Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Ashley and I will be your conference operator today. I would like to welcome everyone to the Gap, Incorporated Fourth Quarter 2016 Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. As a reminder, please limit your question to one per participant. I would now like to introduce your host Jenn Fall, Senior Vice President of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Jennifer Fall - Gap, Inc.: Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Gap, Inc.'s Fourth Quarter 2016 Earnings Conference Call. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that the information made available on this webcast and conference call contains forward-looking statements. For information on factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our forward-looking statements as well as a reconciliation and description of non-GAAP financial measures, as noted on page 2 of the slides supplementing Teri's remarks, please refer to today's earnings press release as well as our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and our subsequent filings with the SEC, all of which are available on gapinc.com. These forward-looking statements are based on information as of February 23, 2017, and we assume no obligation to publicly update or revise our forward-looking statements. Joining me on the call today are CEO, Art Peck; and Executive Vice President and CFO, Teri List-Stoll. As mentioned, Teri will be using the slides to supplement her remarks, which you can view by going onto our Investor section at gapinc.com. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Art. Arthur L. Peck - Gap, Inc.: Thanks, Jenn, and hi to everyone on the call, and thanks for joining us today. As we close out 2016, which is my second year as CEO, I want to spend a moment to reflect, reflect on where we've been and where we are and where we're going, both in terms of the work that we're doing but the overall industry context as well. When I took over two years ago, that's two years that has flown by, we and I knew our performance wasn't where it needed to be. We knew that we were in an industry that was changing dramatically. And looking back on it now, I think we probably all underestimated the magnitude and speed of the changes taking place. It's been pretty stark what's been happening over the last year as we've looked at – some competitors have exited the market. That said, we finished the year strong and Teri will take you through our results. And I'm pleased with the progress that we've made, but we are in a market that is in significant disruption. Let me share a couple of truths, at least as I think about them, that are on my mind. First, the apparel market is growing, whether you peg the number at 2% or 3% or 5%. We're in a market that has long-term structural growth, has continued to grow, and that is a good thing. Secondly, the market is, and we have clear evidence of this, continuing to move towards rewarding size and scale, whether that's vendor relationships that provide favorable pricing and innovation, whether it's us with a multi-brand portfolio doing business with our landlords to optimize our real estate footprint, or frankly whether it's our balance sheet and income statement where we see scale in investments, whether it's technology, innovation or other forms. But this is a market that is moving towards rewarding size and scale, and we believe that conveys us a significant structural advantage. The third, omni, almost a cliché word at this point because it isn't like omni is in the future. Our customers are omni today and that is a fundamental reality. Many of our customers begin their journey with our brands on their phone and they finish it in our stores. Many of our customers begin their journey with our brands in our stores and they finish it on their phone. And we've been doing work and we will continue to do work to really line up with where our customers are, not where they're going but where they are today. Again, I'm pleased with the progress, but we have more work to do. Finally, we believe fundamentally, there is a significant market share opportunity. To read the headlines today, you'll see the words dead, dying, sick. We are none of those. We are healthy and strong and have a plan and clear direction. But we can all pick our favorite company that's no longer in business and when the lights go off and the windows get boarded over, that is market share that is made available to the rest of the industry. She's not stopping shopping. She's shopping someplace else. A time of disruption means that market share becomes more fluid. And if we put what we believe are our structural advantages together along with much of the work that we've been doing on product and experience, we believe we have a significant opportunity to consolidate and gain market share going forward. I've said it many times and I'll say it again, because it is foundational, we are a product company and we are a retailer. And if we don't get our product right, we will not win regardless of how good we are in digital or many other things. It starts with emotional product that she connects to that has the right quality, the right fit and the right value proposition. Two years ago when I got into this seat, we really approached product in two ways. One was some quick fixes, particularly addressing quality, aesthetic, the value and the fit and some longer term work that we've been doing where we've made significant progress. Where we have done the quick fixes, and they weren't actually quick because they required work, where we've got fit right, particularly in bottoms but other parts of the assortment, where we've re-established the quality that she is looking for. Where the aesthetic is on, on progress and tracking with where our brands need to be, we've gotten credit for it. We've really gotten credit for it and you can see this anecdotally if you look at the reviews. You can see this in the performance of the underlying core categories where we've done this work and the customer has responded. It's taken longer and I expected, to be honest, a bigger balance out of this work. It was akin to the work that I did when I was running Gap brand back in 2011, but we have seen and continue to see the validation that this work is paying off and that she is reengaging our brands in a way that makes us very optimistic. Then there was the longer lead time work. And what it really is is what I call de-risking our product model. Time is the enemy in this business. And a typical industry average development cycle has for many – much of the industry's history been 10 months. We've done the work now to get many of our programs and many of our categories down in some cases to 8 to 10 weeks. And, in fact, a third of our product across the company can be produced within the quarter. This allows us to buy differently and this allows us to chase trend differently. This allows us to manage inventory differently. A big unlock here was to separate our core basics which we can purchase very cost effectively and efficiently from our fashion items, which have more risk. And we now platform nearly 60% of our fabrics committing to the fabric in advance, positioning that fabric at our vendors and having access to capacity to be able to cut and sew garments immediately at the release of a PO. We've also substantially increased our testing of product whether that's crowd source testing, which we now have validation results in better commercial outcomes or testing physically in our stores oftentimes in stores that are seasonally ahead of where we are so that we can use that to inform our buys. Another thing we haven't really talked to you much about is the tools to do this. In Gap brand, which is leading the way, we're moving also to a demand-based buying model. And this requires tools that are different than what we've historically used. And historically the tools that we use to merchandise, to do inventory management, to do sourcing and costing, there were 18 separate tools that we were using to do that. And needless to say, some of them were on green screens and many of them didn't integrate. We have moved now to one platform that can be used across all inventory, pricing, assortment building and in-season management and we're well underway for the implementation of that platform in the company. That conveys, obviously, a productivity advantage which is important for our cost structure. Most importantly, we believe that it really helps us to get the right product in the right place at the right time, to improve the outcome for our customers and to improve the productivity of all of our inventory. Last on that front, and there's a lot more, but the last thing I'm going to talk about is the fact that we've been making significant investment in our logistics infrastructure. We've traditionally run as much of the industry has, with separate direct distribution for our online customer and retail distribution. We have the, I guess I'd call it the gift, maybe the luxury of having large retail distribution centers that are not fully utilized and the work that we're doing right now, number one, is an investment avoidance issue where we need to continue to add direct distribution capacity. We're actually doing the work to convert the retail DCs to be able to ship both direct and retail fulfillment out of one pool of inventory and one DC. It allows us to avoid some form of incremental asset investment in new buildings. It also allows us to leverage and be very flexible with one pool of inventory. And we are part of the way through that. We have a clear plan for making that happen. There was a slight setback associated when we had the Fishkill fire, but not significant and we'll make material progress on that in 2017 and plan to wrap that up in early 2018. So there's a bunch of things underway. There's much more than I can talk about in this call. I'll look forward again to engaging with many of you as we spend time out meeting you personally. Let me shift now to talk a little bit about our brands in Q4 and I'll start with Old Navy. As you can remember, we had a tough Q4 in 2015. And I have to give kudos to the team and, quite honestly, kudos to the brand. We diagnosed the issues. We made changes. We leveraged our responsive capabilities. We modified appropriately places in the assortment and I expected that really to take probably two quarters to fix and we got traction faster than that. Historically, types of misses that we had in Q4 would really have taken a year. And it really took us four months before we started to see traction and the brand really getting back on track. That yielded, this last year, Old Navy's fifth consecutive year of sales growth and a business that is approaching $7 billion in annual sales. And I have to repeat it because I'm proud of it, but I have to repeat it, which is a 12% comp in December and a 5% on the quarter which I believe under any metric represents a market share gaining performance. This was driven by a strong commercial plan, cut-through marketing and great product acceptance. There was tough traffic but we beat the traffic, beat the traffic headwinds to deliver a positive top line by driving a strong sales over traffic. This was really what was happening with everything going on inside the store. A few callouts. We emerged as the leading market share competitor in women's dresses on a rolling 12-month basis. And again, you've heard me say market share many times and I will continue to say it. Market share today is really omni-market share. Market share historically was square footage. As we think about market share going forward, it is omni and it is category-specific, and the entire company is moving in the direction of really being category market share focused. Women's dresses was a big win and we were able to drive very high-double-digit comps, not by guessing and buying into the category in a big way, but by feeding units into the business off of a responsive platform, really led by customer demand. It's just really the inverse of the historical buying model. I continue to believe that Old Navy is very strong and our aim is to continue to invest in and build that business. It's a market share play. The brand is incredibly well positioned across family, fun, value and fashion. We have clarity of brand equity. We have a strong marketing voice, and really most importantly, we have operating discipline, which is big on by mind. You will hear Teri talk about that as well. The consistency and discipline is something that we have not had as consistently as we needed to across the company. And Old Navy really is the shining example of that in my mind. We continue to believe we have a winner in the brand with significant market share opportunity in front of us. Let me turn to Gap. Progress has been slower than I expected, but I'm really pleased to see some bright spots and I look for, under the covers, period-over-period improvement in key places in the business and I have not been disappointed in seeing it inside of Gap. Jeff and the team at Gap are doing heavy lifting right now to continue to transform the product and the operating model. And probably the most important thing going on in Gap, again, is building on our responsive capabilities, moving to a monthly and demand-driven-based buying model. I would be remiss, however, to say that Gap, as we reported to you, is a very complicated composite of channels and geographies. And I point that out because, obviously, we have a big business in Japan – Japan has been a tough market for many to do business in, a large presence in Europe and a growing presence in China as well as the North American business across the three channels and a franchise presence. So as I look at Gap, I look under the covers to see what the leading edge indicators are, product acceptance, women's business, et cetera, and I'm pleased with what I see. If I look at 2016, Gap is a brand in the relevant categories where responsive capabilities matter. They have moved the majority of their business onto a responsive operating model. A couple of standout examples are the women's knit's business, which for Gap is a big business and the woven's bottoms business, also a big business, leading the way. By Q4, those categories had grown to high-single-digit comps with margin expansion up to 500 basis points. And again, that is starts with on-trend quality product, but it also sits on a platform of the responsive capabilities beginning to show what they can do. I'll move on to Banana Republic quickly. As you've seen, I've made a change in leadership there and I've not yet put in a new brand president. I've taken advantage of this moment to really roll up my sleeves, get into the business personally and understand what's going on. Here's what I would observe. There's a lot to like and a lot right in the business, but not enough. In categories where we lost our dominance and lost the trust of our consumer and we put our shoulder against realigning those categories, categories like pants. Our for-fit (16:47) women's pants complex, categories like suit separates. Those categories we're seeing excellent traction with the consumer. Suiting is an example, double-digit comps with a 400 basis point improvement in margin, but we need more faster. And that's really what I'm focused on right now, which is taking the next steps and taking them quickly to continue to turn the business around. I'm not pleased with the performance. I'm disappointed with the performance. I do believe there's a lot of potential in the brand. We don't break out Athleta, but I have to talk about it. I am nothing but pleased with the brand's performance and the team's performance. The customer continues to respond to the assortment, continues to respond to the aesthetic, continues to respond to product fabrications and the very strong marketing of The Power of She campaign. We are seeing continued excellent growth and we believe the brand is positioned in the sweet spot. Right at the intersection of performance and lifestyle which we, as a company, are very interested in, but Athleta is leading the way on. I'm bullish on Athleta and I'm bullish on the brand's growth prospects. Now let me pause and I want to hand it over to Teri. I met Teri several months ago and we've gotten to know each other over that time period. We've been working now here together for five or six weeks and I would tell you that I just couldn't be more pleased with having her partnership. I'll make a few more comments on that, but I want her to talk a little bit about 2016 and then the perspective moving forward. Teri L. List-Stoll - Gap, Inc.: Great. Thanks, Art. So good afternoon, everyone. I'd like to start by first saying how happy I am to be part of Gap, Inc. and its portfolio of iconic brands. As Art said, this marks my sixth week with the company and so far I've been extremely impressed by the passion and the commitment that Art and the team have around continuing to move the company forward in this difficult environment. Over the last few weeks, I've been diving deep into the business to better understand where we've been, the progress we've made and the opportunities ahead. I'm really excited to be in the role and I welcome the opportunity to help continue to sharpen our operational discipline and execute against our transformation strategies that position the company for long-term growth. For those on the call that I don't know yet I look forward to meeting you and working together. Moving onto the fourth quarter and full year performance, starting with sales, our sales for the fourth quarter were up 1% to $4.43 billion. Comp sales were up 2%. Net sales for the year were $15.5 billion, down 2%. Comp sales were also down 2%. Moving to gross margin, fourth quarter gross profit was $1.5 billion, representing gross margin expansion of 110 basis points to 33.9%. Merchandise margin was up 50 basis points with positive AUR at all brands. Rents and occupancy leveraged 60 basis points, driven by the positive fourth quarter comp and the benefit from certain restructuring actions. For the full year, gross profit was $5.6 billion and gross margin was up 10 basis points to 36.3%. Merchandise margin was up 30 basis points, and rents and occupancy deleveraged 20 basis points on the year. Regarding SG&A, as we've noted, we expected Q4 SG&A to deleverage as we invested more in the business. We also had an increase in incentive-based comps as we lapped bonus accrual reversals in the fourth quarter of last year. For the fourth quarter, total operating expenses were $1.2 billion, which includes the following items: $26 million of restructuring costs associated with the company's previously-announced store closure and streamlining initiatives; a $71 million goodwill impairment charge related to INTERMIX; and the $73 million benefit from insurance proceeds related to the fire at our Fishkill DC. In line with our guidance, marketing expenses for the quarter totaled $195 million, up $26 million versus last year. For the full year, marketing expenses increased $23 million to $601 million. And for the full year, total operating expenses were $4.4 billion. Excluding total restructuring charges of about $197 million and the fourth quarter goodwill impairment charge and insurance proceeds, adjusted operating expenses were $4.3 billion, $156 million above last year. Regarding taxes, our fourth quarter reported effective tax rate was 22.8%. During the quarter, we realigned certain aspects of our legal structure to provide additional flexibility going forward, which resulted in a non-recurring tax benefit. Our adjusted effective tax rate was about 10 points higher, excluding this benefit, as well as the tax impact of the restructuring and impairment cost during the quarter. As a reminder, the adjusted Q4 tax rate benefited from changes in our geographical mix of taxable earnings. For the full year, our effective tax rate was 39.9% and about 1 point lower on an adjusted basis. Turning to earnings, on a reported basis, fourth quarter earnings per share were $0.55, and full year EPS totaled $1.69. On an adjusted basis, fourth quarter and full year earnings per share were $0.51, and $2.02, respectively. Full year adjusted earnings per share excludes a $0.41 impact from restructuring costs, including the impact from a higher tax rate, a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $0.18 related to INTERMIX, an $0.11 benefit from insurance proceeds related to the fire at our Fishkill distribution center and a non-recurring tax benefit of $0.15. Additionally, it's important to remember that foreign exchange negatively impacted full year adjusted EPS by an estimated $0.15 or about 6 percentage points of growth on an adjusted basis. Regarding stores and capital expenditures, during the year, we completed the wind down of our Old Navy Japan business and the closure of a number of dilutive Banana Republic stores, primarily internationally. As we've said, these closures will allow us to better align talent and financial resources against our most important priorities in 2017 and beyond. On a total company net basis, we closed 75 stores in 2016, and our square footage as of the end of the year was down about 3%, in line with our previous guidance. Capital expenditures totaled $524 million, also in line with our previous guidance. Balance sheet and cash flow, we ended the fourth quarter with inventory down 2% year-over-year. Our full year free cash flow was an inflow of about $1.2 billion, including approximately $73 million of insurance proceeds related to the Fishkill fire. As anticipated, we paid down $400 million of term loan in full during the fourth quarter and ended the year with $1.8 billion in cash. Moving on to 2017, before we get to guidance, I wanted to lay out some changes to our reporting practices. As we have looked at our practices relative to the industry, as well as our approach to planning and operating the business, we've decided it is more appropriate to provide additional perspectives on anticipated results for the year, while moving away from monthly sales reporting. While our intent is to maintain our level of transparency, we believe this approach will allow us to focus more on driving excellent execution of our plans to strengthen the business for the future. Going forward, we'll continue to provide guidance on full-year earnings per share. We'll also add perspective on expected full-year comp sales, as well as full-year capital expenditures and store count. Where there may be other significant factors affecting our planned results, we'll also provide that perspective as needed. In addition, we'll provide perspective for the first half of the year, specifically regarding EPS and inventory. As I said, we're committed to continuing to maintaining transparency with you and our investors through our quarterly and annual reporting. We believe this approach to providing guidance better aligns the investment community with the way we approach the planning and operations of the company to build shareholder value. So, moving to guidance, as Art mentioned, we have an incredible opportunity to capitalize on the changing retail landscape to further differentiate ourselves within the competitive set and, importantly, to capture displaced market share. In 2017, we're focused on capitalizing on our improved product quality to improve sales with healthy merch margins; investing strategically in the business to strengthen our brand equities and to support growth for 2017 and beyond; maintaining our operating discipline and driving efficiencies by leveraging scale; and returning excess cash to shareholders. With that mindset, we expect earnings per share for fiscal 2017, which includes the 53rd week, to be in the range of $1.95 to $2.05. We currently expect that foreign exchange will continue to be a headwind in 2017. We estimate an impact of about $0.09 of earnings per share or about 5 percentage points of growth. This expected EPS range assumes 2017 comp sales are flat to up slightly. We expect net sales growth to lag this, given an expected negative impact of foreign exchange. Let me take a moment to provide some color around the relationship between the first and second half of the year. During the first half of the year, we'll be continuing some of the increased investments that began in the back half of 2016. And initially, it's important to remember that the back half of 2017 will include the benefit from the 53rd week. With that in mind, let me take you through some expectations for the first half. First, we expect continued investments in marketing, primarily at Gap brand, as we seek to leverage the incredible brand awareness that exists and translate it into top-of-mind purchase intent. Second, we're lapping minimal incentive-based compensation accruals last year that will pressure SG&A in the first half. Third, as Art discussed, we're making investments in our digital and omni strategies that we believe support the long-term growth of the business. Fourth, as noted previously, rent and occupancy will include the preopening costs associated with our Times Square flagship locations, scheduled to open in the back half of 2017. And lastly, per published reports, traffic has decelerated February month-to-date, which we have factored into our comp assumptions for the first half. As a result of these factors, we currently expect first half earnings per share to decrease relative to adjusted EPS for the same period last year. We expect the percentage decrease to be in the high single digits. Regarding several other relevant metrics, we will, as Art mentioned, remain focused on disciplined management of inventory levels, learning from our experience following the Fishkill fire and leveraging the benefits of our investments in supply chain. Based on current trends, at the end of the second quarter, we would expect total inventory to be down low single digits. Recognizing that this is a point-in-time measure, we'll be looking for sustained improvement and inventory management efficiencies. With our investments in responsive (29:58), we would expect inventory levels to decrease over time. Factoring in jurisdictional mix of earnings, we expect a full year effective tax rate of about 39%. And excluding an estimated $200 million of spend related to rebuilding our Fishkill distribution center, we expect capital expenditures to be about $625 million. As a reminder, we expect insurance proceeds to cover the cost of rebuilding our Fishkill DC. While the 2017 expected capital expenditures are above 2016, it's important to note our expected spend still remains below our five-year average of approximately $660 million. This spend reflects a balanced approach to invest in the business strategically to support long-term growth. About half of this spend will go towards store investments, with the remainder largely related to IT and supply chain investments to support our omni and digital strategies, as Art discussed. Regarding company-operated stores, during the year, we plan to add 40 net new stores. Openings will focus on Old Navy and Athleta. Closures will be weighted towards the Gap brand. Regarding our store investments, we, of course, will be very thoughtful and prudent around these investments and will adjust the level of spend as needed depending on our performance and expected returns. Finally, turning to cash, our priorities for use of our cash remain unchanged. First and foremost, investing adequately, but responsibly, in the business. Second, maintaining our commitment to our dividend, which currently provides a 4% yield. Finally, returning excess cash to shareholders, while maintaining sufficient liquidity to comfortably support our business. Given our bias to repay the $400 million term loan, we didn't complete any share repurchases during 2016. That said, we have $1 billion remaining on our share repurchase authorization, and based on our current investment plans for the business, we would intend to use a portion of that authorization this year. Our current thinking is to repurchase at least sufficient shares to cover the dilution from our option exercises. Our current plan would be to repurchase $100 million in shares in the first part of the year. From there, we'll monitor the business and make other determinations about whether additional share repurchases are appropriate. With that, I'll turn it back over to Art. Arthur L. Peck - Gap, Inc.: Thanks, Teri. Really appreciate it. As I mentioned and she mentioned, we've been working now side by side for really six weeks. And one of the things that I saw in Teri as I was getting to know her, and I've seen in spades since she has joined the company is that she comes from a culture and a background where operating discipline and cost control are sort of second nature. But she also comes from a culture and a background where the power of innovation and brand building are equally second nature. And I said it before; I'll say it again, I'm very much looking forward to her partnership. We are both committed to ongoing cost control and we view many of the initiatives that we are taking as ors, not ands. In this environment with the competitive turmoil we're seeing with the skittish consumer that is out there, having a lean cost structure is not just a competitive advantage, it's an imperative. And I also believe that in the environment that we're operating today, with the volatility that we're seeing, we would be remiss if we were not constantly grinding away at our cost structure and looking for opportunities for efficiency. I do want to highlight the fact that underlying that, we are working very hard and are more done than not to really rewire the operating platform of the company. And what I mean by that is, historically, we had many functions that were duplicated across our brands. And we have been working really over the course of the last 12-plus months to bring those together in what I call a best-in-class and best-in-cost operating platform. Wherever we can work on a shared basis and work more effectively and more efficiently, we will do that on a centralized and shared basis, while, of course, skimming that platform for everything that faces the consumer and everything that needs be expressed through the brand fingerprints and the brand DNA, so the brands continue to show up as the brands that they are. It's another place where, as we're getting that work done, we see advantage, structural advantage from our multi-brand portfolio as we build this best-in-class and best-in-cost operating platform. Now, I've talked about market share a lot and I want to do a slight deeper dive on market share and I want to highlight the active and performance category. You all know that this business continues to grow. We have a very significant business in the space already, well north of $1 billion. It is on its way to being a third of U.S. apparel spend and it remains a key driver in the overall apparel market. It's a market that we're committed to certainly through Athleta, but it's also a market that we're committed to and excited about in our businesses that continue to build inside of Old Navy and Gap. And one of the things that significantly differentiates this space versus much of the rest of the apparel market is technical innovation. You've heard me say this before and I'll say it again and you'll hear it again, we believe that there is a significant opportunity, particularly in the intersection of performance and lifestyle. A couple examples of this, of this proactive innovation are the Sculptek fiber and the Powervita fiber that we have in products inside of Athleta, which is seeing significant success in their bottoms business. To further push innovation, technical innovation, we have created a small, focused and nimble innovation center, focused on proactively driving innovation at the fiber, yarn, fabric and chemical level rather than being a passive taker of innovation like we have been historically and much of the industry is. We've hired a super-interesting individual to run it. His name is Tetsuya O'Hara. He was leading innovation at Patagonia and I think we can all agree that Patagonia has been an incredibly innovative company. He's just on board. We're really excited about what we expect to see out of this innovation center. And again, that's a center that we have not duplicated across many places of the business, but a center in service to all of our brands. So let me talk for a moment quickly about experience because it's critical. And when I say experience, it's both the digital experience and the physical experience and, really importantly, it's where digital and physical come together. I want to give you a couple examples of the progress that we're making and what I'm starting to see in terms of how this can potentially significantly change the way that our customer is engaged with our brands. So number one, we believe that as a multi-brand portfolio, we have a structural opportunity to exploit some places for experience that we have not exploited historically. Today, we have a loyalty program that is single tender and connected to our credit card. We are in the process right now of building out a multi-tender multi-brand loyalty program that will deliver a rich, mobile-delivered experience for our customer. We believe, and we've actually seen results that support this, that a program like this can drive higher share of wallet, higher engagement, increased personalization and also really offer us very efficient, very effective direct communication with our customers. It's a path towards cost efficient marketing and engagement versus broad-based advertising. We think it's a win-win. We're in the middle of it now. We introduced our first Old Navy native app just several weeks ago and have gotten very good engagement from our customers and we're continuing to move this forward. Let me give you another example. We, as much of the industry have, traditionally operated with a point-of-sale system that is hardwired terminal based in our stores. And we're largely complete in moving our POS off of hardware into the cloud and making it browser-based. What this does is it obviously gives us efficiency in the back end in terms of IT, but the most important thing it does is it puts capabilities in the hands of our sales associates and our customers on the floor that were never there before. If you go back to Old Navy's Q4, what you see is a really exceptional sales over traffic spread. Not insignificantly, this was driven by the fact that we have deployed across many Old Navy stores the mobile POS which also has the ability to do stock checks, to do check inventory levels, to open credit cards, et cetera, and what we're seeing is when a sales associate has this, it changes fundamentally the way they interact with our customers in a very positive way. Okay. Let me wrap up, and I just want to summarize here for a moment. As I look across the landscape and I've learned over the last two years, and we've seen the industry continue to change and that change continue to accelerate, I am convinced that winners will dominate in four areas. First, product. If you don't win at product, you won't win at anything, and we're well on the way towards modernizing our product capabilities and de-risking our buying processes. That's innovation, that's quality, that's fit, that's on-trend every day. Secondly, brand. Brands matter. Strong, healthy, relevant brands will win the day. We have some of the best global brands in the world, and we're working to make them stronger. At the same time, we're continuing to build brand awareness around an emerging brand like Athleta. Third, unique and differentiated customer experience. This is where we're working very hard to solve the omni equation, to put capabilities in our hands that customers haven't historically had, to change the way our sales associates interact to make sure that every unit of demand in every place that it sits inside of this company, every piece of demand, every customer is matched with every unit of supply in a seamless, cost effective and frictionless way. Those three things together, we believe, yield a significant market share opportunity. And then all of that sits on a disciplined, best-in-class, best-in-cost operating platform. This is a journey. It's one that we're approaching with urgency, with determination. I'm a realist. I can see where we have made mistakes, and I can see where I can get very excited as the proof points begin to materialize. My money is on Gap, not only to survive this changing environment that we're in, but to emerge a very clear winner. Now, let me turn it back over to Jenn and open up the call to questions. Jennifer Fall - Gap, Inc.: That concludes our prepared remarks. We will now open up the call for questions. We'd appreciate limiting your questions to one per person.