Shoe Carnival, Inc. (NASDAQ:SCVL) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript November 16, 2023
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, good morning, and welcome to the Shoe Carnival’s Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Today’s conference call is being recorded and is also being broadcast via webcast. Any reproduction or rebroadcast of any portion of this call is expressly prohibited. I would now like to introduce Mr. Steve Alexander with Shoe Carnival Investor Relations. Mr. Alexander, please go ahead.
Steve Alexander: Thank you and good morning. Thanks for joining us today. Earlier this morning, we issued our earnings press release for the third quarter of 2023. If you need a copy of the release, it is available on our website in the Investors section. Joining me on today’s call are Mark Worden, President and Chief Executive Officer of Shoe Carnival; Carl Scibetta, Chief Merchandising Officer; and Patrick Edwards, Chief Financial Officer. Management’s remarks today may contain forward-looking statements that involve a number of risk factors. These risk factors could cause the company’s actual results to be materially different from those projected in such statements. Forward-looking statements should also be considered in conjunction with the discussion of risk factors included in the company’s SEC filings and today’s earnings press release.
Investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of today’s date. The company disclaims any obligations to update any of the risk factors or to publicly announce any revisions to the forward-looking statements discussed on today’s conference call or contained in today’s press release to reflect future events or developments. And with that, I’ll hand the call over to Mark.
Mark Worden: Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. I’d like to start today by introducing Patrick Edwards, who in September was promoted to the role of Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, and Board Secretary. Patrick has served as an Executive Officer of the Corporation since 2021 as our Chief Accounting Officer and Board Secretary. Previously, he served as our Corporate Controller since joining the company in 2019. Patrick brings over 30-years of progressive financial leadership experience to his new role and has been instrumental to our financial performance. I’m sure you will all enjoy working with him going forward, and I know he’s excited to get to know you all. Now, moving on to the quarter, we started out Q3 with a very successful back-to-school campaign and strong results.
We saw momentum building in key categories, market share growing, and moderating sales trends compared to earlier in the year. However, once back-to-school shopping concluded, the sales trend softened significantly heading into Labor Day weekend, and we saw disappointing seasonal sales for the remainder of September and October. For the quarter, sales were $319.9 million, down 6.4% versus the prior year. This result was at the low end of our expectations. Yet, I would like to commend the team’s achievement of approximately $320 million in sales, which is a level of quarterly sales that the company had never come close to achieving in any quarter prior to 2021. I’m so proud of our team’s customer focus and strong commitment to delivering results in the face of a challenging environment.
Our EPS delivery was $0.80 in the quarter and $2.11 year to date. Both are below our expectations and were impacted by the very sluggish start to the fall season. Looking at how these results compare over the longer-term strategic horizon, our 2023 year-to-date EPS is more than 40% higher than any full-year EPS result prior to 2021. In fact, the Q3 EPS result of $0.80 is more than any full-year EPS delivery prior to 2018. I am disappointed with our performance shortfall versus our expectations that we set too high. Yet by steadily advancing our long-term strategies, the company has achieved transformative profit growth compared to results just a few years earlier. Moving to a recap of the August back-to-school season. I believe Shoe Carnival is the leader of the family footwear business for kids and has been for over four decades.
We pride ourselves on delivering kids’ a fun back-to-school shopping experience with the best depth and breadth of the brands kids want to show off as they head back to school. When I look back at this challenging year, the result I am most pleased with is the sales growth achieved during the month of August, growing our kids categories low-single digits versus the prior year. The 2023 back-to-school season resulted in the second-highest kids category sales in the company’s 45-year history, surpassed only by 2021. Our kids” sales grew to over 30% of total sales during back-to-school as compared to a typical full year historical range of 18% to 20% of total sales. This category acceleration was driven by growth in athletic sales led by court and basketball in both girls and boys, record high transaction value, as well as conversion and margins that were among the highest levels in our history.
Similar to Q2, we invested aggressively this quarter, supporting our back-to-school advertising and marketing campaigns as we were seeing encouraging sales trends. This growth contributed to significant market share gains year to date for our company within the backdrop of the family footwear industry where sales have declined approximately 10% year-to-date 2023. To summarize, momentum was improving as we headed into our last earnings call, and that gave us increased confidence that balance-of-year trends appeared likely to continue to moderate. In hindsight, we were wrong about trends moderating for the balance of the year. After back-to-school finished, our top line performance quickly softened as the normal seasonal business and fall season did not kick in.
The weather was persistently hot and dry in most of our geographies during September and October, and sales turned to high-single-digit and low-double-digit declines for multiple weeks in the early fall period. From a category perspective, boot sales have been very soft with the warm dry weather. Total boot sales declined low-20s in the quarter and certain seasonal segments barely started at all. Given the unexpected top line challenges in the latter part of the quarter, we are lowering our full-year 2023 sales and EPS guidance. Patrick will go into detail on guidance in his remarks, but I will highlight that a revised guidance reflects a Q4 outlook that comps sales declined steeper than prior quarters and is based on our limited visibility into customer holiday shopping and the broader macroeconomic drivers that continue to be volatile.
We continue to experience softness in the segment of our customers with household income under $30,000, including our urban lower-income customers. For some perspective, our overall customer mix is split about evenly above and below household income of $50,000. In the segment of our customers that are above $50,000 household income, we’re seeing a mix shift to more affluent customers with household income over $75,000. In fact, our customer segments below $30,000 and above $75,000 are now about equal on a year-to-date basis, with both segments in the high-20% range. The growth in the above $75,000 segment is being driven by e-commerce transactions and our Shoe Station banner. Turning to Shoe Station. The banner produced excellent results all around in the quarter, with net sales increasing low-double digits versus the prior year, margins expanding, and sequentially accelerating sales growth versus Q2.
We continue to see Shoe Station results significantly outpacing the overall footwear category and generating leading performance within our company. Growth is largely driven from investments in our CRM platform capabilities that have grown Shoe Station CRM membership high-teens versus prior year. The success of this acquisition and the speed of achieving synergies further strengthens our commitment to our M&A growth strategy, which is largely focused on making additional regional acquisitions that can be rolled up into our Shoe Station growth banner. Total company e-comm sales increased approximately 10% in the quarter, demonstrating that our digital marketing and CRM strategies are driving customer awareness and engagement, helping to partially offset the traffic softness we are seeing in our lower-income urban customers.
As part of our continued strategy to drive long-term sustainable top line growth, at the end of October, we relaunched our Shoe Carnival e-comm website, bringing customer-focused improvements to the online experience. As part of this redesign, we have completely reimplemented our search platform, and we are leveraging real-time analytics to display the most relevant trending and recent searches, while also heavily emphasizing product imagery. We’re also leveraging predictive analytics and the power of generative AI across the site to create a more personalized and engaging experience for the customer. Combined with our advanced CRM capabilities, these investments to improve our customers’ online interaction bring us closer than ever to showing the right product to the right customer at the right time.
We’re very excited about the relaunched site, and we believe that this user experience will drive a higher level of customer engagement, whether the customer is looking to purchase online or to simply get more information for visiting one of our over 400 stores. Gross profit margin in the quarter was 36.8%, representing the 11th consecutive quarter above 35%. When taking a longer-term view of our profit transformation, the margin expansion is the key driver of improved results as evidenced by an increase of 590 basis points in Q3 2023 versus Q3 2019. As I discussed previously, competitive intensity was high during the back-to-school season with many competitors deep discounting products and running profit-losing promotions. Comparing to the back-to-school period four years ago in 2019, our gross profit margin in the 2023 back-to-school season increased 820 basis points, driven by our targeted promotional plans, smart buying strategies, and continued growth of our Shoe Perks CRM membership.
And as I shared earlier, we gained this long-term margin expansion while also growing our kids” business to the second-highest level of any prior back-to-school. During the quarter, we continued our strategic investments advancing our store modernization program. As we have discussed in the past, our store modernization and in-store experience investments continue to drive fleet profitability and productivity. Over two years into the program, we now have 55% of the fleet remodel complete and continue to be approaching approximately 65% of all stores to be completed summer of 2024. Additionally, we now have approximately 70% of the fleet updated with Nike shops or multi-branded athletic shops, bringing a differentiated athletic shopping experience to our customers across most of our store footprint.
We also continued executing our inventory optimization improvement plan in the quarter. We are ahead of schedule reducing inventory levels while sustaining strong gross profit margins and providing the freshest mix of branded products for our customers. Carl will cover more details in a few moments, but our inventory coming out of back-to-school and Q3 is in a good position. Our balance sheet has continued to strengthen as the year has progressed, with approximately $71 million in cash and marketable securities on hand at the end of the quarter. Additionally, we continue to fund our strategic investments in the business from operating cash flow and carry no debt. In the current interest rate environment, our zero-debt position puts us in a great place to efficiently and strategically fund both internal and external growth opportunities with cash generated by the business.
Given the strength of our balance sheet and the expectation for a lower level of near-term growth, we made the decision to increase our dividend by 20% per share during the quarter. With this recent increase, we have now increased our shareholder dividend by 166% since the third quarter of 2020 and provided 46 consecutive quarterly dividends. Additionally, with a portion of our excess capital, we began making share repurchases. We repurchased $5.4 million worth of our shares in the quarter and approximately $44.6 million still available under our share repurchase program at the discretion of management. Before I turn it over to Carl, I’ll briefly summarize our Q3 performance by saying that we won the August back-to-school period, growing our kids’ business low-single digits and once again growing market share.
We invested aggressively behind advertising and marketing to drive growth in kids, and while that pressured short-term profitability, it resulted in more profit generated in Q3 alone than in any full-year EPS prior to 2018. We have a playbook in place to grow our kids’ business and can be replicated to drive success in future back-to-school seasons. September and October were challenging after a strong start to the quarter. The seasonal business and the fall season never really got started, resulting in soft top line performance in the latter part of the quarter with poor results in boots and certain other categories. We invested behind advertising and marketing in September and October, driving continued market share gains, but sales were below our expectations.
We’re taking a cautious approach to the balance of the year guidance given the limited visibility into customer holiday shopping and poor seasonal category performance to-date. During the quarter, we continued to drive accelerated growth in Shoe Station as well as strong growth in our total e-comm sales. As part of our profit transformation strategy, we delivered a healthy gross profit margin and are on pace to deliver approximately 36% gross profit margin for the year, up approximately 600 basis points from four years ago. We’re ahead of schedule on our inventory optimization plan with inventory levels down and product assortment in a good position. We are disappointed with the soft Q3 ending and declining trends carrying into Q4. Yet our balance sheet is very strong with no debt, and we are generating solid cash flow.
This positions the company to fund increased shareholder value and future growth opportunities as they become available in 2024 and beyond with cash generated by the business. And now I’ll hand it over to Carl to provide further color on the quarter and our categories’ performance. Carl?
Carl Scibetta: Thank you, Mark. I think it’s helpful to start with a level set on the consumer backdrop and inventory positioning heading into the third quarter and back-to-school and how it impacted our results. We knew the family footwear consumer would be cautious with their purchases given persistent inflation and the highest interest rates in 17-years. Our consumer would be focused on essentials and, more importantly, we knew they were looking for value, especially in the case of our lower-income urban consumer who continues to be challenged and is more price conscious in the current economic backdrop. The athletic supply chain disruptions experienced last year eased, and we were ready for this value-conscious consumer with a significantly improved athletic merchandise assortment.
As we saw, this consumer behavior played out in our results for Q3 and more specifically in our strong performance during August back-to-school. Our assortment delivered on our customers’ needs. Our total athletic business performed well in the quarter, down only mid-singles, reflecting this focus on essential purchases. And one of our most essential categories, children’s athletics, we grew the category low-single digits. Said another way, when it comes to the essential footwear brands that kids wanted as they headed back to school, we had them. And for parents who were looking for value when purchasing essential footwear for their kids, we delivered. As Mark discussed, our performance during the key August back-to-school season was very strong, particularly in the children’s category where we grew comp sales low singles in August.
We have been the leader in the children’s category for decades, and once again this year we grew our sales and market share in children’s footwear across Shoe Carnival and Shoe Station during the most important season of the year. Our marketing strategies drove what demand was out there and our merchandise assortment, modernized fully-staffed stores, and easy-to-shop e-commerce platform provided the right backdrop for the consumer to make purchases. I will provide more details on our category performance for the quarter later, but I first wanted to highlight the strong performance in the month of August. We grew our children’s comp sales low-single digits, driven by both girls’ and boys’ athletic sales, led by court and basketball. We invested aggressively behind advertising during August and our investments paid off as our market share continued to grow.
Our strategy to deliver children’s sales growth during back-to-school worked, and it can be used again successfully to deliver growth in the future. Competitive intensity was high during the quarter. We continued to see aggressive promotional activity on seasonal and fall merchandise all the way through October. In the quarter, we delivered gross profit margin of 35% for the 11th straight consecutive quarter, and we remain committed to our profit transformation and targeted CRM strategies to continue delivering strong gross profit margin. Our merchandise margin in the quarter decreased by 120 basis points versus prior year as unseasonably hot weather led to softness in boots which were down in the low-20s, resulted in increased promotional activity in September and October.
From a long-term perspective, compared to four years ago in Q3 2019, our merchandise margin significantly expanded by 645 basis points in the quarter, demonstrating the success of our long-term profit transformation strategy and our ability to leverage our advanced CRM capabilities and analytics. During the third quarter, we continued to further optimize our inventory levels, and we are ahead of schedule. Inventory at the end of the third quarter was approximately 6% lower on a dollar basis than prior year. And on a unit basis, total inventory was down 11% versus prior year. Our inventory content is clean, and we continue to manage inventory flow to ensure our stores are stocked with the product offerings that our customers want. We will continue to generate additional efficiencies as we execute our inventory strategy for the balance of the year, and we continue to expect that our inventory at year end 2023 will be down more than 10% on a dollar basis versus 2022.
To be clear, our strategy to further optimize inventory levels and drive more efficiency while maintaining the freshest product assortment for our customers is ongoing and will continue beyond the end of fiscal 2023. Now moving to the quarter. Total Q3 comp sales were down 7.4%, which reflected the increased headwinds coming out of August and going into Labor Day weekend. Our back-to-school performance was successful with an improving trend in comparable sales versus both Q1 and Q2 comp sales and was led by growth in children’s sales. After back-to-school finished, our top line performance softened as seasonal business and fall sales, particularly in boots, were below our expectations for September and October. From a category perspective, for the quarter, children’s comp sales were essentially flat with low-single-digit growth in athletic led by court and basketball, while nonathletic was down high-single-digit.
Comp sales in both men’s and women’s adult athletics were down mid-singles. An improved inventory assortment helped stabilize athletic sales even in this cost-conscious environment. As we optimize athletic inventory levels versus prior year and had a solid performance as part of the August back-to-school, basketball grew high-30s in the quarter, but this growth was more than offset by skate down high-30s and running down mid-teens. Third quarter comp sales in women’s nonathletic footwear were down mid-teens with boots and dress down in the 20s. Sandals were down low-double-digit and sport was down high-single-digit. Casuals were down mid-single-digit in the quarter, led by low-double-digit decline in flats, partially offset by mid-20s growth in tailored.
Men’s nonathletic comp sales were down low-double-digit, dress was down low-20s, and boots were down mid-teens. Casuals were down mid-single-digit. To summarize, our kids’ business performed very well during the key back-to-school season, growing sales in August low-single digits on a comp basis. And in adult, basketball delivered strong high-30s growth in the quarter. However, in September, October, our top line performance softened as seasonal business and fall sales were below our expectations with persistently hot dry weather in most geographies and a lower-income urban customer that remains challenged. As we have seen in other past recent seasonal periods that challenged customer is reducing nonessential purchases including seasonal footwear.
The softer top line trend coming out of Q3 has carried into early Q4 and visibility into holiday shopping is limited. In the quarter we continued optimizing our inventory. We are ahead of schedule and remain on track for inventory to be more than 10% lower on a dollar basis than prior year at year end of 2023. We remain committed to our profit transformation and targeted CRM strategies and are excited about fresh new products that are coming into our stores the balance of this year and in early 2024. And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Patrick for review of our financials. Patrick?
Patrick Edwards: Thanks, Carl. And thank you, Mark, for the earlier introduction. I am excited to be in my new role and to continue supporting the future success of Shoe Carnival and execution of our growth strategies. We have a strong foundation, and I am confident in our ability to continue growing and driving shareholder value and growing market share. I look forward to getting to know each of you and working with you. Now moving onto our financial results. Starting with top line, our net sales in Q3 were $319.9 million. This was down 6.4% versus the prior year and down 7.4% on a comparable store basis. As Mark discussed, our results during the key August back-to-school period were sequentially improving, compared to Q2 and Q1, including growth in the children’s athletic category.
We invested in advertising and marketing, and we gained market share. Our strategy worked. Going into Labor Day, top line trends for our Shoe Carnival banner softened versus the prior year on warm weather impacting seasonal merchandise, including boots. That trend continued into September and October. September and October both reflected high-single-digit comparative sales declines, more than offsetting the improved back-to-school trend. The 7.4% comparable sales decline for the entire third quarter was driven by an approximate 11% reduction in traffic, partially offset by a nearly 10% increase in e-commerce net sales. Shoe Station banner total sales for Q3 came in at a low-double-digit increase versus prior year on the strength of new stores and e-commerce.
And Shoe Carnival banner total sales came in at a high-single-digit decline, particularly impacted by September and October activity I would like to take a moment to discuss the success of our Shoe Station banner acquired in December 2021. Our expectations were that the transaction would be immediately accretive to diluted EPS in 2022, contributing approximately $100 million in incremental sales. Shoe Station delivered on both. At the time of the deal, we started with 21 stores, and we currently operate 28 with clear line of sight on several more. Integration was completed ahead of schedule, delivering efficiencies and synergies that, as expected, have continued to increase the banner’s gross profit margin. As we have discussed today, Shoe Station’s net sales are growing at an accelerated and profitable pace driven by both storefront and e-commerce.
Shoe Station results are significantly outperforming the overall family footwear category. Within our own operations, the Shoe Station banner leads in operating income margin with the margin in the low-double digits year-to-date. In summary, the Shoe Station acquisition is delivering a very attractive return on investment for our shareholders and the success of this acquisition and the speed of completing the integration and achieving synergies further supports our commitment to M&A as a growth strategy. Now moving back to total Shoe Carnival results. Q3 gross profit margin was strong at 36.8%. Our increased level of gross profit margin over the long-term has been a key driver of the company’s profit transformation. Compared to pre-pandemic Q3 2019, gross profit margin in third quarter 2023 expanded significantly with, as Carl mentioned, that increase driven by higher merchandise margins.
Compared to Q3 2022 gross profit margin was down 150 basis points with merchandise margins decreasing 120 basis points, reflecting increased promotions on seasonal merchandise in the back half of the quarter. Buying, distribution, and occupancy costs declined in the quarter but deleveraged 30 basis points as a result of the lower sales. BDO expense reductions were primarily the result of continued lower freight and distribution costs, partially offset by higher investment in store modernization and increased rent associated with operating more stores. SG&A expense in Q3 was $89.8 million, representing an increase of $2.5 million over Q3 2022. The increase was primarily from advertising investment that drove growth in children’s sales during back-to-school and market share gains throughout the quarter.
Net income for the third quarter of 2023 was $21.9 million, or $0.80 per diluted share. As Mark mentioned, these results were below our expectations given the unseasonable weather post Labor Day. It is worth reemphasizing that over the long-term, the $0.80 earned this quarter is more than any full year EPS delivery prior to 2018. Over a five-year period ending with Q3 2023, we have delivered a 22% EPS CAGR. A special thank you to our team members and our vendor partners that have helped us achieve this kind of growth and profit transformation, and also a thank you to our long-term shareholders for supporting this growth over the last five years. To further support shareholder value, during the quarter, we increased our dividend by 20% to $0.12 per share.
The increase in the quarter represents a 166% increase compared to three years ago. In the quarter, we also repurchased 230,696 shares at a weighted average share price of $23.60, totaling $5.4 million. Our strong balance sheet, liquidity position, and history of generating steady operating cash flow are key drivers to internally fund growth and deliver these dividend increases and share repurchases. As of the end of 2022, we have maintained no debt at year end for 18 consecutive years, and we have continued funding our operations without debt through the third quarter. At the end of the third quarter, we had total cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities of approximately $71 million, with no debt outstanding. Cash and cash equivalents increased almost $23 million in third quarter 2023 versus Q3 2022 and on a Q3 year-to-date basis, cash flow from operations increased over $50 million versus year-to-date 2022.
We continue to expect cash flow performance to more than fully fund store remodels and new store activity planned in the balance of the year and provide the capacity for M&A opportunities if conditions are appropriate. As previously discussed, the Shoe Station transaction that closed in December 2021 was consummated with cash on hand. While no debt was incurred or was any stock issued in that deal, we have the flexibility of doing so in future acquisitions, if desirable. Now, moving on to guidance. We provided a detailed, updated outlook for fiscal 2023 in our earnings release earlier this morning. Given the softness in the latter part of Q3, continuing trends we have seen into November, and uncertainty with holiday shopping, we are updating our net sales guidance for fiscal 2023 to $1.16 billion to $1.18 billion, compared to the prior range of $1.19 billion to $1.21 billion.
We now expect comparable store sales to be down 8.5% to 9.5% for the full-year. That range reflects our expectation of a comparable store sale decline of 9% to 12% in the fourth quarter of 2023. We expect gross profit margin to be approximately 36% and SG&A to be between $323 million and $327 million, or approximately 28% of net sales. For the year, including the extra week, we are lowering our diluted EPS guidance to $2.65 to $2.75 from our previous expectation of $3.10 to $3.25. We continue to expect inventory at the end of fiscal 2023 to be approximately $40 million, or 10% lower than the prior year. After a promising start in August with children’s sales growth, improving trends, and continued market share growth, September and October slowed at our Shoe Carnival banner compared to last year.
As Mark discussed, with a softer-than-expected start to the fall season continuing into November and uncertainty regarding customer holiday shopping, we are taking a measured approach to the balance of the year. Our strategy to drive growth remains unchanged. Our balance sheet is strong and our cash flow is steady. This puts us in a great position to fund internal growth, execute on desirable M&A opportunities, and most importantly, the continued ability to deliver long-term shareholder return. This concludes our financial review. We would now like to open the call up for questions. Operator?
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Q&A Session
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Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And we will take our first question from Mitch Kummetz with Seaport Research Partners. Your line is open.
Mitch Kummetz: Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. And Patrick, congratulations on the promotion. I’ve like a half dozen questions. I hope that’s okay. Starting with the quarter, you guys gave Carnival and Station sales, but you didn’t give comp. Could you give us comp on those two businesses for 3Q?
Patrick Edwards: Hey Mitch, this is Patrick. Glad to talk to you. Can’t wait to meet you in person. We’re not going to give out comp guidance for the individual banners at this time. It’s just not what we do. We think the total number is just fine, 7.4% down.
Mitch Kummetz: Okay. Can you say if Station was positive comp in the quarter? I know that the growth was double digits, but I imagine a lot of that’s from stores.
Mark Worden: Hey, Mitch, it’s Mark. Good morning. Let me build on it again. We don’t delineate comps between. Here’s what I’ll tell you, though. Shoe Station performed excellent in the quarter. If you go back over the last three quarters, Shoe Station declined single digit in Q1. In Q2, it grew single digit. In Q3, it grew double digit. We’re seeing great acceleration and continuing trend, so we’re very pleased with where it’s going. We just don’t delineate the comps between the banners.
Mitch Kummetz: Got it. And then you mentioned that the comp on boots was down low 20s. Can you either give us what the boot penetration was in the quarter or can you tell us what your consolidated non-boot comp was for 3Q.
Carl Scibetta: Hi, Mitch, this is Carl. Boot penetration is really not high for the quarter to the total. It runs approximately just under double digits for the quarter. What I would say is the entire nonathletic category was affected by a lack of the consumer in September starting fall and boot, which certainly falls into that shopping. So they were all affected in the nonathletic area about the same. And we gave you, on the prepared remarks where kids and adult athletics direction and where they finished.
Mitch Kummetz: And then, Carl, on boots, was it broad-based softness? Can you maybe speak to your boot performance by any subcategories? If there was any variation in the performance? And I’m also curious, on boots, have you seen any uptick in November, particularly the first week of November? Because I know there was some colder weather that week.
Carl Scibetta: Sure, Mitch. For the third quarter, we saw some positive signs in the fur category. I’m sorry, faux fur category. Let me get that out right. And we did see, though, not a big category, stronger sales in tall-shafted boots than in booties, so more traditional booties that are a big, big piece of our business started off very slow. We’ll tell you, in the first week of November, when weather cooled, the boot category did improve quite a bit. And that booty category that we have that’s a little more traditional did pop up quite a bit as weather cooled. However, once the weather, second week of November, got warm again, we saw it revert back to what happened in third quarter.
Mitch Kummetz: Okay. And then you mentioned inventories down 10% year over year. How are you feeling about your boot inventory in particular? How does that look and what does that portend for 4Q particularly on the margin side?
Carl Scibetta: I’m very pleased with the job the team did on planning boots and purchasing the styles in boots, they left themselves, frankly, with a lot of flexibility and will react to that flexibility if needed. But as a result, the way they planned and purchased the category, I do not see any margin erosion liquidating boot inventory to hit our target at the end of the year.
Mitch Kummetz: Okay. And then maybe my last one and I’ll get back in the queue. In terms of the 4Q comp guidance, I think down 9% to 12, how did you guys come up with that? Are you basically extrapolating September and October over the balance of the year? And actually, maybe you can give us comp for the first two weeks of the fourth quarter, but how did you come up with that as your comp guide?
Patrick Edwards: Hey, Mitch, this is Patrick again. The high-single-digit comp declines that we saw in October and in September have continued into the first part of November, and we’re seeing very similar results to that. The 9% to 12% comp decline, Q4 sort of brackets what we’re seeing right now and also encompasses the comp decline that we saw in Q1 of 2023. That was around 11.9%, so it’s within that range. Also, just one other point, too, on that. There’s a lot of limited visibility on the holiday season. We’re uncertain how this holiday season is going to go, given our low-income customer and consumer sentiment all over. So I would just indicate that the targeted days on which we sell, we don’t know how that reaction is going to come around day after Thanksgiving.
Mitch Kummetz: All right, thanks again.
Operator: And we will take our next question from Sam Poser with Williams Trading. Your line is open.