Polaris Inc. (NYSE:PII) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript October 24, 2023
Polaris Inc. beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $2.71, expectations were $2.69.
Operator: Good morning. And welcome to the Polaris Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to J.C. Weigelt, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
J.C. Weigelt: Thank you, Gary, and good morning or afternoon, everyone. I am J.C. Weigelt, Vice President of Investor Relations at Polaris. Thank you for joining us for our 2023 third quarter earnings call. We will reference a slide presentation today, which is accessible on our website at ir.polaris.com. Joining me on the call today are Mike Speetzen, our Chief Executive Officer; and Bob Mack, our Chief Financial Officer. Both have prepared remarks summarizing the third quarter, our expectations for the remainder of the year and some initial thoughts on 2024. Then, we’ll take your questions. During the call, we will be discussing various topics, which should be considered forward-looking for the purpose of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Actual results could differ materially from those projections in the forward-looking statements. You can refer to our 2022 10-K for additional details regarding risks and uncertainties. All references to third quarter 2023 actual results and 2023 guidance are for our continuing operations and are reported on an adjusted non-GAAP basis, unless otherwise noted. Please refer to our Reg G reconciliation schedules at the end of the presentation for the GAAP to non-GAAP adjustments. Now, I will turn it over to Mike Speetzen. Go ahead, Mike.
Mike Speetzen: Thanks JC. Good morning, everyone. And thank you for joining us today. This morning we posted third quarter results that were slightly lower than our original expectations, driven by elevated manufacturing costs and an increasingly cautious consumer environment. which resulted in lower shipments. Despite these headwinds, we posted share gains across all of our segments for the quarter, and we had record PG&A results that were bolstered by the broadest portfolio and all Powersports. We also had an incredibly successful Off Road dealer meeting in July and marine dealer meetings in August, both with positive feedback from dealers regarding our new products. We are certainly operating in a dynamic environment where we have seen declining consumer confidence, given persistent inflation, coupled with even higher interest rates, and rising consumer debt.
We saw this impact retail more than we anticipated in the third quarter, and anticipate this to continue into the fourth quarter. Additionally, dealers are taking a more conservative position, given a slower retail environment, and rising flooring costs associated with higher interest rates. Despite all this, I remain confident in our ability to excel in this environment, as evidenced by our share gains in all three segments in the quarter, and a very positive reaction to our recently introduced new products. Our teams continue to closely monitor the environment, and we believe our revised guidance accounts for what we know today. Turning to our third quarter performance, sales declined 4%, driven by lower shipments relative to a year ago, as well as higher finance interest.
If you will recall, last year we had elevated shipping in the quarter to alleviate low dealer inventory levels, and to catch up on motorcycle shipments that have been constrained earlier in the year. North American retail was up 5% in the third quarter. The promotional environment picked up a little in Q3, but still remains lower than 2019. Additionally, we believe we are successfully targeting potential customers, with the right promotional offers to drive dealer traffic. While retail was generally lower than we had expected, we further strengthened our share position in each of our three segments. This included achieving the notable milestone in North America of being the number one motorcycle company in the mid-sized category. Margins were down due to continued headwind from foreign exchange, as well as increased pressure from floor plan promotional costs driven by higher interest rates and higher dealer inventories.
Shipping volumes were also lower as we lapped a strong shipping quarter last year. The mix was another contributing factor to lower margins as we saw a slower than expected ramp up in production of our premium Off Road products including our new Polaris XPEDITION and RANGER XD. I would note that our Marine team did a good job reacting to lower demand signals early in the quarter and made required cost adjustments to protect margins. On the manufacturing front we have two big themes occurring in our Off Road business. The first which is encouraging is that we had some of our strongest clean build days and weeks as we neared the end of the third quarter. These are days where vehicles came off the line ready to be shipped versus entering a rework process.
Our teams believe they can build on the success in the fourth quarter. While this is encouraging, the later than anticipated improvements did impact our ability to get many high-demand vehicles and dealers on time. The second theme is that we continue to build at a much higher cost than we should be. The supply chain has improved quite a bit but our ability to more cleanly and efficiently execute has not. There are several factors that impacting this. Over the last few years our plants have contended with the pandemic, labor shortages, park shortages, new production lines and facilities and in the third quarter the complexity of the startup of manufacturing of our new premium products. These rapid and drastic changes have brought on an inefficient cost structure and mode of operation.
As we appear to be entering a slower growth time in our industry there is no better time than now to address these inefficiencies. We’ve deployed key lean resources into the most troubled facilities and remain committed to a culture of continuous improvement. While this is disappointing it is very fixable and we will show the best of Polaris’ fighting spirit as we work aggressively to not just improve our performance but to make it better than it has ever been. Execution is key here. And I believe we have the right team, as well as the right strategy to remediate the situation. Considering these manufacturing inefficiencies and weaker than anticipated end markets, we’re narrowing our full year sales guidance to the lower end of our previously issued range and lowering our margin and adjusted EPS guidance.
Bob will provide more detail later in the call, but we plan to remain competitive and gain share in this dynamic environment while actively managing costs. Our goal is to continue to invest in the business, strengthen our operations, and emerge from this stronger than we entered. Now let me share some thoughts related to customer trends we’re seeing. We’re closely watching software retail trends that have extended into October. In Off Road, these trends are pointing to a cautious outlook in utility and continued weakness and recreation. We missed our third quarter retail expectations, which was the result of weaker than anticipated end markets coupled with the slower ramp up of new product shipments, and continue constraints on manufacturing our premium products.
Retail continued to be strong in new and premium products. Our dealers are telling us they have sufficient inventory of base and value models and would prefer to see higher volumes of our premium NorthStar products in more of our recently launched Polaris XPEDITION and RANGER XD, which is obviously a big focus for us in the fourth quarter. For On Road, Q3 retail was down low teens, given a slower market and difficult comps to last year when motorcycles were retailing much later given constrained availability early in the year. I would note that our heavyweight bikes are seeing more pressure than our mid-sized category. In Marine, softness continued and even somewhat accelerated. We’re now over 90% through the selling season, and dealers seem cautious given negative headlines covering the broader market as well as elevated interest rates.
Given the selling season has mostly wrapped up and the continued softness through the first three quarters of the year as well as sufficient dealer inventories, we have adjusted our Marine sales guidance downward. Pressures have mounted on our retail assumptions, but we still expect to grow retail in the fourth quarter, albeit at a slower rate than previously expected. Growth is expected to be driven by snowmobiles as well as our new products. We also have a favorable comparison in snow that should help contribute to retail growth in Q4 as we are on track this year to ship snow check units before the season begins versus much later shipments last year. As many of you saw firsthand at our dealer meeting in July, we launched two new categories in the Powersport space and could not be more excited about the opportunity ahead of us.
Polaris XPEDITION, which started shipping in Q3, has seen strong demand for our premium models, and we’re working hard to meet this elevated demand. In addition, feedback from early customers has been very positive. The RANGER XD is the first extreme duty side-by-side with industry-leading torque, payload, and towing capacity. Shipments are slate to begin in November, and dealers are telling us they have high interest and allocations to customers already established. Also important to remember the RZR XP launch from earlier this spring. This product has been well received by dealers and customers. Importantly, the RZR XP hits at the largest sub-segment of the recreational market. It’s a multi-terrain product that makes up approximately 35% of our RZR sales, and our share in the multi-terrain space is over 2x our nearest competitor over the last five years.
This is certainly a product we love having in the portfolio and should not be overlooked in our share gain strategy. In addition to our new vehicles, we also launched the next generation Lock & Ride with our all new Lock & Ride MAX cargo system. The new system adds an unmatched level of adaptability and provides customers with virtually limitless configurations to best match their needs for every journey, task, and activity. Lock & Ride MAX is yet another step in our industry leading parts, garments, and accessory strategy, where we’ve seen significant content increases across all product categories related to new accessory and attachment offerings. While they are not explicitly mentioned on the page, our On Road and Marine segments also had incredible new product launches that reflect our continued commitment to industry leading innovation.
It was an exciting new product year at Polaris, and we believe these new products can help us gain share in the fourth quarter and into 2024. We continue to be in a much healthier dealer inventory position relative to last year. Dealer inventory has improved, given better production and supply chain dynamics, coupled with softening demand in some markets. I would note that dealer inventory is still below 2019. As I mentioned earlier, we’re continuing to evaluate and adapt our mix, given current demand trends. We’re putting more emphasis on prioritizing RANGER XD, Polaris XPEDITION, and Ranger NorthStar lines during the fourth quarter, as this is where we see the greatest demand. We’re watching inventory levels closely and are ready to take appropriate steps necessary to manage inventory in Off Road and On Road.
Similar to how we’ve pulled back production in marine in the face of weakening demand and rising dealer inventory. Wrapping up my comments on the quarter, While the results are short of our expectations, we did gain and share and see strong demand for our new products. We’re excited to get these new products into the market so consumers can again experience what Polaris leads the industry in innovation. We still have work to do operationally to ensure we deliver more consistently and at a lower cost. As I said, I am confident in the team and their ability to execute. We’ll continue to watch retail trends and are prepared to adjust our business model accordingly. We’ll continue to invest in innovation and to improve our operations. The strategy we laid out last year and talked about at our Capital Markets Day in July remains unchanged and I expect our team to deliver on all aspects of the strategy, which we believe can generate attractive returns for our shareholders.
I’ll now turn it over to Bob who will summarize our third quarter performance and provide additional details for the remaining balance of 2023, including guidance and expectations. Bob?
Bob Mack: Thanks, Mike. And good morning or afternoon to everyone on the call today. Third quarter results were driven by lower shipping volumes and higher finance interest, impacting both sales and margins. Manufacturing costs remained elevated versus expectations heading into the quarter, which tempered much of the expansion opportunity. Promotions continue to be higher on a year-over-year basis given abnormally low levels last year during the third quarter. Adjusted EPS was down 17% for the quarter. Positive contribution from tax and share account was more than offset by the previously mentioned headwinds to margin, as well as higher net interest expense, which was up over 60% relative to last year, primarily due to higher rates.
As Mike mentioned, PG&A had a record quarter for revenue as we continue to benefit from the broadest portfolio in Powersports, as well as new innovation such as Lock & Ride MAX that is being very well received with our new products. In our Off Road business, revenue increased 6% driven by strong growth in utility, snow, and commercial. This was partially offset by a decline of approximately 20% in recreation. North American retail was up 5% in ORV with double-digit contributions from utility and crossover lines, which include general and the new Polaris XPEDITION. Industry data shows we took share across the ORV portfolio. Snow season is off to a good start, and what is encouraging is that we are well on track to deliver customer orders before the ‘23, ‘24 riding season begins, which was a key goal of ours this year.
Margins in the quarter were pressured by foreign exchange, finance interest and unfavorable mix. Another factor which Mike mentioned was elevated manufacturing costs that did not subside during the quarter. We do expect share gains going forward as we pick up production of our new products and allocate promotion dollars effectively to drive customer purchase patterns. It remains an exciting time in our Off Road segment as we continue to lead with innovation and enter new spaces within the Powersports market. Switching to On Road, our fifth straight quarter of motorcycle share gains was driven by our strong product portfolio and healthy inventory. During the quarter, our mid-sized portfolio earns the distinction of number one market share in North America.
This is another achievement in the rich history of Indian Motorcycles. Our mid-sized bike portfolio consists of the Scout, Scout Bobber, and Scout Rogue, all of which have an iconic style rooted in the 120-year history of Indian Motorcycles while offering modern performance and technology to our riders. North American Indian Motorcycle retail was down low teens driven by a challenging backdrop and increased competition. On Road revenue was down 19% due to lower ship volumes given industry softness combined with comparing against our third quarter last year, which saw a large catch-up on motorcycles with black painted parts given production issues earlier in 2022. On Road gross profit margin was up 335 basis points driven by favorable product mix, partially offset by promotions driving lower net price.
This marks the fifth straight quarter expanding margin over 250 basis points as the On Road team continues to deliver on its profitability plan. In Marine, the industry continued to be negatively impacted by slowing consumer demand. Industry data shows the pontoon market is down almost 10% year-to-date as customers continue to be deterred from purchasing by high interest rates. Despite these industry headwinds, our Marine portfolio did gain share in the quarter led by Hurricane in Bennington. Gros profit margin was down 338 basis points given top line pressures. However, our team continues to actively manage the variable components of their cost structure to protect profits. Most of the season is behind us in Marine and we are busy planning for 2024.
At the August dealer meeting, we launched some new value boats under the Bennington brand called the S and SV. We know dealers are closely watching inventory and we want to support their ability to have the right boat mix. We believe the S and SV Bennington boats attract a different customer relative to our legacy portfolio and we look forward to helping dealers broaden the options they offer to customers with more approachable pricing and features. Moving to our financial position, we continue to see our balance sheet as a competitive advantage. Cash generation continues to trend favorably and our net leverage ratio continues to be in a healthy spot at 1.7x. Our cash flow in the quarter was impacted by late quarter shipments in Off Road, as well as the delayed wire transfer from our Polaris Acceptance joint venture.
This pushed a normal month-end payment into early October. Absent these items, which provided strong cash inflows the first week of October, our leverage would have been approximately 15 basis points lower. We have repurchased 1 .4 million shares year-to -date and we are well ahead of our target to repurchase 10% of our outstanding shares before the end of 2026. We believe we are set up well for a variety of scenarios in the broader market with our balance sheet and cash generation capabilities in 2023. Now let’s move to guidance and our current expectations for 2023. Given what we saw in Q3 in our updated assumptions for Q4, we are slightly narrowing sales guidance towards the bottom of the previous range and bringing margin guidance down, which lowers our adjusted EPS guidance.
Regarding sales, we are lowering the top end of guidance and now expect sales to grow 3% to 5% this year. While we have lowered our Off Road sales expectation, which has a negative impact on mix, we still expect Off Road sales to grow in the high single digits. We are moving On Road to flat, given the softness we have recently seen in the industry and moving marine down as well given year-to-date trends. We do expect Off Road to have a sizable contribution from snow in Q4 as we remain on track to ship a significant amount of model year ‘24 Sleds in the quarter. Shipments of Polaris XPEDITION and anticipated shipments of RANGER XD are also expected to have a positive impact on sales and retail. Share gains are expected to continue for Off Road as well on the back of these shipments.
In line with prior expectations, net price will be a fourth quarter headwind, driven by the lapping of the benefit we have seen from the price increases in a stronger promotional environment. Finance interest will also continue to be a headwind. Margin guidance is being lowered given what we saw in Q3 in the trends we expect to continue into the fourth quarter. While we knew we had over 130 basis points of margin headwinds heading into the year associated with higher finance interest and FX, we had planned to overcome these macro headwinds with efficiencies on the operation side and improvement in warranty. While we have seen year-over-year benefit in these areas, they are not to the extent that we had planned. On the operation side, benefit from improved logistics costs have been somewhat offset by higher plant manufacturing costs that have not subsided.
While we see the typical startup inefficiencies associated with launching major new products as temporary, they remain a headwind for Q4. Production of the RANGER XD is late relative to our initial thinking, we now expect to start shipping the product in November. As Mike mentioned, going forward, we see significant opportunity to refocus on lean principles to improve the overall efficiencies of our plants. It is also worth noting the mixed benefit we are seeing in the first half of the year has gone the other direction with delays in new products and lower than previously guided Off Road sales. Operating expense dollars are expected to be sequentially flat in Q4, therefore the same factors that are impacting gross margin are also impacting EBITDA margin.
We will continue to contain costs where we can and certainly move fast in this area if we see our markets deteriorate further. Adjusted EPS is now expected to be in the range of $9.60 and $10 or 8% to 4% percent below 2022. We are not expecting any material changes in interest expense or share count, but we are expecting our tax rate to be closer to 20% as we close out the year. For the fourth quarter, a few things to note. We expect retail to be up year-over-year in Off Road, partially offset by On Road and marine, the main driver being snowmobile ship and retail. As noted earlier, margins are expected to be down year-over-year. We have significant other cost headwinds from higher finance interest, debt interest, and foreign exchange that we expect will persist.
In summary, there are some puts and takes in the third quarter, but our longer-term goals of driving leadership in the powersports space and delivering on our financial goals remain on track. We have work to do and the team remains focused on the task at hand. It was encouraging to see share gains in the quarter, which are expected to continue. It was also great to see another strong quarter from our On Road team. We believe our long-term strategy can generate strong shareholder value and our teams are working hard to make that happen. With that, I will turn it back over to Mike to provide some early thoughts on 2024 and summarize our call today. Go ahead, Mike.
Mike Speetzen: Thanks, Bob. The dynamic environment I spoke about earlier is not expected to abruptly end on January 1, and thus we need to be vigilant and agile in how we manage our business going forward. When I turn on the news, it does seem like a parade of horribles facing the consumer, with higher interest rates, persistent inflation, mounting credit card debt, student loan payments returning, and other significant domestic and global events. However, we are focused on adjusting and adapting to these external factors. We expect to manage production, shipments, and spending consistent with what we see an ongoing demand trends and will stay close to our dealers. We just got started with Polaris XPEDITION and RANGER XD is next.
Therefore, we expect those to be nice contributors to retail and share gains into next year. Innovation remains key to our strategy, and you should continue to expect innovative new products each year from our teams to help strengthen our leadership position in Powersports. Tackling the manufacturing inefficiencies is critical to our long-term strategy to expand EBITDA margin. Thus you should expect to hear more about this opportunity when we formally provide guidance in January. Part of this will help with lowering working capital through inventory management, which should result in positive cash generation. No matter what happens externally, cash remains king and we have a strong track record of investing that cash and earning high returns for our shareholders.
And I do not expect this pattern to change. I strongly believe our team with focus execution can deliver a strong year with share gains and margin expansion in 2024 by focusing on innovation, improving manufacturing efficiencies and implementing smart capital allocation decisions. Wrapping up, it was encouraging to see share gains across all three segments during the quarter and to see record results from PG&A as well as strong margin expansion in On Road. The feedback from dealers at our dealer meetings over the summer gave me renewed confidence that we were focused on the right areas to drive strong results. While we are tracking software retail trends, we believe that we have an attractive lineup of products to enable share gains with new products as well as premium products that remain in high demand.
Efficiencies within manufacturing are a huge opportunity for us. And while they will not be achieved overnight, we are focused on improving them through an enhanced lean environment. We remain confident in the strategy we laid out in 2022. And with all long term strategies, their objective is to see through good times as well as bad. With focus execution, I believe we can end the year strong and emerge stronger to continue marching towards our 2026 goals. We thank you for your continued support. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Gary to open up the line for questions.
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Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Joe Altobello with Raymond James.
Joe Altobello: Thanks, guys. Good morning. I guess first, Mike, for you, I wanted to dive in a little deeper into your initial thoughts on 2024, you did make the point that you expected –to be continued retail softness to extend into ‘24. But if we look at Q3, retail was up five, you expect retail growth in Q4 as well on an easy compare. So is the base case for ‘24 right now in terms of retail flat to up modestly or somewhere in that neighborhood?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, Joe, we’re still working through the first views of next year. Obviously, we saw a fair amount of change happen relatively quickly here in the third quarter. On our last call, we talked about July retail looking good. And then obviously August and September start moving in a very different direction. So we’re still working through that. I think the key point for us is that we anticipate that the pressures are going to continue. The Fed has clearly signaled that they’re not going to do much on rates here for the balance of the year. We anticipate there could be other action next year, but I anticipate interest rates are going to continue to remain headwind. And I think when you look at the broader macro, even though the talk of recession had come down, it’s kind of bounced up just a little bit.
And so we do think consumers are going to continue to have a cautious mindset given everything that’s going on in the environment. That said, we do feel good about the new products. We think that’s certainly going to be a tailwind as we get into next year. And given our poor performance from an efficiency and margin standpoint, even in what I’d call a flattish environment, we do anticipate that we can improve margins next year with the level of cost discipline that we’ve got brought back into the business. You’re starting in the fourth quarter and we’ll continue to gain momentum as we go into next year. Operating expenses for us have been well managed and we’ll continue to do that as we head into next year. And our guidepost is going to be dealer inventory.
We’re still below where we were in 2019, we’re going to continue to watch that, make sure it remains at the right levels and react accordingly. So tough to call what we think next year is going to be. We need to get a couple more months under our belt, see how things are headed for next year and then we’ll talk more in January.
Joe Altobello: Understood. Maybe just to kind of follow up on that. How does the software and your term retail outlook impact your ‘26 target? Does it make the past a little bit more back end loaded than you thought back in Nashville?
Mike Speetzen : I don’t think so. Clearly the biggest headwind that we’ve got is really around the margins. And I’d make a couple of comments. Number one, the thing to keep in mind and we don’t use this as an excuse, but between interest rates impacting our flooring costs as well as foreign exchange, we’re dealing with 120 basis points of headwind right out of the gate versus when we put the targets out originally. All that said, given the deterioration in productivity we’ve seen in our plants over the past year or so, we see a pretty ample opportunity. I actually look at it very positively because these are things well within our control and we can get after that. When you look at revenue and you look at the other measures, I feel very confident about that.
The margins we’ve got some work to do, I think you should expect to see progress on that into ‘24 and I think we’ll be on the right trajectory to get ourselves into that mid to high teens EBITDA level that we committed to.
Operator: The next question is from Craig Kennison with Baird.
Craig Kennison: Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I appreciate the candid call here. I wanted to ask first about the utility segment. That’s an area that has held up better in recent quarters, but it seems to have changed recently. Maybe shed some light on that.
Mike Speetzen : Yes, I’d say a couple of things, Craig. We have seen some softening in the commercial side. As we’ve talked about in the past, we’re a top provider of equipment into big rental companies and we have seen some pullback and hesitation as they’ve seen some of the commercial building projects either get delayed, pushed out or canceled. So we have seen some of those things. Then I would tell you that we’re seeing similar dynamics in that kind of the value to midline side of the market where consumers are a little bit more sensitive to interest rates. And that certainly has impacted not only the rec space, but now has crept in to the utility space. All that said, as we talked about in our prepared remarks, we continue to see a high level of interest in those premium products, things like NorthStar.
Obviously, the XD hasn’t hit dealer showrooms yet, but we know from talking to dealers, they’re anxious to get the product on the floor and they’ve already got a number of customer commitments. So we continue to feel good about that high end of the market. We just see a little bit of slowdown relative to expectations in the middle to lower end of the utility market.
Craig Kennison: Thank you. Then on slide 4, you mentioned that 70% of your customers are new customers. That seems like an unusually high number. Maybe you can just tell me what that has been recently and then what it might say about repurchase activity among your existing customers.
Mike Speetzen : Yes, I mean it’s still in the range that we’ve seen. I would say over the past two to four quarters, we’ve probably seen that number in the mid-60s. So I don’t know statistically that I would say that it has moved dramatically relative to what we’ve seen both historically as well over the last few years. We have seen some slowdown and repurchase rates, the near term repurchases rates, which isn’t surprising given the comments that we made around the health of the consumer and just some of the other dynamics. Consumer has an existing vehicle. They probably are more apt to put accessories on it or let that vehicle run for another year or so until they repurchase. So we don’t see anything in those numbers that has us overly concerned.
As we talked about in the prepared remarks around customer dynamics, the search, the configuration builds, all those types of things remain healthy, not just versus last year, but in many cases relative to 2019. So we know there’s still interest in the category. We think people are just hesitant to make the purchase right now relative to what we were expecting.
Operator: The next question is from Robin Farley with UBS.
Robin Farley: Thank you. Just if we could return to the long-term targets for a moment. I know you mentioned a bunch of the changes that you still expect to come over time with the manufacturing improvement. Could you circle back to kind of your top line expectations and what you kind of thought about with those 2026 targets and whether that’s impacted by starting to see utilities soften here or just how we should think about the top line part of the long term. Thanks.
Mike Speetzen : Yes, Robin, I guess I’m not overly concerned about it on a couple fronts. I mean, one, we’ve obviously seen strong performance, even with a tepid environment, just given the mix of vehicles we’ve had some of the pricing actions that have been taken, although we expect pricing obviously to become less of a factor moving forward. I would tell you that if you look over history, when our market slows down, it tends to come back pretty quickly. I’m not necessarily sitting here telling you I think that happens in ‘24. But as I look out to ‘26 and I look at the mid-single digit revenue growth that we’ve got out there, I’m pretty confident that over the course of the next two to three years, we’re going to see the markets moving away that allow us to continue on the trajectory that we’ve been on thus far.
Like I said, the biggest focus area for us, for me, is ensuring that we’ve got the inefficiencies being addressed in our factories. The margin improvement is probably the single largest opportunity that we have in front of us that we’ve got to get after, the teams are aligned. We’ve been working through everything that has to happen. We’ve got the right trajectory change here in the fourth quarter, and I’m confident that as we get into ‘24, we’ll continue to see that progress.
Robin Farley: Great, now that’s very helpful, thank you. And maybe just one small follow-up. In terms of the market share gains, can you characterize a little bit about what might be happening in the market overall with market share shifts? There’s been a lot of movement in the last two or three years, and are you seeing the consumer, is it — do you think that the share gain is that maybe the sort of value or entry level customers not buying products in the way that they were of your competitors, and that part of the market isn’t there, and that’s making other industry share numbers lower, or is there a move to or away from premium out there in terms of market share shifts? Thanks.
Mike Speetzen : Yes, I’d say there’s a couple of things. I mean, certainly the dynamic we saw during the pandemic when some of those value players had a lot of availability and picked up some, what I’ll call short term share, that certainly has moved back the other way. Those consumers are really not in the market. They are highly sensitive to interest rates and economic conditions, and so certainly we’ve seen impacts there. And as we’ve talked about, there’s a bit of a bifurcation, us and one of our other key players both are doing well right now, and I would say that we’re viewed as more premium and high performance, and I think that end of the market, albeit weaker than what we expected, remains strong relative to the other segments of the market.
And so I think that’s a continuation of trends we’ve seen in the past and definitely a dynamic around some of the short-term share gains that were had back in ‘20 and ‘21 from those value players that had readily available, albeit very cheap product that consumers went after and those consumers are really not in the market anymore.
Operator: And the next question is from Sabahat Khan with RBC.
Sabahat Khan: Okay, great. Thanks and good morning. I guess one of your earlier comments was around a couple of drivers of the lower shipments. I think you talked about kind of the lower demand, but also some manufacturing issues as well. Are you able to maybe parse out how much of each of those components kind of contributed to the guide down or the performance in the quarter across demand versus maybe kind of inability to maybe get the product into the channel? And to what extent is, I guess, mixed in that composition as well?
Bob Mack : Yes, a complicated question. But yes, if you think about Q3, I would say that in terms of shipments, the bigger impact was the timing of getting our new products out would have been the largest impact on shipments in the quarter. Certainly even because of that, the mix is a little bit negative because those are high margin products. And then we talked about last quarter that we thought we would see an incremental $40 million of manufacturing inefficiencies costs related to those in the second half of the year. And most of that would be in Q3. And what we think now is that it’s going to be about $70 million with most of the $40 million in Q3 and about $30 million in Q4. And really, just because of the way the accounting works the costs we see in Q3 we incurred in Q2 and the cost we see in Q4 we incur really in Q3 just because they get loaded into inventory.
So our focus right now, as Mike has said, is driving those costs out as fast as we can so that they don’t carry forward into next year and that we can get a handle on them as quickly as possible. We’ve taken really aggressive actions. It’s really our two largest plants. They have the most complicated product sets. If you look at the rest of our plants, they’re operating at the levels of efficiency they were at pre-COVID. So we feel confident that we can get there. It’s just taken longer in the large plants but we’ve got a lot of resources focused on it right now.
Sabahat Khan: Okay. Great. And then I guess as we look out to ‘24 and you mentioned that you’re working on fixing some of these manufacturing issues, I guess is that kind of the bigger uncertainty on ‘24 beyond just the consumer? Is there some variability in your timeline? Are you able to get this stuff maybe sorted before it impacts ‘24 in a meaningful way or is that something you’re still kind of to be tbc on how quickly some of these issues can be contained. I’m just wondering what the timeline to get the stuff settled is so whereas maybe the consumer might be the only variable in the outlook
Mike Speetzen : Yes, no, we’re, I mean look we’re clearly, I’m not happy with the performance and the issues that we encountered that said, as I talked about in the prepared remarks, I mean the business has contended with an awful lot in terms of the supply chain labor disruptions, schedules moving around all that. That said as we look forward there’s really five things that have to happen, stability in the supply chain, stability in labor, stability in our production schedule, getting the new product production process nailed down and then this refocus on lean and what I tell you is the supply chain has stabilized. I’m not saying that things are perfect but I can tell you that we have worked through one of the last largest fires that was causing a bit of disruption even into Q3 and we’re feeling better about where those things say stand.
Labor stabilization, that presented some pretty significant challenges for us in Q2 and Q3 and we feel like we’ve got that largely in a better spot and the team has really put a lot behind that. I would tell you that schedule stability is improving. It helps to have a more dependable supply chain. We’re getting better at our demand forecasting certainly with the market slowing down that takes some of the volatility out of the equation. It allows the teams to kind of catch a breath and get that schedule set. I feel good about the new product manufacturing on XPEDITION. We’re obviously slated to start delivering XD in November and the teams are making really good progress on that. So I feel like that one’s well underway and then really comes down to this refocusing on lean.
Now that the environment has settle down, we can start working on things within our factories like material flow that probably haven’t been operating very efficiently over the past several years. And we can get to work on those. I laid all that out because it’s important to understand there’s a number of different things going on. Bob made the comment, it’s really our two plants in Alabama and Mexico. But there’s reason to believe we can get this done because we did it in Roseau with our snowmobile business. We did it in Spirit Lake, Iowa with our motorcycle business. And as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, our September production efficiency and hitting the mark was much improved. And we’ve seen that continuing in October. Bob mentioned it from an accounting standpoint, cost improvements or cost inefficiencies kind of fall on a one quarter lag.
So we’re going to be battling a little bit of that as we get into next year. But the teams are aligned. We’ve got incredible lean resources that we now have embedded in each of the two big facilities. And we’re monitoring it daily. I’m briefing on it every week. So it is a big focus for us. And I’m confident the teams will get this moving in the right direction as we get into ‘24.
Operator: The next question is from Megan Alexander with Morgan Stanley.
Megan Alexander: Hi, thanks for taking our questions. At first, I just wanted to make one clarification. Bob, I think you mentioned in the prepared remarks, you lowered the Off Road guide, but still up high singles. I think slide 12 said Off Road unchanged. So is that just a plus seven or plus eight nuance type of situation?
Bob Mack : Yes, we lowered the range a little bit.
Megan Alexander: Okay. And then looking at the implied fourth quarter you talked about flat-ish volume year-over-year. You maybe have some shift that you talked about from the new product, from a shipment perspective into the fourth quarter. And then you talked about retail up driven by snow. So I guess it’s the implication that side by side retail, you expect to be down in the fourth quarter, and maybe can you contextualize how that compares with what you’re seeing so far in October?
Bob Mack : Yes, so a couple of things. So if you think through shipment in Q4, relative to prior year, there’s a fair amount more snow in ‘23 than there was in ‘22, because we have production problems in snow in ‘22, and that’ll all ship Q3, Q4 this year. So that’s part of it from a ship standpoint that’s negative to mix though. And then on the side by side, if you think about retail, retail will be up on side by sides, primarily driven based on our expectations of shipments of the new XPEDITION and XD, RANGER XD products. Those will be big contributors because they’re shipping, XPEDITION were shipping in Q3 for retail in Q4 and then we’ll continue to ship XPEDITION and we’ll start shipping XDs which dealers have orders customers waiting for and so that will all retail in a quarter. So we’re not expecting side by side to be down. We just right now the core part of the side by side market looks a little soft.
Megan Alexander: Okay, that’s helpful. And then maybe a follow up as it relates to dealer inventory levels given those comments and some of the shipments shifting into the fourth quarter. And you talked about down 10% versus ‘19. One of your slides suggests history would imply that dealer inventory is flat on a quarter-over-quarter basis. So is the implication that it’s actually up on a quarter-over-quarter basis and I guess how are you thinking about how dealer inventory ends the year and what that could mean in terms of ‘24 sales?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, I mean dealer inventory improves sequentially. So it certainly is up in third quarter versus the second quarter. A lot of that’s driven by the slowdown we’ve seen and obviously even though our production and efficiencies were there, we were able to get more product into the market. We’re targeting to have dealer inventory kind of either flat or down versus 2019 as we get to the end of the year. But we’re going to watch that. Certainly you’ve got dynamics around making sure that we get plenty of XD and XPEDITION, which are both under high demand as well as our NorthStar Rangers into the channel. But I wouldn’t suggest that there’s some substantial significant change from where we are today.
Operator: The next question is from Fred Wightman with Wolfe Research.
Fred Wightman: Hey guys, good morning. I wanted to come back to the manufacturing and efficiency number. It sounds like that’s now supposed to be $70 million versus $40 million previously. Can you just sort of help us with the sequencing of that as we carry into the first half of the year ,sounds like that’s something that you expect to continue, but just the relative impact on 1Q versus 2Q would be helpful.
Mike Speetzen : So the way it’s flowed through this year, at the end of Q2, we thought it would be $40 million and really most of those costs were incurred in Q2 so we knew they were going to come through in Q3 and we had expected to be able to have a bigger impact on them in Q3 than we did. So the Q3 sort of excess cost carried into Q4, that’s about $30 million that will impact us in Q4. It’s a little tough to say what the impact will be in Q1. We’re actively working to, because we’ll, look, the Q1 impact will be the cost we, mostly the cost we incur in Q4. And so we’re working actively to bring those costs out and to address those inefficiencies as Mike discussed. So I would say it’s a little early to say what the impact will be on 2024 and we’re not focused on ‘24 guidance yet, but you can count on the fact that we’re working as aggressively as we can to minimize any impact going forward.
Fred Wightman: Fair enough. And then there’s a comment in the slides just talking about some lending metrics that were pressured. Can you just expand on what exactly you’re referring to, what categories, whether it’s retail or wholesale, what exactly you meant by that?
Mike Speetzen : Really, the comment was really related to retail. And so what we saw in the quarter was really good [inaudible] rates and volumes up versus prior quarters and last year. Approval rates were pretty flat relative to history and FICO scores are actually up. The pressure is coming from increased focus on kind of debt to income ratios and the lenders kind of putting more focus on that versus just FICOs. And then also some of the smaller lenders, the credit unions and things like that, that were aggressive during the pandemic have backed off a little bit, which is good for us because we’ve got four lending partners who’ve been aggressive in the market. So there’s not a lack of credit, but there’s a little bit of pressure on this sort of debt to income as the banks continue to review their portfolios.
Fred Wightman: Perfect. Thank you.
Mike Speetzen : We don’t believe that it’s a panic impact on retail or anything like that. It’s just a slightly changing environment.
Operator: The next question is from Tristan Thomas with BMO Capital Markets.
Tristan Thomas: Hey, good morning. Just a question given the kind of slower production ramp, are you shipping in as many RANGER XD 1500s in 4Q as you expected three months ago, or is some of it going to kind of still over into the first quarter next year?
Mike Speetzen : We are not. We got off to a late start as we talked about. And so we anticipate that just pushes forward into ‘24.
Tristan Thomas: Okay. And then just kind of back to retail. I think you said flat, maybe down a little bit, versus ‘19. If I just look at, I think market share is down a bit, retail is trending lower. Should your inventory levels be lower. And I mean kind of how are you thinking about what’s appropriate?
Mike Speetzen : I didn’t catch the first part. Did you say market share is down?
Tristan Thomas: Well, I said, if I look at market share compared to ‘19, at least I can see your ORV market share is down. And then also retail is running lower than 2019, but if inventory is flat, I mean, why is that appropriate?
Mike Speetzen : Well, our inventory right now is down 10%. And the point I was trying to make when I answered the earlier question is, if we anticipate by the end of the year will be either be down slightly versus ‘19 or flat. The thing to keep in mind is we now have XPEDITION and XD shipping into the market. So if you were to adjust for those items, our inventory is definitely down versus ‘19 as we come out of the year. Which is consistent with what we’re seeing around retail performance more broadly.
Operator: The next question is from Dave MacGregor with Longbow Research.
Dave MacGregor: Yes. Good morning, Mike. And congratulations on the progress on the On Road. It’s encouraging. I wanted to ask you about the promotional programs you’re seeing in the marketplace right now. If you could elaborate a little bit further, a little more detail around what you’re seeing, and the competitive behaviors and also are consumers responding to the promotions or is that maybe not so much the case right now?
Mike Speetzen : Yes. I mean, the promotional environment certainly has ticked up. We look at it on a number of different measures and overall as a percentage of revenue, it’s still down about 25% from where it was in 2019. And we’ve gotten much more specific around what we’re doing in terms of tailored promotions directed at specific consumers, as well as the interest rate buydowns. I think on the targeted offers, we see those picking up traction. The interest rate buydowns certainly have garnered a lot of interest, but as Bob mentioned, the banks have tight lending standards and certainly that’s creating some pressure. Obviously, it’s no secret to this community that credit card debt is peaked and anybody taking on a new mortgage is obviously dealing with higher interest rates.
So the banks are getting more particular about installment debt and overall debt loads, and that certainly is preventing some consumers from getting finance. But overall, we feel like we’re putting them into the right spots, still more efficient than what we have been historically. But ultimately, it’s tough to get consumers off the sidelines if they’re worried about much larger issues and we’re not going to get into throwing just huge gobs of money into the marketplace. We’re going to continue to be very targeted in how we drive consumers into the dealer and have it been a high quality lead that the dealer can convert.
Dave MacGregor: Thanks for that. Just as a follow up, can you just talk about what you’re seeing in the used market right now and the extent to which that may be impacting your business?
Mike Speetzen : Yes. I mean, as we talked about, we launched Polaris Xchange. So we obviously have very good visibility into what’s going on. The used market has slowed. Used prices have come down. We see that directly through the vehicles we have coming out of Polaris Adventures and through the Xchange process, I would say it’s normalized relative to some of the very high percentage of MSRP, resell numbers that we saw back in 2021 and even into ‘22. And I would say it mimics more what we’re seeing in the broader new vehicle retail market. Things are just slower than they have been.
Operator: The next question is from Jaime Katz with Morningstar.
Jaime Katz: Hey, good morning. I was hoping you guys could articulate maybe what the differences you’re seeing between the Marine buyers and the traditional Powersports buyers are. I know you’ve spoken a bit about everybody shifting to this like premium purchasing that has been benefiting you in models. But I think in Marine, you’d mentioned that you’re doing some lower price point products. So I’m wondering if that’s a function of just the absolute price points of boats relative to ATVs or if there’s some wider adjustable market or some other thing that’s driving that decision.
Mike Speetzen : Yes, on the Marine side, Jamie, it’s really kind of two things. To your point, the absolute dollar value of the boats makes the — or exacerbates the interest rate problem. You’re looking at boats that average 60,000 to 75,000 and go up as high as 300,000. So that interest rate impact is a lot more. The tenure of the financing is a lot longer. So we think that the interest rates have had a bigger impact in marine. We still see tremendous interest at the high end of our portfolio. But the consumer, as we came through the pandemic, there really just were no kind of entry level boats of ours or even most of our competitors available. And coming out of that, with boat production returning to normal, dealer inventory starting to return to normal, we felt like it was a good time to reinvigorate the entry level of our Bennington line and give another option to try to bring kind of a different consumer into the space, just given the lack of availability of those products over the last two to three years.
So we think it’s good timing. We think it’ll be a positive for the Bennington brand and will help bring that new consumer in.
Bob Mack : And Jamie, the other thing I’d add is, remember, marine is probably more directly correlated to, say, our RZR business, where you’ve got primarily vehicles that are for people to go out and enjoy the outdoors. The utility portion of our business, even though we’re obviously a little bit more cautious than we had been, that does dampen volatility because these vehicles are being used, obviously, for far more than just people going out and enjoying the outdoors. They’re used to get work done. And so that certainly dampens some of what we see when we compare the two categories.
Jaime Katz: Okay. And then any update on the debt that’s about to mature in December?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, so we’re — we have a board meeting after this, the next few days and we’ll be discussing with the board what our options are and what path we want to take and we expect to get that executed. Certainly before the term of the 364 expires in mid-December.
Operator: The next question is from John Healy with Northcoast Research.
John Healy: Great. Thanks for to fit me in. I just wanted to ask a question about feedback from the dealer community largely on inventory levels. I know you mentioned that you’re 10% below today and ended a year, you’ll be comparable to 2019 levels. But are dealers wanting to be at 2019 levels and the thought process and some of the feedback we’ve gotten this morning is questions relating to with ASPs up relative to ‘19 and just the cost to carry that inventory, is ’19 the right way to think about where dealers want to be or should we be thinking about the right level of inventory for a dealer is maybe 80% or 90% of ‘19 levels. So just curious of what the feedback has been about where they would like to be themselves.
Mike Speetzen : Yes, I mean, we spend a lot of time working through that obviously and the tough part about talking about dealer inventory is we don’t do it justice by talking at a high level. We’re looking at this by region by model by sub market. And so we work through that with our dealers in terms of the way we set our profiles in terms of stocking levels. We are below 2019 and that’s on adjusted for the sales price dynamics basis. But the key differences we get to the end of the year is we do have two very new large platforms with XD and XPEDITION. And so when we look at the numbers excluding that, we are at a point where the dealers are below where they were in 2019. And we think and I think broadly they agree that we’re zeroing in on the right range.
That said we know that there’s pockets we’ve seen more pronounced slowdown in some of the RZR products where we’ve got to work with the dealers in specific regions to make sure they can move that product. That isn’t anything that is abnormal. We constantly have to deal with shifting dynamics and we’re working through that with the dealers and I think the key is we’re using that as our guidepost as we move forward into ‘24 to make sure that we keep those inventory levels at the right level so that the dealers got the right product for the consumer and they can manage their finances given the higher floor planning costs.
John Healy: Understood. And then just a follow-up on the snow business. Obviously, you guys are enthusiastic about what’s on the horizon there. Is that more about the catching up over last year or are you starting to see some benefit for maybe the dealer starting to shift towards you guys and maybe away from Yamaha as they kind of exit the category here at some point in the not so distant future. And how big of an opportunity do you think that is for you guys?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, the Yamaha piece is small, really, we and BRP are the two major players in the snow business. So there’s certainly some business to be picked up there, but I would tell you that the reason we’re optimistic about our snow business is all the work we’ve done over the past year, year and a half to get that business back on track. Part of the headwind we’ve got as we head into ‘24 is, is the dynamic of the fact that we were late delivering our 22 snowmobiles. So we ended up shipping a lot in the first quarter of this year and we’ve made vast improvements in our ability to deliver and we’re going to have all of our snow check units delivered before the end of this year. And so obviously as we get into ‘25, we’re going to be back on a more normalized cadence.
And that obviously we’ll present some challenges as we move forward, but we’re really happy with what we’ve been able to do in that business, both in terms of getting the production smoothed out, but also the improvements we’ve made in quality, the new products that team has ready to launch as we get into ‘24 has us very optimistic about that business. Albeit it’s a small part of the overall company, but a big part the heritage and heart of the company. And so it’s really important for us to make sure that we’ve got that on the right track. So we’re very optimistic about where we’re headed.
Operator: The next question is from Scott Stember with ROTH MKM.
Scott Stember: Good morning, guys and thanks for taking my questions. First question on the utility side of ORV. You mentioned that the commercial side is softening a little bit. Could you maybe talk about the other side of that, whether it’s agriculture or anything else that’s driving that business? How is that piece holding up?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, I would just echo the comments I made earlier. I would tell you kind of at the valued of mid-range of our lineup has slowed relative to what we had seen. But the demand at the higher end, whether that’s the NorthStar Ranger or the soon to be delivered RANGER XDs, remains solid. So I think it speaks to the fact that the category is more resilient because consumers are using that to get work done on a ranch or farm. And we see that holding up better than we do in many of our purely recreational categories.
Bob Mack : Yes, we talked earlier that we saw some slowing from the rental companies in the back half of the year. But our rental commercial business was still really strong for the year as these guys got into their kind of Q4 that they backed off on capital purchases. But we expect to see that start to return as we get out of the year and they get back to their new capital budgets. And the road projects and chip app stuff and all that remains pretty strong. So we do expect to see that commercial business be pretty solid again in ‘24.
Scott Stember: Got it. And last question on PG&A. You talked about it being pretty strong still as the close out the year. But if you were to back out the Lock & Ride phenomena and some of the newer products on a like for like basis, how are you viewing the attachment rates of people holding off, not putting as much items on their vehicles?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, well, I mean, first of all, the new Lock & Ride MAX really hasn’t, I mean, it’s obviously on the new vehicles that we’ve got out there, but the proliferation is still relatively low. Obviously, that’ll pick up as we get into next year. Now, the attachment rates have continued to climb. We’ve done a lot with the factory installed accessories we do, whether that’s through Slingshot Design Center or the customization that our off road customers can do when they order a vehicle through the dealer. And we see that continuing to be strong, which I think speaks to the fact that people want to customize vehicles, which was a big part of our strategy. So we’re optimistic. They’ve done a lot to grow that business.
And as we talked about in my prepared remarks, I mean, we have the industry’s leading number of attachments. And I’m really happy with what the team’s done. You look at these new vehicles that have launched the XPEDITION launched with over 100 accessories, XDs launching with over 70 accessories. We did the same thing with our XP RZR. It really allows us to get out and get customers customizing these vehicles the way that they want to.
Operator: The next question is from James Hardiman with Citi.
James Hardiman: Hey, good morning. Thanks for squeezing me in here. First, just a quick clarification. Bob, I think you said you expected side by side to be up in the fourth quarter. Is it just side by side or do you think total ORV will be up in 4Q?
Bob Mack : I think total ORV will be up. Then obviously off road will be up because snow is included in off road.
James Hardiman: Okay, great. Then maybe just another point of clarification. As you think about retail, I guess ORV retail in particular, where do you think that finishes versus 2019? I’m just trying to wrap my brain around weeks on hand of inventory or inventory turns versus 2019. It feels like with retail down and inventories even close to flat, that those would almost have to be more weeks on hand, fewer turns versus ‘19 when I think you said coming out of ‘19 that you were a little bit heavy.
Bob Mack : Yes. So I mean, as Mike said, we think it’s going to be retail be relatively flat to ‘19 if you look across the whole company. And dealer inventory right now looks like it’s going to be down. If you exclude XD and XPEDITION, that you’ll have new channel fill on. So those weren’t in the base, but in terms of major categories that we don’t think have a lot of overlap. So turns are relatively consistent. Like Mike said, there are pockets and the pockets were light, the pockets were heavy. We’re focused on that, helping the dealers where they’re heavy and getting things like NorthStar where we’re still light out into the channel. So we feel good about dealer inventory. We are, is part of the reason we took the revenue guide down a little bit is we are going to be cautious as we go through the quarter.
We took out some marine from the quarter that we wanted to make sure we stay in the right position on dealer inventory and marine. Same thing with on road. It’s been the motorcycle market, retails looked a little soft, so we’re making sure we go into the season with the right amount of inventory. So I don’t think we’re heavy from a turn standpoint. Certainly the dollars, and what you probably hear from dealers is they feel the dollars, and with the price increases and the heavier mix on premium products and the interest rates, obviously we’re conscious of that and we’re working through that to try to optimize it for people, but we feel like we’re in a good place on dealer inventory.
James Hardiman: I’m sorry, did you say you thought that full year ORV retail would be flat with ‘19, even after, I think it was down 20% in the third quarter?
Bob Mack : Yes, James, we’re not going to sit here and get down into the particulars, but I think overall as a company, we think we’ll be flat-ish, maybe down a little bit relative to ‘19. And it’s about to come out, I mean, our dealer inventory levels adjusted for the two new products to be comparable to ‘19 should be down as well. And so we know it’s not perfect in all areas, but certainly a pretty good guidepost for us as we think about, getting into ‘24 and how we want to start planning the business.
Operator: The next question is from Xian Siew with BNP Paribas.
Xian Siew: Hi guys, thanks for taking the question. Maybe on the new category, it sounds like, as you’ve kind of talked about before, that you view them as incremental with little overlap for the existing line. And I know it’s kind of early, but are there any kind of initial indications that you’re bringing in a new customer or any kind of, is it, whether it would be like presales or anything like that?
Mike Speetzen : Yes, we are definitely — we don’t have a lot of experience yet with the XD other than what we’re hearing from the dealers given we haven’t delivered that. But for XPEDITION, certainly we are pulling in folks that would have contemplated buying a more of an automobile to go do the types of activities. But the XPEDITION offers them at a far more attractive price point, the ability to have a vehicle that can get them out doing the overlanding and deep woods activities that they want. So it’s still early days, but we’re really encouraged with what we’ve seen. And I’d encourage you if you get the chance, there’s plenty of reviews and customer videos and things out on YouTube that I think really speak to it better than we ever could on this call.
Bob Mack : Yes, I think if you think about XPEDITION, right, the product we have that’s most comparable as general and we’ve continued to see strong retail on general. And no fall off there. And it looks like it’s, as Mike said, it looks like it’s proving out to be a somewhat different customer. Just like the customer that wants more features would have maybe traded out of a Jeep or some other type of off road vehicle into the XPEDITION which obviously has a lot more capability than the general, which has a little bit of a different use case.
Xian Siew: Got it. Thanks. And maybe just a follow up. It sounds like versus we talked last time, it sounds like the value segments where it’s maybe getting a little more pressure. Can you maybe just remind us the mix of value versus premium?
Mike Speetzen : We don’t really, we’ve ever given that mix, but we’ve seen or got a growth on the premium side. Value, it’s obviously units, a lot lower dollars. And that pressure, like we said, is coming really, we think from interest rates and this credit pressure on debt to income ratios, because that tends to be that buyer so.
Operator: This concludes our question and answer session, and the conference is also now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.