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Albertsons Companies, Inc. (ACI 0.10%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Oct 18, 2021, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Welcome to the Albertsons Companies second-quarter 2021 earnings conference call, and thank you for standing by. [Operator instructions] This call is being recorded. I would like to hand the call over to Melissa Plaisance, GVP, treasury and investor relations. Please go ahead.

Melissa Plaisance -- Group Vice President, Treasury and Investor Relations

Good morning, and thank you for joining us for the Albertsons Companies' second-quarter 2021 and earnings conference vall. With me today from the company are Vivek Sankaran, our CEO; and Sharon McCollam, our new president and CFO. Today, Vivek will share insights into our second-quarter results as well as review our progress against our strategic priorities. Sharon will then go into the financial details of our second quarter as well as our updated full-year 2021 outlook before handing it back over to Vivek for some closing remarks.

After the prepared remarks, we will conduct a Q&A session. I would like to remind you that management may make statements during this call that are or could include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Forward-looking statements are not limited to historical facts but contain information about future operating or financial performance. Forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations and assumptions and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to be materially different from those anticipated.

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Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in our forward-looking statements are and will be contained from time to time in our SEC filings, including on Forms 10-Q, 10-K and 8-K. Any forward-looking statements we make today are only as of today's date, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise any such statements as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Please keep in mind that included in the financial statements and management's prepared remarks are certain non-GAAP measures, and the historical financial information includes a reconciliation of net income to adjusted net income and adjusted EBITDA. And with that, I'll hand the call over to Vivek.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Melissa. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Before we get started, I would like to introduce Sharon McCollam to any of you that do not know her in a new role as President and CFO at Albertsons Companies. She will lead all areas of finance, IT, real estate, strategy, corporate development and supply chain.

As many of you know, Sharon officially joined us on September 7, and now has just over six weeks under her belt. She came out of retirement to join us on our transformation journey, and her prior experience at Best Buy and with the digital transformation of William Sonoma will help us as we move forward. We are very excited that she has joined our team, and I look forward to working with her to accelerate our transformation. We also want to congratulate Bob Diamond on his retirement and thank him for his seven years of service with Albertsons and especially for his contributions to our successful IPO last year.

Let me now turn to our second-quarter results. I'm pleased to report that our results for the quarter exceeded our internal plans across all key metrics, increasing our confidence in the business going forward. Our ID sales increased 1.5% in Q2 and 15.3% on a two-year stack basis. We continue to gain market share in food on a one and two-year basis.

And in MULO, we are up on a two-year basis and down only slightly on a one-year basis. In addition, we achieved adjusted EBITDA of $965 million and adjusted EPS of $0.64 per share ahead of our expectations. Again, this quarter, against a backdrop of digital sales growth exceeding 200% in every quarter of 2020, the benefits of our digital and omnichannel investments continue to resonate with our customers. In the quarter, digital sales increased 5% year over year and increased 248% on a two-year stack basis.

Our Drive Up & Go and home delivery capabilities, reaching 95% of our customers increased omnichannel households by over four times versus Q2 2019 and retention has been strong. Omnichannel household growth is a key initiative as these customers spend three times more than any in-store-only shopper. We also continued to drive year-over-year growth in identified households, another key initiative that is foundational to better understanding our customers through data analytics and allowing us to improve our offerings to drive recurring and incremental spend. In our just for U loyalty program, ongoing benefit enhancements continue to accelerate membership growth, which increased 17% year over year to 27.5 million members.

Within the program, the number of actively engaged members increased by almost 9%. Actively engaged members are those that are redeeming rewards such as fuel or grocery rewards in the current quarter. In addition, we had a 93% retention rate with actively engaged members in Q2. Remember that actively engaged members spend approximately four times more with us.

We also saw better-than-expected in-store results as traffic in our stores continue to increase versus Q2 2020. We believe the increased traffic is being driven by our ongoing efforts to protect the health and safety of our employees, customers and communities and the higher vaccination rates that are helping customers become more comfortable in returning to stores. These results reflect the momentum we are seeing through the execution of our transformation strategy across all channels. The consumer backdrop remains strong throughout the quarter.

I will now take a few minutes to walk through the pillars of our transformation strategy that helped drive these results and provide you with an update on our progress. These pillars include in-store excellence, accelerating our digital and omnichannel capabilities, increasing productivity and strengthening our talent and culture. In-store excellence has been elevated by providing the right assortment in each local market using digital tools to enhance replenishment and in-stock conditions, encouraging friendly customer service and enhancing speed and ease of checkout through frictionless and contactless payments. I will briefly touch on recent progress on two elements of our assortment, fresh and Own Brands.

In fresh, our efforts to differentiate our offerings have generated elevated demand with fresh growth outpacing center store by approximately 250 basis points year over year. Sales in each of our fresh categories remain ahead of pre-pandemic levels as customers continue to consume more meals at home. In Own Brands, the introduction of new products as well as the rollout of Own Brands into Albertsons legacy divisions has generated strong growth. Our Q2 sales penetration was 25.2%, up approximately 60 basis points from Q2 '20.

During the quarter, we launched 85 new products, including ready-to-eat meals, refrigerated Signature Reserve pastas and several O Organics coffee items. Year to date, we have launched over 400 new Own Brands items and are on track to reach our goal of launching over 800 items this fiscal year. Finally, we continue to invest in stores. Through the first half of the year, we opened seven new stores and completed 76 upgrade and remodel projects.

Our next priority is the acceleration of our digital and omnichannel capabilities. Digital transformation is an imperative in our growth strategy, as we aim to provide an array of convenient shopping experience for our customers. To this end, we have expanded our Drive Up & Go locations to over 1,900 and expect to reach approximately 2,000 locations by year-end. Underlying the rollout of our digital and omnichannel capabilities is our focus on delivering a superior customer experience as well as improving profitability over time.

For example, in Drive Up & Go, our average wait time for pickup is now down to three minutes. In delivery, we continue to speed up delivery times while reducing delivery cost per order by expanding our third-party delivery store network, and we added DoorDash one-hour delivery to all divisions with a catalog of 40,000-plus products. And we also announced DoubleDash allowing customers to combine delivery of a restaurant meal and a grocery delivery in one trip. In micro fulfillment centers, we are improving our productivity in our three existing MFCs, and we have plans for an additional four MFCs before the end of our fiscal year, bringing the total to 7.

This is two less than previously estimated as the launch of two locations has moved into fiscal-year '22, primarily as a result of delays in construction. In loyalty, our integrated loyalty and e-commerce app is now fully rolled out and offers a connected customer experience with redesigned rewards and other new features. To partially offset all of these investments and cost inflation, our third priority is driving productivity. During the quarter, we continued to eliminate waste and improve efficiencies to enhance promotional effectiveness, reductions in indirect spend, labor efficiencies and ongoing efforts to reduce shrink.

We continue to expect to achieve the targeted $1.5 billion in annual gross savings by the end of fiscal-year 2022. Our fourth priority is strengthening our talent and culture and supporting the communities we serve. We continue to add talent throughout the company at both the corporate and division level, including the recent appointment of Sharon, our outreach through job fairs for retail and distribution employees and the training we have put in place to assist in the success of our new employees and enhance retention. Our pharmacy team continues to serve our communities with an array of services, including the COVID and flu vaccines.

To date, the pharmacy team has administered over 7.5 million COVID vaccine doses. In support of our associates that were impacted and the communities we serve, the Albertsons Companies donated $500,000 to help provide food to those impacted by Hurricane Ida and the California wildfires. We also continue to take actions related to ESG and sustainability. We recently published our fiscal 2020 ESG report, which is available on our company website.

As the next step from our recently refreshed materiality assessment, we will soon release a comprehensive set of goals in areas, including climate action, diversity, equity and inclusion, waste reduction and circularity, and community stewardship. And now I will turn to Sharon to provide remarks and cover the details of our second-quarter financial results and outlook.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Vivek, and hello, everyone. I'm thrilled to be here today and couldn't be more excited to have joined this team at such a transformative time in the company's history. What I have found to be the most impressive since joining is the disciplined approach that the company is taking to leveraging the favorable backdrop that the industry is seeing today while at the same time, remaining deeply focused on the strategic priorities that Vivek just covered and are foundational to advancing the transformations longer term. Consistent with these priorities, where I am currently spending the majority of my time is in the acceleration of our digital and technology initiatives, the strengthening of our omnichannel capabilities and the advancement of our productivity agenda, including identifying opportunities to further rationalize our cost structure, particularly in the technological enablement of our supply chains and our stores.

I look forward to discussing all of these topics further, both today and in our meetings to come. But now we'll turn to the details of our second-quarter results and provide an update on our fiscal '21 outlook. As Vivek said earlier, we were extremely pleased with our sales trends as we delivered Q2 2021 identical sales growth of 1.5% on top of 13.8% growth in Q2 2020 for a two-year stack of 15.3%. Total sales in Q2 2021 were $16.5 billion compared to $15.8 billion last year and $14.2 billion in Q2 2019.

Gross profit margin was 28.6% in Q2 2021 compared to 29% in Q2 2020 and 27.8% in Q2 2019. Excluding the impact of fuel however, our gross profit margin was flat compared to Q2 2020 as higher products, supply chain, and advertising costs were offset by productivity initiatives, favorable product mix and pharmacy margins related to COVID-19 vaccine. Compared to Q2 2019, gross margin increased 85 basis points, primarily driven by improvements in our productivity, shrink expense, sales leverage, and improved pharmacy margins related to COVID-19 vaccines, partially offset by investments related to our growth in digital sales. Selling and administrative expenses as a percentage of sales were 25.6% during the second quarter of fiscal '21 compared to 25.6% in Q2 2020 and 26.8% in Q2 2019.

Excluding the impact of fuel, selling, and administrative expenses increased 55 basis points year over year. This increase was primarily driven by higher employee costs, appreciations, and expenses related to the acceleration of our digital and omnichannel capabilities and other strategic priorities. These increases were partially offset by lower COVID-19-related expenses. As it relates to the year-over-year increase in employee costs, labor related to the reopening of certain fresh departments such as deli, bakery and prepared foods, market-driven wage rate increases, and higher equity-based compensation expense contributed to this increase.

On a two-year basis, our selling and administrative expenses were down 120 basis points versus Q2 2019. This decrease was driven by strong sales leverage, partially offset by higher employee costs and expenses related to investments in our omnichannel and digital capabilities and other strategic priorities. As a result of opportunistic refinancing transactions as well as continued debt reduction Q2 2021 interest expense decreased by $20 million to $109 million versus Q2 2020. Adjusted EBITDA was $965 million in the second quarter of 2021 compared to $948 million in Q2 2020.

This increase in adjusted EBITDA was primarily due to increased sales, partially offset by higher selling and administrative costs. Adjusted net income in Q2 '21 was $370 million or $0.64 per fully diluted share compared to $356 million or $0.60 per fully diluted share in the second quarter of fiscal 2020. I would now like to discuss free cash flow and capital allocation. During the second quarter and year to date, we have generated significant free cash flow driven by better-than-expected operating results as well as lower working capital.

From an investment perspective, capital expenditures year to date were approximately $823 million as we continue to invest in our digital and technology platforms, completed 76 remodels and opened seven stores. For the year, we continue to expect capital spending in the range of approximately $1.9 billion to $2 billion. Regarding debt reduction, subsequent to the end of the quarter, we provided notice of redemption of the remaining $200 million of Albertsons 5.75% unsecured notes, due in 2025, which will save us $11.5 million per annum in interest expense going forward. And finally, in regards to returning cash to shareholders, we announced today a 20% increase in our quarterly dividend from $0.10 to $0.12 per share based on our confidence in future cash flow generation and our strong operating performance.

I will now turn to our updated outlook for fiscal-year 2021. Given the outperformance in Q2 and recent trends, we have updated and raised our guidance for fiscal-year 2021. We now expect identical sales in fiscal 2021 in the range of negative 2.5% to 3.5% compared to prior guidance of negative 5% to 6%, representing an updated two-year stacked ID range of 13.4% to 14.4% compared to prior guidance of 10.9% to 11.9%. We expect adjusted EPS in the range of $2.50 to $2.60 per share, up $0.30 from our previous guidance range.

We expect adjusted EBITDA in the range of $3.95 billion to $4.05 billion, up $250 million from our previous guidance range. We also expect our tax rate to be in the range of 23% to 24% compared to 25% previously. I will now turn the call back over to Vivek for some closing remarks.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Sharon. In summary, I would like to reinforce a few messages. Our omnichannel strategy is working with our customers. We're adding customers to our franchise.

They're spending more with us and engaging in more ways with us. We continue to gain market share in dollars and units, and our trends improved with each successive period in the quarter, and especially around holidays. Our digital initiatives continue to drive engagement and growth. We remain focused on elevating service, quality and speed.

Our productivity initiatives are delivering, strengthening the middle of our P&L. We're also navigating the uncertainties of the times: inflation, product supply, labor challenges to name a few, with agility and creativity. Our strong performance year to date and continuing positive trends give us the confidence to raise our full-year 2021 outlook for the ID sales, adjusted EBITDA and EPS. While we celebrate progress, we remind ourselves that we are still in the early innings of our transformation with significantly more potential to capture.

Finally, none of this would be possible without the efforts of our 285,000 associates, who take care of our customers and the communities we serve day in and day out. I want to thank each and every one of them for their contributions to our ongoing success. We will now take your questions. 

Questions & Answers:


Operator

Thank you. [Operator instructions] Our first question is coming from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your questions. 

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Hey, Vivek. My first question is on inflation, I guess just straight housekeeping. So can you talk about product cost inflation or retail price inflation to the customer? Where is it, and how is it trending sequentially? And trying to figure out what the benefit could have been during the quarter. Thank you. 

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Simeon. I'm going to turn that over to Vivek.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Simeon. So the CPI inflation was around 2% in the quarter. Ours was about 3% on cost, OK, for the quarter. And as I said earlier, we expect the inflation to be higher as we go through the year, but we expect it still to be in the 3% to 5% range, which, in our opinion, is extremely manageable.

And you're seeing that come through in at least the quarter we just delivered. So we feel good that we can manage it through both what the customer is able to -- we have strong customers. So with that backdrop and what we have going in productivity, we are able to manage that in our P&L.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. OK. That's helpful. My next question, I want to ask Sharon about the phrase table stakes.

I think you remember, it was mentioned a lot at Best Buy. And I think it was related to pricing and making sure prices were at parity to large competitors. And I know we've talked about this with Albertsons in the past, but I'm curious, Sharon, your own perception as a customer of Albertsons and the industry so far. What do you think -- or where should pricing be? Where should you operate? I'm curious if you have a view yet? Like, where would it make sense? Where wouldn't it make sense to level the playing field against other competitors?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Simeon. Thank you for that. I think I'll let Vivek talk first about where we have been with pricing, and then I will follow up with my view as it relates to Albertsons in that comparison you spoke to. So Vivek, why don't you take the first part, and I'll take the second?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Simeon, I just want to be sure that I reinforce our approach to pricing, right? The first thing we look at is, are we gaining market share in dollars and units. Because to me, gaining market share units gives us a good indication that the value we are providing our customer across the mix of our portfolio, the fresh portfolio we have, our own branch portfolio and the branded portfolio resumes, and so that's the first thing. The second principle on pricing, I want to reinforce again is that we take an incredibly surgical approach to it.

So every single quarter, you should know that we are investing in pricing. And we invested by price area in specific markets. And again, it's with the outcome that we care about, which is growth and market share gains in dollars and units. So please keep that philosophy.

And then, Sharon, you might want to add to that?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So Simeon, I would say that interestingly enough, there are great similarities to what we were doing in my previous life. And I would say, overall, the company has a very surgical approach to pricing, and that is actually not new. We are definitely building capabilities in this area.

I would say that they have moved their capabilities in this area materially over the last 12 months. And when I look at that, Lightning Rod Products, we might call them something different in the grocery space. But there are products that we offer in our store that, mentally, customers are consistently benchmarking. And to the extent that we see that, of course, we are going to be reacting because that is what is good for our customer.

So it is different in every category. We have a much more expansive number of products that we offer. And I would say that you will continue to see us invest in surgical ways into pricing over time where it makes sense to do it.

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

OK. Right. Thanks. Nice quarter, everyone.

Take care. 

Operator

Our next question is coming from the line of Edward Kelly with Wells Fargo.

Edward Kelly -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Good morning, everyone. I guess for -- I want to start with just a follow-up and then I had a bigger picture question. But just on the inflation front, you mentioned last quarter, sort of 3% to 4% being like a good number for the business. Today, you said sort of 3% to 5%.

CPI is running much higher than that. I mean CPI is kind of closer to the high end. I'm just kind of curious sort of taking a step back, can you just provide a bit more color on sort of how you're thinking about this, in terms of, like, how you manage it strategically? What your competitors are doing? And how we should be thinking about the gross margin in the back half of the year against that backdrop?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Ed, I'll let Vivek take that.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So let me start with the gross margin question, Ed, because that's ultimately what we are trying to manage to at the top, right? So we want the top line growth, and we want to make sure that it comes with a healthy gross margin. I've always maintained the fact that in our company, we obsess about this notion of gross margin tailwinds. And gross margin tailwinds come from better mix management, better shrink management, smarter promotions, supply chain benefits and cost of goods benefits.

And those first three have been programs that we've been doing for a while now. And the last two, as we talked about earlier, we are going to see more and more benefits from that toward the back half of the year. So from the management of the gross margin in the P&L, while we can't predict what's going to happen with inflation, we certainly are prepared with what we can do with what's in our control. So think of it that way.

Now secondly, with my 3% to 5%, I mean to me, the CPI projections came up. I think they've gone up to 3.5% for the full year. So I expect that it will continue to increase a little bit over what we've seen through the rest of balance of this year and maybe the first part of next year. But it's still, in my opinion, Ed, very much in the manageable realm for a country like ours, especially with the consumer, with the backdrop we're seeing with the consumer.

The last thing I'll leave you with is, you'll see that a big part of the inflation is proteins. And protein inflation doesn't -- it tends to be more cyclical. So I suspect that some of that will come back. Protein inflation -- and you'll see it in different parts of protein.

So -- and it's a very manageable part of the business, especially when we have butchers in our store who can manage and give different choices for consumers. And that's how we manage the protein inflation, so consumers can always have something that they pick up to meet their budget.

Edward Kelly -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Great. That's helpful. And then I just wanted to follow up related to the broader category of investments. So you're ramping investment in the business and in digital transformation.

I'm curious, is this changing at all with Sharon joining? What I mean by that is, either in urgency or the size of the spend, kind of curious, Sharon, is that how you think about like the position of the company's stores or technology or supply chain, and how that could impact areas like capex going forward? We have seen companies sort of ramp capex into transformation. So I'm kind of curious as to how that may apply here.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Ed, I think that they have had a very disciplined strategy around the capital investments that they are currently doing. To the extent that we could accelerate those investments, we would. And from my perspective, these investments create gradual and incremental returns over time. And the early stages of these types of transformations start with having to build the foundations.

Where the company is now is very much on getting out of systems that are old enough to drink and vote in most states and actually putting in platforms that they can build on quickly, right? And so this is a story that you hear from every large retailer who has legacy systems. So they have been working on that for the last 18 months -- 24 months since Vivek joined the company. We are in the process, the analytics behind these investments and the work to determine direction is very well on its way, on many of these projects, and now it's the execution that needs to happen. Rest assured that our goal is going to be to accelerate the pace at which we are rolling this out.

One of the key things we had to do was to get ourselves into the cloud. And as you know, that is a significant undertaking, and the company is making great progress on that. We still have a ways to go, but we are making very good progress in that space, thus being able to move much faster in the future. So your question was, how do I feel about it? I feel the discipline around it and the strategic discipline around it has been excellent.

I think there is always the opportunity to accelerate, which is something that I mentioned in my prepared remarks that I'm very interested in doing, both on the technology side and on the supply chain side of it. And as we look forward and we get into our guidance for 2022, this has been a question that I've received numerous times from many of you in the private meetings before our call today, and I will be providing some additional color when we go into 2022. As we get clear picture of the 2022 capital spending expectations and budget. But as you know, they have taken them up.

So I feel very confident that we will be able to execute against the initiatives that they've originally laid out.

Edward Kelly -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Thank you. 

Operator

Our next question is from the line of John Heinbockel with Guggenheim.

John Heinbockel -- Guggenheim Partners -- Analyst

I wanted to start with omnichannel households, right? So up four times, I would imagine that's still less than 5% of your total households. Is that fair? And then when you think about maybe the next two years, can you double again the number of omnichannel households over that time period to two times? And what do you think drives that? Obviously, organically just having capabilities with some of that, but more -- is it really your outreach marketing-wise, right, that drives that growth from here?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

I'm going to let Vivek take that. 

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Hey, John. Good morning, John. We are below our competitors in terms of our overall omnichannel mix in the business, and we've said that before and we continue to grow that. We are excited about the growth rate, but we're also excited about the quality and the speed at which we're providing it, right? So to your question, I do think we can continue to increase it at the same pace, if not more.

And there's a couple of things. One is just making sure we are covering the entire market. I'll give you an example, John. When we open up two-hour delivery in our markets, we see even more incremental growth, right? People love the speed.

And our coverage is in the close to, say, 60% of the market, and we're going to continue to grow that. So our philosophy here is to keep giving customers more choices on Drive Up & Go. It's three-minute service when you pull up to the parking lot. We want to make sure we give you more speed in delivery and more choices in delivery.

And I think that's -- those fundamentals -- and as we open it up, continues to increase the number of omnichannel customers we get. To your point, we haven't turned on a big marketing blitz or anything because we see a lot of customers coming to our stores, and we just convert them at that point. They see the availability and they start engaging in it.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

And John, I would add to that, that over time, this past year, we have been adding capabilities. The app that customers were buying online with has been upgraded materially. Again, all of these initiatives that we're working on in the e-commerce side of the business are gradual and incremental. You implement them, customers learn to use them.

They see how much more efficient they are. They have a better experience, and then they use it more. So we've really soft launched the majority of these. We're also making similar progress in the loyalty area.

We talked in Vivek's prepared comments about the fact that we are increasing our number of loyalty member. And as we enhance the benefits and enhance the efficiency and the experience the customer has in redeeming loyalty, etc., that will also be greatly helpful to advancing this.

John Heinbockel -- Guggenheim Partners -- Analyst

And then maybe as a follow-up, right? So if we're going to -- I don't know if it will be a double in omnichannel customers, right, but certainly, the demand is going to increase exponentially. So maybe talk to -- and I know the MFCs tie into this but it's broader than this. Bringing the cost to pick, I guess, I don't know if you guys look at cost to pick a piece as opposed to an entire order, but cost to pick down -- and how much can you bring the cost to pick down by, right? Can you bring that down 25%, 30% or possibly even more?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Vivek?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. John, the cost to pick down, there's two steps. One is, how do you become more and more efficient in the store, and that's through technology. And then in some of our stores, we've created what we call a ware room so that your fastest-moving items can be baked even faster in a very small space.

So that's -- but you're going to reach the physical limits. And so our long-term strategy will not be about picking everything from the store. On certain locations, we had to do that, but that's where the MFC comes in. What I can tell you is this that we've seen the MFCs getting to a point where the cost to pick becomes about the same as the labor cost that we have for an order in a store, right, because of the productivity it gives you.

And at some point, you start becoming indifferent to whether the auto has picked -- whether -- or somebody shopped the store or whether they shopped it through the MFC. That's their vision. When that converges, this thing opens up in a big way for us because you're kind of indifferent. The MFC are going to take a little while, John.

As we said, a couple of MFCs, we couldn't get done, right, because of delays, permitting takes a little longer, construction takes a little longer in today's environment.

John Heinbockel -- Guggenheim Partners -- Analyst

Thank you. 

Operator

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

Karen Short -- Barclays Investment Bank -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks very much. So just a question regarding guidance. So your comps guide has obviously improved.

But when we look at the second half EBITDA dollars, they're kind of more or less in line with consensus. So I'm kind of wondering if you could give a little color there, meaning, you can obviously raise top line, but you didn't really change the second half EBITDA dollars. And then tying into that, you did say sales accelerated throughout the quarter, but the full-year ID guide implies the deceleration in the one and two-year ID. So some color on that? And then I had a bigger picture question.

Melissa Plaisance -- Group Vice President, Treasury and Investor Relations

Karen, on the bigger view for the back half, I'll let Vivek take that. And then I'll take more of the detailed financial side of the question.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Karen, the way I think of it is -- let's say we've got about 2.5 points additional ID growth, right, let's say, about $1.65 billion or so at a 15% flow-through is an additional $250 million for the year, right? So that's how I would think of it as -- and remember that the back half of the year is going to depend a lot more -- we're getting a lot more of our productivity. So that's how we have trained at least the model for how we think about the full year.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

And then, Karen, when you look at the back half, if you do the math, basically, you're in the back half at -- in the midpoint of it somewhere around flat, so obviously, that will flow through, as Vivek just described. And I would say this, as we look at the back half, like, all of you, like, every report that I've read that many of you have written. We are very thoughtful about whatever dynamics will result in the back half as it relates to the stimulus changes that will be upon us, which some have already happened. However, I will point out there's been some new ones.

We went from the snap increases throughout the first part of the year and now they are paying out the child care credits on a monthly basis. And as we understand it, we are -- the industry looks like it's seeing a lot of that going into grocery and into everyday necessity. So we are thoughtful about the back half, and we will continue to push the business. But as we see it, right now, I think we've played in a very balanced view of what the back half could look like on the comp side.

Karen Short -- Barclays Investment Bank -- Analyst

OK. That's helpful. And then, Sharon, in your comments, you obviously said you had -- there were great similarities at Albertsons to kind of some of your former experiences. But one comment you made was that you're taking, I think, a very surgical approach to pricing and have moved significantly in the last 12 months on that front.

Can you just update us on where you're at in terms of that? And what is to be expected going forward?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

As it relates to my comments on the pricing, the company is building a very strong pricing team. Considerable resources have been added to that. This is one of those investments that we continue to talk about on our strategic priorities. So again, this is all about data, Karen.

And as you think about the time, the benefits of that are gradual and incremental. I hate to keep saying that, but it is true for just about every one of the underlying projects and the strategic priorities that Albertsons has. So as we think about pricing, again, what I said is the company has always been known for its deals. While the price that you see, customers are getting special pricing through loyalty.

They are getting special pricing through deals. And actually, we have data that would tell you that people come to us for our deals. So it is interesting to see how well the company is managing that at this point. Now do I think we need to go further? I do.

And there's no one here that doesn't think that you have to keep safe and keep pace with what others are doing in the industry. So I feel like we will continue to see benefit in pricing, and I think we will be looking at the guests, like we always have been looking at them and where we believe it is important, and it will create more stickiness with our customers. We will be adjusting that pricing. But I just don't think that -- like there's -- Simeon said earlier, that this is a lot like Best Buy.

I think it isn't in the pricing arena. And at that side, we did match price but there were many products that you can't match, and that is always the case. So happy to have some further conversations as we talk about this over time. But I feel very confident that we are building a much stronger pricing capability in the company, and we will see benefits from that.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Karen, if I can add to that. There's -- we talked some time about our promotion tools that we are launching. Now that is national.

All our promotions are going through that too. And while we are doing less promotions, we're also doing a lot -- we're a lot smarter with our promotions. We know which ones to do to drive traffic, which ones to do to drive margins, etc. And then a lot of that is also going digital.

So from a promotion standpoint, we have so far ahead of where we were a couple of years ago, from a data and technology capability to do it. And that's the principle we're going to continue to go down. The other thing we're doing when we talk -- and Sharon said surgical is that, in these different price areas, we also adjust price -- everyday pricing. And we do that very, very -- in every quarter, there are some parts of our -- some markets in our franchise where we're adjusting it on an everyday basis.

That's the combination that we continue to play, and we're getting better and better at it because we have the data and the tools to do it.

Karen Short -- Barclays Investment Bank -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much. That was very helpful.

Operator

Our next question is coming from the line of Ken Goldman with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed with your question.

Ken Goldman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning. Thanks, Sharon. You mentioned that one of your priorities right now is working on the productivity agenda.

We've seen overall, for the grocery sector, margins decline for decades now. So I'm curious, when you think about productivity, are you thinking about the net effect potentially being that margins over the very long term could reverse course and start to rise over time? Or is the idea, you really just need more tools so that the headwinds just aren't -- or offset partially a little bit better. I'm just trying to get a better sense of how you view this. Because I think there's a belief out there overall that margins will continue to decline forever in this industry, and I'm just not sure how you see that.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

So Vivek had made some comments about this in the last conference call. I'll let Vivek take this first, and then I'll give you my view.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Ken. The approach here is, we want to make sure we don't grow this business simply by expanding gross margins. We want tailwinds in gross margins, but we always want to have room for reinvestment of that for growth. So that's number one.

Number two, you can speak about the industry, but I want to speak about Albertsons. We've got plenty of room in the middle of the P&L to drive more and more productivity. Why is that, Ken? It's because we are -- yes, we went through the integration in the past but we haven't yet learned how to fully operate with scale benefits. And a lot of the initiatives that we are driving are driven by improving -- leveraging initiatives that get us better cost because of scale benefits.

We haven't implemented all the technology that many others have, that drives productivity benefits. So in the middle of the P&L, you're seeing our productivity being driven by initiatives, frankly, that are not new to the sector, but new to us, right, which gives us more flow through in the middle of the P&L. So -- but think of that philosophy, Ken. It's managing the gross margin through tailwinds and investments so that we are driving customers back to us and engaging more with customers and driving the top line and a set of technology and scale-based initiatives that improve the middle of the P&L that end up with margins, right? So -- but -- and if we can keep that engine going, which we think we can, we'll continue to normally deliver growth but healthy margins.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

And Ken, I would just add to that to what Vivek said that there are other ways as well that we think are going to help offset some of those cost pressures. I, first and foremost, want to say that there is no doubt in my mind that there will continue to be cost pressures on all of retail. Grocery -- consumer electronics, pick one, home furnishing, it doesn't matter. There will be cost pressure.

There is also the incremental cost of adding these online businesses, which we're all aware of. In order to combat that, first of all, growth has to be the foundation of the strategy. And we are making great strides in continuing to gain market share, and it is a deep, deep focus of the organization to gain market share. And as Vivek said, on a two-year basis, we gained it on both metrics.

We were gaining on dollars, and we're gaining on units. The second thing that we have that other retailers in the space have already taken advantage of is the penetration of owned brands. We still, in the IPO -- and you can go back to the IPO, we talked about the fact that we have an increased opportunity for penetration in Own Brands. We have not yet -- Vivek mentioned a 25.2% penetration today.

We still have significant opportunity there, and we will continue to capitalize on that. Another area that we have opportunity to create a tailwind or an offset to some of these pressures is going to be in the mix of fresh. We continue to talk about the fact that we are growing faster in fresh than we are in the center store. That is giving us a margin benefit.

And we will continue to grow in that area because we believe that this is one of the greatest things that we can do for our customers is to create an incredible fresh experience, but it also has margin benefit from a mix point of view. So those are just a few things I would add to what Vivek said that will give us some tailwinds to help offset the cost pressure that we would all agree is certainly coming.

Ken Goldman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Thanks very much. 

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Paul Lejuez with Citi. Please proceed with your question. 

Paul Lejuez -- Citi -- Analyst

Hey, guys. Thanks. Curious about the categories where you're seeing the highest levels of inflation. And Vivek, I think, maybe mentioned protein earlier.

And how you've chosen to passthrough or not passthrough those higher prices to the customer? What has been the customer reaction in terms of elasticity of demand? And how does that compare to what you had expected? Thanks. 

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Vivek?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Thank you, Paul. Good morning, Paul. We are mindful.

Let me start with this. We have not seen a material change in customer behavior. And I think it speaks to the strength of the customer. It speaks to the fact that they're, in my opinion, still consuming a lot at home.

They're enjoying cooking and so on. So we're seeing those trends stick. And in fact, in the research we are doing with our shoppers, we don't see that changing dramatically. We don't see their intent changing dramatically over the next several weeks and months.

So that's number one. Number two, remember, we are always optimizing for a basket, and that's important to keep in mind because you can see the protein inflation going up and so on, but we're always managing for two things. One is, what's the right way to pass the inflation so we get the -- we make the basket affordable and yet keep the gross margins that we want. The second thing we do is manage it locally.

And that's something we can do with our model because we've got the divisions that know what's necessary in their market versus the competition they have. So in those two dimensions, we're able to manage that passthrough, if I can call it, very, very locally. And that's the combination that's giving us the ability to deliver the gross margin without compromising the sales. Is that helpful?

Paul Lejuez -- Citi -- Analyst

Yes. Thank you. And then just another follow-up. On the SG&A front, can you quantify some of the year-over-year changes in terms of which were the -- which were moving the dial.

And I'm also kind of curious about the productivity initiatives, where you stand in that $1.5 billion by '22? How is that progressing relative to your plans?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So why don't I take that one, Paul? On the SG&A and the increases, there's a couple of dynamics during the quarter that we discussed in the press release. The first one was that we had the reopening of many of our fresh departments, deli, bakery, prepared foods, that creates a mix difference within our stores and the labor hours that, of course, go along with that. So that was one of the big drivers and one of the largest drivers.

The second area that we saw increases is in the market wage rate. While we do have union contracts across majority of our employee base, we still have annual increases that come along into those contracts. And then, of course, I don't have to describe for you the wage pressure that you would see in any role, and we can start with stores, and we can work our way all the way through the corporate headquarters. We have wage pressure in virtually every area in the company, like, every other retailer.

We also had a higher stock-based compensation this quarter, based on a credit that flowed through the P&L last year. But in the order of magnitude -- they are in the press release of the order of magnitude.

Paul Lejuez -- Citi -- Analyst

Got it. And just that $1.5 billion?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. We have not disclosed our progress against that. However, we are progressing as you would expect them to progress. And we continue to be committed to delivering on that promise.

Paul Lejuez -- Citi -- Analyst

Thank you, guys. Good luck. 

Operator

Our next question is coming from the line of Rupesh Parikh with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your questions.

Rupesh Parikh -- Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to follow up on the gross margin line. I was wondering if you could provide more color on the puts and takes you see on the balance of the year.

And I think last quarter, you guys indicated you could be close to flat with the prior year. So I just wanted to get a sense of what your updated expectation is for the full year. Thank you. 

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Vivek, do you want to talk about the back half gross margins?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Rupesh, I think the -- let's think of it as some of the initiatives that are going to help us in the back half of the year in gross margin, in addition to the things we talked about before, mix, shrink, promotions, own brand penetration and so on is the new flow-through coming from supply chain benefits and the new flow through coming from cost of goods reduction, right, which both of them are leveraging our scale, and I talked about those initiatives earlier. So we feel good about the overall gross margin tailwinds that we have coming with us. And we'll continue to use that appropriately to drive growth and where we need to make investments.

So no -- there should be no fundamental change to the thinking on gross margins, Rupesh, if that helps.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

And we don't guide by gross margin. We only guide adjusted EBITDA, just as a reminder.

Rupesh Parikh -- Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. -- Analyst

OK. Great. And then maybe just one follow-up. Just on the supply chain.

Just curious where you guys are on the stock front right now?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So I'll let Vivek speak to that. He was just in a meeting on it.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. It's surprising that we're still talking about how are the stocks and where we're on the stocks. But the fact is, it's like whack-a-mole, Rupesh. There's -- on any given day, something is out of stock in the store.

But -- so let's talk about how we manage it. Now we give customers alternatives, right? If you come in, you may not get exactly what you want when you want it, but you might get an alternative. And if you come in another day, you'll probably find it. And so -- now this comes down to execution.

This comes down to local execution, finding ways to make sure that the store is supplied, finding ways to make sure that the stuff is not in the backroom but at the front. And that's where I'm proud of what the teams are doing, just to be that much, a little bit better than others in what's on the shelf.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

And I'll just add to that, Rupesh, for the next three months, fourth quarter holiday, actions that you've seen that are being taken by many of the largest retailers, we have been all over this and have a list of probably 25 things that we are approaching differently this year than we have in the past in order to ensure that we offer our customers the best in stocks we can.

Rupesh Parikh -- Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. -- Analyst

Great. Thank you. 

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Scott Mushkin with R5 Capital. Please proceed with your questions. 

Scott Mushkin -- R5 Capital -- Analyst

Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. So I wanted to talk about something a little bit more short term, which Sharon, I think you always had the reputation of being pretty conservative on the guidance. Is that the philosophy you're going to bring to Albertsons? Should we assume kind of a continuation of that?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. There would be no question that I believe that, especially in the environment that we're operating in today that that would be appropriate. So I couldn't affirm more strongly that I believe that is a good strategy.

Scott Mushkin -- R5 Capital -- Analyst

OK. Great. And then I know it's a little early to think about '22, but we get a lot of questions on this. And I guess, as you think about it, is it going to be possible to grow earnings next year to a degree? Or is that something that's going to be just really hard given the cost pressures on the business, the union contracts and labor and other things going on.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Scott, we will not be talking about 2022 until we get closer to the end of this year. There is so much learning that needs to happen with the changes in the consumer and what's post COVID. There is never going to be a post COVID, but the next chapter of where this goes.

So when we get into the fourth quarter, and we look at next year, we'll try to give you a lot more color on that. But I think this needs to unfold before we start talking about 2022.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. The only thing I'd add, Scott, is that remember, cost on things are a controllable item. We can work that with productivity initiatives. I think the biggest unknown as Sharon points out is, where is the consumer? How is consumer behavior going to change? And as we've all seen, I don't know if we predicted what's happening now.

So...

Scott Mushkin -- R5 Capital -- Analyst

Perfect. And then if I could slip one last one in, just the philosophy that's -- is there going to be a change? And what's the philosophy on capital efficiency and ROIC, given that we are going into an investment period a little bit with the company, it sounds like, further investment?

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Scott, I would say this. I think it is a philosophy of discipline, but it is a philosophy of "do it as fast as you can." Time is not your friend. And philosophically, that is very much how we will be moving forward.

We have a lot of opportunity. Vivek mentioned earlier, we have brought together a lot of companies. And they've done a good job of getting them solidified onto a similar platform, a common platform. But as we move forward, we still have opportunities in better buying.

We just consolidated some of that. So we have significant opportunities. But by the way, other retailers don't have in their tailwinds. So I think, yes, the diligence around those investments will be high, and we will continue to accelerate to the extent we can over the next 12 to 24 months.

Operator

Your next question will come in from line of Robbie Ohmes with Bank of America.

Robbie Ohmes -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Hey, thanks. Vivek and Sharon, I will -- OK, for my one question. With the -- I think the guidance implies kind of similar to lower ID sales in the back half. And what I was hoping, can you give a little more color on sort of the traffic versus transaction size assumptions in that? And maybe speak to what you're seeing? Are you seeing consolidation of trips remain similar? Or is that dropping off? I'm just -- in that customer behavior assumption, what do you think is staying the same versus changing, especially on that size of the transaction versus visits to the stores?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Robbie, back in -- when we talked about Q1, we have seen that there was -- in-store traffic was going up a lot. We saw digital traffic. While it was higher, the rate was coming down.

What's interesting is that over the last several periods here, the traffic seems to have stabilized in the store. So we're seeing healthy, stable traffic in store. And we've seen a pickup again in digital traffic. So -- and about three weeks into this quarter, we started seeing a pickup in digital traffic.

And we've just launched our new app, and we've started this faster service and so on. So we've seen the digital traffic go up. So I'm predicting that -- to me that we're going to see some stability on those store traffic, people started to get to a new pattern over here. I don't know how Thanksgiving changes that, Robbie, but I hope that gives you some color.

That's how we've thought about the rest of the year.

Robbie Ohmes -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

That's great. Thanks so much. 

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Michael Montani with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question. 

Michael Montani -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Thanks for taking the question. Just wanted to follow up, if I could, quickly Vivek and Sharon, on the competitive environment, and what you're seeing in terms of promotions throughout the quarter and then obviously to start this quarter and into year-end.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Vivek?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Pretty stable, Mike. We're not seeing a fundamental change. I think everybody uses -- my sense is all the last players are doing more digital promotions, are doing things we're doing, like being smarter about promotions and then we also have supply challenges, right? So we're not seeing any material change on the promotion environment.

Michael Montani -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Thank you. 

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Chuck Cerankosky with Northcoast Research. Please proceed with your question. 

Chuck Cerankosky -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Good morning, everyone. Great quarter. If you could comment a little bit on how your prepared foods business evolved during the quarter as some of these new -- excuse me, the old sections of fresh, reopen, and also your progress in Meal Solutions, please?

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Chuck, we were very cautious as we brought those back in, and we saw different take rates in different markets on salad bars, hot bars and such. And the general sense I get now is that customers are back on the fresh side of the store, on the self-service side of the store, and certainly, you could see that in most markets. And then on the meals program, we are excited about what we're doing.

It's a very difficult thing to pull off to develop the meals in store, manage and keep the shrink down, yet keep the offer really fresh. It's a difficult thing to do, and I'm delighted that the team seems to have cracked the code on that, and we've launched it in about four markets already. Our plan is to continue to drive that through. Chuck, the crazy thing is that the biggest challenge there is equipment.

Because like everything else that too is constrained and how quickly you can get it. 

Chuck Cerankosky -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

All right. Thank you. 

Melissa Plaisance -- Group Vice President, Treasury and Investor Relations

OK. Thank you, everyone. I'm sorry we weren't able to get to everyone today, but we ran a little bit over. We appreciate your interest.

Cody and I will be available for the balance of the day for questions, and Sharon is going to join us on the follow-up call. So thank you very much, and we'll talk with you soon. Bye-bye.

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, all.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 79 minutes

Call participants:

Melissa Plaisance -- Group Vice President, Treasury and Investor Relations

Vivek Sankaran -- Chief Executive Officer

Sharon McCollam -- President and Chief Financial Officer

Simeon Gutman -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Edward Kelly -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

John Heinbockel -- Guggenheim Partners -- Analyst

Karen Short -- Barclays Investment Bank -- Analyst

Ken Goldman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Paul Lejuez -- Citi -- Analyst

Rupesh Parikh -- Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. -- Analyst

Scott Mushkin -- R5 Capital -- Analyst

Robbie Ohmes -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Michael Montani -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Chuck Cerankosky -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

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