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Big Lots, Inc. (BIG) Q2 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

Big Lots, Inc. (NYSE: BIG) Q2 2022 earnings call dated Aug. 30, 2022

Corporate Participants:

Alvin Concepcion — Vice President of Investor Relations

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

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

Analysts:

Spencer — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Sarang Vora — — Analyst

Matt — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Krisztina Katai — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Mark Jordan — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Jason Haas — Bank of America — Analyst

Zachary Donnelly — KeyBanc — Analyst

Presentation:

Alvin Concepcion — Vice President of Investor Relations

Good morning. This is Alvin Concepcion, Vice President of Investor Relations at Big Lots. Welcome to the Big Lots Second Quarter Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

On the call with me today are Bruce Thorn, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Jonathan Ramsden, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial and Administrative Officer.

Before starting today’s call, we would like to remind you that any forward-looking statements made on the call involve risk and uncertainties that are subject to the Company’s Safe Harbor provisions as stated in the Company’s press release and SEC filings and that actual results can differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements.

We would also like to point out that where applicable, commentary today is focused on adjusted non-GAAP results. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP adjusted results are available in today’s press release. The second quarter earnings release presentation and related financial information are available at biglots.com/corporate/investors.

I will now turn the call over to Bruce.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. The second quarter was one, in which we did what we said we would do despite a very challenging environment. We brought inventories down materially, stayed tight in both opex and capex and made great progress on repositioning our assortment towards better bargains/closeouts and lower price points while enhancing our healthy offering of treasures and everyday essentials. We also took important steps to strengthen our balance sheet and secure our liquidity. We’ll talk more about each of these points in a moment, but this is an appropriate moment to thank our entire team here at Big Lots for their outstanding contributions over the past quarter.

For our customer, things remain tough with high inflation making it more difficult for her to afford daily living expenses and causing her to pull back on discretionary purchases. We serve customers across a wide range of income levels. But our lower income customers have been hurt more than others. Never has our mission to help her “Live big and Save lots” been more important than now. We are working hard to provide her with more bargains and closeouts to help stretch her dollar and more surprising treasures to bring excitement and freshness to her shopping experience as well as improving our assortment of everyday essentials she counts on.

We are leveraging the foundations upon which our company was built and leaning into our brand DNA a phenomenal value. We are simplifying our value offerings, leveraging our scale and more deeply partnering with our vendor partners to deliver compelling opening price points across our assortment. We are moving quickly to elevate our penetration of amazing bargains by way of closeouts. We are clearly communicating the uniqueness of our value offering throughout our stores and online with new signage and powerful end-cap displays. More detail on all of these initiatives in a moment, but I want to make sure the message for this call is clear. We are meeting the current challenges head on. We are making tremendous progress in repositioning our business for the current environment, and we expect that to become increasingly clear in our results in the near future.

I’ll now spend a few moments to share some more specifics. As I mentioned, we remain laser focused on providing outstanding value to our customer. To do this, we are partnering closely with our vendors, flexing our long-established closeout muscle and leveraging our excellent private label brands. Earlier this month, we met with over 100 representatives of our top 50 vendors to ensure we are fully aligned on how we are going to partner to deliver great value. Last quarter, you heard me talk about cost engineering and using our scale and relationships with suppliers to offer better opening price points to create unique deals that customers can only find at Big Lots. These are not going to be baby steps in opening price points. We’re going big. Across the furniture category, for example, we are margin engineering products to offer opening price points at pre-COVID levels over the coming quarters. I’m very pleased with the progress here, and you should expect to see more great opening price points on quality items in time for Labor Day, for example, in sofas and recliners. As it relates to bargains, which are closeout items, off-price brands and limited time deals, it is a target rich environment for procurement. We’ve already capitalized on these opportunities, and we continue to see great deals in categories such as Toys, Appliances, Soft Home and Apparel. As we continue to aggressively rightsize our inventory position, this is freeing up additional open-to-buy capacity for even more deals for our customers. In order to meet our customers’ needs, we are planning for the mix of bargains in closeouts to reach one-third of the business over time, offset by strategic reductions in less productive or redundant never-out merchandise.

With regard to treasures, which are more unique, corky, trendy and seasonal items, we also expect this to represent a third of our assortment. A great example of the excitement we can bring in this area is a Disney pop-up shop within the Lot section that will launch later this week. In Essentials, which include category staples and never-out, we have already added more daily deals this month, particularly in the Food and Consumable categories, and there will be more to come as we continue to curate an even better assortment of solutions in the back half of ’22 and into ’23. With more bargains and treasures, we are adjusting our end-caps to make it easier for our customers to find and recognize these great deals. Our new end-caps will feature cleaner, simpler and more compelling signage, price points and assortment. In July, a little under 40% of our end-caps were bargains and treasures. By October, it will be nearly 90%. So, this is a substantial step-up in messaging to our consumers.

Lastly, we’re well positioned as a trade-down destination. As we continue to improve our value offerings, we’ve seen a significant increase of 16% in customer reactivations through our loyalty program. Our private brands, especially Broyhill, will play a key role in increasing our appeal as a trade-down destination. Both Broyhill and Real Living continued to do well with sales growth of around 20% in each brand. Across all divisions, these brands represent 30% of our business in Q2, up notably from the mid-20s last year.

We also note that our seasonal customer has a household income that is 2 times higher than our core customer. So, we see that category as a year-round trade-down opportunity. These are all important steps we’ve taken. They are underpinned by the knowledge that across all our categories, including big-ticket items, our customers will shop us when they see a great deal. While we have more work ahead of us, our strategic direction is clear.

Turning back to the second quarter. Despite volatility caused by the current macroeconomic backdrop, I am pleased we were able to deliver second quarter results in line with the financial guidance we provided.

Looking at specific category performance in the quarter, Seasonal comps grew strongly, accelerating sequentially from Q1 to up to roughly 30% in Q2 on both a one-year and three-year comp basis. Relative to Q1, our Q2 three-year comp sales also accelerated in Soft Home, in the Lot, Apparel and Electronics. It was in line in Food, but decelerated somewhat in Furniture, Hard Home and Consumables.

I’ll give you a little more flavor on what drove some of the category performance. In Seasonal, we had high sell-throughs on many items such as gazebos and upper price points for resin wicker. Our Halloween sales were also strong, up double digit versus prior year. Our Food and Consumables categories have stabilized with strength in candy, laundry, paper and our Salty and Snack Categories. Furniture, Soft Home and Hard Home categories continue to be impacted by consumers delaying or cutting back on higher ticket purchases. The Lot and Apparel drove a lot of excitement in our stores and showcased some of our newest items and best deals.

As we progress into the back half of the year, I’m excited about the lower opening price points, great bargains and fund treasures and more productive essentials, which will help drive momentum across our categories. It’s now worth zooming out a little bit because it’s easy to get caught up in the near term and lose sight of the bigger, longer-term picture. Our business has historically been resilient regardless of the economic environment. That’s because value never goes out of style, and that won’t change this time around either. Areas where we are seeing great traction include our e-com business, up 35% in Q2, representing 7% of our total business.

We were particularly pleased with an improvement in the conversion rate online by 50 basis points, which we also saw in our stores. Within e-comm, same-day delivery grew over 80%, and our convenience offerings continue to expand with new partnerships with DoorDash and Shipt. Meanwhile, we continue to focus on removing friction across the e-commerce journey with improved navigation, access to deals and streamlined cart and check out. We’re also excited to have rolled out a regional pricing model in California with more regions to come.

More localized approach enables us to flex pricing to improve our competitive position and optimize our margin profile. Our new space planning capabilities are also enabling us to flex and optimize our assortment across the fleet. In addition, we are investing in new tools to improve the efficiency of our promotions and are already seeing some quick wins from our work in this area.

While the Furniture business has been challenging on an industry-wide basis, we are proud to be one of the few furniture retailers that customers can go to and take their furniture home that same day, while still providing her options to order online and pick up in store at the curb or deliver the same day for nearly 1,000 stores across the U.S.

We continue to enhance our unique position with the new furniture sales model with improved staffing and incentive-based compensation to drive engagement and sales. This model is now in 380 stores and is continuing to do very well, delivering strong double-digit lifts in stores where the full new staffing models in place versus the rest of the chain.

Meanwhile, our new stores continue to perform well, and we have been running ahead of plan with particularly strong performance in small town and rural markets that are increasingly the focus of our strategy. While we are prudently slowing down in the near term, we still see a long runway for growth with the potential for over 500 new stores over time.

Finally, we continue to improve our supply chain visibility. Earlier this month, we rolled out a new tool that enhances inventory flow to both support sales and drive down costs. In September, we’ll be opening our fourth forward DC, which adds incremental capacity to help flow inventory in the peak season. Also by the end of September, we’ll complete Phase 1 of a multiyear project to have an order management system, which will give us a single view of inventory to greatly improve the omnichannel customer experience.

So, to sum it up, we did what we said we would do in the face of a challenging environment in Q2. But alongside that, we continue to make tremendous progress on our journey to deliver outstanding long-term shareholder value. We are confident in our ability to increase customer shopping frequency to grow our business through good times and bad. We’re bringing in more bargains and closeouts that our customers need and we’ll communicate these deals better.

We’re getting sharper and more productive on pricing and promotions. We’re driving more excitement and freshness through our treasurers and The Lot. We’re getting better at selling quality furniture that customers can take home the same day or order online with speedy delivery. We’ve got a strong private label and seasonal offering to capitalize on trade-down opportunities. We’re improving our supply chain and tech capabilities to improve our business model and provide more convenient solutions for our customers. All of this will help us deliver on our Operation North Star strategy, which remains more critical than ever. Simply said, we are working hard to be her best destination for quality bargains and treasures while improving her shop-ability of our everyday essentials.

I’ll now pass it over to Jonathan, and I will return in a few moments to make some closing comments before taking your questions.

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

Thanks, Bruce. And I would also like to express my gratitude to the entire Big Lots team. I’m going to start by going into more detail on our Q2 results, which I will discuss on an adjusted basis excluding store asset impairment charges, and we’ll then address our outlook for the back half of the year.

A summary of our financial results for the second quarter can be found on Page 10 of our quarterly results presentation. Q2 net sales were $1.346 billion, a 7.6% decrease compared to $1.457 billion a year ago. The decline versus 2021 was driven by a comparable sales decrease of 9.2%, which was within our guidance range.

As you will recall, our second quarter sales got off to a strong start in May with a mid-teen three-year comp fueled by a strategic decision to elevate promotional activity aimed at reducing inventory levels. As we successfully drove inventory levels lower, we were able to reduce promotional activity as the quarter progressed. In turn, our three-year comp sales trends slowed over the course of the quarter. While at the lower end of our guidance range, three-year comps ended up nearly 2 points ahead of Q1 at about plus 4%.

The slowdown in July, we’ve seen across the broader retail environment, and we were not immune. Consumers continue to feel spending pressure from high inflation, and our lower-income customer continues to be the most affected. High inflation is causing consumers to delay or cut back on discretionary purchases especially of high-ticket items. Since then, we have seen comp sales trends stabilize on a one-year basis, which we will be primarily referencing going forward from July into August.

Second quarter adjusted net loss was $66 million compared to $38 million of net income in Q2 of 2021. The adjusted diluted loss per share for the quarter was $2.28 versus diluted EPS of $1.09 last year. The gross margin rate for the second quarter was 32.6%, down approximately 700 basis points from last year’s rate and in line with our items. This included significant impacts from higher markdowns and freight, although as we will discuss in a moment, we are starting to see both of these headwinds turn.

Turning to adjusted SG&A. Total expenses for the quarter including depreciation were $523.5 million, very close to the $523.9 million last year, and a touch better than our guidance of slightly up year-over-year. Store payroll costs, bonus accruals and equity compensation were all below last year, but were offset by increases in distribution and outbound transportation expense. We expect transportation headwinds to continue through the back half of the year, but at a moderating pace as we’ve seen some relief in recent spot fuel rates.

Adjusted operating margin for the quarter was negative 6.3% compared to a profit of 3.7% in 2021. Interest expense for the quarter was $3.9 million, up from $2.3 million in the second quarter last year. The adjusted income tax rate in the quarter was 25.5% compared to last year’s rate of 26.7%, with the rate change primarily driven by discrete items related to audit settlements and employment-related tax credits, partially offset by lower nondeductible compensation expense.

The tax rate comparison was impacted by comparing income tax benefit this year to income tax expense last year. Total ending inventory cost was up 22.8% last year at $1.159 billion, in line with our guidance and driven by average unit cost. This represents a significant sequential improvement versus Q1.

During the second quarter, we opened 11 new stores and closed three stores. We ended Q2 at 1,442 stores and total selling square footage of 33.1 million. Capital expenditures for the quarter were $46 million compared to $45 million last year. Depreciation expense in the quarter was $37 million, up $2 million to the same period last year.

We ended the second quarter with $49 million of cash and cash equivalents and $253 million of long-term debt. At the end of Q2 2021, we had $293 million of cash and cash equivalents and no long-term debt. The year-over-year change reflects share repurchases executed during fiscal 2021 and higher inventories. We did not execute any share repurchases during Q2, but have $159 million remaining available under our December 2021 authorization.

On July 29th, we executed an engagement letter for a new five-year syndicated asset-based revolving credit facility of up to $900 million, with an additional uncommitted increase option of up to $300 million. We are making good progress on the new facility and expect it to be completed during the current quarter, replacing and refinancing our current $600 million five-year unsecured credit facility.

In addition, we expect to further strengthen our balance sheet through asset monetization. This includes the outright sale of approximately 25 owned stores we are targeting to complete by the end of the year, in addition to which we are evaluating sale leaseback proposals on our remaining owned stores and other owned assets.

On August 23rd, our Board of Directors declared a quarterly cash dividend for the second quarter of fiscal 2022 of $0.30 per common share. This dividend is payable on September 23, 2022, to shareholders of record as of the close of business on September 9, 2022.

Turning to the third quarter outlook. We expect the sales environment to remain uncertain. We expect one-year comps to be down in the low double-digit range in line with what we have seen quarter-to-date. Net new stores will add about 140 basis points of growth versus 2021. We expect continued promotional activity will drive our Q3 gross margin rate into the mid-30s. While this is down from the prior year, it is sequentially better than Q2, driven in part by lessening promotional activity as we have made good progress in clearing through inventories.

We expect SG&A dollars to grow low single digits versus 2021 due primarily to increased outbound transportation costs and costs related to two incremental forward distribution centers. Overall, this will result in a significant operating loss for the quarter. We expect a share count of approximately 28.9 million for Q3.

As we move into Q4, we expect the [Technical Issues] levels improving sales momentum due to our efforts in providing better value to customers and lower freight and non-freight costs will lead to a recovery in Q4 gross margin to be approximately in line with the prior year.

While we expect the sales environment to remain uncertain, we see a more normalized fourth quarter gross margin rate for a few reasons.

First, relative to Q3, sales should improve sequentially on a one-year comp basis as our inventories get into a clean position creating open-to-buy opportunities to offer better deals for our customers with increased bargains and closeout offerings, unique and exciting treasures and lower opening price points. With improving sales and clean inventories, there is a reduced need for markdowns and promotions, which will benefit our gross margin.

Second, inbound freight costs are easing. In Q2, higher inbound freight costs including detention and demurrage charges approached 400 basis points of gross margin rate erosion versus 2019. Freight costs have been coming down since the early spring, and we are starting to see this benefit flow through. Meanwhile, detention and demurrage charges will be much lower in the back half as we have cleaned out our DC yards and got past much of the supply chain disruption for the past 18 months.

Third, non-freight costs are also coming down as we’re seeing price reductions from our vendors as raw material prices have moderated.

Fourth, as Bruce referenced, we have been more targeted and efficient with pricing and promotions. Our early work in Food and Consumables indicates a $20 million annualized gross margin opportunity that we are already actioning [Phonetic] and expect to see benefit from in the second half.

Last, we expect to see a shrink benefit in the fourth quarter versus the headwind we have faced in the first three quarters. We are also continuing to intensify our expense reduction efforts. We continue to expect to take out $100 million in SG&A this year, which is our original plan, of which approximately $70 million is structural.

This will be partially offset by outbound transportation expense including the impact of higher fuel rates. We have achieved approximately half of these savings in the first half of the year. And while there is some benefit in Q3, much of the balance due to seasonality effects. As a reminder, the $70 million in structural savings will come from store payroll, supplies and other goods not for resale and headquarters costs. The balance is driven by expense impact of lower sales and lower bonus accruals. We expect to continue to drive savings in 2023 and beyond.

In regard to capex, we now expect approximately $160 million versus $175 million previously. On the store front, recall that last quarter, we prudently slowed the pace of store openings, given the current economic uncertainty.

We still expect over 50 openings in 2022. But due to economic conditions, we have also taken a harder look at stores we would like to exit including both leased stores and underperforming owned stores. Based on this review, the number of closures at the end of 2022 is likely to be higher than previously anticipated and could be similar to or greater than our number of openings. We see this as a very healthy pruning of our fleet and, in some cases, an acceleration of closures that would otherwise have occurred in later years. Meanwhile, our store refresh program remains paused.

Looking forward, we continue to see major store growth opportunity and expect to continue with a healthy rate of openings in 2023, albeit while continuing to take a prudent and watchful approach. We expect full year depreciation of around $153 million including approximately $38 million in Q3.

We are committed to ending Q3 with cleaner inventories as we drove higher sell-throughs and reduced receipts. As Bruce mentioned, this increases our ability to go after closeout later in the year when we will have more open-to-buy opportunities. We expect total inventory cost at the end of Q3 to be up mid- to-high single digits year-over-year which will represent a further substantial narrowing of the sales to inventory spread from where we ended Q2.

We continue to expect Q4 inventory to be flat to down compared with the prior year. Beyond this year, our confidence in the long-term runway for growth has not wavered, and we are optimistic about the value we will create as Operation North Star progresses.

I will now turn the call back over to Bruce.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Jonathan. I’d like to end the call by again thanking our associates for their focus on planning to win and maintaining that obsession with the customer that has led to the very positive customer feedback. Together, we achieved a Net Promoter Score above 80% in Q2, which is top tier in the industry.

As a result of their efforts, 22 million customers have rewarded us with their loyalty.

I’ll now turn the call back over to the moderator so that we can begin to address your questions. Thank you.

Questions and Answers:

 

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. Our first question today is coming from Greg Badishkanian from Wolfe Research. Your line is now live.

Spencer — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Don [Phonetic] for Greg. So, just given the volatility in trends and weakness in the lower-income consumer that we’re seeing and I think a lot of people in retail are seeing, how are you thinking about the setup for the holiday season? And then with the heavy discounting that we’ve seen across retail, do you think there’s been any pull forward from 4Q sales into the third quarter or potentially into the second quarter as well?

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

Hey, Spencer [Phonetic], good morning. I’ll jump in on that, and then maybe Bruce will want to add a couple of comments. So, baked into our guidance is some moderation in comps from where we were in Q2, both on a one-year and a three-year basis. We did get some benefit, obviously, from the intense promotional activity in Q2, which we’re kind of modeling out for Q3. And then, we expect Q4 to be a little better than Q3 for a number of reasons, including some of the supply chain constraints we had last year. So — yeah, we think there’s been some pull forward, and we’ve tried to model that into our outlook for the balance of the year.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

And I’ll add by saying, I think we’ve got a good holiday plan. The team is working very hard on making sure that we’re all staffed and ready to go with good product. We’ve obviously tailored our assortment for the holiday. We’re off to a good start with Halloween as we mentioned in our opening remarks. Halloween is up double digit versus last year. And we’re very much looking at what’s top of mind for our consumers right now. It’s tough out there and necessities are top of mind. We’re making sure we’ve a good stock there. Deals on big ticket items are also top of mind. Credit is still in good shape with the consumer as we’ve watched in some cases in the maybe — medium to upper income levels better than pre-pandemic. The lower income levels are still pretty strong. She’s frugal, she’s smart. Food items are still top of mind, but also home maintenance, cleaning, storage resilient — are all resilient. And the holidays, especially holidays, she never stopped shopping for a holiday. Holidays are important to her in good times and bad times, and we’re set up to meet her expectations for the holiday.

Spencer — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Great. That’s helpful. And then just to dive into SG&A for a minute, can you talk about what’s driving the growth in 3Q? And then how are you thinking about pulling further costs out of the business as you start to rightsize the cost structure given where the top line is today?

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

Yeah. So Spencer, in Q3, the big driver is really transportation expense. You’ll just continue to run pretty well up from a year ago, and then also the cost of our two newest forward distribution centers, which have come on stream. So, that’s what’s driving SG&A up a little bit in Q3. And then we see a more favorable dynamic in Q4 as we’ve got more savings coming through. So, we’d expect to more be kind of flattish in Q4 on SG&A currently. Overall, we think there’s still significant opportunity to take structural cost out of SG&A. We’ve taken $70 million out this year. The biggest chunk of that has come out of the stores, but also some out of quarters and other areas. And we think that’s an ongoing opportunity. We will be going after that. We are intensifying our efforts there. We’ve got a task force set up to really dive deep into that. And we think there’s still significant opportunity beyond 2022.

Spencer — Wolfe Research — Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is coming from Sarang Vora [Phonetic] from [Indecipherable]. Your line is now live.

Sarang Vora — — Analyst

Hey, good morning, guys. My first question is on the current trends. Can you provide color on the low double-digit negative comps you are seeing quarter-to-date? Is the trend — the category trends very similar to what we saw in the second quarter? Or are you seeing shifts, given the changes in the consumer behavior?

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

[Technical Issues] I’ll be happy to take that. So — yeah, generally consistent with what we’re seeing in Q2, clearly comps in seasonal were pretty strong in Q2 as we were supporting that with a lot of promotions. A little bit of moderation there, but generally pretty consistent. And generally, we would say that that sequential decline from where we were for Q2 is primarily a factor of the higher promotional activity, particularly around seasonal in Q2. We see, as the quarter goes on, that remains fairly consistent, although August was probably a somewhat more challenging comp for us than the balance of the quarter.

Sarang Vora — — Analyst

Got it. And my second question is on the composition of inventory. You clearly made progress from 1Q to 2Q, and it seems like there is a work in progress right now. But as you go towards the end of fourth quarter, I heard that it will be flat to down by the end of the year. So, just curious if you could share color again on like category — like, how are you managing this inventory to be flat to down for fourth quarter? Are you ordering less? Are there any categories that could see significant decline as you go through the fourth quarter? Just curious to know the trend on the inventory side and the composition of inventory towards [Speech Overlap].

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

Sure. Yeah. So, a lot of it comes back to seasonal. So we’ve been carrying seasonal inventory through Q2 and some — to some into Q3, and we expect that problem to be largely solved as we go into Q4 and have a much more normalized seasonal inventory level. And then last year, we brought in a lot of seasonal relatively early in Q4. So, that’s one of the reasons why we’re going to be down at the end of Q4 as we don’t expect to fully lap there. We had essentially to smooth the supply chain issues, brought in some receipts early in Q4 last year to set us up what we thought was going to be a stronger selling season for summer lawn and garden. But we feel good about the inventory levels. And the important point behind that is that it’s opening up — open to buy to go after better closeout opportunities, and we’re excited about that.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

I’ll just add, the seasonal inventory we worked through in Q2 was predominantly the patio, lawn and garden furniture. And we went big in that buy last year, which we’ll be able to comp. And unfortunately, there was a pullback in customer spend early in Q1 and into Q2, as you know [Technical Issues]. And so the majority of our inventory bulge and markdown promotional activity was to move that product in Q2, which we’ve for the most part, put behind us. The go-forward seasonal inventory is on lower ticket items and more seasonal items that we’ve curtailed and rightsized for the Q3 and Q4, we expect to see really nice sell-throughs on that and better management overall across our product lines. Merchants have done a nice job. Our planning, allocation [Phonetic] and replenishment teams have really tightened things up. And we’re going to add a lot more bargains and treasurers, and that’s going to excite our customers going into the back half.

Sarang Vora — — Analyst

That’s great. Good luck with the quarter. Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

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

Matt — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Hi. This is Matt on for Peter. Thanks for taking my question. First one from me, just curious if you’re seeing any tightening with your credit providers for — in regards to consumer credit.

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

Yeah. Not significantly, Matt. We actually saw an acceleration in our big loss credit card penetration of sales in Q2. Leasing was more sort of flattish, but we haven’t seen any significant impact yet from your timing of credit availability.

Matt — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Okay. Great. And then secondly, I was wondering if you could provide a little bit more color on your furniture sales specialists. I think you said still driving a nice lift, but — is there anything else to call out? And are you all still planning to expand it store wide maybe by next year? Or what are the plans for that? Thanks.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Matt, just to cover off the furniture sales program, we basically have a furniture sales lead and three furniture specialists in about 380 stores right now. It gives us open to close furniture coverage, whereas typically we don’t have that in the balance of chain. We’re seeing nice sales lifts, double-digit sales lift and fully staffed stores. We expect that over time, going into next year as we roll this program out, we can get to over 600 stores. And it’s really important because buying furniture at Broyhill, large ticket items, Real Living, these brands are going to be billion-dollar brands, and it’s a big ticket sale for our customers and helping them through that requires an incentive [Phonetic] team, a knowledgeable team to make that engagement, a really good engagement. And once again, you heard us talk in opening remarks, as we open up new stores, especially in the rural markets, our furniture program does very well there, along with our omnichannel capabilities to pick up same day from the store, buy it, take it away from the store, but we also have it shipped to our customers. So, we think that the furniture sales program that we’re rolling out right now is something that will continue to grow in most stores across our balance chain over time.

Matt — Piper Sandler — Analyst

Great. Thank you all.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is coming from Krisztina Katai from Deutsche Bank. Your line is now live.

Krisztina Katai — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to ask about the opening price points and just the proportion of closeouts that you’re working towards, which sounds like a good opportunity. Any way to quantify how the customers have responded to your efforts here and how best to think about the competitive dynamics across your peers as we enter the fourth quarter? Also, just considering closeouts are mostly in the discretionary categories, are you making any assumptions that maybe you should go at after closeouts in consumable categories as well just because that’s what we see right now, the customer is really looking for and is a traffic driver?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. First. Hi, Krisztina, I’ll take this. The first part of your question, regarding opening price points. During the last couple of years with the inflation rates and so on, they really pushed some of our products out of opening price points, and we’ve worked hard with our great vendor community to bring those back down, especially in areas like furniture. For example, our recliners moved from $299 in the $200 to $300 range up to the $400, $500 range with all the freight costs and component costs. We’ve now worked to bring that back. And this fall, we’ll have the $299 recliner back. And that’s just one example. Across the home categories, we’re making efforts to do that and should have a very nice opening price point. That’s what hooks customers back in and then we shop and trade them up with the bargains and deals that we have in store. With regards to bargains or what we are calling bargains that encompass closeouts, it’s basically anything that is a lower comp than other retailers, really pleased with the progress that our merchandising team is making in sourcing the bargains. I want to explain that it’s beyond Food and Consumables, although Food and Consumables are still a big part of it. In fact, we just got a national closeout on potato chips due to packaging changes just last week that is going to sell very nicely for our customers in Q3 and Q4. But it’s across the board. As we mentioned in our opening remarks, these closeouts will find a way to our end-caps in July, less than 40% of our end-caps. And the basic store has about 35 end-caps in general around the race track. Only about 40% had bargains and treasures. In October this year, we’ll have that penetration grow to 90% where bargains will make a major part of that end-cap assortment. So, it’s going to be across all categories, and we’re seeing good traction. It’s a target-rich environment out there. We’re seeing it in toys, appliances, vacuums, home textiles, furniture, branded product, even secondary branded product. We’re very focused on buying smart with a good exit plan. And everything we buy in the closeout bargain arena, we’re trying to make sure that it’s accretive to that category’s margin and overall company margins. So, we see a lot of opportunity to — especially during these tough times for our customers, to bring the deals to her that she really enjoys.

Krisztina Katai — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

That’s great. And then just a follow-up on the gross margin outlook. Obviously, it sounds like the third quarter will still be under a little bit of pressure. Maybe just talk about your confidence in getting back to normalized gross margins in the fourth quarter. And just curious to hear your assumptions around the competitive environment across retail, just considering that there’re a lot of retailers with heavy inventory still as of today.

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

Yeah. Hi, Krisztina, I’ll jump in on that, and I think Bruce will add a few comments. Yeah. So, we are expecting some continued promotional pressure on margin in Q3, which is why we’ve guided to the mid-30s. We’re still working through that seasonal inventory that we came into the early spring with, so that will continue to weigh on it a little bit. By the time we get to Q4 though, we do think that will be behind us. There are a number of factors, which we think will drive our gross margin higher in Q4, which we talked about a little bit in our prepared remarks. We’re going to be in a better inventory position in general coming into Q4. We’re not going to have the supply chain issues that we had last year. We’re going to do better on shrink. Detention and demurrage is going to come down meaningfully as we cleaned out our yards and freight rates have started to turn, and we’re starting to see that benefit now flow through in our gross margin rate. So, all those factors we think are going to be tailwinds as we come into Q4. We do assume it’s still going to be a somewhat challenging promotional environment and our comp sort of [Technical Issues] bakes that in. But overall, we’re optimistic about Q4, and we’re up against the 37.3% rate in 2021, which we expect to be in line with in Q4.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

And I’ll add, I feel like we’re doing really good work to end fiscal ’22 in a stronger position. Keeping in mind what we said earlier, seasonal from lawn and garden played a big role in the first half of this year, moving through that inventory. That’s pretty much behind us at this point. Promotions are going to be much more efficient going forward. Our vendor community is working well with us, once again, restoring those opening price points, reengineering products with good quality, but more margin for us as well. All that’s going to play into a better back half. So, back half should continue to grow in margin rate, and the team is really focused on that.

Krisztina Katai — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

That’s great. Thanks so much for the color 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 is coming from Kate McShane from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now live.

Mark Jordan — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Good morning. This is Mark Jordan on for Kate today. I guess following up on that last question, how do you feel your opening price points are positioned relative to your competitors?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

It’s a good question, Mark. What we do is we look at our competitive pricing on a weekly basis. And we’ve added new tools, third-party resources and tools and systems to help us do a better job ensuring that we’re placed in a good competitive point. So, that helps us establish an opening price points. There’re some areas where we look at the elasticity, and we understand the range we can be on basic easy-to-shop, especially name brand items in the Consumables and Food areas. Other areas are a little bit more difficult to shop, but we maintain a good comparison ratio. And then once again, the increase in bargains, our ability to bring our own brands into the comparison and off-price or closeout brands and that penetration growing across our assortment gives us a competitive edge against everyday low price mass retailers, grocery chains, etc. So, I feel like we’re in a good position, and it’s getting better every week, and it’s going to get stronger through the back half of this year, and we’ll enter ’23 from a really good position with a nice balance of bargains, treasures and everyday essentials. And in that respect, we’re aiming to get to a third of bargains across our assortment, which is better than everyday low price deals out there, a third treasures, which were already in a good place. It’s an emotional and delightful purchase for her, and everyday essentials we’re working on, that’s where we really get to the price competitiveness, and we’re looking at reducing some of the redundancy and making it even more productive with more solutions for her at competitive prices. So, I think we’re in good shape and getting better every week.

Mark Jordan — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Perfect. And I guess it might be early if you haven’t done your inventory counts yet, but do you have any updates on shrink?

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

We really don’t yet because, to your point, our physical inventory cycle typically starts in January, which is where we get the full rate. We are planning to do some late September sort of sample test of inventories to see what traction we’ve got. I mean, I think as we talked about in the past, there’s an accounting impact in Q4. But even if our shrink rate didn’t improve at all because we effectively in Q4 2021 had to take the sort of hit for all of 2021 in terms of increased shrink rate. So, we’re up against effectively a 60 basis points impact in 2021 of last year. But we’re optimistic we’re going to do better than hold the rate flat, and we think all the things we rolled out, including new shrink technologies, embedded [Phonetic] training at the store level, new incentive plans and so on, are going to help us bring that down. But we’ll get our first read in September, so we’ll report on that at our next earnings call, and then we’ll get a full read in January when we begin the full physical inventory program for next year.

Mark Jordan — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Mark.

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

Thank you, Mark.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is coming from Jason Haas from Bank of America. Your line is now live.

Jason Haas — Bank of America — Analyst

Hey, good morning. And thanks for taking my question. I’m curious if you’ve seen any early signs of trade-down? And if not yet fully, I’m curious, what categories going forward do you think are most likely to attract that trade-down customer?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Jason. Trade-down is happening. We believe the process is beginning. We’re already in the beginning stages of it. Right now, just to give you an overview of how we see trade-down, trade-down — customers are pretty loyal to the store they shop and they’ll trade down within that store. We see that in our own stores, especially in the furniture category, where she’ll go from Broyhill purchase to a Real Living purchase. It’s just our entry-level price point there. And so we’ve seen, in fact, Real Living passed Broyhill in overall sales in Q2, which is a good thing for us. Both owned brands are doing quite well. And then, they’ll start changing stores, and we’re seeing that starting to occur too just at the beginning stages of it. We’re starting to see customers with a higher income, over $100,000, just ever so slightly start trading into us and gaining penetration in overall sales. But, we’ve got a great assortment for that. I think the trade-down happens in lawn and garden, patio or seasonal areas. We already know the household income of the customer in that area is 2 times our core customer. And so we’ve already proven the trade-down happens there. Furniture in the Home categories, Hard Home, Soft Home are great ideas for her. Especially now when she’s being frugal about these big ticket purchases, the accessories she can have in Hard Home and Soft Home, Big Lots is a great option for her. So, we think trade-down is happening. We think, as this macroeconomic environment continues, that trade-down will accelerate. And what’s more is exciting in a related way is that our reactivated customer growth has significantly grown Q2 this year versus Q2 last year, up mid-teens versus last year. So, they’re coming back as well to shop us.

Jason Haas — Bank of America — Analyst

Thank you. It’s good to hear. And then as my follow-up question, I was curious, maybe for Jonathan, if you could talk about the rationale for doing the sale leaseback and I guess, potentially — sorry, I can’t remember the exact way that you phrased it, between the sale leaseback and the sale of those stores, but I was curious, what was the rationale for doing that? And what’s the plan to use those proceeds for?

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

Yeah. So there’re a couple of different buckets of that, Jason. The first is we’ve got 25 owned stores, which we are planning to sell outright, not leaseback. And they are underperforming stores that if we impute a normal rent charge there, they’re not economic and we can sell those 25 stores for a very significant multiple of the cumulative EBITDA they’re generating. And in some cases, they’re generating negative EBITDA. So, that one we think is kind of straightforward and that’s going to be a fairly significant sum. Then, we have another 25 or 26 owned stores that we’re considering sale leaseback proposals for. We’ve also got our corporate headquarters here. So, we have the ability to execute sale leasebacks on those, which we’re considering proposals currently, have not made a final decision on that, but that’s something that we are actively considering. And then we have the synthetic lease on our Apple Valley distribution center in California, which needs to be refinanced by 2024 in any case. We have — the equity attached to that belongs to us. So, if we were to sell that — lease it back, I mean, there’s the potential equity gain there for us. But that’s the other piece we need to address and we’re working on currently too. So, in terms of proceeds, first of all, our priority is to make sure we have appropriate levels of liquidity. So, we’re protected from any downswings like the downswings we all have seen over the past couple of quarters. We want to make sure we’ve got healthy levels of minimum liquidity at all times. Next priority is to make sure we’re appropriately investing in the business to drive long-term growth and shareholder returns. And then obviously, you have the dividend and then you have share repurchases, which assuming we have excess liquidity, and we’ve utilized capital support, appropriate levels of investment in the business, if we have excess liquidity beyond that, then we think share repurchase is an appropriate use of that excess liquidity.

Jason Haas — Bank of America — Analyst

Thank you.

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

Thanks, Jason.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is coming from Zachary Donnelly from KeyBanc. Your line is now live.

Zachary Donnelly — KeyBanc — Analyst

Thank you. So, over the course of the past couple of weeks, we saw some pricing investments from competitors like Family Dollar or different dollars and discounters. And so I was wondering, kind of over the longer term, how you’re thinking about potentially the need for price investments, especially within the Consumables segment?

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, good question, Zachary. What we’ve done is we partnered with a third-party consultant to review, especially our Food and Consumables line, so that we maintain competitiveness and also have the right bargains and deals. And we’ve rolled that out on the Consumables side of the house and just started rolling out the Food side of the house. And in some cases, what we’ve seen both regionally and across products, in national brands as well as off-price or bargains, is the opportunity to either take prices up or take prices down to grow our share in the marketplace. And we think that on an annualized basis, this will add $20 million worth of margin just in Food and Consumables to our P&L. That work will start showing up in Q4. So, that’s just work that we’re doing to ensure that we’re priced competitively and also have the bargains and treasurers penetration growing at the same time with opening price points that are appropriately set. We’re continuing to roll that out across the country, and we’ll take that, as I mentioned earlier, to other categories across the store. So we’ve got — and once again, we price scrape every week. We review things. The team is very agile and responsive in our competitive position. It’s a muscle that we’ve actually worked on quite a bit over the last 90 days, and we’re getting better and better at it.

Zachary Donnelly — KeyBanc — Analyst

Great. Thank you. I appreciate it.

Bruce Thorn — President and Chief Executive Officer

You got it, Zachary.

Operator

Thank you. That does conclude today’s teleconference and webcast. A replay of this call will become available. You could access the replay until September 13th by dialing toll free (877) 660-6853 and enter the replay confirmation 13732156, followed by the pound sign. The toll number is 1 (201) 612-7415, replay confirmation 13732156, followed by this pound sign. [Operator Closing Remarks].

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