Walmart Inc.

Walmart Inc.

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Walmart Inc. (WMT) Q3 2018 Earnings Call Transcript

Published at 2017-11-16 09:25:42
Executives
Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
Analysts
Michael Louis Lasser - UBS Securities LLC Oliver Chen - Cowen and Company, LLC Simeon Ari Gutman - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC Robert Ohmes - Bank of America Merrill Lynch Scott A. Mushkin - Wolfe Research LLC Karen Short - Barclays Capital, Inc. Edward J. Kelly - Wells Fargo Securities LLC Chuck Grom - Gordon Haskett Research Advisors Robert Drbul - Guggenheim Securities LLC Paul Trussell - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc. Matthew J. Fassler - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC Kate McShane - Citigroup Global Markets, Inc. Daniel Thomas Binder - Jefferies LLC Scot Ciccarelli - RBC Capital Markets LLC Joseph Isaac Feldman - Telsey Advisory Group LLC
Operator
Greetings and welcome to Walmart's Fiscal Year 2018 Third Quarter Earnings Release Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Steve Schmitt with Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Rob. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Walmart's investor relations call to discuss third quarter earnings. This is Steve Schmitt, and I'm joined today by, Kary Brunner, Michael Brigance, Joey Smith, and Miguel Garcia from the IR team. Hopefully, you've seen our materials we issued this morning. I'm going to hit on a couple of key points in a minute, and then we'll open the call for Q&A. There will be forward-looking statements on today's call, which are subject to future events and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from these statements. Please review the full Safe Harbor statement accompanying our earnings materials. So let me talk about a few highlights in the quarter. We had a really strong quarter. We have broad-based growth. On a constant currency basis, consolidated net sales were up 3.8%, an increase of $4.5 billion. We delivered adjusted EPS of $1. You notice our GAAP EPS was $0.58 a share. So we adjusted GAAP EPS for three items that are detailed in the release, I'll hit on the three of them. We recently completed a debt tender offer. We made an FCPA accrual regarding possible resolution of the FCPA matter. We made the exit of certain properties in one of our international markets. So excluding these items, our adjusted EPS was $1. We have good momentum in sales growth across the business. Walmart U.S. comp sales growth was 2.7%, with comp traffic up 1.5%. We saw about a 30 to 50 point positive impact to the comp from recent hurricanes. Our Walmart U.S. eCommerce sales grew 50%. Sam's comp sales grew 2.8% led by traffic and also had a benefit from the hurricanes. International delivered another solid quarter with 10 of 11 markets reporting positive comp sales. Excluding the charge for the FCPA accrual we disclosed today, we would have leveraged expenses as a company in the quarter, which has been a point of emphasis for us. We're now expecting full year adjusted EPS of $4.38 to $4.46, which is an increase from our prior guidance of $4.30 to $4.40. Fourth quarter Walmart U.S. comp sales are expected to increase between 1.5% and 2% on more difficult compares. Just a couple of reminders. We'll release our fourth quarter earnings on February 20, 2018. And like to let everyone know that next year's earnings release dates will be posted to our website. So please mark your calendars for that. And at this point, we'd be happy to take your questions.
Operator
Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Michael Lasser with UBS. Please proceed with your question. Michael Louis Lasser - UBS Securities LLC: Good morning. Thanks a lot for taking my question. We saw a noticeable down trick in your U.S. gross margin even if you back out the hurricane-related impact, and you cited the price investments and the mix shift to eComm. Those have presumably been drags on the gross margin for the last several quarters. So why did it take a noticeable step down this quarter? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Michael. Let me talk about maybe two things; gross margin on a consolidated basis, and then on a U.S. basis. So on a consolidated basis, gross profit rate declined 29 basis points. And you hit on several of the items, so on a consolidated basis, we have price investments in certain markets, mix effects of eCommerce, which you mentioned, and keep in mind the U.S. hurricane-related expenses that we had. I'd also like to point your attention to operating margin and some of the things that just we'd like you to pay attention to, as we called out some items such as the FCPA accrual, international impairments, and hurricane impacts. So just keep these in mind when you're looking at overall operating profit performance in the quarter. For Walmart U.S. specifically, gross profit margin declined 36 basis points in the quarter. Price investments, as you mentioned, mix effects of eCommerce impacted as well. And the hurricane specifically, we estimate impacted the gross profit decline of about a third of that. So I'm not getting into all the details specifically, we continue to invest in price. We're operating with more discipline, and we'll continue to look ways to manage our margin, and ways that work for our customers and work for our shareholders. It's really the productivity beginning to turn for us. So you could see gross profit margin pressure from time-to-time, and we need to get more disciplined with expenses. That's our plan. Michael Louis Lasser - UBS Securities LLC: And my follow-up question is, Steve, in recent times, there's been talk about Walmart potentially charging higher prices online than in-store. Can you describe the thought process behind that, and the potential risk that customers would experience from having segmented pricing across channels? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Sure. So if you think about our business, and certainly our DNA, we're about offering everyday low prices, both in-store and online. The fact is, some products are just cheaper to sell in stores, think about items like bottled water, so you'll see some price differences from time-to-time. Michael Louis Lasser - UBS Securities LLC: Thank you very much. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thank you.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Oliver Chen with Cowen and Company. Please proceed with your question. Oliver Chen - Cowen and Company, LLC: Hi. Thanks, Steve. Nice quarter. Our question is about smart cart technology and how you're thinking about leveraging a lot of the Jet technology, just where you are with that in relation to Walmart? And then secondly, I'd love your thoughts on the Lord & Taylor deal, and just some of the strategic rationale there would be helpful? Thank you. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Oliver. So the first question around smart cart technology. It's something that we continue to look at. We need to be thoughtful about it as we think about putting that potentially on Walmart.com, but nothing really more to add at this time. In terms of the Lord & Taylor relationship, it's going to be a unique experience. Think about it as a flagship store. This is expected to launch in the spring. It will be dedicated store on Walmart.com and in the app. We're excited about the relationship, the deep relationships Lord & Taylor has with great brands, and we know our customers look for premium brands on our site. So we think it's a good agreement, and we look forward to the spring. Oliver Chen - Cowen and Company, LLC: Okay. And Steve, some of our work around customer survey satisfaction at Cowen has been volatile. Can you revisit clean, fast, friendly, and is there anything we should note that's happening, and opportunities to continue to enhance customer satisfaction at large? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Well, I think there's a lot of things. If you talk to Greg Foran, the CEO of our U.S. business, he could probably list a list of 20 to 30, maybe even more than that, from the time the customer walks in the door to the time they check out, from a booking standpoint. So, we continue to look at it. It's a point of emphasis for us. I think you can tell in our results, the customers like the changes that we're making in our stores, and we'll continue to look to make a better experience so they continue shopping with us. Oliver Chen - Cowen and Company, LLC: Okay. Thanks. And just lastly, inventories, they were down. They look attractive. Are you feeling like that's a continuation, where we continue to see negative inventories, and are you fine with that relative to in-stock levels and sell-throughs? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: So we're happy with our in-stocks. We continue to make progress on inventory. You've seen more incremental improvements versus, I'd say, the step change improvements we saw last year, and we'll continue to look for improvements we can make in the business. Oliver Chen - Cowen and Company, LLC: Thank you. Best regards. Happy holidays. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks. You too.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Simeon Ari Gutman - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Good morning, guys. First, I wanted to ask about the core business, if we just do some math, excluding some of the hurricane impact. I think if you take out, let's say, the midpoint of 40 basis points from the hurricane and then you add back the EBIT, I think $150 million, it tells that – U.S. EBIT margins were up a little bit. I'm guessing that's how you're looking at that performance. Just want to confirm that that's a fair way to look at it? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: I think it's a fair way to look at it, Simeon. Simeon Ari Gutman - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Okay. I don't know if you'll talk about this, but did Jet.com benefit to the comp, and then bigger picture, your eComm was up 50%. I think the out-year guide is a 40%. Is basically – you're just going to mix out. You're going to – and Jet was in part of the quarter, I guess, and so it'll fall a little bit out of it in the next quarter. Are you just glide-pathing to that 40%? Is there any change in that growth rate that we should expect going forward? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Well, if you think about Jet, and thanks for bringing that up. Jet was in the comp for a month, the way our comp calculations work. So there really wasn't much of an impact in the third quarter results. Really the way we think about eCommerce is really in total. Jet is a piece of our eCommerce business overall. We made the decision earlier this year to give more transparency on our U.S. eCommerce business, and we furthered that in our October meeting, so we'll continue to report on the eCommerce business as a whole. In terms of a glide path, we feel good about the direction of our eCommerce business. I think this quarter is another good example of that and we will report that as we go. But in terms of any glide path or volatility, we'll wait and see. Simeon Ari Gutman - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Okay. And the last piece, in the PowerPoint, you called out automotive is a strong category. Is that growth in services, in unit count on vehicles that you're performing services on or is that in the product side if you know? Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Yes. Simeon, this is Kary. It is on both. Really solid performance in automotive as you've seen over the last number of quarters and it goes from, certainly a step up service aspect but also good price point on things like tires for instance that are driving customers increasingly to Walmart's automotive area. Simeon Ari Gutman - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Okay. Thanks, guys. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Robby Ohmes with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Please proceed with your question. Robert Ohmes - Bank of America Merrill Lynch: Hey, guys. I wanted to ask about the food business. You guys called it out, the great comps. Can you give some color on what you guys are doing to make it so strong. Is the online store pick up really supporting those comps significantly? Have you been doing any special promotions in food? Anything on how you're driving that? And then – and also I noticed, I think the commentary on inflation was that it was the same or maybe even a little bit lower. Can you give us any color on how you guys see the inflation outlook in your food business going forward? Thanks. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Robby. Maybe I'll give a few comments and turn it over to Kary to give a little more detail. So we'll take the inflation piece first. So the way we've reported inflation on food is really excluding the price investment that we've made and as we got into this quarter we think it's a very – it's – you talked about what Brett said in his remarks, which is in a similar range or below what we reported which was 30 basis points of inflation in the past quarter. The fact is it's getting a little bit more difficult for us to really be precise with that number as we look at our price investment markets. As we anniversary some of those price investments, it's just becoming a little bit more difficult, so we'll give you as directional as a number as we can to help you analyze that business going forward. In terms of the grocery business or the food business overall specifically, you mentioned online grocery pick up. We know that that's working for our customers. We continue to expand it. We're in 1,100 locations now and expect to add another 1,000 next year. So that's a big initiative for us. It's working and our customers love it. In terms of other things that are working, it's, again, it's a lot of different things. It's expanding assortment, it's quality of product, having in-stocks and price is a component of it as well. Kary, anything else you want to add? Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: I think it's great that the customers earlier responded to areas we've spent a lot of focus on, particularly fresh areas, fresh categories and that business has really sequentially improved. Price points are right. There's a good assortment. The presentation within the stores is really, really good. And then top that off with online grocery. So I would say that's certainly key areas on top what Steve said. Robert Ohmes - Bank of America Merrill Lynch: Is the spread between the comp at a online grocery store versus a Walmart store without it? Is it dramatic? In terms of the comp trending grocery between those two? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: We won't give the specifics of that. But we know it's an initiative. It's working for us based on our rollout plans. Robert Ohmes - Bank of America Merrill Lynch: All right. Thanks, guys. I had to try. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Robby. And I appreciate it.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Scott Mushkin with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question. Scott A. Mushkin - Wolfe Research LLC: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to touch on two things on the U.S. margin specifically. I think (13:55) the first thing is, you actually are now leveraging expenses in the U.S. How should we look at that with labor costs accelerating pretty rapidly? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Okay. So I think we have to manage labor costs like we manage other expenses in our business. One of the big initiatives that we have is, as we grow the business we want to be more disciplined with our costs. We need to be more efficient. We talked about some of the technology enablers that are helping with that. We have to manage labor costs and we have to look to do that in the most efficient way we can to reach the margin objectives that we have. So that's what we continue to do. Scott A. Mushkin - Wolfe Research LLC: And then as far as the gross margin... Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Yeah. Scott A. Mushkin - Wolfe Research LLC: ...we've talked about it a little bit. But I was just wondering could you give us any thoughts about freight, a lot of companies we cover had been talking about freight cost going up and that's pressuring them. How should we think about that factor as far as Walmart goes maybe fourth quarter and beyond? Thank you. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Scott. I think you think about freight just like the other variables that we manage in the business. We have a lot of experience managing the P&L and whether it's labor or freight, we have to pull different levers to deliver on the objective that we have in the freight would be no exception. But I don't have any specifics for you in terms of freight cost increasing. Thanks. Rob, next question please?
Operator
Yes. The next question is from the line of Karen Short with Barclays. Karen Short - Barclays Capital, Inc.: Hey, thanks. Just a quick question on leverage. So, obviously you saw some pretty good leverage in 3Q and it was, I guess, even higher if we add back a portion of that $150 million hurricane impact. So I guess the question is, is there anything that you could point to specifically that helps you get that leverage this quarter? And how do we think about it from – and then obviously, I know the comp was strong, so that was part of it. But, how do we think about the sustainability of that into the fourth quarter and beyond? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Well, you mentioned the sales piece of it which certainly helped. But it's really about becoming more disciplined with our expenses overall. I know we had been talking about that for a while now and it's a big objective of ours going forward. There's not one thing, it's just about being more efficient with the business overall. It's great that we started to see that in the third quarter. We've talked about our goals next year to leverage expenses and we'll continue to push towards that. But it's not one thing, it's a lot. Karen Short - Barclays Capital, Inc.: Okay. And then, in the commentary on U.S. merchandise highlights, you included the comment about improvement in private brands. Any color you could give, maybe in terms of how many SKUs you added, anything? I know you're really reluctant to directionally give a penetration number. But if there's any color you could give on that, that would be great. Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Sure, Karen. Penetration does continue to grow. And I think what's great about this is it spans multiple categories. You think about areas like food, where we're introducing different private brands. You saw an announcement earlier this quarter about our Baby, and improving the private brand offering within our Baby categories, certainly in consumables, health and wellness, you have a good selection. So it's a key area of focus for us, as you've heard from Greg. Often, we think there's an opportunity there to give an improved quality at the right price point for the customer, and that will continue to be a focus. Karen Short - Barclays Capital, Inc.: And the percent penetration, will we ever get that? Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Not today. Karen Short - Barclays Capital, Inc.: Yeah. Thanks. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Karen. Rob, next question please?
Operator
The next question is from the line of Edward Kelly with Wells Fargo. Edward J. Kelly - Wells Fargo Securities LLC: Hi. Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to hit on pricing real quick. Was there any change sequentially in the pricing strategy? And did the return of inflation play a role in the impact on the gross margin? Because obviously, it's harder to invest in price in an inflationary environment. I'm wondering if it's simply more of the gross margin pressures, because the costs are cupping (18:01) back, and it's more costly to invest in price in that type of environment. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks for your question. So, we continue to execute our pricing strategy that we laid out, I guess, two years ago now. The details of that, and you're not going to be surprised to hear me say that, that we keep pretty close to the vest. So pricing is a piece of what we're doing, along with customer experience and all the other initiatives that we have to grow the top line. So we're not going to give specific details of pricing, but we continue to execute the strategy, and our customers are responding. Edward J. Kelly - Wells Fargo Securities LLC: Just a follow-up on grocery. I think you said comps were up low single digits in the category, in food. It seems like hurricanes would have an outsized impact here, and just based upon the tone out of Doug, it certainly seemed like there was an acceleration sequentially. Excluding the hurricanes, did that business still accelerate sequentially? Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: We've seen really improving trends overall over the last number of quarters in the grocery business, and it really gets to a lot of the things we've talked about earlier on the call. More discipline around, stepped-up presentation for the customer, good assortment, our fresh business has improved, price points are right. So the customers are increasingly coming to Walmart. Traffic continues to improve in the grocery business as well. And ticket is falling, we talked about increased units. So certainly, hurricanes are a factor within the number, but you've seen continued improvement in the grocery business, as we've spoken about over the past year. Edward J. Kelly - Wells Fargo Securities LLC: Okay. Thanks, guys. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thank you.
Operator
Next question is from the line of Charles Grom with Gordon Haskett. Chuck Grom - Gordon Haskett Research Advisors: Hey, thanks. Good morning. Doug spoke in his prepared remarks that both new and old customers are adopting some of the online efforts. I was hoping you guys could dig into the new customer bucket, and if there's any way you could quantify that for us? Is it a younger customer, and how do you cultivate that new shopper so that she keeps coming back, both online and in-store? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Well, if you think about the Walmart customer base overall, it's actually a pretty good mirror image of the U.S. population in general. We're pleased with how new customers are using us in multiple ways, and really an omni experience we laid out in our October meeting, that the omni customer certainly spends more with us than single channel customers. So we continue to push that forward. In terms of different age groups or whatnot that are adopting at a faster order, we don't have that particular information. But we continue to move customers into the omni experience at Walmart, to use our brands in different ways. We're expanding our online grocery pick up, almost doubling it next year. We'll continue to do that, because we know that that's where the customer wants to use us in multiple channels, and we'll continue to forge ahead with that. Chuck Grom - Gordon Haskett Research Advisors: Okay, thanks. And follow-up would be, in the past you guys did a lot of survey work on the health of the consumer. Wondering if you guys are still doing that? And then when you look at the acceleration in your comp, how much of it do you think is you versus any macro tailwinds that are out there? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: We do quite a bit of research as you would expect, Chuck. So there's a lot of scientific data that we get, now I won't give you a scientific answer. The real – I think the nuts and bolts of it is that we think the customers reasonably, I mean, is doing reasonably well. We haven't seen a marked change over the last several quarters, certainly in our results we continue to, I mean, this quarter is a good indication that our initiatives are appealing to the customer, but we don't see a marked change in customers right now. Chuck Grom - Gordon Haskett Research Advisors: Okay. Just my last quick one would be, just on inflation, U.S., you said it was up about 30 basis points in the U.S., but Sam's it was up closer to 70 basis points. I'm wondering why such a divergence between the two segments? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: That's really a different product mix and more than anything. Chuck Grom - Gordon Haskett Research Advisors: Okay. Thanks. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thank you for your questions.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Bob Drbul with Guggenheim Securities. Robert Drbul - Guggenheim Securities LLC: Hey, good morning. Couple of questions. The first one is, within the U.S. business, the comp store sales, was there any variability month-to-month that you would call out? And I was wondering if you could give us an update on the associate delivery test underway, how that's going? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Bob. In terms of the associate delivery test, we continue to learn from what we're doing. It's certainly an initiative that leverages the unique assets that we have. But not only associate delivery, but ground-based platforms to solve for last mile for really quick delivery for our customers. So we continue to watch that and learn from it. Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: As far as business performance month-to-month, we really don't get into those details. There's just a lot of noise and variability from holiday shifts and otherwise. And certainly with the hurricanes there was increased noise. So overall where we land it was in a pretty good spot. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: And nothing you can tell from our fourth quarter guidance of 1.5% to 2% that we feel pretty good about the momentum we have. Robert Drbul - Guggenheim Securities LLC: Got it. And I was wondering if you could just maybe comment on the electronics category both online or also in the store, just how you're thinking about that heading into holiday? Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Yeah. We have a great holiday planned. We think we've put together something we work on for a long time and even spend some time with kids and picking out toys and electronics that they increasingly use. And so we think we have a good assortment of product for the holiday that will appeal to a large portion of customer. And I think we'll have that assortment available in a big way both in-store and online. Robert Drbul - Guggenheim Securities LLC: Great. Thanks very much. Good luck. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Bob.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Paul Trussell with Deutsche Bank. Paul Trussell - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.: Hey, good morning. Just wanted to circle back to Sam's Club, nice acceleration in comp. If you can just flesh that out for us, seems like you certainly expect this trend to continue given the 4Q guidance. Also, if you can touch on any membership trends coming out of Sam's? And then just as my follow-up, if you can just go into maybe a little bit more detail on how the hurricanes impacted this quarter, particularly on the margin side, just a little bit more detail on that would be helpful? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Maybe I'll take the second part of your question first Paul. In terms of the hurricane piece, I think we're as specific as we can be with what we laid out in the quarter with the Walmart U.S. business, the 30 to 50 point comp benefit. Sam's I think was 70 to 90 basis points. We talked about the net of sales and increased cost, gross margin and SG&A to be about $150 million headwind for the U.S. – Walmart U.S. business and about $20 million for Sam's. So I think we probably gave as much information as we could from that standpoint. In terms of Sam's overall, I think in the comp piece of it, what I'd point you to more than anything is strong traffic. So a 3.6% member traffic growth. We have members coming in more frequently. We have initiatives like Scan and Go that make it easier for members to come in and shop at clubs. And that's what I would point you to is traffic up 3.6% in the quarter. Paul Trussell - Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.: Thank you. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks, Paul.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Matt Fassler with Goldman Sachs. Matthew J. Fassler - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC: Thanks so much. My first question relates to health and wellness, where I think you saw comps accelerate to mid-single digits from low single digit. Anything in particular drive that pickup in momentum? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Matt, it's really the same factors that have driven health and wellness and relatively consistent performance. There was a pick up this quarter as we continue to see script growth in our pharmacy, traffic is very healthy and we also have some new items in over-the-counter that are doing well and some of that obviously is driven by sickness so Cold, Cough & Flu (26:44) was strong this quarter, but branded drug inflation as well is a fact there, but really kind of the same factors that you've heard us talk about over the last couple of quarters, just a bit of a pickup in traffic this quarter. Matthew J. Fassler - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC: Got you. Second question I want to ask real quick. So you said you gave us all the detail you could on the storms, I'm going to try to go slightly deeper into one. If you think about that comp benefit that you discussed, would you expect that that would have benefited ticket or traffic, if you could differentiate? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Probably both. I mean, we did see some higher dollar purchases from the GM side. Matthew J. Fassler - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC: Got you. That's helpful. And then finally, just to get clarity on where some of the one-time items that are excluded from adjusted earnings are showing up in the divisional P&L. Should the FCPA be taken out of unallocated, and the international real estate taken out of International? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: See from a geography standpoint it's SG&A, SG&A overall. And one thing to point out on the FCPA is, it did drive the quarterly tax rate up. So if you're looking at the year-over-year tax rate, the majority of it was driven by that particular accrual. Matthew J. Fassler - Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC: Got you. Thank you so much, guys.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Kate McShane with Citi. Kate McShane - Citigroup Global Markets, Inc.: Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. My question is a little bit bigger picture in nature, but you've pursued a lot of different strategies with buying brands in some cases, like ModCloth and Bonobos, and then partnering in other cases, like with Lord & Taylor. Can you just walk us through how you're thinking about the strategy of acquisition versus partnership, and why one way makes sense versus the other, depending on what that relationship is? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: I think the key is to be flexible. If you look at some of the partnerships we've had around the business, I'd point you to JD initially in China, to partner with really one of the largest eCommerce platforms in China, that's where a partnership makes sense. You have brands that we acquired, like Bonobos specifically, that give us really the unique access to great brands like Bonobos that we can leverage to be (29:14) proprietary to our platforms. And then you have things like Lord & Taylor that you can partner, a capital-light way to bring great brands to your site that we think would work for both parties. So I think the key is to be flexible, and we'll continue to be flexible as we look to build our assortment and give customers more options. Kate McShane - Citigroup Global Markets, Inc.: Okay. Great. Thank you. And if I can ask a second question, unrelated. Do you have any perspective on the impact of door closures, more from the mid-tier channel that you could be benefiting from? Obviously the demographics are a little bit different, but do you have any measures that you're picking up share from that area in particular, either with ladies apparel or any other category? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: I think it's tough to dissect and I don't have any, I don't think, useful information, particularly on ladies apparel. But, look, when you have a business of our scale that's growing like we did in the third quarter, I think you're taking share. It's hard to dissect on who from. So I don't really have any color on any specifics on that for you. But thanks for your question, Kate.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Dan Binder with Jefferies. Daniel Thomas Binder - Jefferies LLC: Thanks. My question was around Jet.com and Walmart.com. I had ordered something on Walmart.com recently, and noticed that I got a discount for accepting a delivery time that was beyond the two days, and that's very Jet.com-like, and I'm wondering how much of Jet.com type discounts Walmart.com will be integrating into its own website, such as discounts for using debit versus credit or volume buys or skipping free returns, et cetera. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks for the question. I think it's TBD. I think we'll continue to test, learn, and move forward. So we've got a lot of ideas. We have a lot of initiatives underway. A lot of you that came to Bentonville last month saw a lot of them, there were things that we're doing in-store that we're excited about. So I think you'll see us test, take some swings, see what works, and expand and fail fast on some initiatives too. Daniel Thomas Binder - Jefferies LLC: And then my second question was around pricing, and I imagine when you started the pricing campaign, the lower prices, you had to expect that some would respond. What I'm curious about is, to the extent that you can comment on it, to what extent are you cutting price further as a competitor comes in and gets close or matches where you are? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: We certainly take a look at the competitive environment, that's something we've done at Walmart for a long time. So we continue to do that. Our brand is about everyday low prices on baskets of goods, that's where the customers trust our brands for and (32:12) we'll continue to make sure we do that. Daniel Thomas Binder - Jefferies LLC: Okay. Thanks.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Scot Ciccarelli with RBC. Scot Ciccarelli - RBC Capital Markets LLC: Good morning, guys. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Good morning, Scot. Scot Ciccarelli - RBC Capital Markets LLC: So my question is, let's assume half the hurricane impact was on traffic, half was on ticket. Is there anything you guys can point to that cause average ticket to spike up this quarter, especially, given your continued price investments? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Bigger baskets was a piece of it, Scot. Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Yes, we definitely sold more units and our – again, this gets back to some of the areas that we've talked about already on this call. The food business being very strong, health and wellness continues its good trends. And we saw a pickup in some general merchandise categories as well. Areas like hard-line, automotive performed quite well again this quarter and even saw a tick up in apparel. So, all those are contributing to the overall ticket performance. Scot Ciccarelli - RBC Capital Markets LLC: Got it. And then just a housekeeping item. I didn't see it in the release. Do you guys have the number of SKUs that were available on your eComm platforms at the end of the quarter? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: It's over 70 million. Scot Ciccarelli - RBC Capital Markets LLC: Over 70 million. And what does that compare to Steve? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: In the last summer, we gave, I think it was 67 million. Kary Brunner - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: That's right. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: So we continue to make progress. Scot Ciccarelli - RBC Capital Markets LLC: Okay. Got it. All right. Thanks, guys. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thank you.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Joseph Feldman with Telsey Group. Joseph Isaac Feldman - Telsey Advisory Group LLC: Yeah. Hi, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to follow-up. Do you guys worry about going too high end again? You know I know like we saw you add a KitchenAid, you've got this relationship with Lord & Taylor. And I feel like in the past there was a time and maybe it wasn't so much that you went high end, but the stores maybe got very cleaned up and things were almost too nice for a little while. But is there any risk of alienating your core customer with some of these new higher end brands? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks for your question, Joe. And we appreciate you notice in the KitchenAid's part of our assortment now and you may have seen that we also have Bose, which is – it's a great brand that now is associated with us. So, you worry about that, I think you always watch and learn and we look at the data. We analyze the data really well. We know that customers are looking for premium brands on our website. We think it helps the brand overall. So we'll watch brands like that. We're happy to have them as part of our assortment and we'll continue to learn. Joseph Isaac Feldman - Telsey Advisory Group LLC: Got it. Thanks. And then another, just a quick follow-up, just shift gears to international for a second. The UK, we've seen second quarter now positive comps. Is it simply the price investment that you're getting back in line with the right to be more competitive or are there other things going on that are helping to drive the comps in the UK? Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: I think pricing is a piece of it. But I think over the last, call it, at least 12 months maybe closer to 18 months now, there's been an increased focus on getting back to the basics, giving the customer a better experience and we're starting to see some green shoots there. Joseph Isaac Feldman - Telsey Advisory Group LLC: Got it. Okay. Thanks, guys. Good luck with this quarter. Steve Schmitt - Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.: Thanks. Thanks, guys. We appreciate. We don't have any more questions in the queue. So I just wanted to thank everyone for their time, for your interest in Walmart and happy holidays. Take care.
Operator
This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.