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Tractor Supply Company (TSCO 0.06%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 19, 2021, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Tractor Supply Company's Conference Call to Discuss Second Quarter 2021 Results. [Operator instructions] Please be advised that reproduction of this call in whole or in part is not permitted without written authorization of Tractor Supply Company. And as a reminder, this call is being recorded.

I would now like to introduce your call -- your host for today's call, Mrs. Mary Winn Pilkington, Senior Vice President of Investor and Public Relations for Tractor Supply Company. Mary Winn, please go ahead with your conference.

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Mary Winn Pilkington -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Public Relations

Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the time to join us today, and I do hope you all are staying safe and well. On the call today are Hal Lawton, our CEO; and Kurt Barton, our CFO. After our prepared remark, we'll open the call up for your questions. Seth Estep, our EVP and Chief Merchandising Officer will join us for the Q&A session. Please note that we've made a supplemental slide presentation available on our website to accompany today's earnings release. Now let me reference the Safe Harbor provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

This call may contain certain forward-looking statements that are subject to certain risks and uncertainties, including the future operating and financial performance of the company. In many cases, these risks and uncertainties are beyond our control. Although the company believes the expectations reflected in its forward-looking statements are reasonable, it can give no assurance that such expectations or any of its forward-looking statements will prove to be correct, and actual results may differ materially from expectations.

Important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements are included at the end of the press release issued today and in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The information contained in this call is accurate only as of the date discussed. Investors should not assume that statements will remain operative at a later time. Tractor Supply undertakes no obligation to update any information discussed in this call. Given the time constraints and the number of people who want to participate, we ask that you please limit your questions to one with a quick related follow-up. I appreciate your cooperation. We will be available after the call for follow-up.

Thank you for your time and attention this morning and now, it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Hal.

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Mary Winn, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us this morning. My thanks go out to the more than 45,000 Tractor Supply team members for their ongoing commitment to each other, our customers in the Out Here lifestyle. The team has been through a lot together over the last 15 months as an essential needs-based retailer, including necessary but cumbersome health and safety measures, surge in volumes, the rollout of our Life Out Here strategy, supply chain disruptions, numerous digital investments and more.

The team has risen to each challenge to be there as the dependable supplier to our customers and the communities we call home. Thank you to the team for another great quarter. I would also like to say thank you to our vendor and supply chain partners as we work together to overcome the challenges in the global supply chain network. Together, we were able to support our customers as the dependable supplier for their Out Here lifestyle. Over the first 12 months of the pandemic through the first quarter of 2021 our sales grew approximately 35% or $3 billion. In the second quarter of 2021, as we are now comping the comp, we are pleased this momentum and all the underlying trends have remained and continue to sustain.

Looking at the second quarter, the Tractor Supply team delivered a very strong performance that exceeded our expectations, as we achieved a 10.5% comparable store sales growth for the quarter and a 41% two years back. Our results proved yet again Tractor Supply's unique competitive advantages. Our relentless focus on being the dependable supplier for the Out Here lifestyle is embedded in our purpose as a company. Our Life Out Here strategy is still in the early days, and we are seeing positive trends from our initiatives. We're excited by the momentum. We remain committed to investing in our team members, as we believe they are a key competitive differentiator with our customers.

Just last month, we increased pay for nearly 27,000 of our tenured hourly store team members and also raised our minimum wage to $11.25 per hour. Our team members continue to make Tractor Supply, the special place that it is. Investing in our team members is not only the right thing to do, but it's also a way to recognize their role in driving our business forward. Now turning to our results for the second quarter of 2021; our net sales grew approximately 13.4%. Comparable store sales grew 10.5%, driven by a comparable average ticket increase of 6% and transaction count increase of 4.5%. Diluted earnings per share increased 10% to $3.19.

Importantly, the underlying foundation of our business is robust. For the quarter, every week had positive comps. Our growth was broad-based across regions and product categories. We continue to gain share across all categories, online and in stores. For instance, in Q2, we experienced comparable store growth in our Consumable, Usable and Edible categories that was well above our overall comparable store sales. E-commerce recorded its largest ever quarter of sales. The work we have done over the last year to improve our e-commerce capabilities has certainly resonated with our customers.

In just under a year, our mobile app already has more than 1.6 million downloads and now represents over 10% of our e-commerce sales. Given our strong performance year-to-date, coupled with our outlook for the balance of the year, we are raising our sales and earnings guidance for the year. Kurt will share more details on our revised outlook later in the call. Regarding our pending acquisition of Orscheln Farm and Home that we announced in February, we are working cooperatively with the SEC on their second request. We look forward to the benefits this transaction will offer customers with improved products and competitive pricing.

We have previously shared key observations of our customer behaviors based on our market data and research and I would like to update you on that today. Overall, our customer metrics remain very healthy, with both traffic and spending increasing at a balanced rate. So let's run through some of the insights that are most relevant. First, we are seeing broad continued strength across our customer base. More customers than ever are shopping Tractor Supply. And these customers are making more trips than ever and are spending more money per trip than ever. We are seeing strong retention of customers that have shopped us over the last 12 months.

Our retention rates continue to run above historical trends. The conversion of our Neighbor's Club loyalty program to a points-based rewards is resonating with our customers. Year-over-year, we've added nearly 5 million new members to the program. In our Neighbor's Club members, they're spending about three times the rate of non-members and they're comping at a rate well above the chain average. Neighbor's Club members accounted for about 65% of our sales, and that's a step-up from where we've been running prior to the relaunch of the program. We've grown our high-value customer base in the program by about 15% year-to-date, with customers migrating upward in spending significantly outpacing any downward spending.

The retention rate of our most valuable customers is running north of 95%. New customers are joining the Neighbor's Club program at a rate of nearly 30%, significantly above the rate from last year. And the new customers we are acquiring as compared to our core customers are continuing to skew younger. We're seeing significant growth in our millennial shoppers. Our trends this quarter for the customer age cohorts of 18 years to 45 years old were in line with the first quarter. And we continue to believe that the growth in this customer segment has staying power. Much like last quarter, the types of trends we're seeing can simply be described as once in a generation.

We believe key aspects to our customer service, such as a convenient place to shop, product assortment, legendary customer service and in-stock levels are important to keeping these existing and new customers engaged with our brands. On the macro front, the economy remains strong and key trends continue to work in our favor, such as rural revitalization, trip consolidation, omni-channel adoption and a self-reliant lifestyle movement, including DIY trends and hobbies like gardening, backyard poultry and pet adoptions.

While the cost environment remains elevated across imports, domestic freight, commodities, and labor wages, the merchant team has been aggressively advocating for our customers. Where necessary, we are taking price increases to pass-through some of the cost pressures that we cannot offset. We are closely monitoring the price elasticity to ensure that we are focused on product unit trends. The team is doing an excellent job navigating this environment. Over the past few months, we have navigated unprecedented conditions. As the country opens back up, the Out Here Lifestyle remains incredibly relevant.

And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Kurt to review the quarter in more depth and our outlook before I come back to give insight on our Life Out Here Strategy and other drivers of the second half of 2021.

Kurt Barton -- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Thank you, Hal, and hello to everyone on the call today. As Hal shared many details on the second quarter, in my time on the call today, I'd like to go into some of the specifics around our financial performance and our increased outlook for the full year. We were very pleased with our performance. These results demonstrate the strength and resilience of our business and our strategic initiatives. For the quarterly cadence, April and June were the strongest months of the comp store sales performance. All geographic regions and all major merchandising categories had comp store sales growth.

We believe the underlying health of our business is structurally advantaged. A great example of this is the strength in our consumable, usable and edible products. Our CUE represents the strength of our core business and what drives trips to the store. For the fifth consecutive quarter in a row, CUE had comp store sales growth above 15%. Key sub categories such as poultry, livestock feed and dry dog food were among the strongest categories with comp sales all greater than 25%. Of note, we are seeing strong retention rates of our new customers across every species of livestock and companion animal. For example, poultry, a hallmark home setting category for Tractor Supply has the highest retention rate of the animal species for new customers and new to the category.

Our big ticket categories, which were going against significant growth in the prior year, continue to have strong comp sales performance above the chain average. This was driven by strength in zero turn mowers, safes, utility vehicles, and trailers. Lastly, inflation contributed about 350 basis point to 400 basis point to comparable store sales in the quarter. Our second quarter gross margin rate was 35.8%, a decrease of 67 basis points. Year-over-year, the gross margin drivers were principally three items: first, higher freight costs that all of retailers experiencing; second, an initial impact from the relaunch of our Neighbor's Club loyalty program; and third, a more normalized CUE product mix.

Our price management program partially offset these factors as we look to mitigate the impact of inflation and other cost pressures. Consistent with our guidance, we received approximately 40 basis points benefit from vendor funding for the Field Activity Support Teams or FAST initiative, which was launched in the second half last year. Of note, we continue to see favorability in the frequency and depth of promotions as we are committed to being true to our everyday low pricing strategy and continue to see strong demand for our product categories. For comparison, our gross margin rate this quarter was still about 90 basis points above our Q2 2019 rate of 34.9%.

Our second quarter SG&A expense ratio, including depreciation and amortization, improved by 6 basis points to 22.3%. This improvement was primarily attributable to lower COVID-19 pandemic response costs and decreased incentive compensation as well as good leverage in occupancy and other fixed costs from the increase in our comparable store sales. Partially offsetting this leverage were higher wage rates, additional store labor hours to ensure we are providing great customer service, and investments in our Life Out Here strategic initiatives.

The offset to our FAST initiative benefiting gross margin was approximately 40 basis points of incremental SG&A expense for the labor costs for the team. Much like our gross margin rate, our SG&A performance compares favorably to Q2 2019 when our SG&A expense ratio was 22.7%. Operating profit increased 8.5% with operating profit margin of 13.5% on the quarter. Net income was $370 million, an increase of 9.3%. Diluted EPS was $3.19, an increase of 10%. Turning now to our balance sheet, which remained strong; merchandise inventories were $1.99 billion at the end of the second quarter, representing a 14% increase in average inventory per store. The increase principally reflects growth to support the robust sales trends along with the impact of inflation.

Our supply chain and our vendors are executing at a very high level to meet the customers' current demands. We finished the quarter with $1.41 billion of cash and cash equivalents and no borrowings on our $500 million revolver. Moving now to our updated guidance for fiscal 2021; looking ahead, while the trends in our business provided additional confidence in the structural nature of the tailwind, we remain aware that the COVID-19 pandemic and the vaccine rollout can have further impact on the broader economy, the consumer and our fiscal 2021 results. With still some measure of uncertainty, we continue to plan for fiscal 2021 based on a range of potential outcomes and will remain nimble and adjust as necessary.

Our updated guidance reflects the strong results in the first half of the year and the positive momentum we see in our business continuing into the second half of 2021. Please note that the prospective acquisition of Orscheln Farm and Home is not included in our guidance. So against the backdrop of what we know today, we are updating our guidance to a net sales range of $12.1 billion to $1.23 billion with comparable store sales growth in the range of 11% to 13%. For the year, we forecast an operating margin of 9.7% to 9.9% of sales, a step-up from our prior guidance. Diluted EPS is now forecast in a range of $7.70 to $8. This compares to our previous earnings range of $7.05 to $7.40 per diluted share. We have a unique opportunity with the positive customer trends and momentum in the business.

We are committed to investing in store and supply chain labor as we look to provide legendary customer service to meet our customers' expectations. While we continue to lap challenging sales and earnings comps, we expect positive sales comp in both the third and fourth quarter with the third quarter a few points higher than the fourth quarter. Please keep in mind we will continue to cycle strong gross margin performance of the prior year where we benefited from minimal promotional or clearance activity as well as favorable product mix, where CUE products represented a smaller portion of sales. Much like results in the second quarter, we are expecting gross margin decline in the back half of the year due to higher transportation costs and continued strength in CUE products.

Our guidance assumes promotional activity comparable to last year in Q3, with Q4 seeing some shift back to normalizing promotions during the holiday season. While we are dealing with significantly higher transportation costs, a mix shift to CUE and cost of goods increases, we continue to see benefit from a pullback in promotions and are seeing less price elasticity from consumers as we adjust prices. We believe we are effectively navigating impacts to our gross margin. The strength of our balance sheet and the consistency of our free cash flow continue to be a hallmark of Tractor Supply.

We have raised our outlook for capital spending to now be in the range of $500 million to $600 million to reflect higher construction and raw material costs for store projects and increased technology investments for the customer experience. We remain committed to returning cash to shareholders through the combination of a growing dividend and share repurchase. For 2021, we remain on track for anticipated share repurchases in a range of $700 million to $800 million. This year will mark a milestone with approximately $1 billion returned to shareholders due the combination of share repurchases and dividends.

To wrap up, we are very pleased with our performance in the first half of the year and see positive momentum carrying into the second half of 2021. We continue to build relevance and market share both today and over time. We are excited about the investments ahead of us to better serve our customers from new stores, Project Fusion remodels and our Side Lot transformation. We are strengthening our supply chain and growing our digital commerce, all in support of our commitment to driving strong shareholder returns for the long-term.

With that, I'll turn the call back over to Hal.

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Kurt. Tractor Supply has thrived over the last 15 months. We continue to operate from a position of strength and are committed to investing in the business. Our Life Out Here strategy is designed to capitalize on the attractive opportunity that we see in our nearly $110 billion total addressable market. We are transforming our stores through our Project Fusion remodel and Side Lot transformation, optimizing our technology in store and online and investing in how we operate our stores.

I'm incredibly proud of the progress the team has made in advancing our strategic priorities, especially amid a global pandemic and running the business at an elevated rate. So let me share with you an update on how a few of our top initiatives are progressing. I'll start with the field activity support team. A 1,200-plus person organization that is designed to improve store labor productivity, example task is a FAST team includes execution of merchandising programs like center court, end caps, clip strips, planogram resets, seasonal programs and our sales-driving initiatives.

Rolled out in the third quarter of last year this team has made great progress in improving execution of our merchandising activity, which represents the second largest body of work for our store team members. Year-to-date, the execution of TAC by the FAST team is running at 97%, or nearly 33 points higher than our base year of 2019. The FAST team is allowing the store teams to spend more time on customer service and improve their in-store execution. We believe the FAST team will continue to contribute to comparable store sales well into the future.

Turning next to our Project Fusion store remodel program; recall our Project Fusion is our state-of-the-art space productivity program designed to enhance the customer experience in our mature store base and give new customers that may other shop with us in the past, more reasons to visit. We now have more than 160 stores in the new layout and the customer feedback has been overwhelmingly positive. Our customers are taking note of things like the improved shopping experience in our remodels. And specifically in our customer intercept surveys, they're calling out better organization, improved merchandise selection, cleaner and brighter and easier to navigate factors.

While the majority of the remodels have been completed more recently, we are very pleased with the early read of our customer response and the comp lift of the remodel is running in line with our expectations. Given the size of our store base, this is a multiyear opportunity to continually refresh our store base and further drive comp sales. Another component of our space productivity program is the transformation of our Side Lot. Typically, there's as much space outside of our stores in the Side Lot as we have inside the store. The productivity of this space is substantially below the chain average.

We're in the midst of a multiyear project to transform our side lot, with an expanded product offering and an enhanced shopping experience. With this investment, the side lot space is leveraged to offer a wider product offering in the lawn and garden categories, enter new categories and offer greater convenience through the expansion of our Buy Online Pickup in Store capabilities for drive-through pickup. We also continue to see a positive halo effect from the Garden Center to the existing store and vice versa. Addition of product categories, increased ease of shopping and new services provides us with even more ways to continue to keep our existing customers engage at Tractor Supply and attract new customers to the brand.

Our ability to drive higher sales per square foot, through the transformation of our side lot, remains a significant opportunity. We currently have about 60 side lot transformations completed. And we anticipate having greater than 150 complete, as we exit 2021. In these early remodels, we're learning a great deal about our customers' appetite for our expanded lawn and garden assortment, and even more excited than we embarked on the initial test pilots. The team has done a great job laying the foundation of our Life Out Here strategy, as we scale our transformational initiatives.

Beyond our multi-year strategic initiatives, at Tractor Supply, we are always focused on having the seasonally appropriate offerings to support our customers. Wrapping up the summer season, we're exiting the quarter with our -- with clean inventory with the seasonal change over. We continue to focus on enhancing our product offerings for the transition to the important fall and winter season. Across all areas of the store and online, we have fall-centric merchandising and marketing plans in place to keep our customers engaged. Whether it's the launch of our pet appreciation week in September to the rollout of our Deer hunting planogram set or our focus on heating products for the change in temperature, our customers know that they can count on tractor supply for the relevant product that they need to live Life Out Here.

We are leveraging new lines and innovation across drilling, safe and home and decor. In addition, Ridgecut, our exclusive brand and performance workwear will be expanded across new categories and into women's workwear. These product expansions are relevant to both new and existing customers and will help retain our growing customer base. Across all parts of the store, we have exciting products for the fall and winter, as we shift gears to ramp up for our customers' needs to care for their land, home, animals and pets as colder weather comes.

On the marketing front, we're making continued investments to drive our brand awareness, as part of our plans, we're excited to announce the new multi-year partnership to be the official life out her partner, for the professional bull riders effective this season. The partnership includes a flagship presence on the PBR tour that host over 200 events per year, a Tractor Supply branded broadcast booth during the pre-show on CBS, an in-arena broadcast activation and local customer activation. PBR will also produce and distribute custom content for our social media channels. We're very excited to support our customers' passion for this dynamic and rapidly growing sport.

Again, on marketing, given the strong millennial trends we have been experiencing. We're investing in marketing to continue to attract and nurture this important demographic. Given that the millennial customer cohort may not be as familiar with our brand, we are executing marketing plans to introduce Tractor Supply to this next generation of customers. Just last month, we launched a new campaign, targeting millennial as a media channel, like Pandora, YouTube and other streaming services. This campaign is called, Welcome to Life Out Here and introduces this new audience to what lies ahead in our stores and the lifestyle we help support.

The focus is on key categories such as pet, backyard poultry, gardening and self-reliance. With the primary goal to drive awareness, the millennial campaign has delivered significant impressions since the launch. Early results show best-in-class performance in ad recalls and awareness relative to traditional benchmarks. We believe this indicates that we are resonating with this audience, and it is driving consideration for Tractor Supply.

To summarize, we've delivered strong results year-to-date and made significant progress with our strategic initiatives. We have confidence that our strategy and execution will allow us to continue to build a stronger tractor supply. With our purposeful actions, we'll emerge from the pandemic a stronger company. It's an exciting time at Tractor Supply. My appreciation goes out to each and every 1 of our more than 45,000 Tractor Supply team members for their dedication to our mission and value.

And with that, operator, we would now like to open the line for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Steven Forbes with Guggenheim Securities.

Steven Forbes -- Guggenheim Securities LLC -- Analyst

Good morning. So Hal, I wanted to focus on the Neighbor's Club relaunch. So maybe a two-part question here. If we look at the spending tiers, right, that are sort of defined by the program. Curious if you could provide some context around how these tiers were determined. And any sort of color, right, that you could provide to help us better understand sort of what percentage of members today would qualify, right, for the preferred plus peers? Any color would be appreciated there.

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Steve, of our now 21 million plus Neighbor's Club members. And like, kind of, all loyalty programs we try to -- as we created in this case, three tiers we tried to kind of reasonably distribute it with kind of a decreasing proportion across each of the three buckets. And then we also try to create tier levels that would naturally encourage upward migration and discourage downward migration. I'd say a few things. As we talked about on the call, our Neighbor's Club members now account for over 65% of our sales.

Our retention rate on our Neighbor's Club members is over 80%, very strong retention rate on an annualized basis. And as we said, our highest -- our third tier of spending, which is the Neighbor's Club premium plus the retention rates there are over 95%. And so we're seeing significant upward migration, we're seeing reduced downward migration and the final thing I'll make a mention of is that our Neighbor's Club members, they make two more trips a quarter on average than our non-Neighbor's Club members. And our Neighbor's Club members had spent over $1,000 a year.

We've got almost $2.5 million of those, and that's increasing kind of on a daily basis. So it's a -- It's a very robust program with its 21-plus million members. We've seen over 5 million members join us in the last 12 months. We're seeing outstanding retention. We're seeing excellent migration. As we migrate them, their retentions are holding and actually improving. And we've seen a significant response positive response to the rollout of the new program. As mentioned in our prepared remarks, since the rollout of the program, our Neighbor's Club members are significantly outcomping our overall chain average.

Steven Forbes -- Guggenheim Securities LLC -- Analyst

Thanks. And just a quick follow-up, follow-up. If I think about the last two orders, you provided somewhat context around repeating trends. I think a percentage of customers repeating within 12 months probably in a rolling basis. I think it was 50% last month. You mentioned sort of its running at high. So just kind of the context around repeat trends as we think about the growth in the customer base that you've experienced over the past 18 months.

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So our customer repeat shopping trends continue to remain very high. New customer retention rates continue to hover in that kind of 50-ish percent similar to -- to last quarter and the previous quarters. And our customer -- our new customer counts were only slightly below new customer counts from Q2 2020. And so for us, there's a lot of good news on the customer side. We saw $11 million last year. We saw $2.6 million, nearly 3 million in Q1. We're seeing kind of 50% plus retention rates on those consume new customers.

The way -- kind of an interesting way to think about it is on the 11 million new customers we saw last year, 6 million have shopped with us again and 3 million of those joined the Neighbor's Club program. And so that's just if you think about that walk, just some outstanding metrics, retention, conversion to the Neighbor's Club program. And then again, this quarter, we're seeing customer -- new customer counts nearly the same as the second quarter of 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic.

Steven Forbes -- Guggenheim Securities LLC -- Analyst

Thank you.

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Hey, good morning, everyone. Nice quarter. My first question is the stabilized period that you outlined at the earnings day, it hasn't really happened yet. I guess it has relative to last year, but the business is still growing. Can you talk about the factors that would [Indecipherable] that the business doesn't need to digest and therefore, continue to grow and then vice versa. What's the [Indecipherable] we are going to have a digestion period and we'll have a deeper stabilization period versus the way you affect it?

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, hi Simeon. How are you? I start out with -- at the highest level, I'd say there still continues to be a lot of uncertainty in the United States economy and globally, whether that's on certainly as it relates to COVID, the delta variant, the implications that adds on mobility and on customer shopping behaviors. I'd say if you track back to our October earnings enhanced earnings day last year, kind of implied a bit in the graphic curve showed was a bit more of a return to normal mentality at some point that was more abrupt in nature.

And I'd say, I think as we're all watching how COVID is playing out, that's certainly not the case. And so, I'd also say though that our business continues to evolve, then the -- and if you think back to them, we were talking about 50/50 on structural versus transitory in terms of trends. And I think we'd lean more toward structural now in the way we view our trends. If you think about pet, if you think about the millennial customer, if you think about home setting kind of rural revitalization, categories like poultry, as an example. So last year, as we've said several times, we sold 11 million birds. Half of those were to new customers. We're seeing, as mentioned by Kurt in his prepared remarks, outstanding retention those customers last year, the shop that's on poultry coming back again this year.

In fact, that retention rate is higher than any other animal feed or pet. So I mean, it just shows you that the trends that began last year are really resonating and resilient. And that momentum that we're seeing with our customers and in our business and with the lifestyle, the out your lifestyle that we appeal to is holding incredibly strong. And I think in my prepared remarks, I talked about the fact that between Q2 of 2020 and Q1 of 2021, we had grown $3 billion and 34% comp and we were kind of coming into Q2.

I think like many companies, but certainly us wondering how we would cap the comp and we had guided to kind of flattish at the beginning of the year for that and perhaps even a little down and to finish with a plus 10.5% certainly exceeded our expectations. And it's really all about the underlying trends to strengthen our consumer behavior, new customers and the appeal of that out her lifestyle and I think there's still a lot of uncertainty in the out years and quarters. But I would say, we feel more confident in the structural orientation of the trends than we did last October.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Thank you. In terms of capex, I think Kurt had mentioned that it was relatively level lending down years as up from a couple of years ago. Does it peak in 2021? Do you spend further and accelerate into 2022? How should we think about cadence here?

Kurt Barton -- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Simeon, this is Kurt. On the cadence over the next few years, as we pointed out, back in October when we launched our new long-term targets and the Life Out Here strategy, we said that we've got consistency in our investment in the existing stores as we drive productivity with Fusion and Side Lot, but that where there may be some variation would be on the supply chain as we grow our supply chain, particularly new distribution centers. And so, as you've heard us in the last couple of quarters emphasize the importance of our investment in our supply chain.

We are looking to accelerate and would see us shifting some of the supply chain investments earlier in the next few years. And so, there may be higher than average in '21, '22, even '23. But over the period of time, it still averages out about the five-year expectation that we gave. And the important thing is the recognition and our confidence in the structural nature of this business, and therefore, the importance of our timing of investments in the supply chain. So, I see '21 and '22 pretty consistent in potential on capital as we emphasize ensuring the strength of our supply chain.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Thank you, very much.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Michael Lasser with UBS.

Michael Lasser -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Could you [Technical Issues] livestock product growing in the past, I would say you've been experiencing. But at some point or is this success starting your [Technical Issues] where you are not going to scale they're going to be more promotional, there has been no share losses. So, at what point [Technical Issues] in the next several quarters?

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Michael, how are you, and thanks for joining our call this morning. Yes, I'd start with the fact that we're confident we're taking share really across every major category that we have in the business, both in stores and online. If you look at the profile between new customers, existing customers, both are showing strong comp transaction growth, average ticket growth. And as I said in my prepared remarks, more customers are shopping Tractor than ever. They're visiting us more frequently and they're shopping -- they're spending more when they're shopping us.

What I would say is we participate in a very attractive large $110 billion market, where our share kind of based on our new guidance would be fairly above 10%. There's a lot of share gain out there and also a lot of share to still be competed with. We're dominantly very focused on our customer and just making sure that the initiatives and the actions that we take are out there to create the best customer experience that we can, whether that's investments in our team members to drive that legendary customer service or investments in inventory to ensure we're in stock for our customers.

I would say, as it relates to the promotional environment, we've not -- we've had very little to no promotions in Q1 and Q2 of this year and that's our expectation really for the balance of the year. And I really expect the competitive environment to remain similar for no other reason because of the supply/demand situation that's out there and the global supply chain is disrupted, as I've seen it in my 25-plus years in retail. And everyone is working hard to just keep inventory in their stores.

And I think that mindset would prevail over any sort of promotional kind of share, kind of push that anyone has. I'd also just comment that we don't directly compete with really any primary retailer, being a lifestyle retailer, one of our benefits is that we play across a handful of large categories that are uniquely tailored to our customer. But typically when we're competing with other companies, it's on a one-off category basis, and we really appeal to that whole lifestyle. But I don't anticipate an increase in the promotional environment in the market or certainly for us, anywhere near -- on the near or medium-term horizon.

Michael Lasser -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

My following question is on [Technical Issues] from last quarter year-on-year exactly over the few quarter?

Kurt Barton -- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Yes, Michael, this is Kurt. You stated the results accurate on the last quarter. Let me give a quick backdrop, and that will lead toward the back half. But we entered the year expecting 100 basis points to 200 basis points of retail inflation throughout the year that quickly produced in Q1 closer to 300 basis points, principally from commodities. And then as we shifted into Q2 at the 350 basis points, 450 basis points of retail benefit from inflation, one, it demonstrates the ability, as Hal mentioned, to be able to adjust pricing appropriately.

But the increase in Q2 over Q1 was principally related to transportation costs and other non-commodity type based cost increases. We see the back half of the year staying at elevated levels. And we would anticipate that the numbers in Q2, it would be at that level and potentially at moderately higher levels throughout the back half. And in this inflation environment, I always like to remind that our merchants and our business, we deal with inflation and deflation every year and they're managing this excellent. And we feel we've got the ability right now in the consumer sentiment, the less price elasticity and their behavior to be able to manage the inflation written very well throughout this year.

Michael Lasser -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Very helpful. Thanks so much.

Operator

And your next income from Chuck Grom with Gordon Haskett.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Thanks and good morning. My question is on Side Lot, is it possible now with a few quarters on your bet, give update on sales. Have you seen the strength? And any other up to the balance of the stores you're going to open this year in the Side Lot format? As a follow-up, you talked about 70% of the fleet potential holding Side Lot. I'm curious how quickly you think you're going to accomplish that goal.

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Hey, Chuck. How are you? Thanks for joining the call today. And starting out with both Fusion and Side Lot, we're very pleased with the results. And we've made a lot of progress over the last six to nine months on both of these efforts. We've rolled out, as we mentioned, we've got over 60 -- 160 Fusions done over 60 Side Lot transformations done. In addition to the work on those individual stores, we've brought the project management in-house. We're reducing our construction times and lowering costs, and we see lots of opportunity to continue to do that as we move forward, particularly on the Side Lot.

We've iterated on kind of the plans several times and keep optimizing the format every -- as we roll it out. But we are very pleased with the results with the progress we made in both. On the results, what I'd say is we typically, I think, kind of historically in retail, it's the same in all my experiences. You start to really get a good feel for how the remodel lift is playing out kind of three to four months after the store kind of reopens and the remodels then complete. Most of our remodels hadn't been opened that long.

So we're really kind of waiting over the next three to six months to start to see how that data set plays out. But what I'd say is for the stores that have been open kind of over that period of time, they are at the levels that we anticipated in our initial business case. And we have more of those on the Fusion than we do on the Side Lot. But we're very pleased with the results of both projects. And as I mentioned in our prepared remarks, the customer excitement around us is becoming more of a destination and Garden has been more significant than we even anticipated, and we're even more bullish on that as we move forward.

As it relates to the penetration of the kind of how long. We'll -- I think you can expect to hear us share more of that over time. But I'd say directionally over about a five year time frame, you should think about kind of the Fusion stores. For the most -- the vast majority of our stores having Fusion. And on Side Lot really around that 60% to 70%. I think we're feeling more bullish around getting more of our store base done with Fusion and may be worried in six months ago, just the way that project is going, the cost that we're doing at it, they were doing it for the early read on the lift we're seeing, and then the need just to continue to kind of remodel our store base.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

That's very helpful. And just a quick follow-up I know this is unrelated I apologize. But given some new results [Technical Issues] this delta variant, I'm curious, if you've seen any choppiness in some of the regions that you operate on vaccinations?

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I'd start with -- our business has -- over the last 15, 18 months now has remained incredibly consistent. And we've said that on a number of calls, consistent across regions, consistent in category trends, consistent week-to-week, consistent month-to-month. As we said, all 13 weeks of this past quarter were positive comps. Obviously, all three months were positive comps. We exited June with strong momentum. And even as the -- we certainly say as a nation as we've seen this delta variant pick up. We've not seen any impact on our trends, whether at a national level or at a regional level. And that's very similar to what we observed last year.

And I think it's almost I hate to say it, but I think the lack of mobility sometimes driven by these outbreaks actually plays to of benefit Tractor Supply. I think it's demonstrated that when folks are spending more time more time at their homes with their families, their pets, their animals, their land they find Tractor Supply to be kind of that one-stop shop resource for them to continue all those hobbies that they love and they're just spending more time doing those hobbies. And so while we certainly want and wish the country returned to normal as fast as possible, the delta variant, we don't see it as a potential threat, if anything, maybe some upside to it from our business results -- from a business results perspective.

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Thank you, Hal. Good luck.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Chuck Cerankosky with Northcoast Research.

Chuck Cerankosky -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Good morning, everyone. Can you just -- we look at the strength you exhibited over the past two quarters. And, Hal, could you tie it to the TV advertising you've been doing? And did that lead into this relationship with the PDR?

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. We don't want to own Life Out Here and we think we have the credibility to do so and are viewed that way by our customers. And as I mentioned in -- we do an awareness survey of our customers twice a year. In our last earnings calls, I mentioned our unbranded awareness in November of 2019 was 37% and then 18 months later, right, as we're exiting Q1, it was up to 51%. So we've seen a 14 point -- I'm sorry, a 17 point increase, 34% to 51%, a 17 point increase in our unaided brand awareness. Much of that is obviously our core customer, but a lot of it is also the millennial customer.

And as we mentioned last quarter, we saw a 4 point increase in our millennial customer penetration year-over-year. And as I mentioned in our prepared remarks, that trend continued in Q2. So we think the work we're doing in marketing is broadening the aperture of consumers understanding of Tractor Supply and driving unaided -- and aided awareness and kind of driving footsteps into our stores. As we said, we continue to have strong comp transactions across the board. And we're really excited about the -- the partnership with PBR. We think it's a category that resonates well with our customer.

And one with over 200 activities a year that we can do a lot of activation across the areas of the country where our customers are, and it will be a -- it will be a great partnership. As I also mentioned in our prepared remarks, we're also we have launched a large marketing campaign targeted toward the millennials. And up until now, the majority of our bubble on marketing has been TV and kind of Facebook base. And on TV, it's really been around news media. And we think that's been very successful for our core customers. Those are the major places that they engage with media. The millennial customer, as we all know, engages in different types of media.

They're on Pandora, Spotify, YouTube. And so what does let us do is actually create a very different creative concept called Welcome the Life Out Here, explain who Tractor Supply is, and then talk about those first two, three hobbies that they might engage in backyard poultry, backyard gardening, pest. Things like that. They're kind of starter categories, if you will, in Life Out Here. We're very excited about that work. And the initial feedback from customers is outstanding. And just hats off to the marketing team for all the work they've done to really drive awareness of our business and drive footsteps into our store.

Chuck Cerankosky -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Thank you, Hal.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Peter Benedict with Baird.

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning, everyone. I'll ask questions here. The first, Kurt, your second half plan implies some negative incremental margins. I know you talked about some of the investments you're making, etc. I'm just curious kind of your view on that. How that comes about. Maybe to give us an idea of maybe the magnitude of the gross margin decline or vision relative to 2Q's 65% to 70% decline. And the follow-up would be just about your P&L flexibility as we look longer term in the event that sales do slow or even turned down a bit. What levers do you have to pull in that environment? Thanks so much.

Kurt Barton -- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Hey, Peter, thanks for the question. And two questions, margin second half and then our ability to be nimble and some of the profitability enhancement opportunity. So on the second half, when we look at the operating margins, here's how we view it and frame it up. Our gross margin in the pandemic was really the source of the -- in the operating margin. And we view the second half really about the gross margin performance. We anticipate Q3's gross margin performance where we've got more visibility to Q3 at this point, very much similar in line with the performance of Q2. As we get further into the second half of the year, we've taken a fairly prudent approach.

There's more uncertainty beyond one more quarter. And we've always given a little bit more certainty on the most recent or the most nearest quarter. But in the second half, we recognized -- for the fourth quarter, we recognized supply chain disruptions, inflation factors as well as the -- the holiday season and what level of competitive nature. And so we've certainly reflected some of those uncertainties in the fourth quarter. And the operating margin on the back half of the year really rides on our performance with the gross margin. And as I said earlier, second quarter shows, we've really been able to manage in this environment very well.

The business is structurally very sound. We have a lot of confidence in our business in our back half. And if some of the uncertainties don't play out, we acknowledge there's potentially some upside to the guidance that we've given. In regards to flexibility, as we always have strong profit improvement process going on. And a few of the factors that we are focused on right now where we've got some ability to be able to adjust would be in the supply chain, the work that we're doing to reduce stem miles and to continue to just lever the size of this organization drive efficiency in there as well as our ability to be nimble on variable cost.

If there's any sort of shift in the momentum of the business, we're able to shift very well in regards to variable costs in both distribution and stores to be able to adjust on that. We've got a solid profit improvement initiative that is driving some of the efficiencies. And these are the active offsets that we have going on to be able to help us maintain operating margins well above the 2019 ranges while we're making important investments in the business.

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. -- Analyst

Great. Thanks so much.

Mary Winn Pilkington -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Public Relations

Operator, we have time for one more call.

Operator

All right. And your last question comes from the line of Zach Fadem with Wells Fargo.

Zachary Fadem -- Wells Fargo Securities LLC -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning. Thanks for [Technical Issues] in today. So, Kurt, you suggested that in past [Phonetic] that the 100 basis points of gross margin expansion in 2020 was largely related to muted promo, low clearance environment. And now that we're halfway through this year and you've seen the environment more or less continue, can you just talk us through the long-term state of the gross margin line? And to what extent the current 35% plus margin is the right way to think about this business? Or are there reasons to believe that the historical 34% range is more appropriate as promos and clearance inevitably return?

Kurt Barton -- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

[Technical Issues] we've said throughout this pandemic to your point, we've seen over 100 basis points of our operating margin improvement over pre-pandemic really coming from gross margin, as you mentioned. We've said that we anticipate overtime as we cycle the pandemic, the expected somewhat normalization on some of those factors, the promo, the clearance. While we do anticipate and are very disciplined in holding to an everyday low pricing and giving our customers the best price we can. Our long-term guidance assumes some normalization.

Now we acknowledge that with our guide shows that a second year in 2021, we'll maintain operating margins above that long-term target range. And so as we get further through 2021, we certainly, as we manage this business, see as things start to normalize we'll address the long-term expectations on gross margin. But we're going to always continue to offer strong everyday low pricing. We're going to focus on gaining market share and focus on driving unit growth.

So price is going to be very important to us in leveraging the strength of the size of our business to have an efficient and nimble supply chain. So as we get more visibility, we'll certainly acknowledge the gross margin, operating margin trends compared to our long-term target. But right now, we're not reaching beyond the visibility and certainty in the next couple of quarters.

Zachary Fadem -- Wells Fargo Securities LLC -- Analyst

And a quick follow-up on that. I mean in 2019, you had a $1 billion sales base last year that stepped up to 10.5 and this year it's going to step up more to 12. Can you just talk about scale advantages that you generate a how that translate to gross margin and operating expense line?

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Hey Zach, it's Hal. And again, thanks for joining the call today. And yes, I'd say a few things. First off, on the sale advantage, I'd say, it dominantly gives us an opportunity in the market with our eight distribution centers moving toward 11. The relationships that we have with our vendors and the meaningfulness of that, with the technology investments we're able to make as an example, every single one of our team members wears a theatrical headset that really creates an optimal customer service experience in the stores.

We're in the process of rolling out new handheld devices for every team member inside the stores as well. Those sorts of investments are enabled by our scale and they're enabled -- and they're really focused on helping us great gain and capture market share and drive top-line sales. And as we've talked many times, I mean, our main goal is to grow at a rate faster than the market. That's what's implied in our long-term operating trends. And that's how our business is performing now. And then on the operating profit rate, as we've said, we've been able to -- our outlook is to hold SG&A flat or down. And we've been -- we've done that over the last six quarters and anticipate continuing to do so.

So, as we've grown our sales and grown our sales base, we've been reinvesting in the business, but doing at a point where we're not deleveraging there. And whether it's in the capital line or in our team line. And we view our team members as a strategic asset. We are a customer service-driven retailer. We are not a retailer where you're going to walk in, pick the item you want, go to a self-checkout, and never talk to someone loading your car yourself and drive away, right? We are going to help you pick the item. We're going to greet you. We're going to check you out, and we're going to help you load it in your car. And that's going to drive sustainable share gain for us. And then on the gross margin rate side, I think we continue to be very pleased that the promotional environment remains very little to none.

And our inventory position where it is, we're just requiring little to no clearance activity as well. Our hope is that the longer that sustains itself the more structural that becomes. Right now, we are in a high-cost freight and import environment. That's reflected in our guidance. And we're very pleased with the low promotional nature is allowing us to offset those freight and import to allow us to give the guidance that we've given right now and fully acknowledge. As Kurt said that if sales remain at the rates that they are in Q2 that there would be upside to the guidance that we've given. But we just thought it was prudent at this point to kind of provide the guidance that we have just given the continued level of uncertainty out there.

Zachary Fadem -- Wells Fargo Securities LLC -- Analyst

Makes sense. Appreciate the time guys.

Mary Winn Pilkington -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Public Relations

Great. Thank you, everyone. Dan, that will wrap up our call today. So, thank you for joining us. Marianne and I will be around for any questions and we'll look forward to you in our call in October.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 65 minutes

Call participants:

Mary Winn Pilkington -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations & Public Relations

Hal Lawton -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Kurt Barton -- Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer

Steven Forbes -- Guggenheim Securities LLC -- Analyst

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC -- Analyst

Michael Lasser -- UBS Securities LLC -- Analyst

Chuck Grom -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst

Chuck Cerankosky -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Peter Benedict -- Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. -- Analyst

Zachary Fadem -- Wells Fargo Securities LLC -- Analyst

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