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.