SpartanNash Company (NASDAQ: SPTN) Q2 2021 earnings call dated Aug. 19, 2021.
Corporate Participants:
Christopher Mandeville — Managing Director
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Scott Mushkin — R5 Capital — Analyst
Spencer Hanus — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Matt Fishbein — Jefferies — Analyst
Kelly Bania — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good day, and welcome to the SpartanNash Company Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]. After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions].
I would now like to turn the conference over to Chris Mandeville with ICR. Please go ahead sir.
Christopher Mandeville — Managing Director
Good morning, and welcome to the SpartanNash Company second quarter 2021 earnings conference call. On the call today from the Company are President and Chief Executive Officer, Tony Sarsam; and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Jason Monaco.
By now, everyone should have access to the earnings release, which was issued yesterday at approximately 04:30 PM Eastern Time. For a copy of the earnings release, please visit SpartanNash’s website at www.spartannash.com/investors. This call is being recorded, and a replay will be made available on the Company’s website for approximately ten days.
Before we begin, the Company would like to remind you that today’s discussion will include a number of forward-looking statements. If you will refer to SpartanNash’s earnings release from yesterday, as well as the Company’s most recent SEC filings, you will see a discussion of factors that could cause the Company’s actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements.
Please remember SpartanNash undertakes no obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements. The Company will also make a number of references to non-GAAP financial measures. The Company believes these measures provide investors with useful perspective on the underlying growth trends of the business, and it has included in yesterday’s earnings release a full reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures.
And it is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Tony. Tony?
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Chris and good morning everyone. Overall, Q2 was a strong showing for SpartanNash with both our top and bottom lines exceeding expectations. Like the rest of the industry, we have been challenged by historic labor shortages, strains on global supply chain and rising prices. However, I cannot be more proud of how the team overcame these obstacles in our second quarter. I am encouraged by our momentum, heading into the second half of the year, which is reflected in our decision to improve our full year guidance.
Jason will provide details on our updated outlook, but first I wanted to cover a few highlights from the quarter. I’ll begin with Food Distribution. Our warehouse, labor and transportation costs remain unfavorable and worst in the recent months. Nonetheless, our supply chain team proved resourceful and agile, taking swift actions to manage inventory and profitability. The team strategically reduced inventory by over $60 million during the quarter. This inventory reduction allows the distribution centers to operate more efficiently and provides a solid foundation for the supply chain transformation initiative to begin. I’ll share more on this initiative shortly.
In the Retail segment, our topline trends are proving quite resilient, as we cycled last year’s COVID lift. Sales remained higher relative to 2019 levels. On a two year basis, our comps have improved from 9.3% to 12.1%. The demand for food at home has persisted, and our stores benefited from an overall increase in traffic compared to the prior quarter. Regarding digital sales, we’ve seen over 100% growth since 2019. And to continue the expansion of our digital channel, we recently opened our first micro fulfillment center.
Lastly, in our Military segment, we continue to realize topline headwinds. Domestic traffic across the DeCA channel is down as shoppers have not yet fully returned to basis [Phonetic] after leaving to shop elsewhere during the pandemic. While these trends have caused the segment to trail expectations, our team has been working proactively to leverage positive trends within exports. The team is also executing gross margin initiatives, which has already produced favorable results.
With regard to our 2021 key performance indicators, we are making progress on many fronts. Our private label efforts are ahead of our expectations year-to-date, and we continue to build momentum through the year. Notably, we continue to make improvements within our assortment, pricing and marketing. Specifically, we’ve taken steps to redesign our labels and launch new items in the fresh category. We are also getting our private label products in more homes through the expansion of our locations that offer Fast Lane and ready to eat home delivery.
We continue to see favorability within our gross margin profile, and we’re focused on our broader gross margin efforts across the Company. We are seeing exceptional cost increases, some of which must be passed on to consumers. Meanwhile, our procurement team is actively negotiating the best possible terms with our suppliers. Overall, we are satisfied with the results even as we navigate uncertainties related to inflation and cycling pandemic trends.
Regarding our human capital indicators, we saw continued strong performance in safety, resulting in reduced incident rates due to our intense focus on safety awareness. Our newly energized safety team is implementing a myriad of process improvements to strengthen our performance, everything from the introduction of the universal stretching routines to prevent injury and promote wellness, to incorporating new safety discussions before all meetings. These small acts of safety helped to support our people first strategy. The safety team is also playing a critical role to implementing appropriate mitigating measures in response to our recent COVID surge.
We are still quite challenged with the associate hiring and retention due to this highly competitive labor market. To put the challenge of this unique labor market into perspective, Company-wide, we currently have over 4,000 open positions. As you might imagine, we have taken a number of proactive measures to help us maintain a pipeline of top talent. To accelerate hiring, we recently raised the starting wage for numerous physicians which has helped to attract more candidates.
We’ve also shortened the length of time required in position [Phonetic] for associates to become eligible for benefits. On the retention side, we are heavily focused on associate recognition, and we are excited to launch a number of new associate recognition programs for the front line and for our leaders. We are also investing in more diversity, equity and inclusion programming as well as training and development for associates. We are expanding our total rewards with additional discount days in our retail stores, tuition reimbursement, wellness benefits and more.
As I said in our Q1 earnings call, we are facing a war for talent, and we are taking significant steps to win this war through our people first culture. On to our final KPI, improving distribution service levels. This ties directly to our supply chain transformation initiative that we announced last quarter. Today, we want to provide more details on this initiative, which will address the short-term challenges in the supply chain. It will also allow us to capitalize on the growth of our network in the long term.
Based on the blueprinting phase, we recently completed, we have organized this initiative into the following work streams: Warehouse operations, sales and operations planning, inventory optimization, network strategy and procurement. Starting with warehouse operations, we are incorporating best practices across the network through process standardization and guidance for issue resolution. The combination of these warehouse initiatives will ultimately lead to greater operational efficiency and enhanced control of labor costs.
As for sales and operations planning, we are implementing a more robust process that fully integrates all functions of the organization. This is the best way to ensure supply chain execution and excellence across the network. Improvements to sales and operations planning will help us capture changes to the business environment and bring those insights to our supply chain operators. This provides our teams with the lead time necessary to make adjustments to inventory, labor and transportation capacity that match the current demand.
This process will improve our ability to respond more quickly to broader business issues in real time and best serve our customers’ needs. Regarding the inventory optimization work stream, we will focus on a couple of key areas. We will leverage data and analytics to better manage inventory across the entire network. This will improve efficiency in our distribution centers and reduce excess inventory.
We will also evaluate capacity by warehouse and temperature class to allow data driven buying decisions. In short, these actions will help us ensure that we have the right products in the right location at the right time. To summarize where this project will take us from a financial perspective, the supply chain transformation initiative is expected to provide 15 basis points to 30 basis points of supply chain benefits on a run rate basis. We are eager to continue to make progress on our supply chain transformation and we’ll have more updates along the way.
Lastly, I’ve been with SpartanNash now for almost a year and plan to update the broader community on enhancements we’ve made to our strategy. Along with the leadership team, I am pleased to announce that we will be holding a Investor Day this December. We’re on the lookout for more information in the coming months. I’m excited to share our refresh strategy, as well as, comprehensive updates on the status of our supply chain transformation.
I’ll now turn the call over to Jason to walk through the financial performance in greater detail and provide you with an update on our full-year outlook. Jason?
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Tony, and welcome to everyone joining us on today’s call. Let’s jump into the detailed results. Net sales for the second quarter decreased by 3.6% or $77.5 million to $2.11 billion versus 2020’s second quarter sales of $2.18 billion. We are especially pleased with how well our Retail sales trended in the current year compared to the prior year sales, which included surges caused by COVID-19.
Additionally, we’ve continued to see growth with certain existing Food Distribution customers which partially offsets the decline from prior year. Our GAAP EPS came in at $0.47 per diluted share in the quarter compared to $0.80 per share in the second quarter of 2020. On an adjusted basis, EPS for the quarter was $0.54 compared to EPS of $0.73 last year. The decrease in profitability from the prior year was driven by the lower sales volumes I mentioned earlier. These declines were partially offset by an improvement in the gross profit rate where we saw an increase of 15.8% compared to 15.5% in the prior year quarter.
Gross profit rate growth was driven by improvements within the Food Distribution and Military segments, as well as a change in our overall mix to more margin accretive Retail and Food Distribution segment sales. Lastly, our rate of supply chain expenses increased in the current quarter compared to the prior year quarter due primarily to tight labor conditions and incremental costs associated with health care as associates returned to pre-COVID medical usage levels.
Turning to our segments. Net sales in Food Distribution decreased by $33.3 million or 3.1%, to $1.06 billion in the second quarter driven by last year’s pandemic surges. The decrease in sales was partially offset by continued growth with certain existing Food Distribution customers. Inflation was relatively steady, sequentially, but we did see significant movements between categories within the quarter.
Further, we also saw an upward trend as the quarter progressed and early into the third quarter as some of the price increases from suppliers have taken effect. We still anticipate further increases for the balance of the year. However, as we previously noted, we anticipate that these increases will be passed through to our customers. Reported operating earnings for Food Distribution in the second quarter totaled $16.7 million, compared to $14.4 million in the prior year quarter. The increase in reported operating earnings for the segment was due to favorable margin rates and lower asset impairment and restructuring charges.
These increases were partially offset by a higher rate of supply chain expenses and the impact of lower sales volumes. Adjusted operating earnings totaled $17.4 million in the quarter versus the prior year’s second quarter adjusted operating earnings of $17.9 million. Adjusted operating earnings excludes the asset impairment charges and other items detailed in Table 3 of yesterday’s release.
Retail net sales came in at $620 million for the quarter compared to $631.3 million in the second quarter of 2020, a decline of 1.8%. Our comparable store sales were down 2.7% for the second quarter due to the favorable effects of the pandemic in the prior year. However, two-year comparable sales were up 12.1%, an increase of 280 basis points sequentially from the first quarter as the consumer shift towards food at home persists and our consistent focus on retail execution delivers.
Second quarter reported operating earnings in the Retail segment came in at $12.7 million compared to $24.5 million in 2020 second quarter. In addition to the sales volume impact I mentioned, this decrease was primarily driven by a reduction in fuel margin rates, higher asset impairment and restructuring charges and higher healthcare expenses. Retail adjusted operating earnings were $15.4 million for the quarter compared to $24.7 million in 2020’s second quarter. Again, adjusted operating earnings exclude asset impairment and restructuring charges.
Military net sales of $430 million in the second quarter decreased by about $33 million compared to prior year revenues of $463 million. This was primarily due to the continuation of lower volumes at domestic commissaries following base access restrictions implemented in the prior year. Reduced foot traffic continues to drive significant declines in domestic commissary sales.
Overall, transaction count on a year-to-date basis is down over 12% from the prior year at domestic commissaries. Second quarter reported and adjusted operating losses in the Military segment came in at $3.5 million in the second quarter compared to $4.9 million in 2020’s second quarter, reflecting continued improvement in spite of the significant decline in volumes.
In the first half of fiscal 2021, the Company generated $73.6 million of cash from operating activities compared to $198.2 million over the same period in fiscal 2020. Looking at the second quarter alone, we generated over $105 million of cash from operations this year compared to $69 million last year. The increase in cash from operations during the quarter relates primarily to substantial reductions in inventory that has been strategically targeted [Phonetic] in the second quarter.
The strong cash flow performance enabled us to pay down $75.8 million of long-term debt during the second quarter. The continued pay down of debt balances also resulted in favorable interest expense compared to last year’s second quarter. During the quarter, the Company declared $7.1 million in cash dividends equal to $0.20 per common share. We also repurchased 265,000 shares during the quarter at an average price of about $20 per share.
Our second quarter adjusted EBITDA was $54.4 million compared to $59.2 million in the prior year quarter. Combined with the reduction in our long-term debt balance, our leverage ratio decreased to 1.9 times compared to 2 times at the end of fiscal 2020. As covered in yesterday afternoon’s press release, we are raising the low end of our 2021 profitability guidance range as we continue our momentum into the second half.
Earnings per share is now expected to range from $1.56 per diluted share to $1.69 per diluted share, on a reported basis, while adjusted EPS is expected to range from $1.70 per diluted share to $1.80 per diluted share. Adjusted EBITDA is now expected to range from $200 million to $210 million. This update to our profitability range recognizes the strong performance trends in the Retail segment, but is tempered by headwinds, we continue to feel in our military business and supply chain. These include the continued impact of the availability and cost of labor, we have felt most sharply in our supply chain as well as domestic military commissary trends.
We’ve also made investments in wages across the supply chain, similar to what we already executed within the retail business and discussed in our first quarter earnings call. In addition, the guidance now includes the impact of investments and expected earnings gains related to the previously announced supply chain transformation initiative, which we expect to be modestly dilutive on a net basis for 2021. As Tony mentioned, we will continue to update you regularly on this exciting initiative as it progresses throughout the balance of this year.
We are re-affirming our 2021 guidance as it relates to consolidated net sales. However, we do expect a shift in the segment performance from a sales perspective. With the continuation of positive results in the Retail segment, we now expect that Retail comparable sales will be down from 2% to 5%, an increase of 2% to 3% from our previous expectations. Military sales are now expected to decline between 9% and 13% from last year, a further decline from our previous expectations.
We continue to expect that Food Distribution sales will be down 1% to 3% from last year. These updates reflect both the trends observed in the quarter as well as our updated expectations for the remainder of the year.
And now, I’d like to turn the call back over to Tony.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Jason. In summary, we are very pleased of our overall financial performance and the progress we have made this year. But we’re not yet satisfied. We will work diligently to deliver upon our KPIs that will position us for success, regardless of the industry backdrop.
With that, I’d like to turn the call back over to the operator and open it up for your questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. And the first question will come from Peter Saleh with BTIG. Please go ahead, sir.
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Great. Thank you. Jason, could you just elaborate on the supply chain transformation? I think there was a margin benefit that Tony mentioned, 15 basis points to 30 basis points. When should we start to see that, is that second half of the year, and is that on, I believe you mentioned that was ongoing, so just some more details around that. And does that also include some of the inventory work that you guys have done this quarter? Thank you.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Pete. Thanks for the question and great to have you here this morning. We’re super excited about this — this supply chain transformation program, and where it’s going to take us. A few headlines to build on what Tony talked about just a few moments ago.
The program itself has started with a blueprinting, just as a reminder that the blueprinting that we talked about and announced last quarter, that blueprinting completed within the quarter and we’ve then laid out a specific transformation program and begun work on that program. As you can imagine that the changes for that can be, can range from very quick to very long ranging.
What we’re expecting is that, the seeds of those improvements will begin late this year, early next year, and what we’ve included in our guidance is a small amount of benefit within this year with an expectation that we’ll be building towards a run rate into 2022, and we’d love to give you more color on that as the year progresses, and we’ll share more detail about the program and how it’s progressing at the Investor Day that Tony talked about as well.
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Great. And then just on the inventory, the $60 million, I guess benefit you guys saw this quarter, can you just give us a little bit more color on, should we expect that to continue into the back end of the year or is that more of a one-time in nature, just details there would be really helpful. Thank you.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Thanks, Pete. The inventory was strategically targeted. So the way I would suggest you think about it is that, we had built more inventory than we needed in Q1, and then we also took a step back and assessed what inventory we needed and in what locations, and began work on that program. That effort concluded with a reduction in inventory in the quarter. I’d always think about that as it’s partially a catch up or a recovery from carrying a little too much out of the first quarter. And I would expect that our inventory levels will stay relatively close to where we are through the remainder of the year.
However, they will vacillate up and down based on forward buy opportunities and the potential to create value on that front. So I’d think about this as a base from which there’ll be some variability up and down, but generally, I’d expect to keep the working capital in check.
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Thank you very much. Very helpful.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Pete.
Operator
The next question will come from Scott Mushkin with R5 Capital. Please go ahead.
Scott Mushkin — R5 Capital — Analyst
Hey guys, thanks for taking my questions. So I think I want to focus a little bit short-term, I know you guys, you alluded to some forward buying opportunities, and I was just wondering, as you look to the rest of the year and the inflation outlook, how are you thinking about it? And do you think there’s going to be a lot more opportunities of potential upside to the guidance?
And then the other question I had is just around, we’re seeing COVID surge a little bit, are you guys seeing any uptick in sales because of that?
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Hi, Scott. Good morning. Nice to have you here. Look, let’s maybe start with inflation. Inflation overall, as I spoke about it earlier, it was relatively modest within the quarter. But there is kind of the story within the story that I want to share a little bit with the group here. Just as a reminder, food at home, inflation from a CPI standpoint was running about 1.4% in the second quarter. And when you kind of step back and we look at our wholesale business for us, food — our inflation ran at relatively modest levels kind of 0.5%-ish for the quarter. However, there was a pretty — a pretty big acceleration throughout the quarter from beginning to end, and there was also an impact from the year-over-year impact of lapping the huge protein inflation spike in Q2 of 2020. So you’ve got a little bit of noise in the data there.
Importantly, by the end of the quarter, our inflation in the Food Distribution business is running around 3%, and that increase was really split between two kind of primary areas. The grocery business was running close to the CPI rate that the CPI food at home rate that’s publicly available through BLS with meat running kind of high single-digits. As you know, the meat, protein and produce itself is much more variable and runs on much shorter cycle. So you’re going to see more ups and downs in that — in that piece of the business. You obviously also see less forward buy opportunity because of the short-cycle inventory.
So kind of stepping back on inflation, we saw inflation look similar to publicly available data with some variability on proteins also impacted by the big spike in meat prices last year Q2. So what does that mean for forward buy? We continue to — to set ourselves up to be successful for forward buy. One of the goals of our inventory correction was ensuring we had the right space and the right ability to capitalize on forward buy, should products be available.
As you know, it’s not — it’s not a push button exercise, and obviously there are some products that there isn’t availability, and that’s part of what’s driving the price increase from the vendors themselves. So we will continue to pursue opportunities for forward buy and for capitalizing on that price change, but I wouldn’t build a ton of upside into the back half of the year. We’re seeing a big bulge in inventory now and into the third quarter, it remains to be seen what that will look like into the fourth quarter, and we continue to hold to an inflation rate of 2% to 3% for the year.
I’d like to maybe hand it over to Tony to talk a little bit about the broader inflation environment, because this is a different cycle where it’s not just food, but getting into a big change in the labor market.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I think. Hey, Scott. This is Tony. I would just, couple of comments, and I’ll get to your COVID question as well. So on the inflation piece, one discussion we’ve been having here is around the historical implications of inflation versus the current inflation we’re experiencing in our forecasting. And historically, we have been pretty efficient in passing through inflation particularly in our wholesale business, and so there are benefits there.
I think we will pass that too very efficiently in this case as well, and we believe that between the wholesale and our retail businesses the US just [Phonetic] will be relatively low on that inflation. So I think that’s positive. The one thing I just want to note is that the — the cause of the inflation is more significantly just base labor that it has been in some of the last couple of inflationary cycles. And, we are also subject to the base labor inflationary element.
So while we have the advent of inflation coming from our suppliers, that will pass-through and we’ll find some efficiency in that, we also are subject to the cost, the same cost that they have, and that will offset some of those — some of those upsides. And so that’s just a pragmatic reality and for — I’m sure in other questions we’ll have today, we’ll talk more about labor. It has been a very, very big topic for us and for other business in this environment.
On to the COVID. I think it’s probably a little early to say what the implications of the current surge are. We saw our retail business taking some really positive gains ahead of the sort of the discussion about the Delta variants and those things kind of in the — in the early part of the summer holiday season. And so, and that continues. So I’m certain there is some of that is mixed with some concerns about the resurgence. But we — our businesses started really picking up, and I think on the strength of some sticky habits and then people want to get out and do something. So there are number of things that they could do this year, that maybe they couldn’t do last year.
So we’re being very, very vigilant. There’s a lot, obviously a lot going on in that space and for our own, for our own policy and our own team, as well as how that impacts consumers, we stay vigil on that. But we believe there will be some — there will likely be some benefits from the current — the current behavior as well as the most recent government action to extend the SNAP benefits. So all mixed in there, there will be — I think there’ll be some upside.
Scott Mushkin — R5 Capital — Analyst
Perfect guys. Thank you very much.
Operator
The next question will come from Greg Badishkanian with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Spencer Hanus — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Good morning. This is Spencer Hanus on for Greg. I think you mentioned that you’re going to be building to a run rate in 2022 for supply chain savings. What are the biggest factors driving that timeline? And could you see improvements sooner? And then I guess is there a scenario where margins can get back to 2018 levels?
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Great question. I’ll take a crack at that and then turnover to Jason for the details. Well, so on the — this project is a very comprehensive project, [Indecipherable] as there are sort of five key components of it and it involves a fair amount of detail in terms of training and process optimization and new tools. So that process work will take place over the course of about a year. And so we will see as Jason mentioned earlier, we’ll see some benefits coming in — come toward the end of this year and more of the benefits coming in next year, as we really refine those processes across our network.
So we’ll have that spread, but the work so far it’s early work, the work so far looks terrific. And I think we’ll start seeing some of those benefits towards the end of this year. The — as far as getting back to 2018, there is, it’s certainly our objective to make this a continuous improvement idea that continues to build on itself. So once the project is through, we will also establish additional processes that continue to sharpen that saw. And I think that will involve, likely involve more technology and more and more process improvements that come from technological implications in years to come.
So certainly our objective to get back to that, to that place there are in — there are some mix implications that are — that have changed our numbers there, but that’s — our biggest focus is getting the organization in the supply chain world to be as efficient and effective as possible, and that’s not just a one-year project.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Spencer, building on Tony’s comments, a couple of things I’d highlight, just for reference here. We’ve made great progress on the gross margin side in the Food Distribution business. Our margins, our gross margins are up in the second quarter by about 100 basis points from where the gross margins are, about 100 basis points from where they were two years ago, so pre-COVID. Now to be fair, the supply chain expense has largely swamped that margin improvement, and that’s why we’re tackling supply chain, and kind of the first stage — phase of that supply chain improvement is 15 basis points to 30 basis points, and we expect that to be kind of phase one of multiple phases to continue to build back and capture that margin enhancements and push it to the bottom line.
Spencer Hanus — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Got it. That’s helpful. If I could switch to military for a second, what do you think needs to happen at DeCA for them to win back customers? And at what point do you think it’s time to potentially explore some strategic alternatives there and just refocus your time on Retail and Food Distribution, that is just a little bit more in your control?
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Well, I think there is a — it’s a very complicated circumstances that DeCA is facing. And I have a lot of — they are very desirous of getting and making progress, they have a lot of confidence in the team there, and I think they — they have a big chore [Phonetic] ahead of them, right, they’e got the base closures and closures and openings and closures and openings that happened last year and a half, I think has moved some folks who might have been loyal, commentary shoppers to other alternatives. And I think those habits have been sticky as well, and we’re seeing some of that in the numbers.
So they’ve got — they’ve got to work it off from — as we can say, claw [Phonetic] that back, they’ve got a lot of ideas that they’re working on. From our perspective, I think a couple of things, one is, we think we can actually help where we are fully engaged in partnering with them on ideas and what they can do to bring those customers back.
But obviously, fundamentally there is a — there is a need in the customer out there that can be certain, I think there’s room for better profitability for all the players involved in that supply chain. So we remain confident that there is better profitability in that world. And our team is working hard on that, everything from how we think about mix, and how we think about products and certainly related to that is the supply chain where we just mentioned, there’s a lot of — where we think there’s a lot of cost opportunity in supply chain.
Specific to MDV, that network has changed. We have the opportunity to change our network to better — to better serve what is now a different business than it was just a few years ago. So our job one is to figure out how to make that business work and make it profitable, and that’s our primary focus.
Spencer Hanus — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Got it. And then I just wanted to follow up on the labor commentary you guys have made. You mentioned a few times about stepping up wages. How should we think about the size of those investments that you guys made in distribution, this quarter and then for the investments that you made in Retail, last quarter, are you seeing signs of better retention there yet, or is it still sort of too early to know?
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, great question. So it’s probably a wee bit too early yet. It’s been about a couple of months in retail and just a month in supply chain. We’re seeing better applicant flow, where we’re seeing. We believe the better candidates that have come from that [Indecipherable] I can’t really mention the numbers, but the entry-level wage increases were north of 10%. So pretty sizable increases by our measure. I believe we’re going to come back even this year and make some additional adjustments in retail and some selective increases as well as we believe to strengthen that number even better.
So — but the early, the early anecdotal component, hey we’re getting — we’re getting better applicants, we’re getting a little better stickability with applicants, so we’re confident this work is actually going to get us that place. I think importantly also, because the labor environment has been so challenging, and the cost associated with that has been pretty extraordinary everything from the amount of over time that we’ve had to experience because people are working longer shifts to cover for openings. In some cases, and we have third-party contractors working in that, that are also costly.
I think we have room to make increases in our base pay that actually have a payback as we get stabilized. So we feel bullish on being thoughtful, but aggressive in pay and using that as a tool to help win this war on talent.
Spencer Hanus — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
The next question will come from Matt Fishbein with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Matt Fishbein — Jefferies — Analyst
Hey, good morning, thanks for the questions. Just to follow up on the labor shortage situation. If you can kind of break out for us where you’re seeing more pressure, whether it’s retail versus wholesale and also just on the wage pressure you’re seeing. How is it, I guess different relative to other instances of wage pressure that you’ve faced in your career as a CEO, having battled this for a few months now, are there any flag post that you see in the future like Labor Day, for example that can create some type of catalyst for this to unwind a bit from a macro perspective? We’ll start with that.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So it seems like every day is Labor Day. So, first and foremost, I guess the — I would say we’re seeing a little bit more pressure in our distribution centers. I think that if you think about retail turnover, because of the nature of that work, there’s been a lot of hard time, lot of young people getting their career started. There’s a fair amount of churn at the entry-level end. So historically you’d see, you would not be scared by 50% turnover in that business, because that’s just the nature of how people come on and come off seasonally in the retail space.
And we’re seeing kind of 60%-ish turnover there. On the warehouse side of the business, the history, and most as I’ve been in there you’d see something more like 25% turnover in that business, you have slightly higher paying jobs, people are making careers and working in warehouses, we’re actually experiencing about 70% turnover there. So we have worse turnover in a place and a part of our business that historically would have lower turnover.
So I would say that’s where we’re seeing more of the pressure, is getting good, consistent talent into our distribution centers. And that’s why we’re taking some of the larger increases as well. You know, what’s different is in the last couple of labor pinch points were driven almost exclusively by strong economy. And you think about one or more acute ones we had right around the end of the 20th century when you had the dotcom phenomenas, our economy was growing like gangbusters, and there was a — there was a lot of strain in getting people into jobs then, because unemployment dropped down to 3% and lower in some neighborhoods. But it’s based on the economy. So it’s one of those kind of — if you think about it in a more comprehensive sense, sort of a good problem to have, right. Our economy is cranking, and people are wanting to get in with it, just can’t get in fast enough and we can’t find people fast and keep the economy growing.
This one has been significantly exacerbated by the government programs. And I think the practical reality is that, that we have — we have a latent economy that’s pretty strong. There is a lot of growth potential, there is a lot of need for folks. And at the same time, there is very significant benefits for our folks to not go into the labor market. In our states that we operate in, the sum total of the unemployment and other benefits from the federal government have an imputed value of about $23 per hour.
And that’s not much different than the national number, it’s about the same. And so, that is really different for us as we’re now — now we have a new competitor in the mix. And as that gets stabilized more, I think we’ll get better on better footing and this will look more like some of the other labor crunch of the past. But that wasn’t particularly difficult, and we see that in the applicants who are in a lot of cases, you know as they’re getting into the market, there is a little bit of take it or leave it, because they have a — they have a best alternative to working in a job that they may not favor.
So anyway, that’s the — that’s what’s different. To answer your question, I think that component is new for us as a business society.
Matt Fishbein — Jefferies — Analyst
Okay. Thanks for all that color. It’s really helpful. I just wanted to also ask maybe a longer term broader question on product mix in your Food Distribution segment relative to pre-pandemic. Can you kind of walk us through the changes? I guess you’ve seen through the pandemic where you were from a product mix perspective prior to the pandemic, where did it shake out by the end of last year, and where are you now. And I guess Tony, the bigger question here is, given your fresh distribution background, where should we expect that component to kind of shake out in terms of percent of sales or profit over the next few years?
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Okay, great, great question. So as far as mix, I don’t have that number handy on the mix change versus pre-pandemic. Do you have that Jason?
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
No. Matt, what I’d highlight is that there was naturally a cycle that moved towards kind of HBC type products with the emphasis around cleaning and what I’d characterize as pantry stocking or a hoarding of cleaning goods and then there was — there was a general decline in elements of the store that were fresh in nature, in part because delis were closing. And so we saw kind of a downdraft there. What we’ve seen recently as the kind of the recoveries come into place is a return to those fresh categories both deli, bakery, and what I would characterize as value-add products.
And you’d see this both in Food Distribution, as well as in our — in our retail business. And you didn’t ask, but maybe just a little bit of color on the Retail piece. We saw exceptional comps in Q2, really excellent results with a set forward sequentially in Retail comps from kind of the mid 9% range to the mid-12%s. And, part of that was the value-added growth in bakery, deli, etc, as well as — as well as our promotional and retail execution.
Now, we expect to continue to execute flawlessly going forward, but our outlook also reflects a step down in Q3 and Q4 from Q2 levels, not because of execution, but frankly more around uncertainty, we expect our Q3, Q4 to look more like a high single-digit growth on a comp basis, mid-9% in Q3, around 8% in Q4, so kind of a step down. But still very strong and really supported by some of the kind of the up draft of those mix changes that you — that you asked about in food, but then really close to our supermarket piece of the business.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, and of course those are two year numbers on the comps.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. And our focus going forward is going to be — will be disproportionately on fresh. We think that’s where as people come back to some semblance of the new normal, I think that’s one thing they really value, and we think we’ve got great opportunities for growth around the perimeter of the store. So they’ll be more biased and more focused there.
Matt Fishbein — Jefferies — Analyst
Thank you very much.
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. And our next question will come from Kelly Bania with BMO Capital. Please go ahead.
Kelly Bania — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking our questions. Wanted to first follow-up on the supply chain initiative. I believe last quarter there was a discussion of savings on the 25 basis point to 50 basis point range, and now, it sounds like 15 basis point to 30 basis point. I was just curious if that’s timing or if it’s just the wage increases impacting that, or any color you can help us there.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, it’s $15 million to $30 million, it’s 25 basis points to 50 basis points. So it’s the same as last quarter it was reaffirmed. So if I misspoke, my apologies.
Kelly Bania — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Got it. No problem. Another question, just in terms of the Retail comps coming in better than expected, I guess I would have thought maybe distribution would maybe kind of follow suit, maybe there is some mix dynamics, but maybe just help us understand why that’s not the case.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, and great question, Kelly. So if you kind of dig into the Food Distribution growth, we’re seeing similar performance among our — what we characterize as our core independent customer to what we’re seeing in our Corporate Retail business. Now, there is some underlying mix changes and pieces of the underlying business or the other Food Distribution business that are — that behave differently than traditional grocery, and that’s what you’re seeing come out of the aggregate Food Distribution results.
Kelly Bania — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay. And maybe can you just help us understand where service levels are today, and where you’re targeting them to reach under the new initiative?
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, so service level, so the way we measure the service levels, we are probably about — I’d say about, roughly 2,000 basis points lower than what we would normally have run two years ago, right. So from the mid-90s to the mid — kind of mid-70s in terms of our compliance to orders, so to speak.
We actually — that was a number that was quite a bit lower a year ago, but we have made progress in terms of our processes as well as we receive — as well as additional gains from the manufacturing community as they — as they improve their service to us. And that sort of stalled out a few months ago. So we’ve been — we’ve been getting about the same as actually a little bit worse supply from the broader manufacturing community in the last three to four months.
So, as we — we will refine our process to supply, to be as efficient as possible in getting that product out to our customers into our stores. But, the headline is that the manufacturer is still not all the way back yet. They are also operating, they’re actually operating at a bigger delta versus their previous levels. I mean, that’s more of the — that’s the headline, more of the complicating factor in service right now.
As best we can tell as we survey what other — what other people are experiencing, where we have — we have side by side comparison we are — we are outperforming other like services and we get pretty positive feedback from folks that actually — can actually use multiple services. So we feel good about our internal process there. And the next chore is frankly is to get stabilized with the manufacturing vendors and get their supply up.
Kelly Bania — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay, that’s very helpful. Just one more from me. You made the comment about gross margin up about 100 basis points versus two years ago, but maybe some of the costs eating into that gross margin upside. But just curious if you can unpack that gross margin strength for us, and if you think you can sustain that going forward.
Jason Monaco — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I expect that we can sustain the gross margin going forward. And I think, Kelly, I don’t want to assume, but referring to the Food Distribution business just to be clear. Yeah, I expect that we can sustain it. It’s been — it’s improved based on a combination of a product mix and customer mix, and really the key for us to get back to prior margin structures is to deliver on the supply chain piece which is lagged. Frankly, the top line and profitability and gross margin improvements have been falling to the bottom line, in part due to some of the challenges that Tony referenced in the fill — everything from the fill rates to some of the challenges with the labor market, as well as our own operational practices, which we’re addressing through that supply chain transformation.
Kelly Bania — BMO Capital Markets — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Tony Sarsam for any closing remarks. Please go ahead, sir.
Tony Sarsam — President and Chief Executive Officer
All right, thank you. And thank you all for your participation on today’s call. We really look forward to speaking to you all again when we report out on our third quarter 2021 results in November, and hope to see many of you in December for the Investors Day. We’re really looking forward to that. So with that, we’ll conclude this call and wish everybody a great day.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks].