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Performance Food Group Company (PFGC)

Q2 2026 Earnings Call· Wed, Feb 4, 2026

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Thank you for your continued patience. Your meeting will begin shortly. If you need assistance at any time, please press 0, and a member of our team will be happy to help you. Good day, everyone, and welcome to Performance Food Group Company's Fiscal Year Q2 2026 Earnings Conference Call.

Bill Marshall

Management

Please press the star key followed by the number one on your telephone keypad at any time. I would now like to turn the call over to Bill Marshall, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations for Performance Food Group Company. Please go ahead, sir.

Bill Marshall

Management

Thank you, and good morning. We are here with Scott McPherson, Performance Food Group Company's CEO, and Patrick Hatcher, Performance Food Group Company's CFO. We issued a press release this morning regarding our 2026 fiscal second quarter results, which can be found in the Investor Relations section of our website at pfgc.com. During our call today, unless otherwise stated, we are comparing results to the results in the same period in fiscal 2025. Any reference to 2025, 2026, or specific quarters refers to our fiscal calendar unless otherwise stated. The results discussed on this call will include GAAP and non-GAAP results adjusted for certain items. The reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the corresponding GAAP measures can be found at the back of the earnings release. Our remarks on this call and in the earnings release contain forward-looking statements and projections of future results. Please review the cautionary forward-looking statements section in today's earnings release and our SEC filings for various factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our forward-looking statements and projections. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Scott.

Scott McPherson

Management

Thanks, Bill. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today. Before jumping into our second quarter results, I would like to recognize George Holm. We announced in December after nearly 25 years with Performance Food Group Company, George has retired from his role as CEO. Over his career, George built an impeccable reputation as an industry leader, a visionary, and an agent of growth. Since Performance Food Group Company's IPO in '2, sales have more than quadrupled to over $60 billion, and the market cap of Performance Food Group Company has increased sevenfold. Much of which can be attributed to the vision and influence George has had on the company. More importantly, because of George's stewardship, Performance Food Group Company is defined by more than just financial results. It is a place where people want to work, customers and suppliers want to do business, and a preferred partner for strategic M&A. There's a reason that Performance Food Group Company is often the first and sometimes only call from prospective acquisition opportunities. Many of you have had the opportunity to meet with George and experience his knowledge and insight firsthand. On behalf of our entire organization, I would like to share my heartfelt thanks to George for everything he has done for the many thousands of people who have crossed his path. I'm also thrilled that George will continue to play an important role for Performance Food Group Company. As executive chair of our board, he will be heavily involved in the pursuit of strategic M&A opportunities, maintain his connection to key customers, and be active in Performance Food Group Company's overarching strategy. Following an industry icon like George comes with great responsibility, and I'm excited to take the helm and lead Performance Food Group Company through our…

Patrick Hatcher

Management

Thank you, Scott, and good morning. Today, I will review our financial results from our second quarter, provide color on our financial position, and review our updated guidance for 2026. To echo Scott's comments, despite challenges in the quarter, we are very pleased with our progress through the first six months of 2026. Through December, we continued to make progress on our financial position, as our strong cash flow was used to invest behind our business to drive growth and reduce leverage. We believe that the investments we are making today will pay off nicely as we execute our strategy. We believe that the investments we are making today will pay off nicely as we execute our strategy. In a moment, I will provide additional color on our financial position and capital allocation priorities. First, let's review our results for the second quarter. Performance Food Group Company's total net sales grew 5.2% in the second quarter, with growth in all three operating segments and particular strength in foodservice and convenience. Total company cases increased 3.4% during the quarter, highlighted by a 5.3% organic independent restaurant case growth and a 6.3% organic case gain in our convenience segment. As a reminder, having fully lapped the Cheney Brothers acquisition, as of the second week of the second quarter, Cheney was reported as part of our organic business for the vast majority of the period. As Scott mentioned, in our convenience business, we are very pleased with the contribution from the addition of Loves, and are looking forward to the benefit of the Racetrack business, which started onboarding late in the second quarter. These businesses are expected to deliver incremental sales and profit dollars over the next several quarters. Total company cost inflation was approximately 4.5% for the quarter, just slightly higher than…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press 1 on your keypad. To leave the queue, press 2. Once again, that is 1 to ask a question and 2 to remove yourself. We'll pause for just a moment to allow questions to queue. We'll take our first question from Mark Carden with UBS. Please go ahead.

Mark Carden

Analyst · UBS. Please go ahead

Great. Good morning. Thanks so much for taking the questions. To start, on organic independent case growth, you started the quarter with some solid momentum. Called out the shutdown. Any additional color you can add on performance by month? And then you also just called out some of the recent weather headwinds and impact to guidance. How is January lined up relative to your initial expectations? And do you still see a path to that 6% organic independent case growth for the full year?

Scott McPherson

Management

Hi, Mark. This is Scott. Great questions. And as you talked about in Q2, we started the quarter in October, you know, fairly strong. That was the strongest period of the quarter. And then obviously, the shutdown certainly had an impact the longer it carried on. We saw our November and December months, you know, relatively equivalent. Definitely some choppiness week to week. And then as we moved into January, we saw, you know, really nice rebound, nice performance in January. And then, you know, certainly, as you know, you know, February has been, you know, materially impacted by weather. Last week, you know, really a good portion of the country was impacted. And this week, you know, a little more isolated to the Eastern Half and the Southeast. But certainly had an impact and something we factored into guidance. When I look at the big picture, you know, we're very optimistic about the full year. And I think, you know, you called out the 6% target. That's always what we aspire to. That's that's kind of how our sales organization is geared is we want to be 6% or above. So we're certainly fighting to get there.

Mark Carden

Analyst · UBS. Please go ahead

Great. And then on the Salesforce front, have you guys seen much of an impact on either new hiring or retention in the back of some of the earlier uncertainty relating to US Foods discussions perhaps earlier in the quarter? And then just how did the pace of your Salesforce growth compare to recent quarters?

Scott McPherson

Management

No. It's a great question. You know, really, what I look at when I think about Salesforce, force hiring and performance is really market share. And as I look at the Salesforce's market share performance, not just over the last couple of quarters, but over the last, you know, five or six quarters, we've been very consistent in our independent market share gains. You know, as far as actual headcount, we've been right at that 6% range for the first two quarters of this year. I'm totally comfortable at that level, you know, to see them continue to grow share, you know, to demonstrate through new account acquisition, we're at 5.8%. Net new account gains this quarter, same last quarter. But at the end of the day, and I talked about this in my comments, you know, we are decentralized around that hiring. We certainly have opcos that are hiring in the double-digit range. And some that are, you know, probably below that 6% range. And we really leave that up to them. But, you know, what I use is my gauge is really anchoring back to market share. So I feel really good about where we're at right now and the availability of talent.

Mark Carden

Analyst · UBS. Please go ahead

Great. Thanks so much. Goodbye.

Operator

Operator

We'll hear next from Alex Slagle with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Alex Slagle

Analyst · Jefferies. Please go ahead

Wondering if you could dissect the dynamics at play for the foodservice business. In the second quarter. It seemed like really strong independent growth and the independent mix, you know, sales jumped a lot, but the OpEx was elevated. You called out the chain investments and the cheese and poultry deflation. But maybe you could kind of talk a little bit more about how impactful that was and the cadence of the investments, behind Chaney and, you know, how that maybe differed from expectations or if that was sort of similar to what you expected.

Scott McPherson

Management

Yeah. Let me just start off with Chaney. You know, want to take a step back and just, you know, that acquisition is something that we pursued for a long time. It's been a great acquisition to date. It's a great cultural fit. It fills in a geography that is really strategic for us. So we're really happy with the progress of the acquisition. As I called out in my remarks, we knew going in that we were going to make some material investments in their infrastructure. We have a brand new building that is just completed. We just started receiving product this week. It will start shipping probably over the next three to four weeks. So, certainly, there are some costs related to that. We also opened a new manufacturing facility for them. So overall, I would say, you know, their costs are running a little bit higher than we anticipated. And the other thing that we're taking them through right now is, you know, they transitioning into being part of a public company is, you know, the integration cost to our benefits to our payroll, to our financial mapping. So, again, really happy with the acquisition. Certainly, you know, expenses are on a little bit higher than we anticipated. Then just, you know, you kind of asked about the overall cadence in food service. You know, as you pointed out, really happy with our market share growth, both in independent and chain. You know, from a margin standpoint, you know, as we continue to grow that independent market share, that mix really helps our margin. So that's performed really well. And then, you know, I think from an OpEx standpoint in the core food service, you know, ex Cheney, you know, we have leverage, but I'd say, you know, definitely, there's some opportunity in leveraging OpEx in that area as well. But really, you know, pretty happy with how the core food service segment performed. And then we talked about the deflation in those two couple categories did have an impact on margins for sure. We over-indexed in those two categories. So, really, you know, summing it all up, you know, Cheney and the deflation were really, you know, at the end of the day, really the miss in the quarter that would have gotten to the upper half of guidance.

Alex Slagle

Analyst · Jefferies. Please go ahead

Okay. And then I guess along the same lines, at least in terms of the improving mix of convenience, EBITDA margin opportunity, I wanted to ask about. I mean, it's expanded nicely, and some of that is the foodservice growth. And some other mixed items. But, I mean, the food service penetration actually is still seems to have a long way to go. Kinda curious what that could mean over time for the overall convenience EBITDA margins as we look out the few years, you know, and we continue to grow that portion of your business there.

Scott McPherson

Management

Yeah. It's a great call out, Alex. There's a lot of things going on in the convenience segment that really, I think, help our margin profile over time. You certainly called out food service, and I agree with you. There's a long runway ahead. You know, we continue to grow food service in that high single-digit, low double-digit range. Both in our convenience segment and our food service segment into convenience. So, you know, kind of hitting that from two ends. So that's performing really well. When you look at the macro of convenience though, you know, one of the things that's, you know, I think really encouraging is what's happening in the non-combustible space. Non-combustible nicotine, oral nicotine, and other forms of nicotine that aren't combustible are growing at a rapid pace. Those have a nicer margin profile than combustible cigarettes. So as we see that migration, there's a natural benefit to our margins in mix. So, you know, that's been a great progression, and I think that's going to continue for a long time. So we feel really good about how we're set up in convenience from a margin standpoint.

Alex Slagle

Analyst · Jefferies. Please go ahead

Thanks.

Operator

Operator

We'll hear next from John Heinbockel with Guggenheim. Please go ahead.

John Heinbockel

Analyst · Guggenheim. Please go ahead

Hey, guys. Scott, maybe you can touch on some of the self-help that you referenced back at the Investor Day, particularly strategic procurement. Where are we in that journey? You know? And then maybe as a related question for Patrick, just the impact of deflation on margin comes from where? I don't know if that's mix or, you know, inventory gains, or how does that flow through?

Scott McPherson

Management

Yeah. So I'll take the first half of that and let Patrick tackle the second. So, John, we, you know, at Investor Day talked about procurement opportunities. And we've done a lot of work on that. And, you know, certainly in the clean room environment that we had over the last few months, you know, that allowed us to really dig into our own side of the procurement ledger. And really, at the end of the day, it gave us, you know, that much more confidence that, you know, we're going to be able to get to that top end of the $100 to $125 million of procurement synergies over our three-year plan. You know, the cadence of that, I'd say it's fairly, you know, linear. I think, you know, we're starting to capture some of that in the back half of this year. We'll definitely see capture in year two or in year three and get us to that end number. So we feel really confident about that.

Patrick Hatcher

Management

Yeah. And, John, thanks for the question. I'll jump in here. Yeah. So where we're going to see the impact from the deflation is largely going to be in margin, but it could also be a little bit of inventory gains. I mean, you have to remember we have a very large basket of commodity goods that are constantly moving around. We called out cheese and poultry because our expectations for the quarter were higher than what we actually saw come through with the inflation. So that's the reason we called it out, and it's because we also over-indexed in those two commodities versus the rest of the basket.

John Heinbockel

Analyst · Guggenheim. Please go ahead

Alright. Maybe follow-up for Scott. I know as part of The US food process, right, was some chain business. You know, that had sort of gotten tabled. Does that come back? When does that come back? And you know, how material is that?

Scott McPherson

Management

Yeah. I think as George mentioned on prior earnings calls, you know, we had two or three folks in the pipeline, I'd say fairly material pieces of business that we felt like we had a really good shot at picking up. And as we said, you know, we felt like they were on the fence. Most of those, what they do in that situation is they will renew for the short term, and that's what happened with a couple of these. They signed one-year extensions on their agreements. You know, so we're certainly still in dialogue. But I would just step back and say, overall, in the food service space, we feel really good about our pipeline, both in chain. In the convenience space, obviously, you know, they're performing exceptionally well from a market share standpoint. And I'd even step back and look at specialty and say, you know, we definitely called out the headwind in theater. That's been certainly a challenge. That challenge will really persist for us in the next quarter. That's when we lap at the end of this next or I guess this third quarter that we're in. We lap a pretty material loss in theater. But the rest of the segments are really performing pretty well. When I look at vending and retail, our e-commerce platform, you know, we're starting to see some momentum there. So feel really good as we get into, you know, Q4, that you're going to start to see some nice performance out of the specialty from a growth standpoint.

John Heinbockel

Analyst · Guggenheim. Please go ahead

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

We'll move now to Jeffrey Bernstein with Barclays. Please go ahead.

Jeffrey Bernstein

Analyst

Great. Thank you very much. My first question is just on M&A topic. Scott, you mentioned the pipeline is robust. Just wondering whether there's any change in Performance Food Group Company's specific interest. Seems like you're still working hard on the Chaney integration. Maybe costs are coming in a little higher than you thought. So I'm wondering if there's any change to the approach to that M&A, maybe with George stepping back, how we kind of prioritize that process? And then I had one follow-up.

Scott McPherson

Management

Yeah. I would say overall, you know, really no change to our approach to M&A. I mean, George and I have collaborated on M&A for the last four years. We'll continue to collaborate moving forward on that. We certainly are looking at things in our pipeline, you know, to your point, you know, Cheney, I think has progressed really well. We're really excited about what that's going to bring. And we called out early on that, you know, the synergies that we'll see in Cheney really come at the end of year two and year three. And that's really the way we approach M&A. You know, we try not to make any drastic changes in those first couple years to really, you know, let them acclimate to the organization. We try and learn what we can from them as well. And we think that just makes for a much better long-term approach to M&A, and that's paid off with Reinhart. It's paid off with Core Mark, and it's certainly going to pay off with Cheney.

Jeffrey Bernstein

Analyst

Understood. And then just to follow-up on the independent organic case growth. I know you talked about always targeting kind of that 6% type range. I think the impression is going to be a little bit more of a fight to get there in the fiscal third quarter. So I'm wondering if you could share any of the current run rate or your expectation for that third quarter. And there was a passing mention on the weather. I was expecting to hear something more material. I was wondering whether you could quantify how much potentially that weather impact has had on sales, which were modestly below street expectations for the third quarter, but EBITDA, which was well below. Just trying to gauge the primary driver of that EBITDA shortfall, whether weather had a more outsized impact or whether it's primarily Cheney. Thank you.

Scott McPherson

Management

Well, I'll talk to the cadence of the quarter. And, Patrick, you might want to fill in a couple of things here. We actually started January off really nicely. I would say it was a, you know, call it a rebound from where we were at in December, picked up nicely in January. And then certainly, you know, last week's weather was impactful. And, you know, I think going into this week, certainly having an impact as well. And that's certainly something that we took into consideration when we talked about our guide for the third quarter and the full year. Patrick, anything you want to add?

Patrick Hatcher

Management

Yeah. Just a couple of comments on the guidance for Q3. You know, really what we have embedded in that guidance in the EBITDA is, you know, we do expect to see some continuation of the OpEx challenges that we've had to Cheney that we saw in Q2 will continue in Q3. We also are seeing that deflation impact from cheese and poultry continue into Q3. Scott touched on specialty. And then, obviously, the weather, we contemplate that. You know, we've had bad weather last year, two years ago during this quarter. It is our smaller quarter. It's very hard to, you know, obviously nail down weather, but we have recently experienced two weeks of, you know, impact from weather. And as Scott mentioned, you know, we did see a nice uptick in independent cases as we entered this quarter. And we have the convenience with their new Racetrack customer being for the full quarter. So we have some tailwinds as well. And that's really kind of how we built out the guidance for the quarter.

Jeffrey Bernstein

Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

We'll turn next to Edward Kelly with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Edward Kelly

Analyst

Yeah. Hi. Good morning, everyone. I'm sure George is listening. If he is, you know, he will be missed, and so just wanted to say congratulations. I wanted to follow-up on the cost side, you know, for you. As it pertains to, you know, some of the higher than expected costs related to Cheney. I would think that the weather disruption probably adds, you know, some added cost too. I'm curious as we think about when the business normalizes and we look out, you know, into the next, you know, fiscal year, are there, you know, tailwinds associated with lapping this type of stuff? You know, just kind of curious as to how sort of, like, one-time in nature, you know, some of the stuff is.

Scott McPherson

Management

No. It's a great, great question, Ed. And, you know, certainly, as we talked about, Cheney, the, you know, the major investment in a facility, you know, that's a 350,000 square foot facility that, you know, we're staffing and have been staffing over the last couple of months. And, you know, that won't be fully online, you know, until probably two months from now. So you've definitely got some expense involved with that. And then, you know, as you called out, certainly, creates some expense challenges. You know, as I look at the three-year guidance, I think that's really where we contemplated, you know, what those tailwinds look like. And certainly, you know, our synergies in Cheney we expect to come in years two and really into year three. And that's going to be a nice contributor to our three-year guidance. And, you know, we feel really strong about delivering that.

Edward Kelly

Analyst

Alright. And then just a follow-up for you and, you know, pertains to the three-year guide that you referenced. That, you know, there's been concern about this inflation. You mentioned it on the call today. I guess, first, you know, what's embedded in that three-year guide in terms of, like, an inflation outlook? If food service, you know, is just sort of, like, plotting along at one to 2%, is there any issue with hitting the three-year, you know, guidance if it's a low level of inflation? Just kind of curious as to how you contemplated all that in that outlook.

Patrick Hatcher

Management

Yes. This is Patrick. And it's a great question. And as we think about the three-year guidance and inflation, you know, we embedded into our models what we thought would be a consistent number. And, you know, we've always said, you know, where we are right now is pretty good. We're calling out the deflation this quarter just because, as I've mentioned, our expectations were cheese and poultry specifically were going to not be as deflationary as they are. So when we think about the three-year guidance, we have a lot of confidence in hitting that guidance. We're very much on track if you look at where we're projecting this full-year guidance to be. And then as we enter next year, yeah, we have just a lot of confidence in executing our strategy. Continue to take market share, and then, you know, everything else that we've talked about.

Edward Kelly

Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

We'll move now to Kelly Bania with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Ben Wood

Analyst

Hi, good morning. This is Ben Wood on behalf of Kelly Bania. Thank you for taking our questions. Could you provide any more detail on the monthly cadence of volume trends you saw in convenience? Some of the industry data we look at suggest that sales trends really accelerated into December and through year-end. Is that consistent with what you guys saw? And if so, how are you thinking about the possibility of some of those key categories in convenience inflecting positive going forward?

Scott McPherson

Management

No, it's a great question. As I look back over the full second quarter, those results were, you know, I would say fairly consistent with what we've seen historically, which was kind of low to mid-single-digit declines in a number of categories. To your point though, as we exited the second quarter in December and maybe even into January, I think one of the things that we've benefited from in the convenience segment is when you get fuel pricing that drops down, you know, in some markets into the $2 range, that certainly helps car travel and people being out on the road. You know, obviously, we were really, you know, propelled by, you know, new account wins. But even taking that away, you know, we continue to gain share in our convenience segment, you know, both at the chain level, the regional level. So, you know, our segment's performing well. And to your point, I think there are some signs of improved performance and traffic in convenience.

Ben Wood

Analyst

Great. And then just kind of following up on that. In light of the announcement yesterday from Pepsi to pretty majorly lower price in some of their key snack brands, do you expect others to follow suit? And is there a possibility that some of the snack and convenience categories might become deflationary off of this? And how does that impact your different businesses?

Scott McPherson

Management

I wouldn't want to make predictions on whether other snack categories would become deflationary. That would be, you know, I've been in this space for thirty years. I've never seen those categories become deflationary. Yesterday's announcement was very interesting. You know, what I have since heard is that that's primarily just on the big bag. So right now, we don't see that as being a big impact on our convenience segment. Certainly, that could change and pass along to some other SKUs. But, you know, I don't see that becoming an industry trend just based on my historical experience.

Ben Wood

Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

We'll move now to Lauren Silberman with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Lauren Silberman

Analyst

Thank you. So I wanted to go back on the OpEx side. Can you help us understand how core underlying OpEx is growing ex Cheney? I guess I'm trying to understand how much of the growth is investments in the core business, Salesforce, versus some of the noise that's changing with the new facilities coming online?

Scott McPherson

Management

No. It's a great question, Lauren. I would say and think I said a little earlier in the call, I would say there's certainly always opportunity in getting more expense leverage, you know, across all of our segments. I would say in the core food service segment, you know, quarter over quarter, our expense performance was fairly consistent. We are certainly seeing leverage as a percent of gross profit dollars in our expenses. So, you know, feel good about how the core is performing. Certainly, to improve. But, you know, the bulk of our miss in OpEx from what we anticipated was really just the overrun we saw in Chaney.

Lauren Silberman

Analyst

Okay. I guess in the back half of the year, any way to frame how we should be thinking about that growth now that it's in the full segment year over year clean? And I guess is the overrun more of a pull forward of expenses or higher overall expenses?

Scott McPherson

Management

No. I think it was really situational just to Cheney. And as I talked about with new buildings coming on, some of the things that we're doing to get them to be part of our overall, you know, public organization is certainly added some cost to them. So, you know, we expect that to continue a little bit into the third quarter. As we called out. But, you know, in the long run, you know, we're a company that's really focused on getting OpEx leverage across all our segments. And, you know, feel very comfortable that in our full year, we'll get that in a position that we feel really comfortable with. And that was all, obviously, contemplated in our guidance for the full year.

Lauren Silberman

Analyst

Okay. And then if I could just go on the promotional environment, can you talk about what you're seeing in amongst competitors? Any changes in the promotional environment, especially as one of your competitors seems to be building some momentum, and then there's just the moving pieces of product inflation and how different peers react.

Scott McPherson

Management

Certainly. You know, what I said earlier, what I consistently look at is market share gains. And I think we have performed exceptionally well, you know, this quarter, last quarter. And now as I look back for a number of quarters, market share gains have been very consistent across the independent space, across the chain space as well. You know, so from that perspective, I feel good about how we're performing. That's really my focus. You know, as far as the competitive environment, you know, I would say it's always competitive. I wouldn't say that I saw anything different, you know, this quarter or last quarter than I've seen, you know, from prior quarters.

Lauren Silberman

Analyst

Thank you very much.

Scott McPherson

Management

You bet. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

We'll move next to Brian Harbour with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Brian Harbour

Analyst

Brian, we can't hear you.

Operator

Operator

Yeah. Your line is difficult. Are you able to pick up a handset?

Brian Harbour

Analyst

Can you hear me now?

Operator

Operator

Yes. Perfect.

Brian Harbour

Analyst

Okay. Great. On your deflation comments, can you remind us how those products get marked up? And I guess, you know, for, like, cheese, for example, I mean, how much is this sort of like, category issue if you think about pizza? You know, in contrast to chicken, I would think that, you know, that's demand is still very good there. Could you just elaborate on that?

Patrick Hatcher

Management

Yeah. So just I'll try to keep this high level, but, you know, we're going to, we take our independent customers, we're going to have a markup on cost, and our salespeople are the ones that determine that. A deflationary environment, what's happening with these two commodities is there's oversupply. There's a lot of supply. A lot of capacity came on with cheese. And so it's at a very low point. And same thing with poultry. They're able to increase their supply significantly. They do this from time to time, and they go oversupply, and then they go undersupply. So again, it's really just our over-indexing because of our customer base in those two commodities that we called this out.

Brian Harbour

Analyst

Yep. Okay. Understood. And then just in convenience, I guess I would assume that there's sort of, you know, secular pressure on snack foods and that it's not just the inflation that's happened there, but sort of preference. I think we're seeing that in grocery stores. So, you know, how much do you think that do you agree with that? And do you think that, you know, the convenience stores are sort of committed to replacing some of those products with perhaps healthier options or more on-trend options? Do you think that's happening fast enough such that it sort of, you know, improves sales in that segment versus what you've been seeing?

Scott McPherson

Management

No. It's a great question. There's a lot to unpack there. The first thing I'd say is just looking at product inflation. If you look at snack and candy, you know, I guess, since pre-COVID until today, you know, those are two of the categories that had the highest inflationary increases of any consumable product that's out there. So certainly, I think that price elevation had an impact on demand. And so, you know, Frito's response, you know, like I said, is surprised me a little bit because I do think the consumer is catching up. And, you know, so as we talked about, we've seen a little heightened demand over the last couple of periods in convenience. As far as the mix of products, I think the one real opportunity for us is really in food service. You know, I think the convenience store more and more is becoming a relevant option for high-quality food options. And, you know, so as we think about consumer behavior changing, they want fresher, they want healthier, and, you know, convenience stores have an opportunity to fill that need. And we feel that, you know, we're somebody that can certainly fill that. As far as consumer packaged goods and that mix changing, there's been a shift in general to more healthier and convenience. And to your point, I think could this, you know, kind of dynamic accelerate it? Certainly, could. But I think as we all know, it takes consumer package companies a while to get products to market. So I don't see anything dramatically happening quickly.

Operator

Operator

We'll move next to Peter Saleh with BTIG. Please go ahead.

Peter Saleh

Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the question. I did want to come back to maybe Jeff's question on the forward guide. Can you just talk a little bit about maybe what's embedded from a macro perspective going forward? I mean, we do have some, you know, much higher tax refunds coming through. That should benefit this quarter or maybe into the, you know, first calendar half of the year. Have you embedded any of that into your guide? Have you thought about that? I know you said January was a pretty good month. February, I guess, started off pretty slow. But I think the quarter is really defined by how March performed. So any thoughts on that would be helpful.

Patrick Hatcher

Management

Yeah. Peter, that is a really good question. I spent a lot of time looking into the, you know, the tax refunds. The no taxes on tips or overtime that are going to start coming through. Yeah. And other tailwinds, honestly. I mean, what's the World Cup going to do? All these things as we go Q3 and Q4. We did not embed those in our guidance, mainly because it's very hard to know what that flow-through is going to be, but we do know that putting more money in the consumer's pocket, especially the folks that are maybe on the lower end, we'll see how much of that goes into the market and how much they use that for discretionary spend into restaurants. But we do know that's a very positive thing, and then we know that the World Cup should also be another tailwind, but we didn't put that in the guidance.

Peter Saleh

Analyst

Great. I appreciate that. Can you also comment I think last quarter, George commented that there could be some changes to the SNAP benefits and that could have an impact. Have you seen any change on that front and any impact to date?

Scott McPherson

Management

And there's some, you know, recently contemplated changes as well. But no, I can't say that we have seen any material impact on any of the changes or contemplated changes in SNAP at this point.

Peter Saleh

Analyst

Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

We'll move now to Karen Holthouse with Citi. Please go ahead.

Karen Holthouse

Analyst

Hi. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to dig into, you know, Florida a little bit and just kind of excluding Chaney Brothers or noise from that, your sense of just the underlying health of that market. I think we're hearing some concerns around travel tourism, particularly international tourism around theme parks and whatnot. Being down pretty materially. And then just as snowbird season has gotten underway, any risk that Canadians are avoiding the market this year?

Scott McPherson

Management

No. I think it's a great question. And, certainly, we have our finger on that pulse pretty closely. You know, the one thing that I would say that I've been very pleased about with Chaney is their independent share gain. You know, they continue to grow independent share at a rate consistent with the rest of our business. And definitely, you know, we've been following very closely the travel patterns, and I've seen the recent theme park attendance. So I do think there's been a little bit of a slowdown with international travel and the Canadian travel in the marketplace. But I'll tell you, we have a ton of confidence in Florida overall. I mean, that's been a state that's been growing consistently for a number of years. And, you know, I feel like that, you know, they're poised for a big rebound, and that's state. But, you know, we're performing really pretty well in the state, all things considered.

Karen Holthouse

Analyst

And then one quick follow-up that just prior to the bigger weather events that we saw the last week or so, anything to comment in terms of geographic performance in the quarter today?

Scott McPherson

Management

Oh, it's a really good question. Yeah. We had called out on prior earnings calls that we saw some slowness in the Midwest and we'd also called out areas where we had, you know, friends travel from Canada. But as I think back to, you know, last quarter, the start of this quarter, you know, particularly the start of this quarter, you know, January, which, you know, January isn't the bellwether month because it's a smaller month, but really saw a pretty consistent performance across the map. Didn't see any markets that had any material, you know, lulls or surges.

Karen Holthouse

Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

And once again, ladies and gentlemen, that is We'll turn next to Danilo Gargiulo with Bernstein. Please go ahead.

Danilo Gargiulo

Analyst

Great. Scott, once again, congratulations on your new role. And I want to ask you a more strategic question to begin with. So as you embark in this new role, how would you like your era to be remembered for? In other words, where do you see incremental opportunities for performance going forward?

Scott McPherson

Management

I really appreciate the question. I think it's a great question. One of the reasons that I'm at Performance Food Group Company, it's one of the reasons that, you know, as I was running Core Mark that we decided to merge with them is culturally, I truly foundationally believed in what George and Performance Food Group Company were doing as a company. So, you know, as I've worked with George over the last four years, I would say that, you know, we very much align in how we look at the business. I think fundamentally, we're both believers in driving growth, you know, both organically and through M&A. I think we both pay particular attention to margin and, you know, how mix can help and drive margin. Culture is very important, you know, to me. And then I'd say if there's any, you know, anything that maybe is a little different is I probably have a little slant towards, you know, how are we going to leverage technology? How are we going to leverage that to be more efficient as a company? You know, but outside of that, I'd say, you know, George and I, our approach to the business is very consistent. And my priority for this company is to continue to drive, you know, that top-line growth, but make sure that, you know, everything that we do allows it to flow to the bottom line and that we do, you know, with a great culture and make sure there's a great place for people to work.

Danilo Gargiulo

Analyst

Okay. Great. Thank you. And you mentioned margin in your answer. And earlier, you also talked about the discovery that you really had with the, you know, during the process of a potential merger with US Foods on the procurement side. So I'm wondering, over what time frame do you expect performance to start closing some of the margin gap versus peers? You know, absent, obviously, the mix impact that it's going to be favoring you over time. And what are some of the low-hanging fruits you think you could capture without impacting the case growth?

Scott McPherson

Management

No. Another great question. I would say that the work we did in the clean room was just validation. We felt like when we, you know, sat down and put together our strategy for investor day, you know, this is a company as I called out in my prior remarks that's grown dramatically over the last ten years. And so we felt like as we sit down with our vendors and partner with our vendors that there's opportunity to create cost of goods benefits, to create logistics benefits, you know, just through our size and scale and creating efficiency with our vendor partners. So, you know, I think the clean room exercise was just a further validation that that opportunity exists and that, you know, we have a clear line of sight to go capture it. And the second, I'm sorry, the second part of your question?

Danilo Gargiulo

Analyst

What is the right time frame for the closure of the margin gap?

Scott McPherson

Management

Yeah. I think I've called that out a little bit. You know, we really incorporated that synergy into our three-year guide. And as I look at, you know, the cadence of that, I would say that, you know, we're in the early innings. We're, you know, in the first couple of quarters of that. But we felt like and still feel like that's going to flow, you know, fairly consistently year to year. So, you know, I think that my thinking there is unchanged.

Danilo Gargiulo

Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

As there are no further questions in queue at this time, I would like to turn the call back over to Bill Marshall for any additional or closing comments.

Bill Marshall

Management

Thank you for joining our call today. If you have any follow-up questions, please reach out to Investor Relations.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. This brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time, and you may disconnect.