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Home Depot Inc (HD -0.60%)
Q3 2019 Earnings Call
Nov 19, 2019, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to The Home Depot Third Quarter 2019 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions]

It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Isabel Janci. Please go ahead.

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Thank you, Christine, and good morning, everyone.

Joining us on our call today are Craig Menear, Chairman, CEO and President; Ted Decker, Executive Vice President of Merchandising; and Richard McPhail, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

Following our prepared remarks, the call will be open for questions. Questions will be limited to analysts and investors. And as a reminder, please limit yourself to one question with one follow-up. If we are unable to get to your question during the call, please call our Investor Relations department at 770-384-2387.

Before I turn the call over to Craig, let me remind you that today's press release and the presentations made by our executives include forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the factors identified in the release and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Today's presentation will also include certain non-GAAP measures. Reconciliation of these measures is provided on our website.

Now, let me turn the call over to Craig.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Thank you, Isabel, and good morning, everyone.

First, let me start by welcoming Richard to his first earnings call. Sales for the third quarter were $27.2 billion, an increase of 3.5% versus last year. Comp sales were up 3.6% from last year and our U.S. comps were positive 3.8%. Diluted earnings per share were $2.53 in the third quarter.

From a geographic perspective, all of our U.S. divisions posted positive comps. Internationally, both Canada and Mexico posted positive comps.

Overall, we continue to see a strong and engaged customer. As Ted will detail, both ticket and transactions grew in the quarter. With the exception of lumber and electrical, all of our merchandizing departments posted positive comps. We saw a healthy balance of growth between both our Pro and DIY customers, with Pro sales outpacing DIY sales in the U.S.

While our third quarter results largely demonstrate broad-based growth across geographies and merchandizing departments, our sales performance was below our expectations, driven primarily by the timing of certain benefits associated with our strategic initiatives. At the beginning of the year, we shared with you our expectation that these initiatives would collectively contribute approximately 100 basis points to our comp performance in 2019.

As the years evolve, we have learned great deal and have shared with you that some of these initiatives have progressed more quickly, while others are taking more time. These investments are significant and long-term in nature, and we expect that the momentum we've seen will continue to build. Our rollout is largely on track and we are realizing benefits. It's just taking a little longer than our original assumptions.

In a moment, Richard will walk you through the implications this has for our 2019 guidance. But let me first provide more context. We have foundational IT work stream supporting many of our strategic initiatives that will significantly enhance our ability to serve our customers in an interconnected way. Much of this IT work requires unwinding our legacy systems and that has proven to be more complex than originally anticipated.

Take the B2B website experience for example. Our investments in a personalized B2B website experience is a significant component of the unique value proposition we are creating for our Pros. As you would expect, the most engaged customer cohort is a 135,000 Pros that we on-boarded at the beginning of the year. And we are seeing meaningful lift in spend as these customers become more familiar with the new experience. The rollout of the B2B site experience itself is on track. But underlying IT work must be completed before turning on additional elements of personalization and functionality for our larger Pro customers.

Other investments are yielding results in line with or in some cases above our expectations. For example, homedepot.com continues to be a source of strength. Online traffic growth was healthy, conversion is up, and third quarter online sales grew approximately 22% from the third quarter of 2018. Customers continue to respond to the ongoing investments enhancements we are making to drive a frictionless interconnected experience, including faster fulfillment options.

We also continue to leverage our digital platforms to drive incremental growth from adjacent categories like HD Home, pool and workwear, and are seeing good traction across all of these categories. We are seeing healthy growth in our online sales, and online shoppers continue to see the relevance of our stores as more than 50% of our online U.S. orders were picked up in our stores, a testament to the power of our interconnected retail strategy.

We've continued to rollout automated lockers in our stores to make pickup of an online order easier and more convenient. To date, approximately 1,300 stores have lockers, and we've been very pleased with the customer response, as approximately 95% of customers rating their experience pickup, give us a five out of five stars.

We fundamentally believe that when a customer comes to one of our stores, it has to be a great experience. Over 60% of our U.S. stores have a new look and feel, and customer response has been very positive. Customer service scores in the category of neat and clean have increase 120 basis points versus last year. Our scores for checkout time satisfaction have increased over 280 basis points versus last year.

As we approach the end of the second year of our transformative One Home Depot investments, we have even more conviction today that we are making the right long-term investments for the business to extend our competitive advantage in the marketplace. As with any transformation, the work we are doing is complex, and I'm proud with the way our team is consistently off for the challenge.

Our associates continue to focus on what's most important in our business, our customers, and I want to close by thanking them for their hard work and dedication.

And with that, let me turn the call over to Ted.

Ted Decker -- Executive Vice President, Merchandising

Thanks, Craig, and good morning, everyone. During the third quarter, we saw strength across most of our departments, driven by growth with both our Pro and DIY customers. Comps in appliances, indoor garden, decor and storage, hardware, tools, outdoor garden, paint and plumbing were above the company average. All other departments with the exception of electrical and lumber were positive, but below the company average. Electrical was essentially flat due to light bulbs and deflation in copper. While lumber reported low-single digit negative comp due to continued commodity price deflation, we saw strong unit comp growth.

During the third quarter, we saw balanced growth with both transactions and ticket. Comp transactions increased 1.8% during the third quarter, an acceleration from what we saw in the first half of 2019. The strength in our comp transactions was driven in part by the strategic store investments geared at improving the customer experience and extended outdoor season and traffic growth in a number of core categories.

We also saw solid performance in big ticket transactions. During the third quarter, big ticket comp transactions are those over $1,000, which represent approximately 20% of U.S. sales or up 4.8%. Excluding hurricane-related markets, big ticket comp transactions were up 5.5%. In the third quarter, comp average ticket also increased 1.8%. We remain pleased with the performance of our ticket growth, despite significant lumber price deflation. The increase in our comp average ticket continues to be positively impacted by our customers trading up to new and innovative items. During the third quarter, commodity inflation in lumber and copper negatively impacted our average ticket growth by approximately 80 basis points.

Let me take a moment to comment on tariffs. As expected during the third quarter, we saw increased costs arising from tariffs. Our merchants, finance, and data analytics teams are doing an incredible job mitigating cost impacts and helping us evaluate our elasticities. While still early days, we continue to believe we can effectively manage tariffs. However, we remain cautious on how tariffs could impact the consumer more broadly. Going forward, we will use our tools and analytics to help us continue to focus on being the customer's advocate for value.

During the third quarter, we saw growth at both our Pro and DIY customers. Sales to our Pro customers, which we estimate represent approximately 45% of all sales continue to outpace DIY sales in the U.S. We are investing in resets, services and a suite of tools to drive a better customer experience, and save our Pro's time and money. In the third quarter, we saw strong growth in Pro heavy categories like fasteners, pneumatics, concrete and installation.

Turning to our DIY customer, as summer started to wind down, we saw customers take advantage of the extended outdoor season. During the third quarter, categories like patio furniture, exterior stains and paint, soils and live goods, all had cost well above the company average.

Our digital investments and interconnected strategy are working. As you heard from Craig, we are enhancing features, functionality and category presentations on our website. We continue to see growth in online traffic, conversion and average ticket. In fact, during the third quarter, we saw double-digit online growth in nearly all of our departments. And given the project nature of our business, more than 50% of these online U.S. orders were picked up in our stores.

Let's look at patio furniture, as an example, the category we know our customers shop both online and in our stores. Recently, we've rolled out a new online category presentation patio that allows our customers to easily see the entire collection, different colors and styles, as well as various fulfillment options, all on one page. These new enhancements help drive our strongest patio comp in the last 10 years.

Now, let's turn our attention to the fourth quarter. Last quarter, we talked about the incredible response we were seeing from our customers to our industry-leading line up of exclusive cordless outdoor power equipment from RYOBI, Milwaukee, DEWALT and EGO. We are excited to add Makita as new line of 18-volt outdoor tools to our assortment. Makita is 18-volt platform has over 225 tools and over 30 million batteries in the U.S. market.

During the fourth quarter, we will add a powerful trimmer, lower hedge trimmer and chainsaw to that assortment all compatible with Makita's award winning portable power platform. We are proud to be Makita's exclusive big box partner.

In addition, we are thrilled about the upcoming holiday season. Our merchants have worked hard to establish The Home Depot, as the holiday shopping destination. We have worked tirelessly with our supplier partners to put together a broad assortment of product offerings, the best value for the holidays. As in previous years, we will have a number of special buys for Black Friday, along with an in-store gift center showcasing great offers from our exclusive brands

With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Richard.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Thank you, Ted, and good morning, everyone.

In the third quarter, total sales were $27.2 billion, an increase of 3.5% or $921 million versus the third quarter of fiscal 2018. Our total company comps were positive 3.6% for the quarter, with positive comps of 4.1% in August, 3.7% in September and 3.1% in October. Comps in the U.S. were positive 3.8% for the quarter with positive comps of 4.4% in August, 3.9% in September and 3.3% in October. Versus last year, a stronger U.S. dollars negatively impacted comp sales growth by approximately $41 million or 0.2%.

As you will recall, fiscal 2018 had a 53rd week which shifted our fiscal 2019 calendar. As a result of this shift, our comp in October was negatively impacted due to the timing of our Black Friday event last year versus this year. This shift in timing, in event timing, negatively impacted our U.S. October comp by approximately 100 basis points. U.S. comps for the quarter were negatively impacted by approximately 35 basis points.

As you just heard from Ted, during the third quarter, lumber prices remain depressed. Versus last year, this lumber price deflation negatively impacted our comp sales growth by approximately $175 million or over 65 basis points.

In the third quarter, our gross margin was 34.5%, a decrease of 31 basis points from last year. The change in our gross margin was primarily driven by higher shrink and the mix of products sold compared to last year.

In the third quarter, operating expense as a percent of sales decreased by 10 basis points versus last year to 20%. Our operating expense performance reflects strong expense control and continued productivity in the business as well as continued investments in our strategic initiatives.

Specifically, expenses related to our strategic investment plan of $277 million increased by approximately $44 million from last year, and resulted in approximately 13 basis points of operating expense deleverage. This deleverage was offset by productivity in BAU or business as usual expenses, which drove 23 basis points of operating expense leverage.

Our operating margin for the third quarter was 14.5%, a decrease of 21 basis points from last year.

Interest and other expense for the third quarter grew by $56 million to $280 million due primarily to higher long-term debt levels than one year ago.

In the third quarter, our effective tax rate was 24.5% compared to 21.4% in the third quarter of fiscal 2018. For the year, we now expect our effective tax rate will be slightly lower than 25%.

Our diluted earnings per share for the third quarter were $2.53, an increase of 0.8% from last year.

In October, a devastating round of storms and tornadoes impacted the Dallas area. During these storms, a tornado destroyed one of our stores in Dallas, and our thoughts continue to be with that community and our impacted associates.

At the end of the third quarter, we had an ending store count of 2,290. And total sales per square foot were $449, up 3.5% from last year.

At the end of the quarter, inventory turns were 5 times down from 5.2 times last year, reflecting loading of inventory in support of our strategic initiatives.

Moving on to capital allocation. In the third quarter, we repurchased $1.25 billion or approximately 5.2 million shares of outstanding stock. This included repurchases of approximately 2.0 million shares on the open market and approximately 3.2 million shares through an accelerated share repurchase or ASR program. Note that for the shares repurchased during the ASR, it is an initial calculation. Final number of shares repurchased in the third quarter will be determined in the fourth quarter when the ASR terminates.

Computed on the average of beginning and ending long-term debt and equity for the trailing 12 months, return on invested capital was approximately 45.1%, 290 basis points higher than the third quarter of fiscal 2018.

Turning to our outlook for the remainder of the year. As we approach the end of the second year of investment geared at achieving our One Home Depot vision, we are confident that we are making the right investments for the business to extend our competitive advantage over the long term. As Craig said, these initiatives are gaining momentum and are contributing to our sales growth, but some of the benefits anticipated for fiscal 2019 will take longer to realize than our initial assumptions.

As a result, today we are updating our fiscal 2019 sales guidance. Remember that we guide off of GAAP. The fiscal 2019 guidance will launch from our reported results for fiscal 2018, which includes sales and earnings associated with the 53rd week. In fiscal 2019, we now expect comp sales as calculated on a 52-week basis to increase by approximately 3.5% and we now expect sales reflecting the compare of 53 weeks last year to increase by approximately 1.8%. We are also reaffirming our earnings per share guidance for fiscal 2019. We expect fiscal 2019 diluted earnings per share to grow approximately 3.1% to $10.03.

We look forward to talking with you at our Investor Conference on December 11 in New York, where we'll give you an update on our key strategic initiatives as well as some initial thoughts around fiscal 2020.

Thank you for your participation in today's call. And Christine, we are now ready for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. We will now be conduction a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first 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 question is what gives you confidence in these initiatives hitting? And then what gives you proof that it's the initiatives that are taking longer to realize and not something slowing in the macro? And then I have one follow-up.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

So, let me start with the initiatives. First of all, we are seeing benefits from the initiatives. It's just not at the rate of our original plan. And when we look at the investment that we're making in this business, as we shared with you back in December of '17, we're doing this for the long-term health of the business, and to position ourselves to win comparatively in the long term. This is such a big opportunity that we're going to do this right and continue to make sure that we're delivering an experience that our customers are accustomed to getting from the Home Depot. And so we think we're getting about half of the investment -- benefit in 2019. And as we continue to add additional features and benefits as we unwind some of the complexities of our legacy systems, we'll see that continue to grow.

And as it relates to, you know, how do we know, it's not something else. We continue to see broad-based growth in our business. As Ted called out, we had great strength in ticket transactions. We had strength in big ticket. We saw our Pro business accelerate during the quarter. And when we look at what happens in discretionary spend categories, particularly that are high-ticket discretionary spend, we don't see anything there that concerns us at this point.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Okay. And my follow-up is, if you look at the construct of the existing three-year plan, and you start from today where 2019 margins are going to land looks like around 44%. It would call for flattish margins next year to up as much as 60% if you take the original plan. If the macro is not any different than you plan, which it sounds like it's not, what would cause that to change this range of flat to up 60%?

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Hi. Hi, there, Simeon. So what I would say is, first of all, we're focused on delivering on the guidance for the year, and we look forward to talking about 2020 at our Investor December conference. Clearly, there has been pressure to our margin from shrink, which was the highest contributor to the decrease year-over-year within that 31 basis points. And so that is an unplanned pressure, and we are taking the steps and have many initiatives in place to address that.

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks. I thought I took a swipe at it. I appreciate it.

Operator

Our next 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. You mentioned that you're getting about 50 basis points of lift from the return on investments rather than the anticipated 100 basis points that you previously expected. Is there any reason why we shouldn't just take that delta, the incremental 50 basis points and just tack it on to what we're modeling for next year that speaks to both the nature of the return and the timing associated with the return?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Michael, I think as we look at the investments that we're making, we expect that through the balance of '19, as we move into 2020, we will continue to see the momentum build of the investments that we're making. I don't know that we see it as a straight line, but it certainly will continue to ramp. As we shared in my opening comments, for example, on the B2B website experience, the first 135,000 customers that we put on early in the year were seeing very nice results as we on-board more and we on-boarded a number recently at the end of the quarter. As we continue to see them engage, they get more familiar with the experience we see lift. So we are definitely confident that we will continue to see the momentum build through the investments that we're making.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

And it's also, if you think Michael about the investments we've made in our store environment, and Ted and then you may want to comment a little bit about that. We know that the changes we're making are resonating with our customer and we're seeing positive lift from that.

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Yeah. No. Thank you, Richard. Couple of things that Craig called out. First of all, when you think about our sales growth, online sales growth, and what we've seen in the stores, the 50% that's picked up in the stores, as we continue to make that easy for our customers, we are seeing just incredible repeat as we think about transactions. So we're going to continue to lean into things that really simplify the experience for more customers. We are also continuing to add delivery capabilities outside of the stores as well with our car and van delivery, which really benefits our Pro customer and we see that accelerated through the quarter.

And when you think about VOC scores, Craig called it out, as we think about auto lockers. And, but we're also seeing increased VOC scores on our checkout process on the front-end as well. So we think about the investments we're making, and we think about the fourth quarter coming up. We're going to see increased traffic for our customers, another time of introducing all these investments to our customers, which we believe is just going to drive tremendous loyalty.

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

That's helpful. And my follow-up question is you're guiding to a 5% comp, that's implied for the fourth quarter. And that will be higher than what you've done throughout the course of this year. So what's driving your more optimistic expectation? Is it that you're going to see this accelerating return from the investments? Or are there other factors that you can outline that can help bridge to that 5% you're guiding to for the fourth quarter?

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Michael, thanks for the question. We're very comfortable with our guide based on the momentum, Ted called out. And while our guidance does imply acceleration that acceleration is mostly caused by the absence or reversal of pressures we saw in Q3 as we walk to Q4, from lumber -- lumber deflation from FX and from an event timing shift that we saw in Q3.

So you can look at it a couple of ways to normalize Q3. If you take the quarterly comp of 3.6%, and you add back 60 basis points from a much lower level of pressure from lumber we'll see in Q4 versus Q3, and you add back 35 basis points from the impact of event timing to Q3 where basically our Q3 comped over the first week of Black Friday from last year's Q4 due to the calendar shift, and then you add back 30 basis points from favorable FX compares, you'll see Q4 is actually right in line with the normalized Q3.

You could look at it another way. You could take our October comp of 3.1% as an exit rate, you'd add back 100 basis points from that event timing impact, lumber of 60 basis points and FX of 30 basis points, and again you'll see why we have confidence in the progression from Q3 to Q4.

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

Understood. Thank you very much, and have a good holiday.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Thank you.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Thanks, Michael.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Scot Ciccarelli with RBC. Please proceed with your question.

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Good morning, guys. Two follow-ups. First, so when we think about the impact of both the Black Friday event and lumber pricing, when we are thinking about a net impact kind of negative 25 basis points, is that right, Richard?

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

From lumber, yes.

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay. Got it. And then also...

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

[Speech Overlap] answer your question

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Can you repeat the question, Scot?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Repeat the question.

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yes, just the net impact. Right. You had some of the Black Friday event kind of fall into fourth quarter this year versus 3Q last year, plus you had the lumber pricing. I guess I'm trying to figure out what's the net impact, you know, the comments you've made suggests it's about 25% -- 25 basis points on a net basis?

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

No, they actually both go the same way. So 35 basis points of negative pressure to Q3 and 60 basis points of negative pressure -- sorry, 35 basis points from event timing and 60 basis points from lumber pressure, so they add to about 95 basis points, really sort of alleviation of those pressures as we walk from Q3 to Q4.

And then, if you're looking at total company comp, where there was a 20 basis point differential between total company and U.S. in the third quarter, then you bring FX into play, and we will have about a 30 basis point favorable compare in the fourth quarter. Does that makes sense?

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay. I think so. And then a follow-up question on your shrink comment. As the pressure from shrink continue to increase, or/and related to that, do you have any feel for it, if that's being driven more by internal, let's call it, tests or issues or if it's more external? Thanks.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Yes, Scot, it is continuing to increase. We've seen the pressure. But we have a number of initiatives under way.

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Yes, I'll add. Certainly, in the departments that we are seeing increased pressure, they are more what we considered kind of malicious, and we have had initiatives under way, and have implemented high, restore some of the things we've done in the past to make sure that we secure our product. But in addition to that we are working through initiatives from a technology perspective as well because we want to make sure that we have a long-term solution to mitigating this risk as well. So while we are doing certain things in the short term to release some of this pressure, we are also working on the initiative in the long term.

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

And so when would you expect that trend, if you will, to start to reverse?

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

We have an expectation in the stores that we have implemented some of the initiatives that will start to bend the curve. But as I said, we have done that in our high risk stores first, and we want to make sure that as we protect the top line, we are mitigated and really created a good experience for customers. So we are going to continue to monitor, but some of the things we're seeing in the short term has been really positive in these high risk stores that we have implemented.

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks a lot, guys.

Operator

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

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Good morning.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Good morning.

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

I wanted to follow up on the investment plan for this year. So I think you called out $44 million -- $44 million of pressure right from higher spend this year. But can you just remind us what the plan is for the whole year relative to 2018, because I thought both -- I guess, both in absolute dollars, because I thought the P&L pressure was going to be similar right same dollar impact '19 versus '18. So should we expect a reversal or a benefit in the fourth quarter?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

The investment plan actually ramp through...

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Yes. Yes, the investment plan ramps actually from a total, and remember I'm calling out capital and expense here. But a total investment plan of about $3.3 billion last year, ramping to an investment plan of about $3.6 billion this year. And so we -- and that's in line with the plan that we set back in 2017. And so the expense year-over-year is really sort of in line with that lift as well because expenses generally lift with the capital.

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

All right. Just a follow-up on that, so can you help us break that down between capital and expenses? Or is it really just the incremental, is the $300 million spread between those two numbers?

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

It's actually -- so the breakdown for 2019 is about $2.6 billion in capital and about $1 billion and expense, which is higher than last year's levels. But it really is just that increment of ramping up to $1 billion in expense that you see in the P&L and the cadence of those investments quarter-to-quarter over the year, a relatively steady ramping up through the year and peaking in Q4. As you would expect, as we continue to ramp investment up and investment will be higher in 2020 than it was in 2019.

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Christopher Horvers with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.

Christopher Horvers -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Thanks. Good morning. Look, the market growth has moderated in '19 relative to the past couple of years. Was that your expectation coming in, and do you think that lower mortgage rates allow the market growth rate to reaccelerate from here? So I think it was like sort of a base case 4% market growth rate was a three-year plan, or do you think that maybe that market growth rate moderates a bit further given where later into the cycle?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

We shared at the beginning of this year, we did expect that the market growth would be slightly less than it was in the previous year. And so that was -- that was part of our overall expectations. I mean, when we look at the market in total, however, I mean we play in a $600 billion market that we own about 17% of. And if you look at third-party data, it would indicate that we took significant share in Q3. And so we look at this as an opportunity going forward. We always talk to the merchants about the fact that we don't have enough share to worry about of the market growth itself. We just need to stay focused on the customer and continue to drive the business.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

I think there's another point to that Chris, which is really just looking at the headline of 4% market growth, and what we experienced in 2019 from a lumber deflation perspective. We shared with you earlier in the year that's going to be about $800 million of pressure to us, but it will be pressure in the market in general. And so when you sort of round that out, you're looking at market growth or sort of our base case assumption of 4% lower down to around 3%. And in fact, the fact that we're guiding 3.5% today shows that we think we're getting about 0.5 point from initiatives.

Christopher Horvers -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

And so do you expect -- so I guess the puts and takes as you look forward to Scot, the benefits from initiatives, which I think back to the three-year plan, you had expected that to ramp, or I guess even over the five-year plan. But then on the other side, you have sort of the rate factor. So do you think that rates allow the underlying market growth rate to reaccelerate, and maybe get some back -- get back some of the deflation. So the underlying growth rate actually could be better as you look forward.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

What I would say is the macro and housing environments have played out right in line with our expectations, and the description we would use is housing is healthy and stable. There is no doubt that recent movements in the rate environment are going to create support for that stability. But as we've said for many years, we expected that we would see that from 2012 a period of moderate housing recovery and a period of sharp housing recovery, and then a period of stability in housing. And that has played out. And so I would say again housing is healthy and stable. The rate environment certainly provide support to that.

Christopher Horvers -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

That's very helpful. So my follow-up is on the extended season that was an impressive traffic number. Do you think that that extended season with weather -- understand you lapped hurricane last year, but was the just that extended season additive to comp for this quarter?

Ted Decker -- Executive Vice President, Merchandising

Hey, Chris. It's Ted. Yes and no, I'd say, certainly the extended season, we did well, and things like exterior stains and paint and some garden projects, but then in the Southeast in particular we had heavy drought as well. So there is some give and take with that. I think on the margin we did do better with the extended season. I would say though that the fundamental drivers of the business is the bigger story. When we think about this balance of ticket and transaction growth, we always start the year planning in expecting the balance of ticket and transaction. It really plays out that way, to see 1.8% growth in ticket, 1.8% growth in transactions.

Real underlying story is also unit growth. We saw our strongest unit, since Craig called out, in a year, and if you adjust for as we've always called it the bathtub effect for spring or if you have a weak Q1, you have a stronger Q2 depending on weather -- when the weather hits, when you normalize for the bathtub effect, this was our strongest units in two years, across the entire business. As Craig said, it's across geographies, and it's actually across the store where we're seeing this unit productivity.

Christopher Horvers -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Very helpful. Have a great holiday season.

Ted Decker -- Executive Vice President, Merchandising

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Michael Baker with Nomura. Please proceed with your question.

Michael Baker -- Nomura -- Analyst

Thanks. A couple of follow-ups on the gross margin. First, what are you seeing competitively in terms of pricing, and if you could touch on the paint category in particular? And then secondly, as it relates to tariffs, you said you are -- you think you can manage tariffs. What does manage tariff mean? Does that mean it has an impact on gross margins, but you can offset it elsewhere? Or basically what are tariffs doing to the gross margins? Thanks.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

So from a competitive standpoint to begin with, we see continued escalated promotional environment in the marketplace that would include the categories of paint that doesn't seem to be abating whatsoever. Ted and merchant team are sticking to our strategy of delivering great everyday value to our customers. We know that that's the long-term right approach for the business and has played well for us over time. And so that is absolutely. Ted, I don't know if you want to comment on the tariffs?

Ted Decker -- Executive Vice President, Merchandising

Yes. On tariffs, since this started, we said, we believed it's manageable. And when I say that our finance teams, merchants, and data analytics teams have really drilled into the overall impact of the business. We know down to the SKU level, the point of origin, the classification of the tariff, the potential impact, and from there we start working with our supplier partners to mitigate that tariff impact. We all know that on the margin all goods have elasticities, and we ultimately have to put price through, you are going to retard unit productivity.

So each of Home Depot and our supplier partners are laser focused on maintaining unit growth in this business. So we will work on mitigating the tariff impact to change country of origin, to change makeup of the product itself, to add other features and benefits that can add value to the consumer. With all that being said, we have offset from what would be the -- not theoretical, the actual SKU level buildup of tariff impacts. We have offset well over half. So out of the gate, there is no impact on well over half of the potential tariff impact to our business, again, working closely with our supplier partners.

And with the balance of the impact that is a manageable set of actions we're taking across the portfolio, not necessarily in the tariffs SKU cells [Phonetic]. We have moved on some retails and that's implied when I said we're measuring the various elasticities, and where we've had to move and where we've acted in a portfolio of fashion. We've maintained unit productivity, as I said, whether effective this is our best units last quarter and over two years. So I would sum all that up to the kind of tariffs that we believe it's manageable.

Michael Baker -- Nomura -- Analyst

Thanks. That's a lot of color, and very helpful. One more, just a follow-up to a previous question, just on the housing in the macro, I get that you're talking about it being stable, but if we just look at the simply -- simple measures of existing home sales, they have picked up as of late, really six months to nine months ago, and historically that does lead to better comps for you guys. So I guess are you surprised that comps aren't accelerating on the back of housing or should we expect that maybe early next year?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

I go back to the base kind of comp that Richard walked through with you as we look forward. And you know the underlying health of the business is very solid. Great transaction growth, great unit growth, broad-based across the business. If you candidly look at where we thought this year would play out to where we are today, I mean, 70-plus-percent of the variance to the current year-to-date performance is lumber deflation [Indecipherable].

Michael Baker -- Nomura -- Analyst

Perfect. Thank you.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

So we feel good about the environment.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Karen Short with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Karen Short -- Barclays -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks very much. Just a question, housekeeping. Last quarter you gave big ticket -- ticket growth by month. So I was wondering if you would be willing to provide that this quarter? And then I had a bigger picture question.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

I don't think we have that with us here right now. We can provide that if you want to call in, in the Investor Relations department.

Karen Short -- Barclays -- Analyst

Okay. And then switching to the 2020 investment comments, so you commented that the 2020 investment would be higher versus '19. So I guess the question is, is that comment applied to both expense and capital? And then within the expense, is that still more skewed to D&A versus SG&A?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Look, we've got our Investor Conference in a couple of weeks, and will provide all the color around this at that time. Right now we are laser focused on delivering the balance of this year.

Karen Short -- Barclays -- Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Zach Fadem with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.

Zach Fadem -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning. So following up on the SG&A investment question for this year, you spent $277 million in the quarter. That gets me to about $820 million in operating expenses so far this year, if my math is right. So how much of this would you categorize as strategic versus business as usual investment? And then, I just want to confirm, you don't expect the strategic investments to step down in Q4 to get to that $1 billion for the year that you've talked about.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

So all of the investments that we call out is strategic investment of $277 million in Q3. We've guided to a planned number of around $1 billion, and we will be north of $1 billion this year, right in line with expectations as we set them out at the beginning of the year.

Zach Fadem -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Okay. And then on the 100 basis point calendar headwind in October, could you expand on that just a little bit more. I just want to confirm that this will be a similar benefit to November? And then when you think about the moving parts lumber deflation in Q4 and then the hurricane headwind perhaps subsiding, why do you think the implied 5%-ish comp in Q4 is the right place to land? And there any other moving parts that we should keep in mind?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Yes, I'll speak to the events from a merchandising calendar. It's very heavy at this time of year. So we set our Pro Black Friday. We bring in great values for our Pro. We bring in Appliance Black Friday, which is a very, very large appliance event. And then we've set our gift center, which is a lot of power tools, power tool accessories, hand tools, gifting items. All of those initiatives kicked off on the calendar a week late relative to comp. And that's -- we're quite confident that that's the number of 100 basis points and we see that flowing into Q4. And some of that actually will go into December on the end. So it doesn't all hit in November. This will hit throughout November and December.

Zach Fadem -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks, Ted. Appreciate the time.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Peter Benedict with Baird. Please proceed with your question. Mr. Benedict, your line is live.

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Sorry, guys. I will take mute off. So my question is just around the Pro B2B sign up cadence. You've talked about 135,000 or so that were signed up early in the year. Are you guys still expecting a $1 million by the end of the year or have you kind of slowed the sign ups because of some of the tech issues that you were talking about?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

We still expect to on-board about 1 million customers during the year, and we on-boarded a number of them at the tail end of Q3.

Ted Decker -- Executive Vice President, Merchandising

Yes. Peter we finished Q3 just above 780,000 Pros that have been migrated on to the website. And we continue to add new capabilities as we go through the quarter. We now accept the Pro purchase card with our legacy underlying customers so that they can buy on homedepot.com. We've done things like introduce Buy It Again functionality, and we've made new user registration automatic. So as we have new customers signing up on to our Pro Xtra platform, we can get those customers at the time of sign-up and we can automatically migrate them to the B2B website. So we're on track with customer migration and on track with all of the capabilities.

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Okay. So that $1 target, what -- roughly what percent of your Pros does that represent? I guess, where -- what kind of penetration you guys think you can get longer term?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

But if you look at it, we think we can get all of our Pros our verified Pro customers migrated on to the website over the long term. So that would represent about 30%.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Yes. About 30% of the total.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

The total right now?

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

And as we continue to build the base of capabilities, then we'll obviously do more as we had originally planned to then make that knowledgable to our Pros and market to them accordingly.

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Okay. Great. And just my one follow up would be, just getting back to a question a little bit early, just around trade down, I know you mentioned some things around how you're trying to manage elasticities and whatnot, but I'm just even absent of tariffs, have you seen any sign of trade down either within certain categories or whatnot, where maybe some of the Pros are opting for more middle line product as opposed to higher end? I was curious if you're seeing anything there.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

No, we're not. So, couple of points of observation there. Appliances, for example, we continue to see trade up across just great innovation in appliance business. We've introduced Bosch, which is approaching the higher -- highest end of the category, and picking up lots of net new business there. And then the phenomenon with the cordless power tools now going in outdoor power equipment. We're seeing great pick up, and these are all higher price points with the innovation of technology and outdoor power equipment.

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

All right. Terrific. Thanks so much. Good luck, guys.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Seth Sigman with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.

Seth Sigman -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hey, guys, good morning. I did want to follow up on that last point. So when we look at your average ticket on a comp basis, up 1.8%, yes, pretty similar to last quarter, where it was 2%. I guess I'm surprised it's not accelerating more. It sounds like you had a little bit less commodity deflation this quarter, big ticket trends seem pretty healthy, maybe had a little bit of inflation on the back of tariff. So I'm just curious, is there something else that's holding back the ticket growth? Maybe is that the shift related to Black Friday where you have a lot of big ticket categories or something else maybe?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Yes. Seth, that's exactly it. The big delta would be the events for the holiday promotion. So think of appliances, your average ticket around appliance, gifting portable power tools, combo kits, etc. So that 100 basis point isn't -- that shifted isn't entirely ticket, but much more so the transactions.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

And I'd just say Seth that again we think about the big ticket in this quarter over $1,000 at 4.8 hurricane adjusted markets at 5.5. That is right in line with our expectations.

Seth Sigman -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Yes. Okay. That makes sense. And then just to follow back up on tariffs, it sounds like you guys have manage that really well and have found some offsets. How do we think about the same SKU inflation that is -- that you're seeing in the business and how it may be impacting comps?

And then just the second part of that. There have been some exclusions announced recently in certain categories that you do play in. I'm just curious if that's meaningful at all for you guys? Thanks.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Sure. I would say on the contribution of tariff to that ticket growth, it's actually a very nominal amount. It's by far lower than, for example, the introduction of sales of new innovative higher priced AUR items is a far bigger driver of that 1.8% than any price moves we would have made associated with tariffs.

And on the exclusions, we're working through that. It was last Friday, we had a number of exclusions announced, a number in the flooring category that we're working our way through. Very optimistic about what that is going to mean for vinyl plank. We believe most of our portfolio in the luxury vinyl plank, which has been our fastest growing category and a number of those items are seemingly going to be on the exclusion list. Again we're working through the detail, but we're very encouraged.

Seth Sigman -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks for that.

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Christine, we have time for one more question.

Operator

Thank you. Our final question will come from the line of Kate McShane with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.

Kate McShane -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks so much for taking my question. I just wanted to -- you mentioned that the Pro is still outpacing DIY. I just wondered if you had seen any changes in the delta between the Pro and DIY trends?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

I think if we look at the last few quarters, the delta hasn't changed dramatically, but we did see the Pros strengthened some in this quarter.

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Saw both strengthen, but -- and then the one comment I would make about the Pro business is we're seeing -- Ted talked a little bit about the unit comps which are very encouraging, but the growth in Pro was primarily through transactions versus ticket. So just good broad-based strength on the business.

Kate McShane -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay. Thank you for that color. Just had one follow-up question, unrelated, just with regards to the macro environment, if you could talk about any differential between the performance in different areas of affordability from a geographic standpoint?

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Yes. We actually look at the regional variability every single quarter. And in the third quarter, it was actually the narrowest we've seen in quite some time. And that includes all states, whether they are high salt states or not. So we are very pleased with the narrow variability that existed.

Kate McShane -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Thank you.

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

You bet.

Operator

Ms. Janci, I would now like to turn the floor back over to you for closing comments.

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Thank you for joining us today. We look forward to seeing many of you at our Investor Conference in December.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 58 minutes

Call participants:

Isabel Janci -- Vice President, Investor Relations & Treasurer

Craig Menear -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & President

Ted Decker -- Executive Vice President, Merchandising

Richard McPhail -- Chief Financial Officer & Executive Vice President

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Michael Lasser -- UBS -- Analyst

Scot Ciccarelli -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Steve Forbes -- Guggenheim -- Analyst

Christopher Horvers -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Michael Baker -- Nomura -- Analyst

Karen Short -- Barclays -- Analyst

Zach Fadem -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Seth Sigman -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Kate McShane -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

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