higher accrual rate we moved to in Q4 based on the initial results of our annual physical inventory cycle. Our physical inventories in Q1 have been curtailed somewhat by the crisis, but the results we have seen are broadly consistent with what we saw in Q4.

Total expense dollars for the quarter were $496 million, up from the $471 million of adjusted expenses reported for the same period last year. The increase included unplanned expenses of approximately $17 million associated with the crisis response actions Bruce described a moment ago, including temporary wage increases and additional bonuses, new cleaning protocols, supplies and equipment for protecting our customers and associates, as well as some other unplanned expenses. However, these incremental expenses were significantly offset by savings relative to plan in other areas and our ability to hold expenses while significantly beating on the top line.

As a result, SG&A as a percent of sales was 34.5% in Q1, representing 180 basis points of improvement compared to last year, even with significant unplanned expenses included. We remain confident in our ability to drive SG&A leverage over-time. We have established new cost reduction targets across the business that we believe are aggressive but realistic. Alongside this, we are continuing to promote a broader culture of frugality. Once again, our first quarter results have validated our ability to do more with less. Interest expense for the quarter was $3.3 million, down slightly from last year as a result of lower debt levels. And the income tax rate in Q1 was 27.3%, compared to last year’s adjusted rate of 28.1%.

Moving on to the balance sheet, inventory ended the quarter at $807 million, a 13% decline compared to $927 million last year, with the decline resulting from strong sales in most merchandised categories in the quarter. As part of our initial response to the crisis, we pulled back significantly on inventory receipts, but those actions have now created additional capacity to pursue closeout and other opportunities.

During Q1, we opened six new stores and also closed six stores, leaving us with 1,404 stores and total selling square footage of 31.7 million. Capital expenditures for the quarter were $29 million compared to $77 million last year with the decline primarily coming from fewer Store of the Future conversions and no required investment in AVDC this year.

Depreciation expense in Q1 was $37.7 million or approximately $4.9 million higher than the same period last year. For the full year, we now expect capital expenditures to be around $130 million to $140 million, representing a significant reduction from our original guidance.

We ended the first quarter of fiscal 2020 with $312 million of cash and cash equivalents and $437 million of long-term debt. This represented a significant improvement in net debt compared to the end of the first quarter of fiscal 2019 when the Company had $64 million of cash and cash equivalents and $470 million of long-term debt.

During the quarter, out of an abundance of caution, we chose the draw-down additional amounts on our revolving credit facility to provide protection against the unknown potential impacts of the crisis. As Bruce referenced, we expect our strong liquidity position to be further enhanced by the closing of the previously announced sale and leaseback of our four owned distribution centers. As noted in a separate press release this morning, our Board of Directors declared a quarterly cash dividend for the second quarter of fiscal 2020 at $0.30 per common share. This dividend is payable on June 26, 2020, to shareholders of record as of the close of business on June 12, 2020.

Turning to guidance, at this point, we don’t believe we have sufficient visibility to reinstate full-year guidance. For the second quarter to-date, comparable sales are running up strongly, reflecting a continuation of the acceleration of business that began in mid-April. We expect these trends will moderate over the balance of the quarter due to a number of factors, including competitors and other retailers reopening, the planned cancellation of the July Friends and Family event, potential inventory constraints in certain categories and the abatement of stimulus-driven demand.

Assuming comparable sales for the second quarter similar to first quarter results, we would expect diluted EPS to be in the range of $0.65 to $0.80. This outlook incorporates anticipated pre-tax expenses related to COVID-19 of approximately $18 million. It further incorporates an approximate $7 million adverse pre-tax impact from the expected closing of the sale and leaseback transaction for our four owned distribution centers, but excludes the expected gain on sale from the transaction. Based on quarter-to-date sales, we believe the comparable sales assumption is conservative. Notwithstanding the prior commentary, given the highly fluid environment and uncertain outlook on consumer behavior, the Company believes the range of outcomes is wider than in a normal quarter. We intend to resume the practice of providing formal guidance when business conditions return to a more normal environment.

I’ll now turn the call back over to Bruce.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Jonathan. Before we open the lines for questions, I want to take a moment to once again express my sincere gratitude to the entire Big Lots team, especially our associates in the stores and in our distribution centers. Throughout this crisis, they have been on the front lines each and every day, they are truly heroes, and we cannot thank them enough for their service and dedication.

COVID 19 has changed the world in a short period of time. I believe it has been a defining moment in our 50-plus year company history. We have forged a new way of operating, a new way of collaborating and a new way of succeeding with the common goal for our company to serve our customers and our communities in a safe and healthy environment for all.

We really don’t know what is ahead of us, but as I mentioned in my opening remarks, sales have been strong in the month of May and we remain confident and optimistic about the impact of the roll-out of our Operation North Star initiatives. I’m also very encouraged by our team’s ability to be nimble and pivot towards new opportunities as they become available. As we’ve learned over the last 90 days, our environment can change quickly and unpredictably, but we will continue to navigate through that as we did in Q1, focusing on doing the right thing and playing our part to help our country return to a more normal footing.

I’ll now turn the call back over to Andy.

Andrew D. Regrut — Vice President, Investor Relations

Thanks, Bruce. Operator, we would now like to open the lines for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Certainly. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question today is coming from Chandni Luthra from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now live.

Chandni Luthra — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Hey, guys. Thank you for taking my question and congratulations on a great quarter. I hope you all are doing well. Is there a way to parse-out the impact from stimulus versus perhaps the new customers you acquired in the last two, three months by the fact that you were open and others were not. And then further versus your efforts, say the Lot and Broyhill, what are you doing in your efforts to sort of retain those new customers that you acquired? Thank you.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

So Chandni, I’ll take the first piece of that and then turn it over to Bruce. I think in terms of breaking out what the impact was of we have stimulus versus underlying trend, it’s very difficult to do that quite frankly. We don’t know what the world would have looked like had we not gone through the COVID-19 pandemic. So we’ve certainly spent a lot of time trying to understand that, but our focus frankly has been much more on the second part of your question, which is how do we emerge from the crisis in a very strong position. How do we retain the customers that have come to Big Lots through the crisis and how do we generate more ongoing new business traffic.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I’ll take the second part, Chandni. And thank you for your kind words. Yeah, Q1 was a roller-coaster ride. We saw a lot of traffic early on during the stockpiling phase in March and actually, in Q1 we saw our rewards sign-up up high single digits, actually nearly 10%, so that was good for us. What we’ve done to attract more customers are things like going after them in social media. Social media has played a big role. Our customers like many Americans today are focusing on trusted brands, trusted companies and we are becoming a social anchor point for that. Our heroes discount 15% off continues today and that recognizes all the first responders, medical staff out there or veterans everyone working very hard. And as they come in and they’re new customers, we’ve offered them bounce back programs like $10 off their $40 next purchase and we’ve seen really good response on that.

We’ve also increased and run promotions where if they become a new rewards customer, they’ll get 20% off. And that’s something that we’ve put on and off and that compares very good compared to what we normally run, which is usually $5 off their first purchase. So we’re happy to see new customers come in, experience Big Lots for the first time, bounce back, reward all those heroes out there. So it’s been great. And as they come in, they’re seeing new things that we’ve done across the store, whether it’s our furniture, our Broyhill line or new stores. now the Lot or the queue line that’s been rolling out in the first quarter. We’re excited to see how they’re giving us good feedback. I will also mention, as they come in throughout this COVID-19 first quarter, the net promoter scores have been the highest we’ve seen and engagement has just been wonderful. And so we’re really pleased with what we’re doing. We’ll continue to lean in to new customer acquisition through more branding, marketing, social media coupled with our promotions and extreme value we offer our customers.

Chandni Luthra — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Great. And if I could just squeeze a follow-up there. Is there any color you all could perhaps throw on performance by geography by urban versus suburban markets? Has there been a shift in trend in markets where competitors have started to reopen and lockdown measures have eased a bit? Thank you so much.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I’ll start off and if the team wants to add anything. We’ve seen across the board in Q1 and even into May just uniform strong trends both by across categories, much categories and geography. There have been occasions through Q1 when there were lockdown or shelter-in-home and closed stores where the traffic might be a little lower in one state versus the other, but for the most part, they’ve all trended upward and we’ve been uniformly successful across the board.

As the new competition starts opening up in America, I think we have not seen an impact at this point. I suspect that many non-essential retailers as they open-up are probably getting their legs back and trying to figure out how to staff up and so on, we have not seen a marked decrease in our business as a result of that. So I think time will come, that will tell, we’ll see more impact as more stores open up and there is more opportunity for customers to spend across the board, but right now, we’ve not seen any geography change versus another. I would say locally in terms of urban versus rural, we’ve been strong in both areas.

Chandni Luthra — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is coming from Peter Keith from Piper Sandler. Your line is now live.

Peter Keith — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Hi, thanks, Good morning, everyone, and congratulations on the great results. I was hoping maybe, Bruce, you could talk to Q2. It sounds like there’s pretty broad-based strength and so perhaps no negative mix shift like you saw in Q1 with consumables, just based on the EPS guide, it seems like you might be taking in some gross margin pressure. So I want to kind of understand the context of the mix and how you guys see gross margin shaping up for the quarter?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I’ll start then hand things off to Jonathan or Lisa, but we continued — since the stimulus checks, unemployment checks, we’ve seen strong growth from about mid-April across the board, across multiple categories, all categories, quite frankly, and that’s continued into May with strong results in May, I think for the most part, we think at some point, the stimulus checks and unemployment checks might start to wane, but we’re out of the gates very strong across the board in May.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. Hey Peter, good morning. And just to add a couple of points on the sort of the P&L and from a gross margin rate standpoint in Q1, about 50 basis points of the erosion year-over-year was due to the mix effects we spoke to. So based on where we are today, we don’t anticipate that being the same in Q2 and the mix has evened out more in Q2, but we do still having our focus a little bit of margin rate erosion year-over-year. I think what you’re probably seeing in expenses, we obviously believe we did an extremely good job in Q1 of keeping expenses very tight, actually reducing expenses significantly on an underlying basis, even while sales were going up and that obviously was offset to a significant degree by some of the one-time expenses.

We did pull back on a couple of lines like marketing, where we are planning to fund a little bit more into that in Q2. We do think it’s important that we take this opportunity to bring in new customers or retain customers that have shopped Big Lots over the last couple of months. So we are looking at deploying some more marketing expense in Q2, and that’s baked into the outlook. And I would say beyond that, we’re going to continue to move forward with this mindset of frugality and as we did throughout Q1, look to try and reduce the expenses that we have in our forecast. So, hopefully, to get a better result than what you’re seeing baked into that, but we don’t account on that until we’ve actually got it locked in.

Peter Keith — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Okay, thanks guys. That’s helpful. And maybe a separate question, again to Jonathan. On the real estate sale of the four DCs, could you provide some updated thoughts on the accretion of that transaction with share price now indicating above $40, it’s certainly much different than when the share prices in the mid-teens and the terms were finalized. And on that note too, if and when the deal is closed, is there anything that would hold up a share repurchase authorization in the near term or would this be something authorization would have to wait for a number of quarters?

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Hey Peter. Yeah, I’d happy to respond to all that. So first of all, we feel extremely good about how quickly we’ve moved through this transaction, particularly in the difficult background context and I’d like to express my public appreciation for everybody on our team and our partners of Oak Street who have moved expeditiously through this and we do believe we’re pretty close to closing that. Once we close the transaction, our overall perspective on user proceeds is the same as what we announced in our April 8th press release when we announced the sale leaseback. We intend to pay down our revolving credit facility. We’re going to retain some additional liquidity, which we think is appropriate in the current environment, but then we do as conditions start to normalize expect to deploy the remaining proceeds for other purposes, including investments and growth, but also potential share repurchases subject obviously to a new share repurchase authorization from the Board. So that remains to be a part of our thinking.

With regard to share repurchases, generally, our view is, we will continue to view those as appropriate use of excess liquidity, when the stock is priced attractively on a long-term basis and that hasn’t changed. So, beyond that, we will be more specific when we get to that.

Peter Keith — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Okay. Thanks a lot guys and good luck.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Peter.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Joe Joe Feldman from Telsey Advisory Group. Your line is now live.

Joe Feldman — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

Great. Hey, guys, congratulations on the quarter. Wanted to ask about inventory. You touched on it a little bit, some supply chain, it seems like it’s okay, but maybe some constraints in some areas. Can you talk a little bit more about where inventory stands today, and how you feel? I would imagine, down 13% is not quite where you’d like to be. And presumably, if you had more, you didn’t fuel sales higher. So just maybe talk about that a little bit where — how we should expect that to play out in the second quarter and beyond?

Lisa Bachmann — Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising Officer and Chief Operating Officer

Hi, Joe. I’ll start there and maybe hand back over to Jonathan. But to your point, the inventories came in down 13% in the quarter. We saw very high sales volume across all of our merchandise categories in the quarter. If you think about, as I stated, lawn and garden, that is definitely in a sell down position. So again, we’ll see fewer markdowns as a result of that. But as we look to the balance of our supply chain, I will say that there has been some stress like I’m sure you’ve seen in many industries where we’ve experienced some disruptions. But it’s been fairly short-term with our domestic suppliers as they too have experienced perhaps some COVID-related illnesses. But we’re pretty much from a domestic perspective within those key areas, pretty much getting back on track there.

I think food and consumable vendors, it’s just been such unprecedented demand that we have seen. So we continue to chase there, but I think part of the silver lining here is, we’ve really opened up lot of open to buy for us to go after closeouts in this unprecedented environment with really quality closeouts that are out there. So that’s going to also help balance some of the things that we are chasing. We will start to see on a weekly basis actually now really great quality closeouts hitting our stores. The team is being very aggressive. We’ve gone out after current vendors, new vendors and we’ve had many vendors that are coming forward to us because of some of their retailers that have either were closed or experiencing difficulty in their sales demand.

So I’d say overall, we also feel that we can do more with less. So we have experienced great inventory turns throughout the quarter, and at the same time, we want to be able to true up the key categories that need that additional inventory, but we certainly have learned that we can really turn our inventory tighter. But again, excited about also the opportunity for the closeouts that are in the environment right now.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

I’ll maybe just add a little shout out there for leases team. I mean I think we put them through a lot over the past quarter, as this crisis started to unfold, we didn’t know what was going to come and we chose to move in a very conservative direction and ask people take out significant receipts. And then as we obviously did far better than those lower-case scenarios, we had to then start chasing back into that. I think it’s been remarkable how nimble the team has been in adjusting our inventory levels to where we need to be to support the business.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

I’d also add one other thing, Joe. Our vendor partners have just been outstanding working with us and we’ve done creative things to get product from them to us and to our customers, so just a shout-out to all our partners there. I think for the most part, China is back on track, Vietnam is okay too, India is still struggling a bit and the domestics as Lisa said are getting back on track. So we feel good about the future.

Joe Feldman — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

If I could follow up on the closeouts. Thanks for getting into that Lisa. With regard to those, should we expect them in beyond the categories that you see, you know, like you mentioned in the prepared remarks, like apparel and seeing some good stuff in kids, which is not typically where you guys are focused. And I’m just wondering, will it be things like that or will it be more focused on, okay, within the home furnishings or the furniture area, here is a great deal that we got, and how we should think about that going forward?

Lisa Bachmann — Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising Officer and Chief Operating Officer

Joe, we’re seeing opportunities across all of the categories that we traditionally do business with, first and foremost. So whether it’s Furniture, Soft Home, Hard Home, Electronics, so we’re really going to see incredible deals across the business, but we’re also very much open for what we call white space opportunities and apparel is a category that we’ve spoke about it in the past is something that we believe we have a right permission to play from our customer and we have recently introduced into the Lot apparel in our graphic tees, which have been very well received. But it’s a perfect example of the white space opportunity that we’re going to go after. I think we were giving ourselves the permission here to really open up and look at all opportunities that are available. Again, we have a really experienced team that’s involved with helping to secure these closeouts and not only that, but with our store team leaders, as well as our merchandising team, we really know how to create that exciting environment in store. So again, it’s an exciting time and opportunity for us, that we’re going to maximize.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

If I could just add on, Joe. I’m really excited about Lisa and the merchandising team, what they’re doing to lean into this area. We kind of treat this area and this time in our business as a innovation time, an incubation time, if you will. There is a lot of opportunity to sell a lot of things in white space in closeout and this is going to be fun, this is going to be fun to test into it this year.

Joe Feldman — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

Great, thanks. And if I could sneak one more in, Just on the consumables and food, given the strength, and I know a lot of it has been pandemic related, are you rethinking that category at all? I know you’ve been undergoing a space optimization there, but has the latest couple of months given you any pause or rethinking on that? Thanks.

Lisa Bachmann — Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising Officer and Chief Operating Officer

Joe, we’ve always believed in the food and consumable business and we have remixed some of the products within the food department as we’ve been talking about over the past several quarters and with pantry optimization coming into our stores in the September time-frame, I think that’s just going to take the assortment to the next level, really giving our customers those every day brands that she would expect to see from us. They’ll also be there on closeout as those availabilities become available, but we’ll also be able to offer her those national brands every day very competitively priced. So we’re continually looking at that assortment, but from what we’ve seen and what she is coming for from a stock-up standpoint, we’re encouraged with what we’ve done with pantry optimization that it’s only going to help to fuel the demand that we’re seeing from her.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

And I’ll just add a couple of other things. I think Lisa answered that very thoroughly. But just there is really two types of customers, I mean there is many types of customers that shop us. But when you boil it down, there is then every day customer, we call her everyday Jenny, and there is that destination shopper, Destiny, if you will.

The everyday Jenny, she is coming in for that food and consumables business and we’ve got to make sure we have it, so as we lean into Operation North Star and those strategic initiatives we’re going after there from the queue line which makes more space up in the front area of the store to the pantry optimization, as Lisa talked about, our offering is compelling, because they’ve got everyday low prices on brand names, so she can shop further down her list on those 50 shopping journeys a year or so and we also have closeouts or big buy alerts that give a 10% to 40% discount right next to it. And as Lisa mentioned in the remarks, new signaging that allows that new customer and customers to find that value, you know, as they shop through our stores as something that’s coming this year, we’ve already started rolling it out. So we also have space throughout the store where we can disrupt with more food and consumables. So I think our focus is on that every day traffic driver. That means that we can expand in those areas throughout the store while not losing the destination shopper with the high big purchase items in the furniture, soft home, seasonal categories.

Joe Feldman — Telsey Advisory Group — Analyst

That’s great. Thank you. Good luck this quarter, guys. Thanks.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. Sure.

Operator

Our next question today comes from Matthew Boss from JPMorgan. Your line is now live.

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

Great. Thanks and congrats on a nice quarter as well.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Matt.

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

Bruce, maybe to continue with the closeout conversation, I think today it’s 9% to 10% of the mix. In the past, it was close to 50% at peak, any way to think about a target for closeouts as a percent of sales, and just the timeline for change how we should think about the magnitude of this change? And then just any other larger structural changes to the model that you’re considering out of the crisis?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

No, a good question, Matt. No, we’re not really giving goals yet in terms of closeout penetration. And some of the closeouts we’re going to do will be engineered big buys etc, but I know that it will be more than the overall store box of 9% to 10%. I think there’s still room in the food and consumables business which right now penetrates around 25% and once again having clearly designated areas in the aisles and caps and so on that bring that to life, I think will help out as well. As you heard Lisa say earlier in the conversation, the closeouts that we’re looking at this year are across all categories and they’re good quality closeouts and we’re rekindling all those relationships. We’ve got a lot of muscle, we are building dashboards that we review weekly. And and we’re also — Lisa has got everyone going through the art of the deal training classes and so on, just bringing that back across the other categories other than food and consumables.

So it’s early for us to share what those goals look like, but we’re excited about and we’re excited about rekindling those partnerships and I wish I could tell you the details of the closeout deals that we have secured so far. I really want to tell you that, Matt, but I don’t want to give away our secrets so to speak, but we’re excited about the value. And as we look at where the customer is today and the good thing about our business is value never goes out of style, it just doesn’t in America, it’s always in style. And then given the pandemic that we’re all suffering through here, it’s even more under style and we’re leaning into that. Having this good quality priced product and the extreme value with the ease of shopping and all the other benefits we do is something that we’re excited about leaning into even more so.

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

Great. Okay. Look forward to seeing those being able to — it’s just us friends on the call. So, you could share a little —

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

I got you, man.

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

As a follow-up, on gross margin, Jonathan, maybe what do you see as the right long-term sustainable gross margin for the Company, as maybe we look back and think about 40% to 41% with past peak levels and just beyond this year and all of the noise related, so how would you rank gross margin drivers from here?

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Sorry, Matt, I didn’t quite catch the second part of the question.

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

Just gross margin from here, how would you rank the drivers and how to think about the sustainable long-term gross margin for the Company relative to 40% to 41% of peak in the past?

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. I think overall Matt, we probably may not be able to give you a precise answer on that today, but there’s been a lot of moving parts in our business, a lot of things are changing kind of as we speak and have over the last couple of months. So, I think we still need to get greater visibility on what the shape of our business is going to be by category going forward which will drive that. I think what we have seen is the extremely powerful impact of top line leverage on our business. When we can get our sales up even if it has a bit of investment margin or potentially SG&A at some point, we’re likely to get a very strong return for that.

So I think overall, it’s hard for us to be sort of too precise about where gross margin rates are going to go, it is always going to be influenced by mix. But I think we are proving that at this, the current gross margin rate, we can drive incremental productivity or something very close to our current gross margin rate and I think the most important thing for us to do is to continue to drive top line productivity and margin rate. It is also extremely important but if you know what we need to do on margin rate will be partly a function of where we’re going on the top line.

Matthew Boss — JPMorgan — Analyst

That’s great. Best of luck.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Matt.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Thanks Matt.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Paul Trussell from Deutsche Bank. Your line is now live.

Paul Trussell — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Good morning. And my congratulations as well on outstanding results. On the digital growth — the digital growth sounds encouraging and as you mentioned, is becoming a bigger part of the business now, maybe talk a bit more about how you’re positioning the Company to really attack that digital growth opportunity? And maybe highlight for us, how we should think about the partnership and the assortment that would be on Instacart? Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Paul, thanks again. E-com is something that we started leaning in to in a more significant way last year when we launched our BOPIS –accelerated BOPIS, and I’m happy to say that in Q1 our e-com with BOPIS was 4 times last year Q1 and that’s very exciting for us and as you heard me in the remarks say just recently we did in the first part of this year, volume equal to all of last year. So it is something that given this pandemic, it’s accelerated omni-channel retailers or the people or the companies going towards the convenience around the customer and we are well positioned for that and we in a very scrappy way launched curbside pickup as well in Q1 and that’s been growing exponentially alongside of the BOPIS.

The addition of Instacart, think of it in a way of anything that fits in the back of a sedan, for same-day delivery pretty much small items, we’ve partnered up with them, we sealed the deal and that will be rolling out shortly and coming soon, but that’s just the beginning. We’ve got other same-day delivery options that we plan on moving towards later this year that will help help our customers order and have delivered items beyond the back of the sedan or the trunk if you will, all the way up to furniture and delivery to their home and eventually to white glove treatment and competing in those areas. We want to remove all the friction that we can in very productive and profitable way to grow our business both through brick and mortar and online and especially during this time where people are focusing on increased localism, home-centric lifestyle, protective health and obviously digital acceleration.

And once again, adding to all of that bringing all the other convenience we have with buy online or easy leasing, so LOPIS, the credit card online, all of that together, we see this as an opportunity to continue to grow with her needs and continue to penetrate at a higher level the e-com sales in total versus total sales. So we see it as a major growth opportunity and a profitable one at that.

Paul Trussell — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Thank you for that color. Turning back to SG&A, you’re well on track to meet your goals. Maybe just touch into a bit more detail for us, on where you’re finding those additional savings and just also what we should keep in mind as it relates to what the kind of COVID-related expenses were for 1Q and expected for 2Q? Thank you.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. So COVID — I’ll start with the second piece Paul. As we called out in your prepared remarks, the COVID expenses in Q1 and Q2 were $17 million, $18 million, basically in both quarters are pretty consistent. And then in Q2 that baked in the continuation of the $2 hourly rate increase through the end of our fiscal month of June. So that’s sort of where we are on that.

Overall with regard to SG&A, the original $100 million target was comprised of significant store payroll component, indirect expenses, non-merchandise expenses with a big piece of it, various other store components and then central office components. As we’re looking at the next leg of opportunity with that $100 million pretty well secured, we’re again looking across the entire P&L. So continuing to look to stores, looking at supply chain, looking at our rent opportunities and really trying to identify everywhere where we think we have meaningful opportunities. And so we’ve established targets, the teams are now working against those.

And then there’s also a broader kind of cultural piece beyond that, which is how do we just make sure the entire organization is thinking frugally about our business every day, every dollar is examined to make sure we really believe it as an ROI. We don’t leave anything on the table. And I think we’ve really done a great job on that over the past quarter of getting people more and more in that mindset. When the crisis came along, it obviously accelerated some of that thinking and we want to keep that going. It’s just one of the many areas where we think we’ve got great momentum through the crisis and we want to make sure we keep that going forward.

Paul Trussell — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Thank you. All the best.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Paul.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Thanks Paul.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Liz Suzuki from Bank of America. Your line is now live.

Elizabeth Lane Suzuki — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

Great, thank you. Just a question on easy leasing penetration, how high did it get in this quarter for furniture specifically and I guess your seasonal product, which are the two that are usually offered with easy leasing? And just if you could give any comments on the competitive environment for lease to own? I would appreciate it.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I’ll start it off and thanks Liz. You know, easy leasing, our partners have progressed and continue to be great partners with us. Our easy leasing. just to let you know they as partners actually helped their customers, our customers by giving them breaks through this COVID pandemic and the default rates have been extremely low. So it just shows what good partnership we have with them, really proud of what they’ve done and what we’ve done. But easy leasing continues to penetrate at a good amount high-teens in terms of overall furniture sales. We did see a slight reduction in the basket in first quarter, typically that basket could be around $700 or so. It decreased slightly and we believe that was because with stimulus checks and so on, care packages, if you will, more customers went to just direct buying, but we still saw strong results in the easy leasing program. It’s still a great differentiator and now with Lease Online Pickup in Store, we’re seeing that penetrate at a very nice level of overall easy leasing. So it’s been a good run.

Lisa, anything else to add?

Lisa Bachmann — Executive Vice President, Chief Merchandising Officer and Chief Operating Officer

I think the only other thing I would say is that the easy leasing customer is penetrating very heavily into our Rewards customers. So those are over 50% crossover there, and growing.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Good.

Elizabeth Lane Suzuki — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Liz.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Brad Thomas from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is now live.

Brad Thomas — KeyBanc Capital — Analyst

Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question, and all the details here. I want to follow-up on Store of the Future and some of the other investments you’re all making in the stores, clearly some exciting things happening with the Lot and the queue. I guess could you talk a little bit about how you’re thinking about what your store should look like for the next five years and what you’re trying to learn during this time, and when you might be in a position to come out with a new capital plan and remodeling plan? Thanks.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Thanks, Brad. I’ll start off and then kick it over to Jonathan and Lisa. But just to answer your Store of the Future, I mean, right now, in Q1, we’ll have approximately 400 stores and that will comp Store of the Future’s stores, if you will. And just to give you a little color on it, our balance of chain stores actually performed very well compared to our Store of the Future, just slight differences in Q1. We’re just planning 65 more Store of the Future’s in 2020 and that will bring our total to 531 in total for 2020, 24 of those will be new, 22 remodels, rest will be what we call blend and extend.

We still consider this like when I started a platform for growth, a standardization, a refurbishment, if you will, not necessarily a strategy for growth. What we like is, are the things that you’ve talked about in your question, which is adding higher growth, higher return on investment, strategic initiatives like the Lot, the queue, pantry optimization, Broyhill, and e-com. So if you think about how I think about the Future of the Store, it’s basically we do need to evolve the store and that really means light touches on renovating them, remodeling them, moving them when they are non-productive areas and we’ll always do that. But in terms of refreshing them so they look and meet the brand standards, but our focus is really on high returning strategic growth initiatives like the Lot. You know, the Lot, for example, right now, will be at 510 stores in May, we’ll have nearly 750 stores by holiday, that will have the Lot and they’re comping nicely about a point of comp with 500 square feet and light investment focusing on those life’s occasions where you get high traffic frequency and an urgency because you know that product is not going to stay forever and that’s that surprise and delight.

And the queue line, which is now by the end of May, will be in about 270 stores and by holiday 750 stores — 751 stores, once again, near comp, point of comp that it adds to the store high ROIC, low investment, space savings that allows us to add more product right in the front of the store, whether it’s increase to the furniture pad, if that makes sense in that store or more disruptive closeout big buy alerts and food, consumables and other categories. All of that is what we’re looking at. So basically what does the store look like in the future? It looks like a refresh that what we are working on. It looks like more disruption of extreme value across multiple categories and it looks like merch innovation with things like the Lot, the queue line and many other things that Lisa and her team are working on our merch innovation pipeline.

Brad Thomas — KeyBanc Capital — Analyst

That’s very helpful, Bruce. And Jonathan, if I could ask a housekeeping item, on the sale leaseback, I think you quantified $7 million of incremental costs from leasing those properties in 2Q. Can you just correct my math on an annual basis. It looks like, like that might be about $50 [Phonetic] million, am I in the ballpark with the annual rate?

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. That’s assuming about two months worth of impact in Q2.

Brad Thomas — KeyBanc Capital — Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Brad.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Thanks Brad.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question today is coming from Karen Short from Barclays. Your line is now live.

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

Hi, this is actually Renato Basanta on for Karen. Congratulations on a nice quarter and thanks for taking my questions. So you mentioned sales continued to be strong into 2Q and basically gave that 10% comp scenario. Are you willing to tell us what actual comp has been in May? And maybe just discuss the magnitude to which May accelerated versus 1Q? Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think I’m going to repeat the question. Just let me know if I’ve got it right? You wanted to get insight into what Q2 comp is looking like and maybe in May. Is that correct?

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

Yeah, that’s right.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

I’ll let Jonathan —

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. We’re now going to sort of parse that out more than we have in our prepared comments. We said comps were up strongly in May and clearly we’re implying there above the outlook we’ve given for the quarter as a whole at this point. But as we stated in the prepared remarks, there are a number of reasons why we expect comps to moderate over the balance of the quarter.

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

Okay. And then I was just wondering if you can provide a little bit more color on the health of your core customer. Clearly, there is a lot of stimulus out there, but also lot of trepidation about unemployment etc, so wondering how she is managing and feeling and do you think most of the impact of the stimulus checks is now behind us or is there still some spending power out there?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

It’s a good question on the health of the customer. I think the customer like all of us have gone through a roller-coaster ride over the last 90 days or so. But right now, the customer spending power is very strong with the stimulus packages. I don’t know, I think we still have more distributor and there may be more coming as we watch government proceedings. But it could dissipate, at some point, it will dissipate to some degree, unemployment checks remain healthy. So, right now, the buying power of our customer is very strong and continues to be through May at least.

I think that we’re very well positioned. Once again, I think the customer is like all of us went from panic to acclimation. I think we’re starting to entering some level of recovery at this point and maybe a return to a new normal that looks like our post or past normal and through all this, the themes that we’re seeing that the customer is facing is increased localism on trusted brands and companies and neighborhood discounters like Big Lots, home-centric lifestyle, they not only need to store and bulk up on their products, but they also want to make sure their work environment from home and their living conditions at home are better. They’re thinking about protective health, which is they want to trust that the retailers they shop are keeping up with the cleaning and our team out there, our front-line heroes have done a fantastic job doing that. And their personal health and wellness, those product categories we’ve got for them as well.

Once again the digital acceleration and the way that we’re positioned to get after that from our e-com business, BOPIS, LOPIS, curbside pickup, and now Instacart and beyond, I think that’s going to continue to be something she expects and then cash constraint, whether it’s now or in the future, or always, we’ll see that raising, it’s had a little bit more than ever, and so we’re leaning into big buys, closeouts and giving her more ways to shop with us in a convenient high valued cash constrained way. I think it’s going to resonate really well. So I think the customers are strong right now and I think we’re really well positioned for now, next and later.

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

Yeah, that’s very helpful. And then just a last quick one. Can you provide us with the actual traffic and ticket breakdown in the 1Q comp?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Traffic and ticket breakdown for the Q1, Q2 comp is what he’s asking.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

I didn’t know that we’ve typically broken that out, so yeah [Speech Overlap]

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

— specifically.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. We typically haven’t broken that out.

Renato Basanta — Barclays PLC — Analyst

All right. Great. Thanks and best of luck.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Anthony Chukumba from Loop Capital Markets. Your line is now live.

Anthony Chukumba — Loop Capital Markets — Analyst

Good morning. Let me add my congratulations as well on a very strong quarter. Most of my questions have been asked at this point. I did just have a slight clarification, you talked about comps by month, and you gave a lot of really good color, but what was the comp for the month of April? I mean, I know you mentioned that it accelerated after it sounds like significantly after the stimulus checks first start to hit. But I was just wondering if you could just give us a little bit more granularity in terms of what that comp was for the month of April? Thanks.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. Hey Anthony, thanks for the comments. Yeah, we did, I think as you said, gave a pretty good amount of color on that. So we’re again probably not going to parse that out any further, but April started out slow. We’ve seen the dip after the stock-up period and then we also had the Friends and Family event, we didn’t run, which is a significant headwind. And then the Easter Day closing, which was also a headwind. And then a couple of weeks before the end of the month, we flipped into positive territory as we began to see that stimulus impact on that as we said escalated rapidly through the end of the month. But probably can’t really provide much more color than that.

Anthony Chukumba — Loop Capital Markets — Analyst

Okay, fair enough. And then just one quick follow-up, obviously we’re in kind of strange times, so maybe this isn’t the right time for this, but I was just wondering if you had any color in terms of rescheduling your Analyst Day?

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Yeah. There is nothing specific yet to announce on that. I think obviously we need to wait a little longer until things settle down, but we do look forward to the opportunity to do that and talk about — more about many of the things that have come up on the call this morning.

Anthony Chukumba — Loop Capital Markets — Analyst

Got it, okay. Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Anthony.

Jonathan Ramsden — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer

Thank you, Anthony.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve reached the end of our Q&A session. And now, I will now close the call with replay instructions. A replay of this call will be available to you by 12 noon Eastern Time this afternoon, May 29. The replay will end at 11:59 PM Eastern Time on Friday, June 12, 2020. You can access the replay by dialing toll free 1-877-660-6853 and enter the replay confirmation number, 13703921 followed by the pound sign. The toll number is 1-201-612-7415, and enter replay confirmation number, 13703921 followed by the pound sign.

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s presentation. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

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