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Core & Main, Inc. (CNM)

Q2 2024 Earnings Call· Wed, Sep 4, 2024

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Hello and welcome to the Core & Main Q2 2024 Earnings Call. My name is Alex and I'll be coordinating the call today. [Operator Instructions] I'll now hand it over to your host, Robyn Bradbury, to begin. Please go ahead.

Robyn Bradbury

Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. This is Robyn Bradbury, Senior Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations for Core & Main. We are happy to have you join us this morning for our fiscal 2024 second quarter earnings call. I am joined today by Steve LeClair, our Chair and Chief Executive Officer; Mark Witkowski, our Chief Financial Officer; and Brad Cowles, President. Steve will leave today's call with a business update and an overview of our recent acquisitions. Brad will then discuss the evolution of our smart utility solutions and how we drive the adoption of the latest and most effective technologies to improve efficiency for our municipal customers. We will then turn it over to Mark to discuss our second quarter financial results and updated fiscal 2024 outlook, followed by a Q&A session. We will conclude the call with Steve's closing remarks. We issued our earnings press release this morning and posted the presentation to the Investor Relations section of our website. Our press release, presentation and the statements made during this call may include forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Such risks and uncertainties include the factors set forth in our earnings press release and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We will also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe are useful in assessing the operating results of our business. A reconciliation of these measures can be found in our earnings press release and in the appendix of our investor presentation. Thank you for your interest in Core & Main. I will now turn the call over to Chair and Chief Executive Officer, Steve LeClair.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Thanks, Robyn. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'll begin with a brief company overview and business update for the quarter, followed by an overview of our recent acquisitions. Beginning with our company overview. Core & Main is a leading specialty distributor of water, wastewater, storm drainage and fire protection products. We serve municipalities, private water companies and professional contractors across municipal, non-residential and residential end markets. Our specialty products and services are used in the maintenance, repair, replacement and construction of water and fire protection infrastructure. Our footprint consists of more than 350 branches across 49 states, which serves as a critical link between 5,000 suppliers and a diverse base of over 60,000 customers, none of which account for more than 1% of our annual revenue. We are an industry leader, yet we estimate we have only 17% share of a fragmented $39 billion addressable market. Therefore, we believe our long-term growth opportunity is significant. Our products and solutions play a critical role in improving water quality, reducing water scarcity and preventing floods, all in support of ensuring quality of life in the communities in which we live, work and play. US water infrastructure is in a fragile state with aging pipes, treatment plants and other systems increasingly prone to failure. In 2023, for example, 20% of water mains across the US and Canada were beyond their useful lives, up from 16% in 2018. There are approximately 260,000 water main breaks every year, representing the equivalent of a water main break every two minutes. It is also estimated that the water utilities lose 2.1 trillion gallons of water annually from leaky pipes and aging infrastructure, equivalent to roughly $8 billion of lost revenue. Many of our existing water systems, built decades ago, are now struggling…

Brad Cowles

Analyst

Thanks, Steve. Good morning, everyone. My name is Brad Cowles, President of Core & Main. A quick introduction for those who I've not yet met. I started my career as an engineer and spent over a decade with the Michelin Tire Company. Then over 18 years ago, I began my journey with Core & Main, when I joined the Home Depot to lead the technology integration of more than 30 acquisitions during the formation of HD Supply, eventually becoming the company's Chief Information Officer. I had the opportunity to return to my operating routes in 2017 when Core & Main became an independent company. Since that time, I've led several initiatives that have allowed us to grow faster than our underlying end markets, including several product-line expansions, national account relationships and the extension of our presence in new geographies. Today, I will discuss the evolution of our smart utility offering. We are one of the nation's largest distributors of water meters with access to top meter manufacturers' products and technologies, which we complement with local, regional and national resources to drive innovation to thousands of municipalities across the United States. Many municipalities still rely on manual read or drive-by water meters, which require technicians to physically check or get very close to each meter, record usage and input that data into their billing system. This process is not only labor-intensive but also prone to errors, leading to inaccurate or delayed billing, customer dissatisfaction and potential revenue loss for the municipality. We estimate that manual read meters are still used by roughly one-third of US municipal customers and drive-by systems are in place at another one-third. As communities grow, water demand increases. These outdated systems become even more challenging to manage effectively. For over a decade now, we've been selling Advanced…

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Well done, Brad, and thanks for joining us today. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin with the highlights of our second quarter results. We grew net sales approximately 6% to a new quarterly record of $1.96 billion, driven by 9 points of growth from acquisitions. The disruptive weather, Steve mentioned in his remarks, coupled with comparably lower activity in our end markets, partially offset the growth we achieved from acquisitions. Pricing was sequentially stable from the first quarter, which was consistent with our expectations. Gross margin for the quarter finished at 26.4% compared with 26.9% in the prior year, a difference of about 50 basis points and in-line with our expectations. Gross margins were impacted by a higher average cost of inventory this year compared to last year when we were optimizing inventory levels and still selling through lower-cost inventory. We have now anniversaried supply chain and demand dynamics that drove unusual fluctuations in our gross margins. Going forward, we will continue to focus on driving gross margin enhancement through the execution of our initiatives. Selling, general and administrative expenses increased 13% in the second quarter to $268 million. Excluding acquisitions, SG&A expenses were essentially flat compared to last year as investments in growth were offset by lower variable compensation costs. SG&A growth moderated sequentially from the first quarter as we experienced a reduction in organic revenues and margins, both resulting in immediate reductions in personnel expenses. Our variable compensation structure allows for a reduction in personnel expenses, which enables us to quickly take costs out of the business. Interest expense in the second quarter was $36 million compared with $22 million in the prior year. The increase was primarily due to the addition of $750 million term loan due 2031, higher borrowings under our senior ABL credit facility and an…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question for today comes from Kathryn Thompson of Thompson Research Group. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Kathryn Thompson

Analyst

Hi. Just my first question is just a little bit more housekeeping around SG&A in the quarter, [you saw higher] (ph). You had noted that it was mostly related to your M&A activity, which has been very active in the quarter. Could you parse out a little bit in greater detail the puts and takes for SG&A for the quarter as related to that and other factors and what we should expect for the remainder of the year? Thank you.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. Thanks, Kathryn. This is Mark. On the SG&A for the second quarter, we grew SG&A by about $30 million, that was basically entirely due to acquired SG&A. And then when we acquire SG&A, as we work through these acquisitions, we definitely identify some synergies there. These have been a little higher-cost structure than our average and we expect to work through some of those synergies over a period of time as we scale those businesses, add new products, find new ways to enhance margins. So that's not something we usually take out immediately, but we're able to scale that pretty significantly as we grow. From an organic SG&A standpoint, it was roughly flat for the quarter. We have continued to make investments in growth. Those were largely offset by some of the immediate reductions that we've experienced with some of our variable compensation. So -- but those are really the main drivers. I'd say, as we look forward on SG&A as we absorb some of that acquired SG&A, identify some synergies, you'll start seeing that SG&A get much more back in line with the typical growth pattern.

Kathryn Thompson

Analyst

Okay. You had quite a handful of headwinds you had to navigate from pricing, commodity pricing, softening demand, weather, but still outperforming the industry from a margin standpoint, although obviously not meeting expectations just for the quarter. How are you -- what are the puts and takes that you're doing to manage in the -- facing the current market realities? And just a reminder, are you seeing any meaningful shifts in commodity-type products as a percentage of cost of goods sold and any commentary about how you're managing those more commodity-type products? Thank you.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Yeah, Kathryn, this is Steve. Yeah, as you mentioned, there were a lot of external factors really impacting performance in this quarter. Some of which we really view as temporary. There was certainly the weather situation. That was a real challenge and we put a chart in there. We don't generally talk about weather, but it was so pervasive and wide-scale really in that second quarter and we shared a little bit about this in May, about the May results in the last quarter that really caused a bit of an alarm for us. And just from the weather standpoint, we're -- we saw close to 70 of our branches from Texas all the way up to the upper Midwest that were impacted by this. And some of those branches are our top-performing branches. So that amplified the impact that we had in May and June for sure. You couple that, we're estimating that was somewhere around a $50 million headwind there about 3% of sales or so. So we're anticipating that some of that will come back. We're already starting to see that take shape in Texas, where there's a little longer construction season. We're going to have to see how that takes shape up in the upper Midwest. In regards to a couple of the other areas, little bit of market softness as we talked about in non-residential and that really impacted really our fire protection product line and they've been working on sizing appropriately for that, the commodity impact with steel pipe, those are at historic lows. So some of that's had a drag down in the business. But I go back to a lot of the controllables that we've had in our space and our ability to really drive a lot of the M&A performance, continue to harness our gross margin initiatives and be able to drive in and accelerate some of the private label piece, have all helped to offset a lot of that. We do believe a lot of this is temporary in the long-term look at our end-markets and what we're seeing right now and positivity coming from the field in terms of bidding activity and backlog still look incredibly strong. So, we feel solid about that. And, it's tough quarter for some of the headwinds, but we were certainly able to offset a good portion of those and build for the long term.

Kathryn Thompson

Analyst

Okay, great. Thank you.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Thanks, Kathryn.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Dave Manthey of Baird. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Dave Manthey

Analyst

Thank you. Good morning. A couple of quick questions on the PVC pipe. Approximately what percentage of sales and gross margin dollars are PVC pipe today? And related to that and again, regardless of whatever happens with suppliers or anything else, do you have some sort of contingency plan to right-size the business if you were to see a material drop further from here in PVC pipe pricing?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. Thanks, Dave. This is Mark. In terms of the PVC contribution, I think, I'd go back to previous comments we've made regarding the categories that we've talked about. About 5% of our business is related to commodity-type products, which would be steel, pipe, copper tubing, things of that nature. About 25% to 30% of our business is related to municipal pipe. And I'd say that's split roughly evenly between municipal PVC pipe and municipal ductile iron pipe, with the balance of our business being those more highly specified fire hydrants, valves, fittings, things of things of that nature. In terms of contingency planning or anything like that, as we've talked about, this business is highly flexible. Our cost structure is largely variable with a lot of the personnel expenses that we have. So we do a lot of planning in this company for various scenarios of growth, moderation or decline and feel like we've got an incredible amount of experience operating the business through various cycles. So really continue to do as we plan, but right now, the way we feel like the long-term demand characteristics of this business are intact. We continue to invest in our growth initiatives and opportunities for margin enhancement and that's our focus right now.

Dave Manthey

Analyst

Okay, thanks. And second, can you quantify the strong sales growth that you saw in August just to differentiate that versus what you saw during the quarter? And then, I'm trying to square that with your belief that you will not recover the weather-related shortfall later this year. And I'm just trying to put those two things together, if you could help me with that.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, sure, Dave. I'd say in August, what we experienced was a trend back to what we experienced with some good solid organic volume growth that was on top of the acquisition contributions that we've expected. So I felt good with the trend-line kind of getting into August with, I'd say, a normal weather pattern. We got back into what we considered normal and expected growth patterns. So what we're not expecting is a kind of a surge beyond that just given the capacity to -- at our customers unless we experience maybe a longer seasonal year in certain Northern geographies. So we haven't necessarily baked in a, I'd say, a more favorable end to the year, but that could be upside if we see a little longer season this year.

Dave Manthey

Analyst

Got it. Thanks very much.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. Thanks, Dave.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Bouley of Barclays. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Matthew Bouley

Analyst

Good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking the questions. On the gross margin side, it sounded like a lot of that normalization is now fully behind you and I think the commentary was around really focusing from here going forward on the private label and your sourcing initiatives, et cetera. So is the implication -- and forgive me if I missed this, but is the implication that you do expect gross margins to be stable or increasing going forward given these initiatives, or any additional color on that cadence of margins in the second half? Thank you.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, sure, Matt. Thanks for the question. As we talked about last quarter, we did expect a sequential reduction from Q1 to Q2 that we experienced that was right in line with our expectations. And then as we go forward, you're right. We expect to be able to grow those gross margins from where we finished Q2, given the gross margin initiatives that we have with private label, sourcing optimization among other things. So our expectation is we'll be growing gross margins going forward and the normalization that we were expecting and that we are aware of is now behind us.

Matthew Bouley

Analyst

Okay. Got it. That's helpful. Thanks, Mark. And then secondly, following up on the change to revenue guidance and the August commentary, I guess if we look at that $200 million reduction of the revenue guide for the year, I mean, could you kind of break out what were the largest and -- or maybe even rank the largest contributors to that, whether it be weather, the -- each individual end market, and if you can therefore tell, what -- or at least if there's a number around what you might be expecting for what is pushed into 2025. So that's part one. And part two is the -- for August, is the organic growth actually better or worse, the same as it was in Q2?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, sure, Matt. I'll take the first one. On the change to the guidance, you're right, it was about $200 million or so at the mid-point, with about $100 million of that coming in the second quarter coming in below expectations and that was kind of split roughly between the weather impact and a lower market volume growth than we anticipated. As you look into the back half then, I'd say that misses the balance of that, about $100 million in the second half of the year is entirely due to just lower expected volumes coming out of the end-markets. I'd say probably split evenly across our end markets with what the mix is there. So as a reminder, municipal is about 40% of the business, non-resi is about 40% of the business and resi is about 20%. So really that $100 million really kind of evenly across those end-markets is in terms of what our mix percentage is there. So we've just seen, I'd say, across all three of them come in a little lighter than what we're originally expecting. So we really brought that end-market expectation down from flat to up a little to flat to down a little bit for the full year. In terms of August…

Matthew Bouley

Analyst

Yeah, go ahead.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. In terms of August, I'd say that we probably saw a little bit of release coming in August with some of the better weather, but ultimately, those organic volumes are kind of in line with where we were expecting them to be. So I think we got probably a little release coming out of the weakness we saw in Q2 in August, but we're watching that closely. September, we've got about a week or so in the books for our September fiscal month and we're seeing some decent strength there. So we're optimistic, I'd say, with what we're seeing so far early in the quarter, which is definitely a different position than we were feeling coming out of the first quarter on our last call.

Matthew Bouley

Analyst

Got it. Thanks, Mark. Thanks, everyone. Good luck, guys.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Thanks, Matt.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Nigel Coe of Wolfe Research. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Nigel Coe

Analyst

Thanks. Hey, good morning, everyone. Just wanted to dig in a bit deeper on some of the commentary already given. So on pricing, it sounds like pricing fairly stable sequentially in the second quarter. But I'm curious what the second-half outlook is for price. Are we looking at fairly flat year-over-year price in the back half of the year, i.e., the deflation is more in the first half and then we're sort of stabilizing in the back half of the year? And then, Mark, the commentary you made on gross margins growing, I think your third-quarter guide is still relatively tough. So are we talking about growing sequentially off that second quarter base into the back half of the year?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, sure, Nigel. First question on pricing, I would tell you, sequentially, we saw a pretty stable resilient pricing environment. Most of the year-over-year, I'd say, headwind we saw was late in 2023. We're really in terms of the guide expecting kind of continued stable pricing from here throughout the end of the year, which kind of still results in a low -- I'd say low single-digit, very low single-digit headwind for the full-year guide that we have baked-in. And then from a gross margin perspective, yeah, that's the way to think about it. We'll continue to make progress on our gross margin initiatives. We had good progress in the second quarter though, didn't really show up because we're expecting some other headwinds there, but ultimately expect some growth in Q3 and Q4 and beyond.

Nigel Coe

Analyst

Great. And then a quick one on SG&A. Just -- obviously, we're working here with rough numbers, but it seems like the SG&A attached to the acquisitions, backing into the contribution from acquisition revenue, it feels like SG&A is about 20 points of acquired revenues for the acquisitions. Number one, is that the right number? And secondly, what is the right level for SG&A on a fully absorbed basis for these acquisitions?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, Nigel, I would tell you some of the acquisitions that we've got rolling through have had -- they've helped us at the gross margin level. They've had some nice accretive gross margin but they've had some -- they've carried some much higher SG&A cost structure there. So there's some opportunity to take some of that out, get more efficient as we scale those businesses and everything, but they've been, I'd say, neutral from an EBITDA standpoint and we've got some opportunities to drive some synergies there to expand that. So that's what our focus has been on there, not necessarily the rate that we acquired them at, but the ability to scale those and drive that EBITDA contribution through the P&L.

Nigel Coe

Analyst

Okay. Thanks a lot.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. Thanks.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Joe Ritchie of Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Joe Ritchie

Analyst

Hey guys, good morning. So I know we've talked a bunch…

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Good morning.

Joe Ritchie

Analyst

Good morning, yeah. So I know we've talked a bunch about volumes, but I want to kind of parse it out a little bit further. Steve, I think you mentioned weather impacting volumes by approximately $50 million. When you take into account the M&A contribution now expected for the year, it still seems like there is about a $200 million reduction in volume expectations for the year. And I recall last quarter, we talked about competition normalizing in the space. I'm just wondering, like, how much of this is really end-market weakness versus you guys being a little bit more judicious about the projects that you're going after as we head into the back half of the year. Any commentary on that would be helpful.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Yeah, Joe, no, we really haven't viewed it that way. We are continuing to go after projects just the way we always have and having success there as well. You're seeing -- we highlighted a couple of projects that we're seeing in meters and some of these other specific product categories, I think we'd give you an idea of kind of how we're tackling different opportunities out there. But this -- the weather piece was challenging in a number of ways. We started in the first quarter where we saw kind of favorable conditions that started in the spring that quickly became challenging in May and June. And while we believe that we'll likely recover in Texas and some of these other bigger areas as the weather has improved and we'll continue to pull those projects forward, it's just a question mark about whether there's going to be enough time remaining to pull all of these projects in to release the backlog in the Upper Midwest in addition to tackling the other new projects out there before the season comes to a close. So that's really what we're seeing. We're obviously -- we've been burned by the weather in this last quarter. As we get into the back half of the year, particularly in the fourth quarter, it's always challenging of what weather is going to pose and particularly some of these areas that are very seasonal.

Joe Ritchie

Analyst

Got it. Okay. That's helpful, Steve. So I mean, basically expect maybe some choppiness in the back half of the year, but that normalizes into 2025 and I mean, weather is always a swing factor, but that's the expectation at this point.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Yeah, that's correct.

Joe Ritchie

Analyst

Okay. And then maybe just my one other question. I know that you don't want to talk about the lawsuit. There's a lot of noise in the market regarding pricing and capacity. And specifically, it seems like you are planning on maintaining your pricing discipline as the year progresses. But there's been some commentary around third-party providers entering the market and selling at lower prices. Is that something that you are seeing today across any of your specific products that you distribute?

Steve LeClair

Analyst

I'm not fully familiar with what you're referencing there. Just to go back to the discussions that are happening with PVC in particular, we are not a defendant in that case and we really aren't going to comment on any of the statements made that involve Core & Main, which we simply view as baseless. So I'm not -- we're not going to comment any more on any unsubstantiated claims or statements associated with that.

Joe Ritchie

Analyst

Okay, fair enough. Thank you, guys.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Mike Dahl of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Mike Dahl

Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just one more follow-up on the pricing conversation. When we're thinking about the stability both in 2Q and expected through year-end sequentially. Can you break that out between commodity versus non-commodity? Because I think obviously a lot of fear has been that some of the commodity baskets that people can track would seem to have declined sequentially. So are you seeing that, but you've been able to offset it with pricing opportunities on the non-commodity side, or are you just seeing a different trajectory -- on in the products that you're specifically serving?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, sure, Mike. I can give you a little bit of color on some of those categories. One of the bigger impacts we've seen has been on the fire protection business and you can see that in the results that we break out. We've seen pretty sizable year-over-year declines with steel pipe and that definitely tracks with that underlying commodity and we pass those price decreases along to our customers. So we've seen an impact there. We do feel like it looks like it's now potentially at the bottom. We've seen it stabilize over the course of the last month or so. So I feel like there's stability there, but it's at a pretty low level. Copper tubing has been bouncing around. We've seen some increases coming through on copper. So that's helped offset some of the impacts there. As we've talked about, PVC is off of its -- I'd say municipal PVC is off of its peak levels, but it's been stable here throughout 2024. And then, yes, you're correct on some of the other product categories, we have seen some other increases, or we've been able to pass along increases as we put those project solutions together for our customers. So we've been able to manage through that, ultimately resulting in a fairly stable overall pricing environment, which is again what we expected for this year and it's kind of holding true.

Mike Dahl

Analyst

Okay, that's helpful. Thanks, Mark. And then on the sales discussion, the -- obviously, the weather is -- I think everyone can understand that. In terms of the market weakness, I think some of your commentary characterized it as these deferrals and you suspect there are different things going on. I guess, can you just give us a little more insight into if you don't get the project, what gives you the confidence that it's still out there, it's just being deferred versus it's just not moving forward? Give us insight into whether it's your backlog or your conversations with the contractors or customers in the field recently, in particular, because it seems like there was potentially a shift in July across end markets. So I think it would help if people had a little more confidence that business is still out there.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Yeah. I'll talk first about residential and land development. And we certainly saw in -- as we closed out July that we started seeing a lot more of the phasing of some of the land development being chunked out a little bit differently and phased out into the back half of the year. So, long-term, we don't have much concern about that. We know the impending demand that's out there. We're confident that some of these things are pushed and that we'll continue to see those evolve and take shape. From the non-residential standpoint, just saw something similar, but it's been a little bit more choppy and spotty throughout certain geographies where commercial construction has been delayed in some regards, pending a lot more of the financing capabilities for our -- for the owners of those facilities. So we'll see kind of how that one evolves. That one is a little harder to track for us. And then on a positive side, we are seeing a lot of work moving with DOT and a lot of the work that we're doing with storm drainage and geosynthetics in that area that continue to be very strong. So it's kind of a mixed bag as you look at it. Some of it we really viewed as temporary if we're going into that, some of it being pushed. And then obviously, you have weather on top of that, which is kind of clouded some of the absolute -- how to define exactly how much was weather and how much was market. So just -- I'd say it's kind of soft and sluggish both from a ground standpoint and from some of the end markets.

Mike Dahl

Analyst

Okay. Thanks, Steve.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Thanks.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Anthony Pettinari of Citi. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Anthony Pettinari

Analyst

Good morning. Just following up on the end market softness that you saw. Given your largest end market is muni, can you talk about kind of maybe funding environments and appetite to spend among municipalities, understanding you have hundreds, maybe thousands of customers is hard to generalize, but can you tell us what you are kind of seeing there in terms of underlying demand?

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Yeah, demand continues to be strong there. Even if you look at some of the projects that we've done, if you look at some of the meter projects, which Brad highlighted, you're seeing the investment continue to happen into infrastructure there. For the repair and replacement aspect on that, we believe that some of that softness was weather-related and it's been pushed and we'll continue to see that evolve. And if it doesn't come in fully in 2024, we'll see it in 2025. That's where we have some confidence in the backlog and the type of projects that are in there. So that's generally what we're seeing. I'd share with you that from an IIJA perspective, we're not seeing a lot of those funds flow really into anything into the repair and replace, really not seeing it in meters. It's -- we're seeing some of it in long-term project scoping for the replacement and enhancement of treatment plant facilities for water and wastewater. Those are generally the areas that we're seeing some of that funding. So that could be a tailwind for us as we get into 2025 and we would like to see that start taking shape.

Anthony Pettinari

Analyst

Okay. That's very helpful. And then just one last one, if I could. And sorry if I missed this, but can you update what your private label percentage was in the quarter? And maybe is there some runway to maybe accelerate that in the back half as you work down some inventory or just any thoughts on that private label penetration?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, Anthony, our private label penetration is a little over 2% of COGS and expecting, as you mentioned, some pretty good runway as we get into the back half of this year, number of areas where we're seeing some more adoption of that product and expect to see that contribution increase between now and the end of the year.

Anthony Pettinari

Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. I'll turn it over.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Thanks.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Patrick Baumann of JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Patrick Baumann

Analyst

All right, thanks. Couple cleanups, I guess. On the second-half expectations, can you help us with the cadence, third-quarter, fourth-quarter for sales growth and margins? And I know you have the extra week in the fourth quarter, which is part of the reason for asking this. Just wondering what that-- how that impacts sales and EBITDA for having that extra week in the fourth quarter.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. Sure, Pat. Thanks for the question. In terms of the cadence, typically our Q3, I'd say, looks a lot like Q2, but obviously, we had this big weather impact in Q2. So, expecting a little better Q3 than typical as you think about it relative to the sequential growth in Q2. And then, yeah, that 53rd week for us is in the fourth quarter. That's worth kind of one to two points for the full year. So for the quarter, it's probably in that kind of 6% to 8% range for the quarter. So you should expect a higher sales growth figure in Q4 relative to Q3, but the absolute dollars are going to be down just due to the seasonal nature of Q4. So, I'd say no really unusual expectations outside of that 53rd week in the fourth quarter.

Patrick Baumann

Analyst

Do the sales from an extra week drop down at like a similar margin to normal sales or is there a better margin…

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, I think that's a fair way to think about it. The gross margins will be the gross margins and then we'll pick up extra SG&A for the extra week as well that we have for us. So it pretty much just drop.

Patrick Baumann

Analyst

Okay. And maybe on M&A in the quarter, what did that contribute in terms of sales growth? And then the additional deals that haven't closed yet. I think you said $100 million of spend. How much extra sales are you getting from those deals? Are those are the -- I guess the green name deals?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

That's right. We did a lot of green acquisitions. Yeah, so Pat, for the quarter, acquisitions were 9 points of the growth from the quarter. And then GroGreen is about four locations and then Green Equipment was one location. So you kind of use the framework that we've provided historically, which is about, call it, $10 million to $15 million of revenue per location. Those two are not currently in the guide.

Patrick Baumann

Analyst

Okay, thank you.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. Thanks, Pat.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Andrew Obin of Bank of America. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

David Ridley-Lane

Analyst

Hi, this is David Ridley-Lane on for Andrew Obin. Just so I better understand the SG&A commentary. So ex acquisitions that were effectively flat, I didn't necessarily hear you considering any over and above cost reduction actions in the second half. Is that right what you've sort of seen as the normal fluctuation of variable comp? Is that the right interpretation?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah, that's the right way to think about it. We're obviously paying close attention to the end markets right now. Obviously, we feel like most of what we experienced in the quarter with weather was temporary. We've seen some good activity here to start the third quarter. So I wouldn't say we're anticipating any sizable reductions at this point, but obviously watching SG&A closely, we're still investing for growth. We have a lot of confidence in our long-term growth opportunities and we want to be positioned very well to capture that. So we don't have any, I'd say, overly significant reductions baked into the guide in the second half because of those reasons.

David Ridley-Lane

Analyst

Got it. And then how do -- how should we think about the kind of ongoing pace of share repurchase? Are you guys going to be more optimistic? Should we take the second quarter level as a proxy for a run rate? How should we think about that?

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

Yeah. We'll continue to invest in our organic growth opportunities. M&A is going to continue to be a priority. The pipelines looking really good there. And then we expect to generate, I'd say, roughly $500 million of operating cash flow in the second half of the year. So we should have ample capacity to complete the M&A, invest in growth and potentially accelerate some of the share repurchasing that we did in the second quarter. And if we can -- if we see a relative share price that is attractive and then we'll continue to look at our debt leverage and liquidity to balance that out. So I would think about it as likely just given the amount of cash that we expect to generate that we would accelerate the amount that we did in Q2.

David Ridley-Lane

Analyst

Understood. Thank you very much.

Mark Witkowski

Analyst

All right. Thanks, David.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we currently have no further questions. So I'll hand back to Steve LeClair for any further remarks.

Steve LeClair

Analyst

Thank you all again for joining us today. We have demonstrated our ability to generate strong cash flow and deploy that cash to areas that generate the best financial returns, including investing in growth and returning capital to shareholders. We were successful in adding several new businesses to the Core & Main family during and after the quarter and our acquisitions continue to generate significant growth for the business. We tapped into a new multibillion-dollar market opportunity in Canada through the acquisition of HM Pipe Products, expanding our geographic reach and enabling us to capture a larger share of the growing demand for water and fire protection infrastructure in North America. Our margin initiatives are performing well and we expect they will continue enhancing margins to support our long-term growth strategy. As we discussed throughout the call, our second quarter results were impacted by unusually wet weather and saturated grounds. However, our associates continue to demonstrate unwavering dedication to our customers in their critical projects. I'm proud of our ability to remain agile and focused even when faced with adversity. We believe the market sluggishness experienced in this quarter is temporary and our outlook on the long-term demand characteristics of our end markets remains bullish. We continue to be encouraged by the sentiment from our field teams and our positive bidding activity and project backlogs. We look forward to capitalizing on our long runway of growth opportunities, particularly with new perspectives and the expertise resulting from the organizational realignment we completed this quarter. As we enter the second half of fiscal 2024, we remain confident in our ability to deliver industry-leading service to our customers, drive value-creation and execute our growth and capital allocation priorities now and into the future. Thank you for your interest in Core & Main. We look forward to talking with you again next quarter. Operator, that concludes our call.

Operator

Operator

Thank you all for joining today's call. You may now disconnect your lines.