Earnings Labs

BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. (BJ)

Q4 2025 Earnings Call· Thu, Mar 5, 2026

$91.83

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Hello, everyone, and welcome to the BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2025 Earnings Call. My name is James, and I will be your operator for today. If you would like to ask a question during the presentation, the conference call will now start, and I will hand it over to Diana Raschow. Please go ahead.

Diana Raschow

Management

Good morning, and welcome to the BJ's Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc. Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2025 Earnings Call. Joining me today are Robert W. Eddy, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Laura L. Felice, Chief Financial Officer; and William C. Werner, Executive Vice President, Strategy and Development. Please remember that we may make forward-looking statements on this call that are based on our current expectations. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we say on this call. Please see the risk factors section of our most recent SEC filings for a description of these risks and uncertainties. Please also refer to today's press release and latest investor presentation posted on our investor website for our cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements and non-GAAP reconciliations. I will now turn the call over to Robert W. Eddy.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Good morning, and thank you all for joining us. We are pleased to share that we closed out fiscal 2025 with strong momentum, delivering solid comparable club sales growth and strong profitability. Throughout the year, we navigated a dynamic environment marked by a more cautious, value‑seeking consumer, tariff‑related and geopolitical uncertainties, and broader macroeconomic volatility. Even with these challenges, our team remained focused and resilient, consistently delivering value, convenience, and quality for our members. We also achieved several meaningful milestones in 2025 that strengthened our business and reinforced the momentum we are carrying into the year ahead. We grew our membership base by more than 500,000 members, the largest annual increase in recent years, underscoring the relevance of our value proposition and the loyalty of the families who rely on us. We successfully opened 14 new clubs, the most we have ever opened in a single year, expanding our reach into new markets with sales, membership, and profit performance all well above expectations. We also advanced our digital capabilities, with digitally enabled sales penetration reaching 16% as more members embraced the convenience of omnichannel services. All of these are material accomplishments that create a structurally higher lifetime value for both members and shareholders. Ultimately, these achievements helped drive record full-year earnings per share, reflecting the strength of our model and disciplined execution across the business. As always, our team demonstrated an incredible commitment to our purpose: to take care of the families that depend on us. This purpose guided our decision-making and enabled us to deliver the dependable experience our members count on, no matter the conditions. That was especially evident late in the quarter when winter storm Fern, one of the largest storms in recent years, brought significant snow and ice across much of the U.S., impacting nearly our…

Laura L. Felice

Management

Thank you, Bob. Before I dive into the numbers, I want to acknowledge the exceptional work that our teams across our clubs, distribution centers, and support functions. Their continued focus on serving our members and strengthening our operations played a major role in delivering our fourth quarter results. Now let me walk through the financial highlights for the quarter. Net sales for the fourth quarter were approximately $5,400,000,000, an increase of 5.5% over last year. Total comparable club sales, including gasoline, rose 1.6%, with fuel prices continuing to run down mid‑single digits year over year. Excluding gas, merchandise comparable sales increased 2.6%, and we were pleased to see growth in both traffic and units. Traffic strengthened as the quarter progressed, helped in part by members stocking up ahead of the late‑January winter storm. Within our grocery, perishables, and sundries business, comps were up 2.3%, supported by strong performance in categories like nonalcoholic beverages, candy, and snacks. Unit growth was approximately 1.5%, and price remained up year over year as we have seen inflation continue to moderate. Our general merchandise and services division comp increased 4.3% in the fourth quarter, driven by strength in consumer electronics and apparel, even as home and seasonal remained a drag on the business. Membership fee income rose 10.9% to roughly $129,800,000, supported by healthy acquisition and retention trends across the chain as well as an annual fee increase in January 2025. Our membership base remains vibrant, and we continue making progress in improving member mix quality. As we look ahead, we expect membership fee income growth to moderate as we fully lap the fee increase and return to a more normalized run rate. Turning to our gross margins, excluding gasoline, our merchandise margin rate was down about 50 basis points year over year, driven by…

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Thanks, Laura. Before I wrap up, I just want to take this opportunity to reflect on the incredible progress our team has made on behalf of our shareholders. Looking back over the last three years, we have grown our member count by 1,500,000 members—that is over 20%—and increased our annual MFI run rate by more than $100,000,000, while delivering 90% tenured renewal rates. We have driven digital penetration from 9% to 16%, generated $3,300,000,000 in adjusted EBITDA, and produced more than $2,600,000,000 in operating cash flow, including over $1,000,000,000 this year. We have opened 29 clubs as part of a $1,700,000,000 capital investment into our business, with returns on new clubs well into the double digits. We have accelerated the pace at which we are expanding and have a pipeline to support this level of growth going forward. As part of this effort, we have also added about $500,000,000 of owned real estate onto our balance sheet. On top of this capital investment, we paid down well over $300,000,000 of debt, bringing our net debt ratio down to 0.4 times, and repurchased well over $500,000,000 worth of shares, retiring about 5% of our share count in the process. The club business is a long‑term share gainer and a great business to be invested in because value wins. By delivering the assortment, value, convenience, and membership experience our members love, we will be rewarded with growth in the lifetime value of our members. This lifetime value is the foundation of the equity value that accrues to our shareholders. As we look out towards this year and beyond, we are more excited than ever for both the progress we have made and for the opportunity to create even more value for our shareholders by investing for the long term and delivering value to our members in everything we do. We are at a unique moment in time as it relates to the growth of the club channel. Now more than ever, we are here to play to win.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Bob. As a reminder for our audience, please press star followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypads. We will now open for questions. Our lines are now open for questions. We now have Michael Allen Baker from D.A. Davidson. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Michael Allen Baker

Management

Great. I wanted to ask about merchandise margins, down 50 basis points. In the press release, you said mix. I guess I heard strength in consumer electronics and TVs; I suppose that was probably part of it. But what else drove the lower merchandise margin? Can you talk about sort of inflation—cost inflation versus price inflation? I know one of the hallmarks has been trying to give value back to customers. Just how that whole pricing dynamic is playing out, please? And what should we expect for 2026? Thank you. Mike, I will ask one more. You talked about continuing the pace of openings—25 to 30 every two years. You are only in 21 states right now. How long can you grow 25 to 30? I guess what I am getting at is have you looked at the art of the possible? Could this be a nationwide concept? How many stores could you have over time?

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Maybe I will take the lead here, and Laura can fill in behind me. We are pretty proud of our quarter. You brought up margins in your question and our pricing stance and a few other things. So let me talk a little bit about it in the broadest sense, and Laura can add in some details if she sees fit. The largest contributor to our margin performance against our expectations during the quarter was the mix of the business, and it is mix towards general merchandise. You remember that for us, general merchandise is slightly lower margin than some of the other parts of our business, and within general merchandise, consumer electronics tends to be the lowest gross margin within general merchandise. You remember when we talked about how Q4 might roll out for us, we had restricted buys in a lot of our general merchandise categories to try and manage exposure to tariffs and markdowns and things, and that played out exactly the way that we thought it would. So within the four big businesses in general merchandise, we had a good quarter from a CE perspective. Our apparel business continues to grow. It has been growing for a few years now pretty steadily and had another good quarter there. And then, as expected, we had a tougher quarter in our home and seasonal businesses. Those were more subject to tariffs. That is where much of our inventory cuts happened, and those two businesses had negative comps. So the mix issues associated with that were the predominant cause of the 50 basis point decline in merchandise margins. We also made considerable investments in value during the quarter in our grocery business, and we will continue to do that in the future. As you know, value is the most…

William C. Werner

Management

Yeah. Mike, maybe the one simple idea I will give you and the investment community to think about as it relates to our growth is as we continue to take share, the models continue to update the viability that we have to open up in new markets. We have seen that this year with markets like Selma, North Carolina, and Sumter, South Carolina. They probably would not have been on our radar a handful of years ago, and in pretty short order, not only were they on our radar, but we were able to go there, execute, and those clubs are both off to amazing starts, which gives us a lot of confidence in terms of going into new and different markets into the future. I would tell you that we enter the Dallas–Fort Worth market later next month. Our team is confident, but certainly not complacent, as we go into these in terms of how we execute with the success that we have seen. If anything, the early engagement and the hustle of the team on the ground there in the Dallas market has been pretty awesome. I was down there last week and spent some time with the team and with some community leaders, and we heard feedback across the board that the way that we have engaged with the community down there is something that they have never seen before. We are really excited to get those clubs open. It will be a nice milestone for the company as we show the success that we will have down there, and that success creates opportunity for the future. As we sit today, we are really excited, we are really confident, and more to come.

Michael Allen Baker

Management

Thank you.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Thanks, Mike.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Michael, for that question. Next up, we have Peter Sloan Benedict from Baird. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Peter Sloan Benedict

Management

Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. First, just around the merchandise comps, any way to quantify maybe how impactful Fern was—maybe some of the stock‑up activity that happened at the end of the quarter in 4Q? And then, as you are thinking about the year ahead here, any cadence we should think about? I know there is a lot of puts and takes. Maybe your view on SNAP and the changes there. Just anything that you are contemplating that we should be aware of in terms of the cadence of comp in 2026? That is my first question. And, again, my follow‑up is just maybe a little longer‑term picture. You know, the return to kind of the algo that you guys have. This year there is obviously a lot of puts and takes. You have the investments that are going on. I am just curious, as you get a bunch of these new clubs up and running, when do you start to kind of maybe return the business model to the algo? Is that something that could occur in 2027? Is it 2028? Just conceptually, how does that work in your mind? Thank you.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Thanks. Good question. Obviously, winter storm Fern was a big deal, particularly in our footprint along the East Coast. I would start out with our feeling that largely storms are a net push. You get the buildup on the front side of it—and that can be a little buildup or a big buildup depending on the size of the storm and how well forecasted it is—and then you obviously suffer the downside of storm effects: closing stores, power losses, people not driving, and deloading the pantry that they just loaded up. So on the whole, storms are generally a push. Fern was very big and impacted most of our footprint, and it was certainly very well forecasted—a week out, everybody was saying we were going to get a big storm. We did have a pretty large buildup in front of the storm, and, obviously, it was big and impactful, and so we had a pretty large fall‑off after the storm. The thing to think about is the net impact, and I would say it was a slight positive to the quarter. The downside of the pantry deloading and the travel effects and such, and the supply chain effects, actually crossed the fiscal year a little bit, and so we saw some of the downside leak into February, and I think this is a normal effect. We have seen some weather in the Northeast in February as well, and so February's comps were a little lower than our plan, but all of that is normal weather stuff. Our team did a great job serving our members. Certainly, we proved our destination status—that stat that we put in the prepared remarks of beating our daily fuel volume record by 20% was pretty insane to do that. Our supply chain team really was pretty heroic, beating records of how many cases we moved day after day as the buildup happened, and our club teams did a wonderful job staying open when we could and keeping everybody safe and serving our members. Overall, a very slight impact to the quarter, and I would say a slight impact to Q1 on the negative side as well. From a guidance perspective, there is certainly a lot to balance in the stacks and what is going on, so I will give that question to Laura. Laura, what do you say about guidance?

Laura L. Felice

Management

Yeah. Hey. Good morning, Pete. From a comp perspective, we put out a range of 2% to 3% for the full year. What we did not talk about in the prepared remarks is the cadence of the two‑year stacks, and those accelerated slightly in Q4, as they did in Q3. When we look at the year coming up, I would point towards the two‑year stacks as a starting position. Remember that the first quarter of last year was the high watermark from a comp perspective, and so we have built the plan on that, which would imply the lowest comps in the beginning of the year and growth as we progress through the year.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Thanks, Pete. We are really taking a very long‑term approach to what we are doing here. We talked a lot about our real estate growth. That impacts our depreciation and our EPS performance, but with all that said, I thought this is a pretty good year. We are very proud of our progress—the growth of our entire franchise last year: growing total merchandise sales by more than 6%, membership by 7%, MFI by 9.5%, adjusted EBITDA by 6%, EPS by 9%. Those are all fantastic results. And then, in the prepared remarks, all the three‑year stats, I think, are even more impressive. While we are not satisfied and still want to grow faster, we have a lot to be proud of. We think our shareholders should be happy with our performance, and we will continue to make long‑term investments like in real estate and in value to really get our franchise flywheel moving faster for the future.

Operator

Operator

Thanks, Peter. Just another reminder for our audience: If you would like to send your questions in, you may do so by pressing star followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. In the interest of time, we ask that we limit our questions to just one question per participant. Thank you. Let us move on to Edward Kelly from Wells Fargo. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

John Park

Management

Hey, good morning. This is John Park on for Ed. Thanks for taking my questions. I guess, can you talk a little bit more about the underlying membership trends? How much of the MFI increase was from the fee increase? And any changes in discounting lately that you guys are doing?

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Good morning, John. Thanks for your question. There is certainly a lot to be proud of in our membership growth. We talked about a little bit of that in our prepared remarks, but 500,000 member growth this year; 1,500,000 over the past three years; 10% MFI growth for the year, a little bit more than that for the quarter; another year of 90% renewal rates; improvements in our higher tier—really just sustained, fantastic performance in our membership base. This continued growth in member count will continue, including with as many as 12 new clubs next year, and, obviously, some of that MFI growth was the fee increase, as you pointed out. We are quite optimistic on our ability to continue to grow our membership franchise, and as we do, we will continue to optimize for the best mix of acquisition and retention and rate, and MFI dollar growth. As you might imagine, those things somewhat compete with one another, and so we are trying to optimize the best result for our overall business. When you think about the concept of discounting, I would take you all the way back to many years ago when our chief acquisition model was a free trial model, and we moved away from that towards a discounted membership model tied to easy renewal. Folks that get a discount have to sign up for automatic renewal, and they pay full fee in the second year and beyond. Most membership models use a discounting model at this point, including our two club competitors. The team has done a really nice job optimizing those three things—member count, the rate that the members pay, and the renewal rate. The team also does a nice job varying and trying to optimize in the channels in which we offer these discounted offers, and they obviously change offer constructs and things as we go—really trying to figure out what the best value is for each segment of membership and, again, trying to optimize the business for us and for our shareholders. As we move forward, we will do a lot of the same—trying to optimize what we offer, when we offer it, and who we offer it to—and I expect we will see continued great growth in total membership, MFI dollars, and renewal rates.

Laura L. Felice

Management

The one thing I might add on to that is Bob talked about the new club growth and members we are acquiring in the new club. As we step back and look under the numbers—we have talked about this in prior quarters—we are also really proud of the membership growth in comp clubs which, as you know, is really important to the long term of our business. Think about 2% to 3% comp club member growth, which is a fantastic set that we are proud of as we move forward.

John Park

Management

Awesome. Best of luck, guys.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, John. Moving on, we now have Katharine Amanda McShane from Goldman Sachs. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Katharine Amanda McShane

Management

Good morning. We had a longer‑term question as well. Just with the success that you are seeing with your digital growth, do you think your stores are able to keep up with this level of fulfillment, and are there any investments that need to be made going forward to further support this growth, either in the tech stack or with assets?

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Hi, Kate. It is a good question. We have had sustained, fantastic growth in our digital business. I think it was 31% this quarter, and somewhere near 60% on the two‑year stack—obviously bigger going backwards—and it has really been the engine of convenience that our members love, whether it is buy online, pick up in club, same‑day delivery, or Express Pay. Getting that penetration up to 16% of our business has been a big win, and I expect it to go even further as we go because our members, quite frankly, love all these options. As you know, about 90% of our entire digital business is fulfilled by our clubs, and so you are right to ask the question. I would tell you that we are relatively unconstrained from this perspective. We can pump a lot more volume through our average boxes. In certain very high‑volume clubs, we have constraints. We are working around those constraints by investing capital, by investing in labor, by moving volume around the chain, by using different providers to help us do it. I do not really see a ceiling on our digital growth going forward, and we will work hard to make sure we do not have a ceiling there. We continue to invest in all of our digital properties. Our digital team is fantastic at really improving the experience every day on a relatively inexpensive basis, and they do it day in and day out, and when they say something is going to be done, it gets done. We have come to very much value that as we talk to our members and offer new things to our members, and, obviously, our members are reacting well to that. I do not really see that changing in the future. We are happy to take all the digital growth that comes to us.

Katharine Amanda McShane

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Kate. Moving on, we now have Steven Emanuel Zaccone from Citi. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Steven Emanuel Zaccone

Management

I wanted to follow up on the earnings guidance for the year. Laura, you mentioned some SG&A investments—can you help us understand how big they are? And then on the merchandise margin outlook, I want to follow up there. How should we think about that for 2026? Obviously, mix was a factor in the fourth quarter, but you did reference earlier last year making some price investments, or investments in general, to provide value for consumers. How do you see that playing out in 2026?

Laura L. Felice

Management

Thanks. Good morning, Steve. Maybe I will start on your SG&A question. We spoke a little bit about that in the prepared remarks—so, slight deleverage. We are continuing to invest in the new club growth and ramp that growth. Going into Texas at the end of the first quarter, as Bill talked about, and into the second quarter, we are certainly investing to win there. We know we are off to a strong start, as Bill already talked about as well, but we want to make sure we set ourselves up for success. So some deleverage largely as we look on the new club ramp, and it is largely D&A. From a merchandise margin perspective, we do not guide to merchandise margins on an annual basis. I would say the fourth quarter was certainly the low mark on a year‑over‑year basis as we went backwards a little bit. Remember that for the full year, we rounded it out flat. What we are after this year is continuing to manage the business—making sure we are making price investments where they make sense—all after going towards our long‑term lifetime value of membership and the guidance we have set forth.

Steven Emanuel Zaccone

Management

Okay. That is helpful. Thanks very much.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Steven. Moving on, we now have Mark David Carden from UBS. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Mark David Carden

Management

Good morning. Thanks so much for taking the question. I want to ask a bit about the Texas ramp. I know the stores are yet to open, but you have been doing some initial promos. How has interest been just relative to what you have seen in other markets? And then how have you handled any supply chain challenges, just given distance from current DCs? Is there a set number of clubs you need to open before it makes sense to add a new DC to that region? Thank you.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Hi, Mark. Why do I not ask Bill to take over that question?

William C. Werner

Management

Yeah. Hey, Mark. Listen, I will start with the engagement down in the Texas market and then come back to some of the infrastructure. The engagement has been amazing out of the gate. I mentioned earlier I was down there with the team last week. We have had the team on the ground for many, many months already, engaging with the community, and we have a ton of data given the acceleration of all the recent openings in terms of what we expect from engagement and membership from the clubs that we opened so far. As we sit here and look eight to ten weeks out from the openings, we are seeing exactly what we thought we would see in terms of overall engagement and membership sign‑up, so all signs are positive so far in terms of the entry. I am really excited. The team has done such an amazing job. I am really proud of everything that they have done, and I am really excited to see the results of all their hard work. In terms of the infrastructure, we have been planning for this investment for a while now. We will serve the market with a combination of distribution from our existing distribution infrastructure as well as some hyper‑local support on the ground, and then we will continue to scale as we have done all along. As I think about how we have moved over the last handful of years to some of the adjacent western markets from where we are today—Columbus, Indianapolis, Nashville, and Detroit—that certainly has created a new distribution footprint for us, and we have served that along the way. We will continue to amplify how we serve that with the new distribution center that we are building out in Columbus as we speak. That is a major investment for us, and it will yield significant operational efficiencies for us as well as savings as we get it open. The opportunities that we have to invest in the expansion have been driven by the success of the new clubs, and it is a great challenge to work through, and we are excited for everything that we are doing.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

We are really bullish, as Bill said, about our ability to be successful in Texas. I will offer you one statistic we heard this week: there are more homes being built in the Dallas–Fort Worth market than in the entire state of California. It is certainly a place with very, very high growth. Our team has been doing fantastic work on the ground. The initial membership sign‑ups are well ahead of our pre‑opening plan. Obviously, the numbers are small until the boxes actually open, but the engagement we have seen with the folks in these communities that we will enter has been very strong. We are obviously respectful of this challenge—it has certainly got great competition in the neighborhood—and we want to make sure we offer Texans products and an experience that they like. I think we are off to a pretty good start so far, and we will invest heavily in this market to try and get it right, and we will give it our best shot every day.

Mark David Carden

Management

Thanks so much. Good luck, guys.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Moving on to the next participant, we have Oliver Chen from TD Cowen. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Oliver Chen

Management

Thanks a lot. Hi, Bob and Laura. Regarding general merchandise and the variability that you are seeing, what should we expect in terms of guidance with home and seasonal? And related to that, the category management program as well as fresh in the year ahead—any major catalyst there or changes or more innovation that you are doing there that will underpin some of the comp guidance? Thank you.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Hi, Oliver. Thanks for your question. Maybe I will start, and Laura can fill in whatever I missed. If you look at the complexion of our business in the fourth quarter, you saw quite a mix. Our grocery business performed very well—certainly, perishables is the most important part of that business. We lapped the full chain rollout of Fresh 2.0 during the quarter, and we continue to see steady gains in our perishables business. That has been impacted by some food deflation in that category, but even without that, we had a good quarter. We saw some improvement in our grocery business, and hopefully, that translates into our sundries business as well, as we start to pull some of the same levers there. In general merchandise, we had a good quarter from a CE perspective, where we could chase some inventory and sell it. The prospects for our home and seasonal businesses are kind of varied at this point in time. We need to continue to improve our merchandise mix and our assortment and our value in those categories. Our merchandising team has made strides, and they continue to get better. We obviously are still working on our merchandising team at this point, and we hope to have some news to announce in the next couple of weeks from that standpoint. I would look at home and seasonal as a longer‑term growth initiative. We will continue to grow CE. We will continue to grow apparel. We know what to do in those categories. In the future, we hope to build on that growth in home and apparel. With respect to CMPs, that program is still going on. It has been a successful program for us. Versus our older program we called CPI, which was much more margin‑focused, this has been much more assortment‑focused, and I think what you will see from us in the future is a better mix of those two thoughts. We are trying to put the right thing on the shelf, but also trying to get some more margin performance so that we can make further investments in value—making sure that we are offering the right everyday price, the right promo, the right product—and, obviously, paying the right cost for that product is a fundamental part of the retail equation and making sure we can run the business in the best way for our members and our shareholders. Lots of good stuff to be proud of in the merchandising world and lots of work to come in the future.

Oliver Chen

Management

Thanks a lot. Best regards.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Oliver. Next up, we have Rupesh Dhinoj Parikh from Oppenheimer. Go ahead, please. Your line is now open.

Rupesh Dhinoj Parikh

Management

Just going back to inventory, I know last year your team planned conservatively on the discretionary front, just given some of the tariff headwinds and uncertainty out there. Just curious how you are thinking about inventory over this year. Do you feel like you have sufficient inventory on the discretionary side? So just high‑level thoughts there. Thank you.

Robert W. Eddy

Management

Hi, Rupesh. Our inventory is in great shape. Let me first congratulate our supply chain team and our merchandising team for another great performance this quarter, where although total inventory was up 3%, on a per‑club basis it was down, and our in‑stocks improved by 40 basis points. The team continues to do a great job getting better and more efficient for our members. We need continued gains on that front, and our team has great plans to keep pushing in that regard. With respect to total inventory levels in the business going forward, there is nothing really to think about from a grocery business perspective—that is just about optimizing what we are doing there. From a general merchandise perspective, we have ramped up our inventory in the coming year. We have made bigger buys to support both the new clubs that we are bringing on and, hopefully, comp growth in our general merchandise business as well. Where we were very conservative last year from an inventory buy perspective, we are being slightly more aggressive this year—nothing crazy—but we do have plans to buy more inventory, and, hopefully, we have picked the right items and our members love the assortment and the value that we offer.

Rupesh Dhinoj Parikh

Management

Great. Thank you. Best of luck.

Operator

Operator

Thank you, Rupesh. That is it for the questions queue. With that, it concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. We appreciate your time. You may now disconnect your lines, and have a great day.