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Floor & Decor Holdings, Inc.  (FND 0.25%)
Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call
Feb. 21, 2019, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Greetings and welcome to the Floor & Decor Holdings Fourth Quarter Earnings Call. At this time all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. (Operator Instructions) As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Wayne Hood, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Wayne Hood -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thank you and good morning everyone. Joining me on our call today are Tom Taylor, Chief Executive Officer and Trevor Lang, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Also in the room is Lisa Laube, Executive Vice President and Chief Merchandising Officer, who will join us for the Q&A session.

Before we get started, I would like to remind you of the company's safe harbor language. Comments made during this conference call and webcast contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Any statement that refers to expectations, projections or other characterizations of future events including financial projections or future market conditions is a forward-looking statement. The company's actual future results could differ materially from those expressed in such forward-looking statements for any reason, including those listed in its SEC filings.

Floor & Decor assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements. Please also note that past performance or market information is not a guarantee of future results. During this conference call, the company may discuss non-GAAP financial measures as defined by SEC Regulation G. A reconciliation of each of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure can be found in the earnings press release which is available on our Investor Relations website ir.flooranddecor.com. A recorded replay of this call together with related materials will be available on our Investor Relations website again ir.flooranddecor.com.

With that let me turn the call over to Tom Taylor. Thanks, Tom.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Wayne. And thanks to everyone for joining our fourth Quarter 2018 earnings conference call. We are very pleased to review our fourth quarter and full-year 2018 results as well as to discuss our plans for fiscal 2019. Total fourth quarter sales from 12.1% to $436.7 million from $389.5 million last year, and was at the high end of our guidance of $429 million to $437 million provided on our third quarter 2018 earnings conference call. Adjusted diluted earnings per share for the fourth quarter were $0.20 per share, exceeding the high end of our guidance of $0.16 to $0.19. We are pleased with our results considering some of the unique challenges we faced and overcame in the fourth quarter of 2018.

First as many of you know we were lapping a strong 24.4% growth in comparable store sales in last year's fourth quarter driven partly by the Houston market due to benefit from Hurricane Harvey last year. Despite these difficult sales comparisons and forecasting challenges following the Hurricane our comparable store sales grew at 0.5% in line with our expectations. Our comparable store sales excluding Houston remains strong up 8.7% from the fourth quarter of last year and in line with our long-term expectations of mid-to-high single-digit growth.

Second, our merchandising team successfully mitigated the cost pressures from the 10% tariffs and we have solid plans in place to further diversify our countries margin by year-end. Third, we successfully opened five new stores in the fourth quarter versus three new stores in the fourth quarter last year, including the opening of our 100 store in Burlingame, California. And finally, we successfully managed through a decelerating Houston market with strong results that demonstrate the relative strength of our business model and our market share growth. I would like to thank all of our associates for their continued hard work and dedication to serving all of our customers.

Moving on to full 2018 results. Comparable store sales grew 9.2% excluding the Houston market which is lapping a store flooding due to Hurricane Harvey, our comparable store sales increased 10%. This is our 10th consecutive year of double-digit comparable same-store sales growth, when excluding the Houston market. Our 2018 total sales grew 23.5%, reaching a record $1.71 billion almost triple 2014 sales of $584.6 million and at the upper end of our guidance of $1.702 billion to $1.701 (ph) billion provided on our third quarter 2018 earnings conference call.

This 2014 we have doubled our store base averaged 14.7% comp store sales growth and grown our market share to an estimated 8% of the addressable $21 billion flooring market. As Trevor will discuss in more detail, our 2018 adjusted earnings per share grew 40.6% to $0.97 from $0.69 last year and 23.5% sales growth, while making significant important investment to support our future growth. As we have discussed in the past, the core pillars to achieving our long-term sales and earnings growth targets and growing our market share will come from one, opening new stores; two growing comparable store sales through our broad innovative, trend right, localized assortment, in-stock inventory and low prices; three, expanding and improving our connected customer experience; and four improving the Pro customer experience.

I will now spend a few minutes discussing each of these and the ongoing unique opportunities that they each present as you move into 2019 and beyond and how they will contribute to driving long-term shareholder returns. New stores, as you saw in the press release, we successfully opened 17 new stores in 2018. 2018 marks our sixth year of at least 20% unit store growth, while it's still early, it appears the class of 2018 will be in line with our expectations. Some of these stores were in new large, densely populated markets including our first stores in Boston, Long Island, Seattle and San Francisco Bay Area. While there is higher upfront cost to enter these markets as we've discussed over the last year. We firmly believe these stores will be higher volume, solidly profitable stores due to our value proposition, as well as the density of population and high income levels in these markets.

As Trevor will discuss, the improving sales in 4-wall returns that we are seeing relative to our pro forma new store model from our 2017, 2016 and 2015 new store vintages gives us added confidence that we're making the correct investments in the new stores and supporting distribution capacity. While we are excited about our 2018 market openings we are equally excited about our expected 20, 2019 new store openings. This class is expected to have a higher percentage of new stores in existing markets. Currently, estimated to be about 65% versus 35% in 2018.

Since our new stores in existing markets generally outperform in-sales and operating profit in their first year, due to higher brand awareness and more knowledgeable employees. We expect this to result in a potentially faster ramp in sales and profitability from our 2019 class of the new stores, relative to the class of 2018. The 20 new locations in 2019 will represent 20% growth in units, our seventh year in a row of at least 20% unit growth and is consistent with our annual long-term growth target.

Finally, we continue to see an opportunity to open at least 400 locations in the U.S. and have a strong pipeline of stores teed up ahead of us in 2020 with the plan to have those stores open more evenly throughout the year. To support our new store growth in January, we announced plans to open our fourth distribution center at Tradepoint Atlantic in Baltimore, Maryland. Joining FedEx Ground and Amazon.com, who already operate large warehouses at the port. This is a 1.5 million square feet facility that is expected to be operational in the fourth quarter of 2019 and will support our growth into the Northeast, and create about 150 new full-time jobs by the end of 2023. Trevor will discuss in a moment how this facility will lower our logistics supply chain costs over the long term.

Moving to our second pillar of growth, comparable store sales. As I mentioned, fiscal 2018 represented another strong year of sales growth with comparable store sales growing 9.2% compared with 16.6% growth in 2017. In the fourth quarter, our comparable store sales increased 0.5% against 2017, 24.4% increase and was in line with our guidance of flat to up 2%. Excluding Houston market our comparable store sales in the fourth quarter of 2018 increased 8.7%. On the two year stack basis our fourth quarter comparable store sales were up 24.9%, which was in line with the 24.6% growth in the third quarter of 2018. Transactions, one measure of market share growth remain the primary driver of growth in the fourth quarter and full-year comparable store sales growth. Comparable store transactions increased 2.6% in the fourth quarter of 2018 and were up 7.7% excluding Houston.

For the full year comparable store transactions increased 10% and were up 9.7% excluding Houston. Average ticket declined slightly for the year, but was up 0.3% excluding Houston the decline in average ticket continues to reflect the decline in wood and stone categories as customers currently prefer innovative products in tile, water resistant laminate, rigid core vinyl and decorative accessories. From a product standpoint, laminate and vinyl continue to experience the strongest results in the quarter and for the year due to robust growth from our water resistant laminate as well as our waterproof rigid core vinyl brands. This is the third year in a row that this category has meaningfully outperformed other categories, growing 52% in fiscal 2018 alone. We have shown over the last ten years that we can grow at above market rates regardless what trend is driving growth. As long as hard surface flooring is growing, we believe we will continue to take market share.

As we think about 2019 and beyond, we believe we'll continue to take market share in the hard surface flooring market through ongoing innovation strategies and by offering consumers easy, affordable and updated stylish flooring solutions. To help our customers through the purchase journey we're making investments in our designers and our design centers were over 1,000 vignettes were refreshed in 2018 with the intent of engaging with customers more often about their entire project. We know that when one of our designers becomes involved with the project the average ticket can be four times larger than the ones where they are not involved.

To improve the experience, we have given designers tools like online appointment scheduler, access and reporting on key metrics as well as tablets that allow them to be mobile in our stores to help build customers orders as they peruse our aisles together. Importantly, when a designer is involved, we see improved customer satisfaction scores and favorable customer views on social media.

In 2019, we will also build on our strategies to drive higher basket selling by making sure our Pros in customers leave our stores with all the installation materials that they will need for their project. Like mortar, grout, glues, underlayments tools and sealing products. Remember every product we sell requires installation materials to be installed and we plan to drive higher attachment rates.

Our stores will be reset to better guide this process and in some cases categories expanded. So the customers has more options and can easily find the installation materials they will need to finish their project. We have also taken this into account on our website where we have added Finish My Project functionality. We have tied a portion of our store management incentive compensation to selling these necessary installations products. We are investing heavily in new store level training and human resources, technology to help our associates be more consultative and selling through our customers as well as we new labor scheduling tools to better align when our associates should be scheduled.

Expanding the connected customer is our third pillar of growth. We have been very pleased with our connected customer strategy and expect to build on the success in 2019 and beyond. Specifically, our e-commerce sales continue to grow at a much faster rate than our total sales and in 2018, accounting for about 8% sales tendered. Approximately 77% of our e-commerce customers pickup in store, which demonstrates the synergy between our physical footprint and our e-commerce business. In 2018, we experienced an increase in traffic, as well as improvement in desktop and mobile conversion. Order volume -- order value and attachment rates were all higher year-over-year and we expect to build on this momentum in 2019.

We continue investing in technologies, merchants and associate training that will offer an integrated shopping experience and make it easier to buy from us. We have a number of great new initiatives planned in 2019, that is designed to drive engagement through better customer relationship management analytics and initiatives, which will further improve the connected customer experience. Throughout 2018, we built tools that allow orders to be built online or in the store. Main for specific customer project and save on or emailed to the customers, so that they can evaluate, change and transact on our website in the convenience of their home or on their mobile device. We launched to redesign of our mobile website and enhanced tool called Finish My Project.

Our Finish My Project tool allows associates and customers to simplify the process of adding necessary installation materials. We believe our tools and training can help demystify and build confidence in which installation accessories are needed to complete a customer project. We estimated 72% of customers, who ultimately buy from us. We'll visit our website during their buying process. So it is critical that our side is informative, inspirational and offers customers the ability to shop Floor & Decor however and whenever it's convenient for them. Collectively, our connected customer initiatives give us added confidence that we can sustain, strong e-commerce growth.

Invest in the Pro's are fourth pillar of growth. We see continued opportunities to increase our share of wallet with existing Pros as well as engage with Pros that do not currently shop with us. To that end, we rolled out Pro Premier Rewards in the third quarter of 2018. This loyalty program rewards our Pros the more they spend with Floor & Decor the more points they earn which can be redeemed for all kinds of awards like trips, events, electronics and much more. This program also includes an umbrella of 14 offerings to help these small businesses -- run their businesses more effectively. Examples include payroll processing services, uniforms, email marketing tools as well as access to health insurance all in a low cost. We already have over 50,000 (ph) members in our Pro Premier Rewards program. As engagement continues to grow we expect loyalty and share of wallet to also improve. A major focus in 2019 will be growing in this program, which is integrated into our CRM database.

In addition, in 2018 we launched our Pro Premier act and currently have approximately 4,000 active users growing each day. Pro's have access to increase functionality in the app including keeping track of their orders, looking up skew inventory, scheduling pickup and so much more. We expect our active users to continue to grow as we have many future enhancements coming to further improve the shopping experience for our professional customers including allowing Pro's to build growth and order products directly through app and integrating in SKU barcode scannability. We are excited about the potential growth and loyalty that will come from these initiatives as we build awareness about the very specific services we can offer in 2019 and beyond.

I'll now turn the call over to Trevor to discuss our fourth quarter 2018 results and our 2019 outlook.

Wayne Hood -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thanks, Tom. I'm going to concentrate my comments on some of the changes among the major items in our income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statements and then discuss our 2019 earnings release growth outlook. Tom already discussed our fourth quarter and full year 2018 sales results. So I'll start with our fourth quarter gross margin rate where we experienced a 30 basis points year-over-year decline to 41.4%. The gross margin rate decline was better than we expected due to favorable cost out negotiations and rebates with our vendors, as well as targeted retail changes, which were somewhat offset by higher and year-over-year inventory shrink and inventory reserves.

Moving on to expenses. Our store SG&A expenses grew 16.5% and deleveraged 110 basis points to 27.3% from 26.2% last year. Recall, we are comparing against a 70 basis point leverage last year that came from the 24.4% growth in our comparable store sales making for difficult comparisons. The majority of the store SG&A deleverage was due to opening 12 of the 17 stores in the second half of 2018. Our new stores have much higher SG&A in the first half of their operations versus the back half and we had a very heavy concentration of new store SG&A in the fourth quarter of 2018.

Store preopening expenses totaled $8,300,000 compared to $2,700,000 last year, which was modestly above the $7.5 million we guided to in our third quarter conference call. This increase reflects five new store openings that opened late in the quarter versus three stores last year and some new store expenses for our planned first quarter of 2019 openings that shifted into the quarter. Our fourth quarter corporate SG&A expense totaled $30,300,000, an increase of 20.9% from last year and deleveraged 40 basis points to 6.9% from 6.5% last year, included in our corporate SG&A, as a charge for $5,800,000 related to the lease impairment for our recently exited distribution center in Miami, Florida. The Miami lease impairment charge is not a normal part of our operations and if you exclude this charge, our corporate SG&A actually leveraged 80 basis points to 5.6%.

We exclude the Miami distribution center charge of $5,800,000 from our adjusted earnings per share discussed in more detail below. Excluding the Miami distribution center lease impairment charge, our total SG&A expense rate would have deleveraged a 140 basis points to 34.8% driven entirely by the timing of our preopening expenses. Taken together with the 30 basis point decline in gross margin rate our fourth quarter EBIT margin contracted 300 basis points to 5.3% from 8.3% last year. Excluding the Miami distribution center charge and new store preopening expenses, our operating margins declined 40 basis points, which is due to the formerly mentioned 30 basis points lower gross margin, the higher amount of new stores and operating in more expensive markets as well as an extremely strong fourth quarter 2017 results also already discussed.

Before I discuss 2018 net income adjusted EBITDA and 2019 guidance please note that I will discuss both GAAP and non-GAAP measures. As described in our earnings release, we believe non-GAAP disclosures enable investors to better understand our core operating performance on a comparable basis between periods. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP metrics to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures can be found in our earnings release issued in connection with this call. Fourth quarter adjusted net income increased 5% to $20,800,000 million from $19,900,000 last year.

As Tom mentioned, our fourth quarter adjusted earnings per share increased 5% to $0.20 per share from $0.19 last year, which was $0.01 above the high end of our guidance. Our full year adjusted earnings per share grew 41% to $0.97 from $0.69 last year on 23.5% sales growth despite significant investments we are making to support our future growth. Fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA totaled $44.5 million, up 2% from last year's $43.5 million and was above the high end of our guidance of $44,200,000 that we provided in our third quarter earnings conference call. Our adjusted EBITDA margin rate contracted 100 basis points to 10.2% from 11.2% last year, driven by higher new store preopening expenses.

Moving onto our balance sheet. We are coming into 2019 having further improved our strong financial position to support our future growth. We have about $290 million in available liquidity and our total bank debt declined 23% or $44.5 million to $149 million from $193.5 million in 2017. Our total inventory grew 10%, which was in line with our expectations. Gross capital expenditures totaled $161,400,000 compared to $102,300,000 last year.

As we turn to page on 2018, strong sales and adjusted earnings growth and look to 2019, I will cover some broad themes on how we are planning 2019. First, as it relates to comparable store sales increases for fiscal 2019 due to the Houston negative comp abating as we move past the first half of 2019, it likely increase in retail pricing due to 25% tariffs scheduled to go into place in early March 2019, as well as having a concentration of -- the higher concentration of new stores entering the comp base in the second half of 2019. We expect our comparable store sales to sequentially accelerate throughout 2019.

Second, any pricing actions, we may take related tariffs will be to -- only cover the additional cost of tariffs after considering vendor cost of negotiation as well as moving our sourcing away from China. We've built our 2019 financial plan assuming the current tariff regime stays in place, including the 25% tariffs beginning in early March. If the Chinese tariffs currently enacted or retracted we will update you on our first quarter call, but we would see this is a net positive for the consumer, and a net positive for our business as well.

Third, as Tom walked you through, we are making important strategic investments that we believe will further enhance our strategic positioning in areas like e-commerce, technology, talent, CRM, loyalty training and other priorities like a new Northeast distribution center and relocating our new -- to a new larger corporate office. We are confident these investments are necessary to support our growth and will yield a return much as they have done over the last six years. We had identified at least $0.04 in 2019 EPS tied to our new distribution center and lease accounting that I will discuss further.

We are moving into a new store support center in the late third quarter of 2019 and completing our move in the fourth quarter of that same year. We will take on additional expenses during this transition for items like dual rent, accelerated depreciation of the leasehold improvements of our core -- current store support center as well as one-time move costs to our new store support center. And these are unique to the store support center move. We intend to call these cost out each quarter and remove them from adjusted net income, earnings per share and EBITDA and have called out these estimates in our press release today.

Finally, as Tom mentioned, we are planning to open a new 1.5 million square feet distribution center in Baltimore, Maryland in the fourth quarter of 2019 and we'll be taking on cost of approximately $4 million to $5 million in the fourth quarter. This needed expansion will support our growth in the Northeast and Midwest for years to come. We estimate that for every 75,000 squre feet store we open, we need an additional 15,000 square feet to 20,000 feet of distribution center capacity to support that store. We could have expanded our distribution center capacity in Savannah to support that growth but our analysis demonstrated that over the long run our domestic freight costs into the Northeast and the Midwest would be lower using this port rather than expanding our distribution center in Savannah.

In the short term the upfront lease and labor cost to operate this facility, to build inbound freight and preparation for outbound shipments to our stores in 2020 will create a short-term drag on fourth quarter gross profit between $4 million to $5 million or approximately $0.03 per share. We expect lower domestic freight cost to begin to emerge in the first half of 2020 when this facility is fully operational. Over a three year period we expect this facility could save us about $11 million due to lower domestic freight costs rather than expanding our operations in Savannah, where we have long distance (ph) miles to our Northeast and Midwest stores.

Taking these factors into consideration we expect our first quarter 2019 net sales to be in the range of $474 million to $482 million, an increase of 18% to 20% versus the first quarter of 2018. This growth outlook is based on the comparable store sales growth of 2% to 4%. Excluding the Houston market we would expect our comparable store sales in the first quarter to be in the range of 6.5% to 8.5%. Excluding the cost associated with our new store support center relocation, we expect our first quarter operating margins to be in the range of 8% to 8.5%. Adjusted diluted earnings per share for the first quarter is expected to be $0.26 to $0.28 per share. We're assuming about $104 million weighted average diluted shares outstanding for the first quarter of 2019. We expect our adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter of 2019 to be $56 million to $59 million, an increase of 17% to 23% over the first quarter of 2018.

Turning to our full-year outlook, we expect net sales for fiscal 2019 to be in the range of $2,060 million to $2,094 million, an increase of 20.5% to 22.4% versus fiscal 2018. This net sales growth outlook is based on 20 new warehouse store openings and comparable store sales increases of 6% to 8%. Excluding the impact of Houston we are planning on fiscal 2019 comparable store sales to increase 8% to 10%.

We expect the net impact from tariffs on our product cost to place more sequential pressure on gross margin rate as we move throughout 2019, due to our inventory turning just over two times per year and our average cost method of accounting for inventory. While we plan on first quarter 2019, gross margins increasing approximately 70 basis points to 80 basis points. We are planning on fiscal 2019 gross margins declining 40 basis points to 50 basis points. As previously mentioned, we planned to open our new distribution center in Baltimore in the fourth quarter of 2019 and this is estimated the cost as $4 million to $5 million in the fourth quarter of 2019, thereby lowering our fourth quarter 2019 gross margins, the most relative to fiscal 2018. If tariffs are not enacted, we would expect a modest increase in gross margins in 2019 versus 2018.

Moving on to full year SG&A expense, we expect total SG&A to slightly deleverage or be flat as a percentage of sales. Adjusted diluted earnings per share for fiscal 2019 is expected to be $1.07 to $1.12, diluted weighted average shares outstanding is expected to be $104,500,000 and our fiscal 2019 tax rate is estimated to be 23.1%. As a reminder this guidance does not take into consideration the tax benefit due to the impact of stock option exercises that may occur in fiscal 2019. We expect fiscal 2019 adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $234 million to $241 million, an increase of 22% to 26% over fiscal 2018.

Early adoption of the new lease accounting and no longer amortizing tenant improvement allowance into rent expense, we estimate our 2019 adjusted EBITDA will be higher by about $5 million. This $5 million benefit only affects adjusted EBITDA and does not affect operating income or net income. Also due to the new lease accounting rules, we are expensing an estimated $1 million in previously capitalized new store legal and due diligence costs that are under the previous GAAP we capitalized into the cost of the new stores. When combining this additional expense due to the new lease accounting along with the cost to open our new Baltimore D.C., in the fourth quarter, it is negatively impacting our 2019 adjusted earnings per share by about $0.04 per share.

We are planning on growth capital spending to increase to $220 million to $230 million in 2019 comprised of approximately $146 million to $153 million for new stores that were open in 2019 and some that will open in 2020, about $39 to $41 million for existing stores and distribution centers and $35 to $36 million in store support center capital. Just isolating our class of 2019 new store CapEx versus our class of 2018 new store CapEx, we are expecting the cost of these new stores to grow about 19% in line with our 20% planned unit growth.

A larger increase in 2019 CapEx versus 2018 is driven by three items. First, we are taking on an estimated $26 million to $28 million, higher CapEx for the next year of new stores, the class of 2020 versus the same time last year. There are two reasons for this increase. First, we plan to open more new stores earlier in 2020 versus 2019. In 2019, we estimate openings 15 of our 20 stores or 75% in the second half of 2019. We are planning to open a more balanced cadence of openings in 2020 and since we incur our capital expenditures on average up to six months in advance we are incurring more CapEx for the class of 2020 in 2019 relative to the same time last year.

In addition, we are taking on more construction cost for the class of 2020, which will materially lower our per unit lease cost and provide a good return on this upfront investment. The second driver of our increased CapEx as we plan on spending about $9 million in CapEx for our new distribution center in Baltimore. Third, we plan on spending about $14 million in CapEx for our new store support center. If we exclude roughly $50 million related to the incremental cost of 2020 new stores our new Northeast D.C., and our new store support center, our CapEx growth would be about 20% and we expect our growth in CapEx in 2020 to be much lower than 2019.

The last item that was noted in our press release, we plan to report in our Form 10-K a material weakness in internal controls related to information technology general controls in the area of user access and program change-management over certain IT systems that the Company's financial reporting processes. I can tell you, there have been no misstatements identified in the financial statements as a result of these efficiencies and we expect to file our 10-K in a timely matter. Remediation efforts have begun but the material weakness will not be considered remediated until the applicable controls operate for a sufficient period of time as we conclude through testing that the controls are operating effectively. We expect the remediation to be completed prior to the end of fiscal 2019.

With that, I'll turn the call back over to Tom for a few closing remarks.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Trevor. I'm proud of our team's execution in performance of the business. Even with some bounce in headwinds we faced in 2018. We're excited about the opportunities entering 2019 and we firmly believe our best days are ahead of us. We would now like to take your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

At this time we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. (Operator instruction) Our first question comes from the line of Michael Lasser with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks a lot for taking my question. I'm sure you don't want to provide a kind of detail on how tariffs are influencing the P&L for this year, but can you give us a sense for how much price you're going to take in response to 25% tariff and if we assume your gross margins are a little bit rather than down 40% like you guided few, that would add anywhere from $0.05 to $0.07 this year. So, is that how we should think about the contribution to your P&L, if the 25% does not go through. And then I have a follow-up.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Michael, this is Trevor. Thank you for that. You're correct, our comps do accept, it is like -- it assumes the 25% tariffs are going into effect. We did want to give an exact number on that, just for competitive reasons and I think you -- as you said correctly that our margins -- we do believe that plan would go up if we don't have the tariffs go into place. Although, because the tariffs are implicit in our sales where there maybe some sales difference and some of those assumptions, but yes, we do believe that the tariff don't want to place, that will be a net positive for the consumer as well as a net positive for Floor & Decor.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, and we plan to use price as the last resort. I mean, were in -- we're working hard and, you know, diversifying where we got the product from Lisa and her team have done a really terrific job in negotiating with our suppliers to get cost out and we've got a good plan in place and the effect that they do go through.

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

And my follow-up question is, if we back out some of the hurricane impacts over the last couple of quarters, it looks like you're guiding at the midpoint to 7% Tom, ex-hurricanes that would be a bit of a slowdown from 8.7% that you reported in the fourth quarter. So can you give us a sense for what you're seeing so far to start the year, has it -- is this slowdown in housing starting to impact your -- or further impacting your trend or is it weather or some -- something else going on?

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think, first -- I will touch a little bit on macro and then I'll talk a little bit about, about the sales, but, look, we're not economists. We see the same stat that you do and that our competitors see. Housing turnover declines and continue for almost all of 2018 household affordability is a bit challenged, household values and a increase in household buys are predicted to be slowing, but the data we see about the repair or model industry, it may be slowing but it's not falling off a cliff. We still think the consumer is healthy, we believe we are posted in the -- upper single-digit comps in that type of environment that's really good.

So, our guidance reflects to -- what we've always said in our long-term plans, mid-to-upper single digits, that's how we plan the business, that's how we think about the business. In the fourth quarter, if you think about it, our total sales were still in line with the high end of our guidance, an 8.7% comp in the same environment is very good and if you go back -- the second quarter, 8.6% comp, third, it's a bit of an anomaly because of all the storm effects, in the fourth quarter posted 8.7%, we're really pleased with where we are operating the business.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Michael. One thing I just want to follow up on, because I know we threw a lot of numbers to you guys, but our comps for the full year excluding Houston and we think Houston is probably a 200 basis point to 250 basis point drag on this year, it will be closer to 8% to 10%. So very healthy growth in the environment, we're operating in and we think, well above industry standards.

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

Sounds good. Good luck with the rest of the year.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Chris Horvers with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.

Chris Horver -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning guys. I just want to follow-up on that last question. So I mean you are assuming the core comp does decelerate in the first quarter. So just -- is this conservatism you tend to like to be in range, you did a great job on that in the fourth quarter? Is it somehow, you're seeing a change in the consumer in terms of the breadth of the projects that you are taking on in the amount of ticket, clearly that's a focus for 2019 for you? So just further a follow-up on why you're assuming the core comp as weather ticks down?

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think -- Houston is probably is what's driving us the most complexity there. If you look at our Q1 comps excluding Houston, they are assuming a mid 8% comp and that's essentially what we posted in Q4, and I think, I commented in Q2 as well. So, the business has been fairly consistent and we expect that to continue through the first quarter of this year. As I mentioned in my prepared comments because of tariffs, because of higher concentration of new stores opening in the back part of the year as well as Houston abating, we expect our comps accelerate throughout the rest of the year.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. And I think what we're seeing -- what the consumers are buying in the stores. We're seeing average unit retail as a good thing. Customers -- we are not seeing them step down to lower price point items, we are still seems step up the better and best. So, we still think the consumer is in a pretty good place.

Chris Horver -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Understood. And then as a follow-up, can you talk about, sort of what's the embedded comp that you get from new store maturation? How is that involving this year, you have the -- a high penetration of stores outside that opened in the past couple of years outside our core markets. So is that a net benefit for this year? And then as you go forward, given there's going to be more stores opening in market -- existing market this year, how do you think about that -- into that waterfall benefit as you look out to 2020? Thanks very much.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Chris, this is Trevor. We looked at this in detail again at the end of the fourth quarter and when we went public, we publicly disclosed about 400 basis points of lift because of our new stores comping at a much higher rate than our more mature stores. We look at that again for the year of fiscal 2018, as well as the fourth quarter and it's still running about 400 basis points, which is quite impressive considering the overall first year volumes have gone up pretty substantially in the class of 16 and 17 and the class of 18 will be a good class of stores as well. So as we look to the -- as we look to 2019, we have planned that to be a little bit more conservative, just gives our new stores have performed better. Hopefully, we were wrong again, and it continues to perform at that same rate but it's been about 400 basis points and it's been pretty consistent. So, I thought I answered that.

Chris Horver -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning. My first one, I want to hit on the macro one more time. So when we saw your ICR, your commentary felt reshoring that's more of my words then yours, in that you described the 2018 is somewhat decelerating, but that you were seeing signs of stabilization, is there anything different from what you were seeing at that point, which I assume reflected more of the fourth quarter, then how the beginning of the year has played out, any variability. Tom, you mentioned you're not really seeing anybody trade down. So I just want to probe, how you felt then versus what you're seeing to start the year?

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks. Yeah, I don't feel much different, but I've said that ICR is consistent to what we see today. It's still -- the consumer is still healthy, customers are still buying up the line. The market is -- maybe not as a great as it was two, three years ago, but we still feel it's a good market to participate and then when you think about the company. And I have said it, I've said it before as you know we're still -- we are 10% unaided brand as people don't know who we are, they're still finding us. We've got almost 50% of our stores were less than three years old. We're continuing to take share at a pretty high rate, there is still a secular shift from carpet in the hard surface line. We just have a lot of factors that help us no matter what happens within the economy.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Okay. My follow-up is on the EBIT margin. It looks like the implied range broadly for next year somewhere between 7% and 8% on EBIT and I wanted to ask, thinking about it over time, will more of the leverage in the margin comes from just fixed costs in terms of expense leverage or gross through direct sourcing and supply chain? And then can you just clarify, Trevor, you mentioned one item, that's an add back to adjusted EBITDA. Can you just give us what other items are -- within the guide for 2019 that are in adjusted EBITDA?

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So I think your assumptions on our EBIT margins are in the ballpark once you -- on an adjusted basis, really the big adjustment will have this coming year for adjusted EBIT, would be that relocation of our store support center. And then for the fiscal year '19, all of our adjustments will be similar. We will have an add back, -- new add-back, I think we'll have will be the corporate office relocation, and is really the only new add-back, I think we're going to have on a go-forward basis.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

And then long term as far as the leverage in the model?

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Thank you. So I think our view is that we want to get a little bit of leverage out of both. We want to continue to be a low price leader. We're confident and our prices are low, we watch that very closely every week, and so, what we do think there is -- hopefully, get some leverage out of distribution centers and shrink and things of that nature. So we do think there is a modest amount of gross margin opportunity for us as we look to the future.

And then on operating expenses, as we've said in '18 and some of that into '19, it took us some portion of $10 million to step into these more expensive markets. Those will be completely embedded into the total basis. We get 12 months of operating expenses in 2019. So we would expect to get SG&A leverage. So our current expectation, as we look our long-term is hopefully a little bit from margin and a little bit from SG&A.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Great. Thanks. Good luck.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Chuck Grom with Gordon Haskett. Please proceed with your question.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Hey thanks. Good morning. Guys, can you just walk through the shift in the gross margin complexion from the fourth quarter, which is down about I think you guys had down 30 basis points to the expectation for it to be up 70 basis points to 80 basis points, if you could just maybe just walk through mix transportation, anything like supply chain shrink?

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. This is Trevor. Most of what happened in the fourth quarter, obviously was a lot happened late with the tariffs going into effect on September 24. Tom kind of mentioned this on the last call, Lisa talked about it. Most of that beat was the merchandising team hustled, and went out and got accommodations and rebates and better costing than we had planned for. Shrink was a little bit actually below our plans, worse than our plan. And we actually donate a little bit more inventory to habitat in the year as well, but the majority of that beat was the merchandising team doing a good job in getting cost out.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

And then just your expectation for it to be up in the first quarter, so much like what's shifting.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

So the biggest driver of what's driving Q1 gross margin being higher is we added a substantial amount of distribution capacity in late 2017 and therefore in Q1, it was all new -- of 2018. Now, that we're a year beyond that, we really didn't add any distribution center capacity in 2018. We're going to get a fair amount of leverage. The majority of that gross margin beat is in distribution center leverage for Q1. And then the remaining piece, it is our product margins are just performing a bit stronger as well.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Okay, that's helpful. And then the second question would be, just in light of the 10% increase that took place in the fall. I am curious, what you're seeing from some of the independents and how they've reacted in -- and that has been an opportunity near term for you to take market share?

Lisa G. Laube -- Executive Vice President and Chief Merchandising Officer

Hi. This is Lisa. We've seen a few of the independents start to take price up. I think it may be a little bit more challenging for some of them just having the distributors and the way that they sourced products for us, we go direct to the source that we have -- that you're supposed and that really makes the decisions and so we've been very fortunate that we've had very good, very good luck getting cost out working with our vendors. So we have seen a little from the independents and would expect to continue to see that.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Matt McClintock with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Matt McClintock -- Barclays -- Analyst

Yes, good morning, everyone. Tom, I wanted to talk about the accessory attach rate. It seems like you're really focused on that as a huge opportunity. In terms of putting that in the incentive comp plan for the year for the stores, is that something that's new for the first time in 2019? And then, Trevor, are you embedding any gross margin improvement or sequential improvement from selling more accessories this year in 2019? Thanks.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, so that is something that we've been talking about it all through. So the whole time I've been here, we've talked about attachment selling and selling total project, trying to -- oftentimes the customers leave our stores and they don't have all the accessories -- that they need to install the project and that frustrates us and we've talked and talked and talked and we thought -- we found during the middle part of the year, we really started putting the pressure on rigidcore vinyl, although to make sure that we're putting stuff with that. As we were measuring it more, talking about it more we starting to see a benefit, and we saw better attachment rate and is, as we thought about next year our store managers plans, and our department managers bonus plans are, they were pretty simplistic in their approach and we said let's -- we had been talking for years of what other metric can be put in there to get into focus on it and we said, attachment selling in my mind is two things. It really -- it improves customer service, so it's such a benefit for the customer for our associates to do a good job of saying, hey don't leave here without buying vapor barrier if you're buying rigid vinyl core, and make sure we sell that quarter round molding.

It's really good for the customers, so we have to make a second trip and then it's also really good for us because we saw gross margin. So this is a brand new thing for us. We just got out of our store managers meeting that we did in January sold to the group. As I've -- as I've toward the stores we've seen a lot of excitement within the stores is a -- it's a pretty good way for them to make it easy part of their bonus so, so new and more excited about what it can contribute.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

And Matt, this is Trevor. We did not play in a lot of gross margin of appreciation because of this, that is a higher margin gross products. So if we have as much success as we're hopeful to, we'll talk about that over the coming quarters.

Matt McClintock -- Barclays -- Analyst

Perfect. And then just -- as my second follow-up on. Tom and both, Trevor you're experiencing a lot of deleverage on SG&A from opening stores later in the year. I know this question has been asked before, but you know as we get into the 2020-2021 and beyond. At what point will you be able to simplify the store-opening schedule. So that you start to get those opened earlier in the year. Thanks.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

One thing, I would just, I will mention, we are opening three stores in Q1 of this year versus only opening one store last year, so that is definitely put some SG&A leverage. Our new stores have incredible return but their upfront SG&A is incredibly high because we spend a lot of time training our employees, a lot of advertising, brand awareness and those kind of things, so that is put some downward pressure on SG&A in Q1.

As we also mentioned, as we think about 2020, we're certainly just finishing up our 2019 plan, but as we do think about 2020, we are finally after Tom and I have been here for eight years, we do final -- we're going to have a more balanced cadence of new store openings, as opposed to this year, where 75% of our stores were opened in the back half of the year. And so there might be a little bit of pressure in early 2020, just because we're going to -- we're going to have opened those stores earlier, but we know when we open our stores earlier, the overall profit for the year is much higher.

And so I think 2020 will be a little bit, we won't have as much leverage in the first half of 2020 as we're in the back half of 2020 again only because we're going to finally open the cadence of stores more equally throughout the year versus being so back-end loaded.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

And I would say, our real estate pipeline is the best that it's been since I've been here.

Matt McClintock -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thanks a lot for that color, guys. Best of luck.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks Matt.

Operator

(Operator Instructions) Our next question comes from the line of Seth Basham with Wedbush Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Seth Basham -- Wedbush Securities -- Analyst

Thanks a lot, and good morning. My question is around the fourth quarter comp. In terms of regional performance, is there any color that you can share outside of Houston?

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

As I said in my opening comments. Look, there's always different operating areas that we want to push to get better, but overall, I'm pleased with the performance around the country, we saw pretty consistent performance across everywhere. So, no real comment to add.

Seth Basham -- Wedbush Securities -- Analyst

Thank you. And my follow-up. Lisa is, regards to the pricing compared environment, you mentioned there had been some moves by independents, but what about the big box competitors? How they reacted in terms of pricing for some of the Chinese import products that are affected by tariffs and how you guys responded?

Lisa G. Laube -- Executive Vice President and Chief Merchandising Officer

As we're not going to be seeing anything dramatically different from our big box competitors is, it's the same as it's been since I've been here and we have prices up a day and down day. So it is a constant game, and so I have not -- I wouldn't say that's seen anything dramatically different there.

Seth Basham -- Wedbush Securities -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Liz Suzuki with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.

Liz Suzuki -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Great, thanks guys. This is on the store growth. You've maintained a pretty great pace of new store growth. Have you had any difficulty in finding qualified managers to run your new stores during getting the right mix of locally tailored products when you're opening so many new stores a year and at what point do you think it does get difficult to continue that 20% pace.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

And I think, I think we've done, I think on both, I think from the man -- store manager perspective, we're in better shape today than we were -- when we first started opening 20% in units, we've built out a training department, we've built our curriculum, we've been been able to recruit fairly well. I mean, there's not many retailers that have the type of growth that we have, we give our managers equity, so people want to come and be part of this growth. So we've had a good balance of getting good recruits and a good balance of developing our own people, and we feel good about the pipeline of talent that we have. So I don't see any pressure in that as of today. I feel, it's almost like the real estate pipeline, I feel really good with our talent pipeline, very similar I feel on that and getting the stores assorted right -- now we're in most major places, there is not -- when we talked about the new openings for next year. The amount of new markets, we're doing will be the least that it's been since I've been here 65% of stores next year fill in stores, and we've gotten really good at getting what the mix is.

We have dedicated teams that help us get this assortment and right to begin with and we've been pretty good at -- it not miss in the market. So I also think we've got good process in place. We have a good way to navigate as we go into new markets. I like the way that our densely populated big markets have started off with the sort of those stores very well, so I feel like we've got the process down, and after seven years of opening 20% unit growth, we've got lot figure it out.

Liz Suzuki -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

All right, great. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Peter Keith with Piper Jaffray. Please proceed with your question.

Peter Keith -- Piper Jaffray -- Analyst

Hey, thanks, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I just wanted to dig back in on the gross margin for the fourth quarter and looking forward. So it looks like there was quite a bit of upside from the rebate and cost out, and I was wondering if that's a bit more of a structural change that, we will continue to flow into 2019. And then secondarily, interesting you did not call out supply chain, which has been a big headwind. So, Trevor, I know you've talked about majority of your transportation in-house for the lower fuel rates now starting to become a benefit for you. Thanks a lot.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I think you summarized it well Peter. This is Trevor, you have the merchandising team they households and did some great workforce and margins were better and you right called that out as being secondary to the distribution center benefit we're getting in Q1 of 2019. But we do -- we are seeing higher planned margins and that's been reflected in the plan.

On the supply chain side of things, you're right, things have come down a bit, and we've done a good job of managing our team as incredibly flexible. We have done a great job with our asset-backed carriers as well as our dedicated fleet to negotiate good long-term contracts. And so we feel much better about where that is today, and your final comments is correct, we won't -- we don't expect to have the same kind of fuel surcharges. If fuel stays where it is today, as we get to the back half of 2019, it's still being slightly above where it was in the first part of '18, but our supply chain team feels much better and more stable versus the increasing costs that we saw throughout 2000 -- most of 2018.

Peter Keith -- Piper Jaffray -- Analyst

Okay, thanks a lot and good luck.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Peter.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Steve Forbes with Guggenheim. Please proceed with your question.

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Good morning. Maybe just a two-part question on comp. So the first part being on the first quarter, any color on whether the Polar vortex impacted the guidance range already -- you're seeing anything from that cold weather and then the second part, is being the 200 basis point drag from Houston that you called out for the full year. I think it's 450 basis points, right in the first quarter, maybe just some color on the cadence of that drag as we move throughout the whole year?

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I'll take the first part and Trevor can talk little about Houston but I'd -- Polar vortex isn't our fund right, so you definitely see an impact of how consumer behaves when it's negative 30 degrees in the market and we have stores that are in some of those markets but hard surface flooring. It's not likely when you have a really wet winter -- the category is just a delay in purchase. So we typically see as weather hits, if it affects the given month we get it back within the next month. Historically, our categories rebounded pretty well. So we don't like it. We wish weather, I didn't play, but we don't allow ourselves to talk about it and we tell our teams, if we take a hit because it's negative 55 when they gets to the positive 55, we will make it up.

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey Steve, this is Trevor. For the Houston negative impact. We do you think it's -- some portion of 450 basis points for Q1 is how we're forecasting it. Q2, gets a little bit better, maybe 200 basis points to 250 basis points headwind. And then for both of Q3 and Q4 we expect to 100 basis points to 150 basis points of headwind. And then for the year, that would work out to about 200 basis points to 250 basis points of headwind because of Houston. And then as we get into 2020, hopefully we never talked about it again. We have to hope.

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Thank you all. Bye.

Operator

Our last question comes from the line of Jonathan Matuszewski with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.

Jonathan Matuszewski -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Great, thanks for taking my questions guys. First one, just on the supply chain. You mentioned plans to diversify country of origin throughout this year. Could you just give a little bit more detail on the timeline, the cadence for that diversification where you're moving imports from et cetera. And then I have a follow-up.

Lisa G. Laube -- Executive Vice President and Chief Merchandising Officer

Sure. This is Lisa. So we're working on some of those things now, and we have targets by department where we are trying to lead China. It also somewhat depends on the 25% tariff go through the 10% stays where it kind of depends on what happens as to what our plans will be exactly. As we are planning right now, the 25% would go through, we will begin moving product as early as the next month or two and that will continue throughout the year depending on the vendors ability to get going with us. And so in some cases, there are factories that we work within China that are moving to other countries and we're moving with them and there are other times where we are going and getting new vendors or increasing our purchases from existing vendors and countries outside of China. So kind of a long way around, let say it will -- it will start within the next month or two and continue through the year.

Jonathan Matuszewski -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Great, that's helpful. And then just a follow-up, I think you guys mentioned labor specialization pilot last quarter. Could you just refresh us on the progress there in terms of, I guess specializing labor for merchandising versus selling and versus stocking and any expectations for rolling that out to a larger percentage of the fleet.

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So we definitely -- we have more than one labor pilot, but the big labor pilot that we have is in doubts in multiple stores -- in multiple parts of the country and we are very pleased with the results that we're seeing from at it. It really takes and makes kind of put designer type capabilities of associates within the whole store so instead of having a specialists in stone and specialists in what we have people who can sell total projects around the store, we're very pleased with the result it's rolling into some -- because we've done it a lot in new stores to start and now we're rolling it back into existing stores within the quarter that we're in now and as it progresses and we continuing to see positive results. We'll look at it and increasing the speed of the rollout as we led -- continue to see what we've been seeing. It's going good.

Okay, well listen, I appreciate everyone joining our call today. I want to thank all of our associates, again for all the hard work. We look forward to updating you on the first quarter call. Thank you.

Operator

This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day.

Duration: 61 minutes

Call participants:

Wayne Hood -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thomas V. Taylor -- Chief Executive Officer

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

Trevor Lang -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Chris Horver -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Lisa G. Laube -- Executive Vice President and Chief Merchandising Officer

Matt McClintock -- Barclays -- Analyst

Seth Basham -- Wedbush Securities -- Analyst

Liz Suzuki -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Peter Keith -- Piper Jaffray -- Analyst

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Jonathan Matuszewski -- Jefferies -- Analyst

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