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Earnings call: Advance Auto Parts reports growth amid strategic shifts

EditorEmilio Ghigini
Published 2024-08-23, 07:52 a/m
© Reuters.
AAP
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In their recent Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call, Advance Auto Parts (NYSE: NYSE:AAP) revealed a slight increase in comparable sales and detailed their strategic plans to enhance their financial position and refine their operational focus.

The company reported a 0.4% rise in comparable sales, largely attributed to their professional business, while do-it-yourself (DIY) sales showed signs of improvement.

A notable development was the sale of their Worldpac business to the Carlyle Group (NASDAQ:CG) for $1.5 billion in cash, a move aimed at bolstering their balance sheet and allowing for reinvestment into their core business.

Despite facing consumer-related headwinds and anticipating a challenging short-term outlook with negative to flat comparable store sales, Advance Auto Parts is confident in their ability to steer towards stronger earnings growth in the future.

Key Takeaways

  • Advance Auto Parts reported a 0.4% increase in comparable sales, driven by their professional business, with DIY sales improving.
  • The company sold its Worldpac business for $1.5 billion, intending to use the proceeds to strengthen its balance sheet and invest in the core business.
  • They plan to open 100 new stores per year, funded by the Worldpac sale, traditional CapEx budget, and potential growth from turnaround activities.
  • Full-year sales are forecasted to be between $11.15 billion and $11.25 billion, with operating income margin expected to be between 2.1% to 2.5%.
  • The diluted EPS for the full year is projected to range from $2 to $2.50, with a minimum of $100 million in free cash flow.

Company Outlook

  • Advance Auto Parts aims to generate mid-single-digit margins in the coming years and will share more details in the next earnings call in November.
  • The company expects to continue driving growth, improving margins, and creating long-term value through simplification, cost reduction, and supply chain consolidation.

Bearish Highlights

  • Consumer-related headwinds and lower discretionary spending are expected to impact the company's short-term trajectory.
  • The company anticipates a negative 1% to flat comparable store sales for the full year.
  • Operating income margin pressures are driven by lower gross margin and higher SG&A deleverage.

Bullish Highlights

  • The company is focused on improving the core business and investing for growth, with positive comp sales as a priority.
  • Investments in IT, stores, and supply chain infrastructure are planned to strengthen the company's foundation.
  • There is optimism about the company's market presence and potential for growth.

Misses

  • Net sales were flat at $2.7 billion in Q2, with gross profit impacted by strategic pricing investments and higher product costs.
  • The company did not provide specific details on the impact of grosses from higher supply chain financing costs or the remainder of Worldpac advisory fees.

Q&A Highlights

  • The company did not disclose specific figures for the depreciation and amortization of Worldpac.
  • Sales trends have been impacted by consumer pressure, with consumers delaying discretionary maintenance.
  • There was no specific growth numbers provided excluding Worldpac, but there was positive momentum in the professional segment.
  • The company did not reveal the exact SKU count affected by price investments but emphasized broad-based investments across all categories.

Advance Auto Parts is navigating a complex market environment with strategic initiatives aimed at reinforcing their financial stability and focusing on their core competencies. The sale of Worldpac is a significant step in this direction, providing the necessary funds to invest in growth and operational efficiency.

While the retail landscape presents challenges, particularly in the DIY segment, the company's adjustments and investments in the professional segment are showing positive signs.

As Advance Auto Parts continues to refine its strategies and expand its footprint, the industry will be watching to see how these moves translate into financial performance in the quarters to come.

InvestingPro Insights

Advance Auto Parts (NYSE: AAP) has demonstrated resilience in its recent earnings report, with a focus on growth and operational efficiency. The strategic sale of Worldpac has positioned the company to reinforce its balance sheet and invest in its core business, despite headwinds in the retail landscape.

InvestingPro Data shows a market capitalization of approximately $3.03 billion and a revenue for the last twelve months as of Q1 2024 at $11.28 billion, with a slight growth of 0.7%. The company's gross profit margin stands strong at 39.82%, indicating a healthy profitability from its sales. However, it is important to note that the company is trading at a high earnings multiple with a P/E ratio of 141.27, reflecting the market's optimistic valuation of its future earnings potential.

One of the InvestingPro Tips highlights that the stock has taken a significant hit over the last week, with a one-week price total return of -17.83%. This could be an indicator of market volatility or investor concerns, which may be worth monitoring for those interested in the company's stock performance.

Another key tip from InvestingPro is that analysts have recently revised their earnings expectations downwards for the upcoming period. This is a critical piece of information for investors as it may signal changes in the company's future financial outlook.

For those looking for more insights, there are additional InvestingPro Tips available at https://www.investing.com/pro/AAP. These tips provide a more comprehensive understanding of Advance Auto Parts' financial health and market position, which could be invaluable for making informed investment decisions.

Full transcript - Advance Auto Parts Inc (AAP) Q2 2024:

Operator: Welcome to the Advance Auto Parts Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Before we begin Lavesh Hemnani, Vice President, Investor Relations will make a brief statement concerning forward-looking statements that will be discussed on this call.

Lavesh Hemnani: Good morning and thank you for joining us today to discuss our Second Quarter 2024 Results. I'm joined today by Shane O'Kelly, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Ryan Grimsland, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Following management's prepared remarks, we will take questions. Before we begin, please be advised that management's remarks today will contain forward-looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements, including but not limited to, statements regarding our strategic and operational review, initiatives, plans, projections, expectations for the future and the anticipated sale of our Worldpac business. Actual results could differ materially from those projected or implied by the forward-looking statements. Additional information about forward-looking statements and factors that could cause actual results to differ can be found under forward-looking statements in our earnings release and risk factors in our most recent Form 10-K and subsequent filings made with the SEC. Now let me turn the call over to Shane O'Kelly. Shane?

Shane O'Kelly: Thank you, Lavesh, and good morning, everyone. I would like to start by expressing my appreciation for the hard work exhibited by our team members over the past several months. During the second quarter, our frontline team navigated a weak demand environment as consumers continue to feel the weight of an uncertain macroeconomic climate. Despite the headwinds, our team maintained focus on serving customers and driving progress on our strategic priorities. We ended the second quarter with positive comparable sales growth of 0.4% led by our pro-business. DIY remained pressured, but improved sequentially. Our second quarter comp performance is a step in the right direction. Moreover, the opportunity ahead of us to drive sustainable growth, recapture market share and position Advance for long-term value creation remain substantial. Turnarounds take time, but our team is solid and putting in the work. The macro environment is challenging, retailers are lowering expectations and we're starting from a lower baseline relative to the industry. On the other hand, we successfully managed through a difficult quarter and navigated a complex M&A process with a successful Worldpac transaction that substantially strengthens our balance sheet. We know what we need to do from here. As you will hear later in this call, looking forward, some of our investments are around price, some are related to supply chain and others on optimizing productivity. All are focused on reigniting growth and improving our margins. The slope of the path will also be determined by 1,000 smaller decisions made by our team and not merely dictated by a top down projection. As a team, we keep in mind that even incremental improvements can yield substantial upside. Selling Worldpac and solidifying our balance sheet are early inning wins and it is an exciting time to be an Advance Auto Parts team member. When I joined Advance last September, we had just initiated a strategic and operational review of the business. We have been executing against decisive actions to simplify our business and return to the fundamentals of selling Auto Parts. Progress in these actions is setting the stage for a new future for Advance. Let's review that progress and talk about the path ahead for the company. Number one, the strategic review of Worldpac and the Canadian business. We are pleased to have completed this process, which sharpens our focus on the blended box. Second, reducing our costs to become more competitive while investing in the front line. These investments are energizing the front line and in particular our pro sales teams. Third, making organizational changes to position us for success. Through our internal promotions and our external hires, we are putting outstanding talent in key roles. Fourth, consolidating our supply chain, which unlocks better parts availability and service for our customers, which improves the cost position of the company. And fifth, improving the productivity of all of our assets, which will help narrow our operating margin gap to the industry. Starting with the first decisive action regarding Worldpac. Today, we announced that we have entered into a definitive agreement to sell the Worldpac business for $1.5 billion in cash to the Carlyle Group. The sale process generated strong interest and we are pleased with the outcome. We plan to use the net proceeds to strengthen our balance sheet and invest in the core business. The transaction is expected to close before the end of the year and on behalf of everyone in Advance, I would like to thank the more than 5,000 Worldpac team members for their dedication over the last 10 years. Reaching an agreement to sell Worldpac is a major milestone for the company and our vision from here is to further our commitment to the blended box model servicing both pro and DIY customers with our well-established retail footprint augmented by our independence. That's our path forward and it's a proven service model in the Auto Parts industry. The sale of Worldpac fuels our vision by improving our balance sheet, streamlining our operations and enabling us to focus on one business model. With the Worldpac review now complete, I also want to provide an update on our Canadian assets. During the second quarter, I traveled to Canada and was impressed by the deep expertise and market knowledge that our long-tenured Canadian team brings to the business. Our business model aligns well with our US operations and that team has consistently delivered strong performance. As a result, we have made the decision to retain our Canadian operations. I would like to thank our Canadian team for their patience during the review where they maintained an unwavering focus on serving our customers and I look forward to working with this team to grow the business. Moving to our second decisive action, reducing costs and reinvesting in our frontline. We have reduced costs and reinvested a portion of those savings in our frontline team. These investments have been particularly meaningful for our commercial account managers and our commercial parts pros as they are stepping up our pro-business efforts. During Q2, comp sales to up and down the street pros turned positive year-over-year compared with a decline in the first quarter. Our strategic pro accounts also grew year-over-year and we remain committed to serving them and growing our share across all pro segments. Along with that, we are igniting the field culture to become more customer focused and are reducing time spent on non-sales tasks and we are putting greater emphasis on accountability. As part of this, we are continually seeking feedback from our frontline team members to identify gaps and take swift actions to improve our business. Lastly, we remain on track to deliver $50 million of indirect procurement savings by next year. Our third decisive action is related to organizational changes. We welcomed our new Chief Merchandising Officer, Bruce Starnes, in the second quarter and now we've added talented individuals in additional critical merchandising functions. We have hired a new SVP leading assortment, digital merchandising and inventory management. We've added a new SVP for merchandising, operations and pricing and we've added a new VP of e-commerce. We have also realigned our marketing and e-commerce functions to now report into Bruce's organization for stronger collaboration. These leaders are enhancing our capabilities with respect to fundamental retail operations and I look forward to the value that true merchandising excellence can bring to our business. Early examples include, number one, conducting more frequent and deeper line reviews to ensure that we have the right product depth, breadth and costs. This year, we are on track to do 130 line reviews. Number two, assessing front and backroom assortments to improve relevancy and availability. And number three, coordinating marketing efforts to deliver great offers for our customers. An example of all three of these things coming together is our recent launch of our break bundle program. The merchandising team's work is being augmented by recent pricing actions and the implementation of our new inventory management system. We now have more than 300,000 actively managed SKUs in our new system. We began this effort earlier this year and completed it in July, a full six months ahead of our initial goal. Our fourth action, consolidation of our supply chain. At completion, our supply chain is expected to feature 14 large DCs operating on a single warehouse management system or WMS. This compares to our previous structure of 38 DCs of varying capacities operating with different systems. We remain on track with our WMS implementation with the recent completion of the Thompson, Georgia DC conversion and expect our final DC to be completed by year's end. The 14 DCs will serve as nationwide replenishment nodes while the remaining DCs will either be closed or converted to market hubs. Speaking of market hubs, as of mid-August, we have 10 market hubs in operation. We are creating these hubs by converting smaller DCs, upfitting existing stores or green fielding new locations. The market hub is new to Advance and each market hub has the potential to make an average of 80,000 SKUs available to a supported radius of stores on a same day basis. We are gaining critical insights on managing hub inventory along with determining efficient routes and replenishment frequencies. We now expect to open at least 17 market hubs by the end of 2024 and believe that this updated schedule will enable us to effectively apply learnings and develop the right operational model for our hub service stores. We still expect to open 60 market hubs by 2026. Lastly, our last decisive action is improving the productivity of all our assets. As we continue our strategic and operational review, we are amplifying our efforts to improve overall asset productivity. We believe we can reposition the core Advance business to generate mid-single-digit margins in the next few years. And as we consider our long-term margin goals, we believe the following building blocks will help drive our future success. These building blocks include generating sustainable positive comp sales. This is supported by competitive market-based pricing. It's supported by our energized frontline team and improved inventory availability. Note that sales productivity is our biggest opportunity to close our performance gap relative to the industry. Our second building block is store footprint. This also contributes to closing the sales productivity gap and now with our stronger combined real estate team, we are assessing our entire store footprint to identify markets where we can rationalize stores as well as where we can open new stores. The team is currently scaling capabilities to put us on a path to open at least 100 new stores per year located in markets of strength. The next building block is improving gross margin. As mentioned, there are two primary tenants to unlocking better gross margins and they are merchandising excellence and supply chain. Value is created here from harmonizing first costs, improving DC throughput, optimizing transportation and many other activities. Our last building block is realigning our SG&A with our post Worldpac operating structure. We will continue to invest in the required areas of our business, but at the same time, we are putting greater emphasis with our leaders to manage expenses and create operating leverage for our future. To conclude, as we look to a post Worldpac Advance, we are now executing against a clear vision of operating a single business that is poised for success as we revitalize core processes that focus on the fundamentals of selling Auto Parts. We plan to share more details on our outlook for the remaining business at our next earnings call in November. Now let me hand the call over to Ryan to discuss our financial results. Ryan?

Ryan Grimsland: Thank you, Shane, and good morning, everyone. I would also like to start by thanking our dedicated team members for their commitment to delivering excellent customer service. Before diving into Q2 results and our revised outlook for the year, I will provide some additional details related to the Worldpac transaction. Based on our reported financials over the last 12 months at the end of Q2, Worldpac contributed approximately $2.1 billion to the enterprise revenue and approximately $100 million to enterprise EBITDA. This EBITDA does not account for certain atypical items in our company margins and some overhead costs related to supporting the Worldpac business. These adjustments account for approximately $30 million of additional EBITDA. The transaction price of $1.5 billion will result in net proceeds of approximately $1.2 billion after taxes and transaction fees. These proceeds will strengthen our balance sheet and provide greater financial flexibility to invest in our business and execute our strategic plan. As Shane mentioned, we are amplifying our efforts to improve overall asset productivity to determine the most appropriate asset base and expense structure for the business. We are also evaluating investment needs by business function to effectively deploy transaction proceeds to accelerate growth. The simplification of our enterprise structure will provide further clarity for our frontline and corporate support teams. We believe that a strategic plan to prioritize sales productivity combined with a balanced enterprise cost structure will help deliver margin expansion and earnings growth. While near-term headwinds have obscured our initial progress, we remain confident in our approach and believe that the actions we are taking will position us well to generate mid-single-digit margins in the next few years. Moving to our second quarter results. Net sales of $2.7 billion were flat to last year. Comparable store sales increased 0.4% led by a positive pro comp. DIY comped in the negative low single-digit range. Although improved compared with Q1, the reduction in net sales was largely driven by fewer independent Carquest locations, which largely offset the positive comparable sales performance. In terms of cadence for the second quarter, trends started off soft and improved as we moved through the quarter with the benefit of the tailwind from hot weather related sales and our strategic actions to drive growth among the pros. In addition to the strong performance at HVAC category, we continue to see positive results in fluids and chemicals and engine management. Looking at our channels more closely. Our professional business saw positive comparable tickets and transactions. In our DIY business, comparable ticket was also positive, although more than offset by decline in transactions. Gross profit was $1.1 billion or 41.5% of net sales compared with 42.5% of net sales in Q2 of the prior year. On a year-over-year basis, gross margin was impacted by our strategic pricing investments and higher product costs. Last quarter, we took initial actions to fix our competitive pricing with an investment of $40 million on an annualized basis. During the second quarter, we identified additional opportunities and expanded our actions more broadly across the assortment resulting in a cumulative investment of over $100 million. I would note that these 2024 pricing changes are not in response to the challenging market dynamics. Rather we view these changes as necessary adjustments to reposition Advance more competitively and to improve our price perception in the industry. Our field team has been driving awareness of these changes with regular customer visits. Initial feedback has been positive and we believe that these pricing changes should put us in a stronger competitive position as demand begins to recover. SG&A was $1 billion. As a percentage of net sales, SG&A was 38.9% compared with 37.8% in the same quarter last year. The higher SG&A was driven by an increase in payroll expenses associated with wage investments and training for our frontline team, professional fees related to the strategic and operational review of our business, costs associated with the remediation of our previously disclosed material weaknesses and other expenses associated with the implementation of our strategic plan. Operating margin of 2.7% deleveraged about 200 basis points compared with last year. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.75 compared with $1.32 in the prior year quarter. Year-to-date free cash flow was an outflow of $4.6 million compared with an outflow of $312 million in the prior year driven by the timing of payables in the first half of last year. Moving to an update on our full year 2024 guidance. We have updated our full year outlook for the enterprise, including Worldpac pending the completion of the sale. Following close, Worldpac will be reported as discontinued operations. We will update our outlook for Advance blended box business with our third quarter results in November. We now expect sales for the full year to range from $11.15 billion to $11.25 billion including comparable store sales in the range of negative 1% to flat. Our revised guidance considers our year-to-date performance and expectations for the balance of the year. We expect consumer-related headwinds related to maintenance deferrals, lower discretionary spending to impact our trajectory in the short-term. With respect to quarter-to-date trends, both our pro and DIY businesses have started off weaker, driven by the overarching macro pressure on the consumer, tougher prior year comparisons and diminishing weather-related tailwinds exiting Q2. We have factored this into our guidance for the full year. While we won't speculate on the timing, we are confident the industry will return to growth as conditions normalize, driven by the aging car park and largely non-discretionary nature of auto maintenance. This provides a supportive backdrop for us to execute against. Operating income margin for the full year is now expected to be between 2.1% to 2.5%. The revised margin outlook is being driven by a combination of lower gross margin and higher SG&A deleverage. As indicated earlier, we took additional pricing actions during the second quarter which will impact gross margin. While we are seeing some green shoots in improving unit velocity, the rate of improvement is slower than we initially anticipated given the weaker demand landscape. That said, over time, we expect our price investments to yield positive net results through increased volume. Regarding SG&A, we still expect expenses to be flat to slightly up year-over-year. To a meaningful degree, we are adjusting SG&A to address the current demand environment and are continuing to make necessary investments as part of our turnaround. Diluted EPS for the full year is now expected to range from $2 to $2.50 and we expect to generate a minimum of $100 million of free cash flow. Our guidance for capital expenditures is unchanged and still expect to be in the $200 million to $250 million range as we undertake projects to enhance our IT, stores and supply chain infrastructure. To wrap up, I would like to reiterate that we firmly believe that Advance has a pathway to stronger earnings growth. Through the productivity review of our assets, we'll have better visibility into the margin trajectory for the blended box and we expect to share more on this in November. With that I will now hand the call over to Shane.

Shane O'Kelly: Thank you, Ryan. In closing, I want to thank all of our team members once again for their commitment to serving our customers. Our industry has historically proven to be resilient and its demonstrated an ability to recover quickly after periods of macro pressure. Since arriving at Advance, I have been excited by the people and have been excited by the company's purpose. In the wake of selling Worldpac and with our clearer vision, I am now even more excited for the company's potential. With that let's open the call up for questions. Operator?

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin today's Q&A session. [Operator Instructions] And our first question today comes from Greg Melich from Evercore ISI. Greg, your line. Is open. Please go ahead.

Greg Melich: Thank you. I guess, I'd love to follow-up really on the guidance, Ryan. Just want to make sure the full year guidance still includes Worldpac because you have it this year or does it exclude it?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah. Good morning, Greg. Yeah, it includes Worldpac in the guide as soon as we close that transaction. Q3, it will go into disk ops and we'll provide a guide for the RemainCo at the Q3 earnings call.

Greg Melich: Got it. And so the just to make sure that minimum of $100 million free cash flow that would include the EBITDA, most of the EBITDA from Worldpac this year. So we're thinking about a base for next year we should be thinking.

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, correct. That's the free cash flow.

Greg Melich: Got it. And then I guess a follow-up on the. Okay. Thank you.

Ryan Grimsland: Go ahead, Greg.

Greg Melich: Again on the agreement, for the agreement on the sale, is there any sort of exclusivity of distribution that you have with the buyer where you get to still sell Worldpac product through Advance stores or is it a complete clean break?

Ryan Grimsland: No, we do have an agreement with them. We will continue to sell Worldpac product through our stores. That's a critical piece of our catalog offering for our pros.

Shane O'Kelly: As you know, Greg, Worldpac provides offer to certain European OEM type products that Advance has sold. So that relationship continues. It's not a huge part of our business, but we wanted to retain the capability. So we can source products to Worldpac and then we would sell them to the customer as Advance.

Greg Melich: Got it. That's helpful. And then last on the incremental pricing investment. I guess, it's an extra $60 million. Is that an annualized figure? And could you give us more detail in terms of what product lines or markets you're really looking to do there?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah. It's an annualized number and that's the fully loaded, that doesn't necessarily account for a lift, et cetera, that we would see to offset that. We expect to see unit trajectory and lift offset that and some cost out to get to help offset the $100 million investment, but that is annualized. It's broad spread. When we went in initially at the end of Q1, we had some seasonal categories, probably tilted more towards DIY front room, but also touched some pro categories. This was more broad spread, but also included more pro categories as we tried to get right priced and competitively priced within the pro area, but it's kind of broad spread across, it maybe balances out the price investments across our full SKU listing.

Shane O'Kelly: So some color there. I think the first thing to note is we're not leading the market down. As we looked at historically how we were positioned, we found that we were above the market unnecessarily so. And so this is moving to the market and obviously customer feedback critical in these circumstances. And I'll provide a personal anecdote. I saw a pro customer who pulled up on the screen and said, Shane, you guys are out of whack on radiators. And so we go back and we look at what our radiator pricing is and sure enough we're materially higher. We're sort of $50 higher than where we needed to be. And so we made the adjustment, and then we start to see pickup in radiator units. So as Ryan said, we've done this broadly. But importantly, it's to just be at the market and we'll look for customers to now know us as being market based in terms of pricing and that's part of our growth story going forward.

Greg Melich: That's great. Good luck, guys, and thanks for all the info.

Ryan Grimsland: Thanks, Greg.

Operator: The next question comes from Simeon Gutman from Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS). Simeon, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Simeon Gutman: Hey, good morning, everyone. Hey, Shane, I want to start asking a more strategic question. There's this undertone of where we're improving the core business, but we're also investing for growth. I wanted to ask how much a priority is growth? I understand you don't want to be left out as the industry keeps growing, but the priority versus sort of triaging, fixing the business, bringing it back to sort of normal health versus looking around the corner and still investing for growth in that balance.

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah. Thanks, Simeon. We have to do both. We don't get the luxury of just focusing on one versus the other. I think inevitably in today's business environment, if you look at the cost of benefits or renter or whatever it is, you'll see escalation. So we want to be a positive comping company. And so that's where you look at the likes of what we're doing in our sales efforts and up and down the street pro and rejuvenating team members with investments and focus on our CPPs and cams, also to bringing in Bruce Starnes and his merchandising excellence capabilities that he brings from his past experience. We've got a cadre of outstanding leaders now inside of merchandising to help us with availability, with pricing, with our PLR process in terms of costing. So those are some of the mechanics. But getting to a positive comp is critical for us. We've set the table in many regards as it relates to the underpinnings of how we're competitive on cost and things we want to do. I think the Worldpac sale process epitomizes that. So with Worldpac as a different business inside of our company, the distraction that, that creates, we're singularly focused now on the blended box and so look for us operationally to make that more efficient, to focus on that supply chain, but also look for a growth perspective that we need to be delivering a positive comp.

Simeon Gutman: And then a follow-up. I don't know if you'll comment, but it looks like the run rate of EPS post Worldpac looks like it will be sub $2 and there was this mention of the $30 million of some adjustment to run rate Worldpac EBITDA. Does that mean that it's $30 million that stays with Advance or is that $30 million just not part of, it just goes away?

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah, so Ryan will unpack it a little bit, but I think your hypothesis that the underlying core business is wanting in terms of performance I think is accurate. But that's exactly why we're creating this focus and that's where there's excitement in terms of turning the page as a company as a blended box Auto Parts retailer. Ryan?

Ryan Grimsland: Yes. We won't give specific guidance to the RemainCo until the Q3, but we did provide the EBITDA. The reason we added the $30 million was that is additional EBITDA that is held at the parent company. It's a net of some inner company and costs that are held at the enterprise. So you should look at that as additive to the $100 million that if we were to close the deal on Worldpac think of that as closer to $130 million.

Simeon Gutman: Got it.

Ryan Grimsland: But in Q3 earnings call will come with a full picture of the RemainCo. Yeah.

Shane O'Kelly: Thanks, Simeon.

Operator: The next question comes from Bret Jordan from Jefferies. Bret, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Bret Jordan: Hey, good morning, guys.

Shane O'Kelly: Good morning, Bret.

Bret Jordan: Worldpac working capital situation. Hey, good morning. How much of the inventory that you carry is discrete to Worldpac and I guess what's the outlook as far as working capital reduction?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, Bret, so it's roughly in the ballpark of $1 million of inventory, sorry, about $1 billion of inventory for Worldpac. Their coverage ratio is a little bit lower. We'll obviously share more what that RemainCo looks like as we disk up them in Q3. But that should give you a ballpark. Their coverage ratio is going to mix us down when they're in the consolidated. It will mix us up a little bit when they're no longer with us. But it's about $1 billion of inventory.

Bret Jordan: Okay. And then the proceeds, I guess, you talked about debt reduction and you've got a couple of debt tranches in the high 5%. Can you pay those down or any prepayment penalties, I guess, what's the balance sheet can look like post close?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, we'll definitely share more specifics around that at a later date. Right now, we're going to take that cash, look at when we close the business, we'll look at bolstering the balance sheet. We'll definitely look at what debt we need to pay down, what we need to invest in the business and what we need for going forward. So we'll probably share a little bit more, but if we do attack debt, you would think that we would attack those higher interest tranches.

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah, and I'll touch on -- in the prepared remarks. Go ahead. Sorry, Bret.

Bret Jordan: I said it's repurchased still in the use of proceeds.

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah over, I think, a reasonable period of time on that. I think the first priority is going to be the balance sheet and making sure we've got a good balance sheet for growth going forward, invest in our initiatives and then absolutely over a reasonable period of time returning cash to shareholders, excess cash to shareholders is important for us.

Shane O'Kelly: And on the investment side of the house, three areas, stores. During the prepared remarks, we created a unified real estate team. We didn't have one. We had multiple teams. So we've got a very strong leader running that team and we've been investing in creating a new store opening capability. That's a muscle that had atrophied. So we want to get back to opening 100 stores a year and we're looking at markets where we have a right to win as a way to think about where to put those stores. There's some refresh of existing stores that need a bit of a freshening and then two other areas. On the IT front, we've got two POS systems. We still have a residual legacy POS system that we want to get all of our stores on one POS system. So there's an IT investment there. And then on the supply chain side, we're rolling out the market hubs. We're doing the DC consolidation, but even inside of the existing DCs and think about this in terms of pick mods and conveyor systems, there's investment there, but also in terms of just getting inventory tracking through the system in particular as it goes from a DC to a hub to a customer. So there's some investment there. So there's a number of fruitful areas where we can put some of the proceeds that will help us on the journey, both in terms of improving our effectiveness or increasing our sales above.

Bret Jordan: Great. Thank you.

Operator: The next question comes from Scot Ciccarelli from Truist. Scot, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Scot Ciccarelli: Good morning, guys. Can you outline maybe a bridge to your reduction in your EBIT margin? I mean, I know it's only over 150 basis points or so, but it's a pretty sizable percent reduction. So maybe how much is from the sales change, how much from price investments, how much from strategic investments just to give a better idea of kind of what changed from a couple of months ago?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, absolutely. So the large portion of that is volume and then the other piece of that is the price investments and the margin rate. Those are really the two big drivers of it. SG&A is coming in pretty much in line with what we expected. While we're pulling back on SG&A relative demand. We're also making sure we continue our investment in supply chain and those key growth initiatives that we have. So SG&A is going to come in about the same place we expected in the guide. The biggest drivers are going to be the volume on the top line and margin rate.

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah. And Scot, you made a good observation there. Based on where we sit, even small changes have outsized impacts. We are definitely seeing the headwind with the consumer and it manifests itself in terms of either deferring the spend or trading down. And you guys know the stats, right? Credit card defaults are at a high 9%. People are getting squeezed on rents and mortgage that's up year-over-year. And what we're seeing in the cohorts that are relevant for our company and think about that as households making 50K or less or even 75K or less. Their spend is diminishing or where they spend they're spending less. And so we're sensitive to that. But that downtick hits us and that's something that when you're in a turnaround, we're particularly sensitive to in terms of what that impact is on our bottom line.

Scot Ciccarelli: Very helpful. And then just quick follow-up on Worldpac. How much of that 100 -- I guess we're supposed to be using $130 million figure. How much of that is D&A?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, we don't give specifically on D&A.

Scot Ciccarelli: Okay. Just can we look at a percent of sales?

Ryan Grimsland: Well, the sales of Worldpac was 2.1. EBITDA, we're saying it's closer to $130 million that you would think about. That's EBITDA.

Scot Ciccarelli: I understand. How much of that is the actual depreciation and amortization, though, like. Can we assume if Worldpac was 18% of total sales, enterprise sales, it's about 18% D&A.

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah. We're not giving out specific guidance relative to disk ops or different parts of the business at this time. We'll do that in Q3.

Scot Ciccarelli: Okay. Thanks, guys.

Operator: The next question comes from Michael Lasser from UBS. Michael, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Michael Lasser: Good morning. Thank you so much for taking my question. How should the market think about the long-term competitiveness of core Advance if it's going to have a mid-single-digit operating margin when its competitors are in the high-teens, low 20% range? Does that put it at a disadvantage if the market becomes more competitive and it just doesn't have as much resource to invest to remain in lockstep with the others?

Shane O'Kelly: Hey, Michael, great question. So we said mid-single-digits and think about that as our next few years horizon. That's not going to be our permanent aspiration in terms of where we can take this company, but I would say that this is a huge market. It's an ocean of Auto Parts, 287 million vehicles aged at 12.7 years. And if you look at the share of the folks that have that higher operating margin, yes, they certainly been growing. But in aggregate there's still a large swath of the market that they don't touch and that we don't touch. So there's room for us to grow without ever taking $1 or standing toe-to-toe with them and I think that's important. Secondly, in terms of just sort of bones, in terms of our ability to be out in the market, we have 4,700 retail locations. We work with 1,100 independents. And if you look at where we are, there are many markets where we are the leading player. So structurally, it's not as though to go out and compete with them, we need to actually go have stores and be in markets. We're there. This is a function of tuning our operating model and clearing our focus to be better at those fundamentals. And I think in the past perhaps that hadn't been where we were as focused. So I'm really optimistic about where the company can go. And as we move through this very tough phase, which we're doing now, which is in the turnaround and I would call those other players are still out there in that phase. As we go through this, we'll get to our point that we've talked about that mid-single-digits and we'll continue to improve from there.

Michael Lasser: Okay. My follow-up question is as you are making these investments either in frontline associates distribution or price. Do you have evidence to see that in those areas where you invest, are investing either on a SKU by SKU basis or a store by store basis that are being connected to these new distribution assets that they are outperforming part of that. It sounds like your ability to get to a mid-single-digit margin is mostly sales dependent. Why are there not other opportunities to grow your margins more significantly, especially considering your gross margin is about 1,000 basis points below the others in the industry. Thank you.

A - Shane O: It's another good question. I think there's opportunities in both. We certainly have opportunities as it relates to the margin side. And just think about the supply chain we talked about having 38 DCs on different operating systems. So even without an incremental dollar of sales, we get to the consolidated 14 DC node with the market hubs and that takes out substantial monies. That's a good example. We talked about the tech being on different POS systems and the friction that causes. Imagine being a district manager and you go to one store and your team members are trained on one operating system and you go to another store and it's entirely different and we have that in plenty of locations. So there's an efficiency gain in terms of what our team members do. So we certainly will look for operating improvements. PLR is by the way a huge component. We're conducting 130 of them and that's both in terms of making sure we got the right products, the right mix of private brand versus national brand, the right cost position, we're ordering in the right frequencies and quantities. So a litany of things there that help us in terms of just the margin side without sales. But on those things that you talked about, if you think about frontline investments that helps us reduce turnover, right. There's a lot of hidden costs with turnover. And we've substantially reduced turnover in a number of our key jobs that, that makes a difference. In terms of the distribution, right, as that investment comes through helps us with sales because we're able to say yes more frequently to customers. And then on pricing, touched on it earlier. We needed to be where the market is at. And it's very frustrating to have customers tell you, hey, I like Advance. I like your brand. I like your people, but you're out of line as it relates to pricing. So moving to where the market is we thought was really an important action.

Kelly: It's another good question. I think there's opportunities in both. We certainly have opportunities as it relates to the margin side. And just think about the supply chain we talked about having 38 DCs on different operating systems. So even without an incremental dollar of sales, we get to the consolidated 14 DC node with the market hubs and that takes out substantial monies. That's a good example. We talked about the tech being on different POS systems and the friction that causes. Imagine being a district manager and you go to one store and your team members are trained on one operating system and you go to another store and it's entirely different and we have that in plenty of locations. So there's an efficiency gain in terms of what our team members do. So we certainly will look for operating improvements. PLR is by the way a huge component. We're conducting 130 of them and that's both in terms of making sure we got the right products, the right mix of private brand versus national brand, the right cost position, we're ordering in the right frequencies and quantities. So a litany of things there that help us in terms of just the margin side without sales. But on those things that you talked about, if you think about frontline investments that helps us reduce turnover, right. There's a lot of hidden costs with turnover. And we've substantially reduced turnover in a number of our key jobs that, that makes a difference. In terms of the distribution, right, as that investment comes through helps us with sales because we're able to say yes more frequently to customers. And then on pricing, touched on it earlier. We needed to be where the market is at. And it's very frustrating to have customers tell you, hey, I like Advance. I like your brand. I like your people, but you're out of line as it relates to pricing. So moving to where the market is we thought was really an important action.

Michael Lasser: Understood. Thank you very much and good luck.

Shane O'Kelly: Thanks, Michael.

Operator: The next question comes from Chris Horvers from JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM). Chris, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Christian Carlino: Hi. Good morning. It's Christian Carlino on for Chris. Thanks for taking our question. Could you speak to how you're approaching these price investments? Advance wasn't known for its systems previously. So is this market and SKU based and peers will price at like a high single-digit premium to the WDs on undercar and engine management categories? So are you pricing below the national peers?

Shane O'Kelly: No. So that's not our goal to be below national peers. We're just looking to be at the market. We've looked at CPIs where we've been well above I'd mentioned the radiator example before. We looked category and market specifically at where we were. And you mentioned on the system side. We've actually put a lot of emphasis on what our pricing tiers look like and creating the ability for our outside sales team members to be able to do exception pricing. We're warranted. So we've built capabilities. We've benchmarked the markets. We've looked broadly and we've made the adjustments, but it is not to leave the market lower and I think that's an important component.

Christian Carlino: Got it. That's helpful. Then on getting back to the mid-single-digit margins, I think you've said it hasn't been material. But to what extent could you quantify the impact of grosses from the higher supply chain financing costs that you might get back when you deleveraged? And you're backing out about $25 million of charges for the material weakness and executive recruiting. So what's the remainder of the Worldpac advisory fees that you should get back?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah. So we're not ready to give specific details on those items there. I think in Q3 earnings call, we will lay out more specifically how our path to a mid-single-digit OI rate. So we'll come back with more details there and how we get there. Obviously, there are investments that we're making this year that might not recur, but we might have investments next year. We'll lay that out. So you can understand our path to that number and where it's coming from. The key thing when we think about our gap and our opportunity, it's really three buckets and that's where we're laying down our investment. It's sales productivity. It's first cost margin and it's our supply chain cost. Those are the three big areas that we are focused on and that's where you're going to see the opportunity as we drive that OI rate improvement.

Christian Carlino: Got it. Thank you very much. Best of luck.

Operator: Next question comes from Seth Sigman from Barclays (LON:BARC). Seth, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Seth Sigman: Great. Good morning, everyone. I wanted to just talk about trends over the last several months. Trends improved through the second quarter. Sounds like started off weaker in the third quarter. Can you just dissect that for us a bit more. Is that flow down coming from the pro? Is that DIY? Is it weather? Is it a consumer deferring? Any more perspective on that slowdown that you're seeing and how do you think about that playing out the rest of the year? Thanks.

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, absolutely. So the slowdown we're seeing is across both categories DIY and pro, probably more on the DIY side. We're just seeing consumers pressured and they're putting off discretionary, some maintenance that you would typically want to see. But it's typical when you see these consumers pressured and Shane spoke to it earlier just the pressure on some low to medium income consumer and that's kind of in our guide as we're expecting those trends that kind of continue through the back half of this year. We did see nice positive movement through Q2. We ended the quarter higher than we started the quarter and that really was driven by our pro initiative and we're seeing the up and down the street pro continue to outperform the rest of the business. But we did see the trends decelerate recently and we think the large part of that's really the macro overhang and the consumer pressure that we're seeing.

Seth Sigman: Okay. Got it. And then just my follow-up question. If I back out Worldpac, I think, it confirms the core productivity sales issues that you guys have talked a lot about and you're obviously trying to address. Can you just give us more perspective on what growth has looked like excluding Worldpac at the very least for this quarter, but ideally some perspective on what that's looked like over time?

Ryan Grimsland: We're not going to give specifics right now. We will in the Q3 earnings, but I'll give you just, we are seeing positive in Q2, the positive pro performance. We're seeing that in the blended box. And so when we talk about the up and down the street initiative, we talk about our pro comp and transaction. We're seeing a lot of that in the Advance blended box and that's where we see some positive momentum there, but we'll be more specific on the different units in the Q3 call, but we like what we're seeing in the blended box and the initiatives that we're rolling out.

Seth Sigman: Okay. Thanks, guys.

Ryan Grimsland: Thank you, Seth.

Operator: The next question comes from Steven Zaccone from Citigroup. Steven, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Steven Zaccone: Great. Good morning. Thanks very much for taking my question. I wanted to follow-up on the price investments. So the last time you spoke to us, you said the price investments that you were doing at that time accounted for about 8% of the SKU count. So this $100 million, what does that translate to SKU count today? And then what gives you confidence that you won't need to take another level of price investments? Just given the comment there that some of these have been slower to catch on with your pro customers?

Ryan Grimsland: Yes, Steven, they are much more broad based. Don't necessarily want to share like with a percentage at this point, but it's definitely more broad based across all categories. We wanted to make sure that we were invested in the right places, especially in the pro and seasonal areas. As far as incremental investments, we're always going to continue to look and make sure that we are competitively priced. Again, want to reiterate, we're not trying to lead the market here. We're just trying to remain competitively priced, so we have a better chance to say yes to the customer when we have the product. So there might be some additional investments, but from our perspective, the large portion of the investments were pretty much.

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah and we talk to our customers regularly and as you know, we've got a large initiative underway with up and down the street pros, and we get the feedback that our pricings in line now. For customers where we're the first call, that's welcome news, and we continue to retain that business. Where we're a second or third call, being in line with pricing provides the opportunity to get the marginal business. I think one of the things that's always good about being in the Auto Parts business is there are so many parts out there that nobody has them all. So inevitably, for even an entrenched, customer who's entrenched with the competitor, there's some product that they don't have or they don't have with the requisite availability. We'll get that call. Now that we've got the price that's lined up, we get the business. So we think where we need to be, we'll obviously be tuning it. But where we look at customers, we get feedback from customers. Price isn't the objection in terms of why we are or aren't getting the business.

Steven Zaccone: Okay, that's helpful. And then maybe to follow-up on that, you made the comment earlier that turnarounds take time. And from following this industry, we all know price is just one piece of the factor in that decision to get the business, right. There's also service, parts availability, delivery speed. Can you help us understand how you stack up among those other factors when you're trying to get that customer just to move up the call list? Thanks very much.

A - Shane O: Yeah. So in terms of where we've got great people, our locations, our products, we do well. And so we're excited by what this represents. We're turning the page as a company to put the focus on our stores and we're seeing the early shoots from those investments. So talk about investing in the front line. We're hearing it from our team members. I go talk to -- I talked to a GM who said, hey, I was able to raise the wage for one of my team members for $1.50. That makes a difference for that team member staying around and being part of the company versus potentially leaving for the first opportunity to sell fast food somewhere else. So we're seeing better retention of our team members. We're seeing the energy that invokes. We're seeing it in terms of our product availability. We're seeing it in terms of our PLR impacts. We're seeing it in terms of vendor partnerships. Vendors are reaching out to us and they're saying, hey, we're excited by where you guys are going. We want you to succeed. So the vendors are behind us. So at each sort of level of what we're doing, the improvements we're making are starting to get a little bit of traction. Now we still have things that we want to do in places we want to go. So supply chain, we got to finish the consolidation. We got to roll out the market hubs. In merchandising, as Bruce gets traction with that team, we expect him to do more things. So there's upside in all the areas we're doing, but there's progress that we're getting back from our own team and from our customers, where people are indicating we're on the track. These are the things that we want to do. And importantly, internally, we're getting excitement.

Kelly: Yeah. So in terms of where we've got great people, our locations, our products, we do well. And so we're excited by what this represents. We're turning the page as a company to put the focus on our stores and we're seeing the early shoots from those investments. So talk about investing in the front line. We're hearing it from our team members. I go talk to -- I talked to a GM who said, hey, I was able to raise the wage for one of my team members for $1.50. That makes a difference for that team member staying around and being part of the company versus potentially leaving for the first opportunity to sell fast food somewhere else. So we're seeing better retention of our team members. We're seeing the energy that invokes. We're seeing it in terms of our product availability. We're seeing it in terms of our PLR impacts. We're seeing it in terms of vendor partnerships. Vendors are reaching out to us and they're saying, hey, we're excited by where you guys are going. We want you to succeed. So the vendors are behind us. So at each sort of level of what we're doing, the improvements we're making are starting to get a little bit of traction. Now we still have things that we want to do in places we want to go. So supply chain, we got to finish the consolidation. We got to roll out the market hubs. In merchandising, as Bruce gets traction with that team, we expect him to do more things. So there's upside in all the areas we're doing, but there's progress that we're getting back from our own team and from our customers, where people are indicating we're on the track. These are the things that we want to do. And importantly, internally, we're getting excitement.

Steven Zaccone: Okay. Thanks for the detail.

Operator: The next question comes from Brian Nagel from Oppenheimer. Brian, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Brian Nagel: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. So my first question, I apologize for being repetitive, but I also want to just touch on these price investments. So the question I have, and you're recognizing, as you've said now several times, you're not leading the sector the lower. But the question is, as you've adjusted prices, and I know it's a case-by-case situation, but do you see a competitive reaction to those adjustments you're undertaking on these items?

Ryan Grimsland: Yeah, Brian, we haven't seen competitors move on that, because we're really just getting down to be competitive within the ballpark of them, but we haven't seen them move to bring it down lower. It's not kind of driving a race to the bottom here. We've been able to make the adjustments and keep them in place as we monitor that price and the competitive position of that price.

Brian Nagel: Got it. My second question with regard to the sale of Worldpac. Again, recognizing you're not giving full details at this point, but as you think about the RemainCo, ex-Worldpac, are there other potential implications for the RemainCo? What I'm referring to specifically is that going forward you'll be a smaller company. Are you less of a scale buyer? Are there other leverage opportunities that you'll be foregoing at least near-term?

Shane O'Kelly: I don't see any. I actually see the opposite, which is our vendors are saying, hey, it's great to see that you're getting Advance going. And keep in mind that Worldpac was substantially a separate company. So it's not as though that the procurement between the two entities was consolidated. So the vendors are saying, you guys are focused, you're getting some discipline, you're getting some accountability, you're serious about growing. We want to be part of that, and I think that's a great message. So while we will be marginally smaller, we're still a huge player inside of Auto Parts. So keep in mind there are so many moms and pops and smaller distributors out there, we're still an absolutely significant player in the industry. We've got the support of the vendors. We're building excitement internally. We're going to start opening stores again. So this is, I view today as a watershed moment for this company in terms of selling Worldpac, making the decision to keep Canada and then setting about the trajectory that we're putting forward.

Brian Nagel: Thanks, Shane. Appreciate all the color.

Shane O'Kelly: Thanks, Brian.

Operator: The next question is from Seth Basham from Wedbush. Seth, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Seth Basham: Thanks a lot and good morning. My first question is just on the guidance for this year. How much of the EPS guidance would you consider to be one-time transitory items that will not recur next year?

Ryan Grimsland: That's a smaller portion, not giving specifics on that one, but it's a smaller portion of the overall guidance. The real guide adjustment is driven by margin and margin related to our pricing investments and product cost, but mainly the pricing investments and then the volume on the top line. Those are the real drivers of the EPS, the year-over-year impact of some of those items. And we'll probably lay out more of that on what that means going forward in our Q3 call. But it's not a significant portion.

Seth Basham: Right. And my second question is, post-sale of Worldpac, where do you want to take leverage? How much debt will you pay down to get to that leverage ratio?

Ryan Grimsland: Long-term we want to be at a 2.5. I mean, obviously that's when we look at it from a RemainCo standpoint. When we close this transaction, we'll be evaluating what that looks like. But ultimately we want to remain investment grade long-term and we want to be at a ratio of about 2.5. So we'll continue to look at what that means from a balance sheet standpoint.

A - Shane O: Yeah. And I'll just say that you think about this in the context of a turnaround. So we pick up $1.5 billion here, got close to $5 million in terms of our internal generation. So strengthening the strengthening the balance sheet is a key step. And as we think about the different potential uses, whether it's with debt or company investments or shareholders, it's exciting to now have that cash infusion to fuel the journey, I think, again, I want to emphasize for everybody on the call, selling Worldpac and creating a singular focus. If you just look at key activities associated with a turnaround, right, you simplify the business, you create focus on what the company is going to do. You have a strategy that everybody understands and then you set about doing it. And then, by the way, if you have the luxury of a strong balance sheet to help undertake that journey all the better.

Kelly: Yeah. And I'll just say that you think about this in the context of a turnaround. So we pick up $1.5 billion here, got close to $5 million in terms of our internal generation. So strengthening the strengthening the balance sheet is a key step. And as we think about the different potential uses, whether it's with debt or company investments or shareholders, it's exciting to now have that cash infusion to fuel the journey, I think, again, I want to emphasize for everybody on the call, selling Worldpac and creating a singular focus. If you just look at key activities associated with a turnaround, right, you simplify the business, you create focus on what the company is going to do. You have a strategy that everybody understands and then you set about doing it. And then, by the way, if you have the luxury of a strong balance sheet to help undertake that journey all the better.

Seth Basham: Thank you.

Operator: Final question we have time for today comes from Chris Bottiglieri from BNP Pariba. Chris, your line is open. Please go ahead.

Chris Bottiglieri: Hey, guys, thanks for squeezing me in. Just wanted to kind of parse through the store opening plan.

Shane O'Kelly: Hey, Chris.

Chris Bottiglieri: That seems like something incremental. Hey guys, just wanted to ask about the store opening plan. So I think you're going to spend like I think it would cost about a $1 million to $2 million per box to open a store, free cash for this year is at $100 million. Ex-Worldpac probably breakeven would be my guess. But how do you think about funding the store growth? Is it going to come from the proceeds of Worldpac or is it going to be just contingent on improving margins and sales first and then you can kind of return to store growth, trying to see the timeline and the funding going forward?

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah. So good question. So it's a little both. So we actually open stores every year, right. But as we go forward, having a robust store opening capability is an important part of creating growth. And in terms of where you pick, where you open and how you open, what we find is, makes all the difference. If you open in a market where you're already known and you have some regional market share, the takeoff of that store tends to be much quicker than if you open in an area where you're the last guy in the market. So one of the things that we needed was to bolster our real estate team to make that happen. And that's occurred. And you got to think about that in terms of site selection, by the way, whether you're building or whether you're leasing, in terms of how you go about your stocking programs, your kitting and fitting, your grand opening processes. All of those muscles needed to be rejuvenated. And they have been, and we've been opening some stores that have put that to practice. So now how do you go accelerate it, right. So one of the things you do is you go to the team and you say, okay, go figure out how many stores we can open. And they come back and say, hey, we can get to opening 100 stores a year and do that sequentially, right. That's an important part of it. So that's what they've been doing and now they're identifying the markets where we can go do that. So how do you pay for it. I think you offered some numbers as to what those costs look like. So some of it comes from the proceeds, I think, absolutely right. That's a great way to get the engine going. Some would come from our traditional CapEx budget that we set aside, and I think Ryan's put us at 200 to 250, right. So there'll be money there. And then if you wanted to further amplify it and maybe you can get to something, even a higher number of new store openings then that comes from some of the growth or the benefit that we're creating from some of these turnaround activities.

Chris Bottiglieri: Got you. Makes a lot of sense. And that's a good segue to my next question. How do you think about the store closures? Do you have like kind of a is there a way to frame what percentage of stores are for while losing money? How do you kind of balance the need to scale, particularly in a given market, versus store closures? How do you balance like looping the scale from closing stores and what's the opportunity?

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah. So it's sort of the reverse process. So look at markets where we don't have regional market share. Look at markets or individual stores where our performance is unprofitable or below where we want it to be or maybe where the sales productivity isn't coming. And by the way, the first thing we do is we look at, say, hey, is this a function of we don't have the right management in place, right. Because often you -- the GM makes a huge difference in terms of how a store performs or have -- what's the outside sales participation or the CPP's performance. We always look at those things first. But you could look at individual stores, we can stack them, and we could say, hey, here's a store where economically, it's not where we want it to be. We don't think it's a function of making a leadership change. And so therefore, we'll close it. It could be the physical location of the store based on how easy it is to get in and out of the parking lot. It could be the market conditions in terms of how we're doing generally. And so that's what we'll do. And I think that's an important part of it. And if you close stores that are actually a cash flow drag that's money that then can go to opening a store in a market where it's a cash flow benefit.

Chris Bottiglieri: Okay. Thank you.

Shane O'Kelly: Yeah. Okay. I think we're at time. I just thank everybody for the call today. We appreciate your questions. Look forward to describing more when we get to the third quarter. And know that on behalf of everybody at Advance, we're excited as we move forward in this next chapter of our journey. One blended box, one Advance with our independents growing in the Auto Parts industry. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you very much for your attendance. You may now disconnect your lines.

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