Christopher Horvers : Got it. And then a couple of sort of other bigger picture consumer questions. I guess, is there — are you seeing maybe some mid- to low end, maybe not buying the 18 pack of Bounty? Like do you think you might be losing some category share as someone’s trying to economize the ticket for your — the lower half of your income perspective? And then can you also — can you also talk about regionality? Obviously, there’s some weakness in certain housing markets in certain cities, and then there’s — you have a big exposure to California. There’s been more layoff news in the technology industry, and there’s some population migration. So what are you seeing from a regionality perspective where you’re seeing more weakness versus strength?
Richard Galanti : Well, first of all, we’re seeing strength in sundries as part of what we call food and sundries, which is everything. Food and food and sundries is everything from canned beverages to crackers and cereal, and sundries, of course, paper goods and cleaning supplies and the like. And we’re seeing strength in those areas. Those are — those are actually strong, offset by some of the weakness I talked about on the non-food side. As it relates to regional, I don’t — we don’t really see any big differences. I mean every month, you’re going to see a region stronger or weaker. It has more to do in our view right now of late with weather than anything else. I can’t give you anything definitive on what’s — is the region — it’s pretty — they’re all pretty close.
Bob Nelson : Within 1.5 points or 2 points.
Richard Galanti : Bob is saying here, they’re within a couple of points of comp.
Christopher Horvers : Got it. And then one cleanup question. Just on the inventory, you talked about pockets. It sounded like you cleaned up furniture and electronics, it sounds like. Is there any — where are those pockets? How much is maybe holiday, decor or toys, other more at-risk categories in the month of December?
Richard Galanti : The good news is our merchants are sitting here, holiday decor is fine. One example actually would be we have a small amount of air conditioners and fans, which was — it was a hot summer, and we were very strong in it. There were delays some of the supply chain challenges, some of that stuff didn’t come in until September. And needless to say, we’re not going to put it out there and mark it down when nobody really is looking for an air conditioner unit in September. And so that’s the example of a few things now. We still have some furniture. It’s way down from where it had been. So very, very manageable. I think beyond that, there’s nothing huge. And again, the big question right now would be the fact that from a standpoint of Christmas stuff, both the Christmas stuff as well as toys, we’re in pretty good shape for that. We feel pretty good about that.
Operator: We go next now to Scot Ciccarelli at Truist.
Scot Ciccarelli : I guess I have another gross margin question. And I guess it’s — look, if consumables continue to outpace discretionary goods based on what we’re seeing in the economy, should we expect gross margins to compress a bit just from mix? Or do you have enough levers given existing price gaps across most of your categories to match the flattish gross margins? Just how should we think about the mix impact?