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Monro, Inc. (MNRO)

Q2 2026 Earnings Call· Wed, Oct 29, 2025

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Monro Inc.'s Earnings Conference Call for the Second Quarter of Fiscal 2026. [Operator Instructions]. And as a reminder, this conference call is being recorded and may not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission from the company. I would now like to introduce Felix Veksler, Vice President of Investor Relations at Monro. Please go ahead.

Felix Veksler

Analyst

Thank you. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us on this morning's call. Before we get started, please note that as part of this call, we will be referencing a presentation that is available on the Investors section of our website at corporate.monro.com/investors. If I could draw your attention to the safe harbor statement on Slide 2, I'd like to remind participants that our presentation includes some forward-looking statements about Monro's future performance. Actual results may differ materially from those suggested by our comments today. The most significant factors that could affect future results are outlined in Monro's filings with the SEC and in our earnings release. The company disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. Additionally, on today's call, management's statements include a discussion of certain non-GAAP financial measures, which are intended to supplement and not be substitutes for comparable GAAP measures. Reconciliations of such supplemental information to the comparable GAAP measures are included as part of today's presentation and in our earnings release. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Monro's President and Chief Executive Officer, Peter Fitzsimmons.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Thank you, Felix, and thanks to everyone for joining us. Great to be here with you today. This morning, I'd like to update you on the continued progress we are making at Monro. As we have on our prior quarterly calls, I will focus on the 4 key areas identified as opportunities for performance improvement, which are shown on Slide 3 of our presentation materials. These include driving profitable customer acquisition and activation, improving our store-based customer experience and selling effectiveness, increasing merchandising productivity, which includes mitigating tariff risk and continuing to work on real estate disposition related to the previous closure of 145 underperforming stores. After that, I'll briefly touch upon our fiscal second quarter results, which serve as a solid foundation to build upon as we continue to implement our performance improvement plan to enhance Monro's operations, drive profitability and increase adjusted operating income and total shareholder returns. Let's start with driving customer acquisition and activation. As previously discussed during our last 2 earnings calls, we've identified Monro's highest value customers. As a reminder, these customers deliver significantly more profit per customer than the lowest tier of customers. They are repeat purchasers that visit us over a number of years, and they choose us because we provide both the tires they want and the auto aftermarket services that meet their vehicle needs. During the second quarter, we continued to advance our acquisition marketing efforts through the deployment of a wide range of digital marketing tools to reach our target audience. We have increasingly activated our customer relationship management marketing to speak to our existing customers. Integrated into our marketing activities is the completion of a customer segmentation analysis that is helping to augment our marketing efforts with further granularity on higher-value existing customers and potential customers. Those who…

Brian D'Ambrosia

Analyst

Thank you, Peter, and good morning, everyone. Turning to Slide 5. Sales decreased 4.1% to $288.9 million in the second quarter. This was primarily driven by a reduction in sales from the closure of 145 underperforming stores in the first quarter of fiscal 2026, partially offset by a 1.1% increase in comparable store sales from continuing store locations. For reference, comp sales were up 2% in July, up 3% in August, and we exited the quarter down 2% in September. And while tire units were down mid-single digits, we believe we outperformed the industry in the quarter. Gross margin increased 40 basis points compared to the prior year. This primarily resulted from lower occupancy costs and lower material costs as a percentage of sales. These were partially offset by higher technician labor costs as a percentage of sales, mostly due to wage inflation. Total operating expenses were $90.4 million or 31.3% of sales as compared to $93.2 million or 30.9% of sales in the prior year period. Importantly, the increase as a percentage of sales was affected by $8.3 million of costs incurred in connection with consultants related to our operational improvement plan, partially offset by $7.6 million of net gains from closed store real estate dispositions. The second quarter of the prior year also included $2.8 million of net gain on the sale of our corporate headquarters. Operating income for the second quarter was $12.8 million or 4.4% of sales. This is compared to operating income of $13.2 million or 4.4% of sales in the prior year period. Adjusted operating income, a non-GAAP measure, for the second quarter was $14 million or 4.8% of sales as compared to $12.6 million or 4.2% of sales in the prior year period. Net interest expense decreased to $4.4 million as compared to…

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Thanks, Brian. As previously indicated, through our national retail network, economies of scale and durable business model, we believe we can both provide our customers with the services they need and generate meaningful value for our shareholders in any economic environment. We have a compelling set of consumer offerings and more than 6,000 talented teammates. Our balance sheet is strong, and our business generates healthy cash flow. We remain encouraged by the progress we've made, and we are keenly focused on executing our plan to improve operations, drive incremental profit and enhance total shareholder returns in fiscal 2026. With that, I will now turn it over to the operator for questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Bret Jordan from Jefferies.

Bret Jordan

Analyst

Could you talk about within the comp, the price contribution versus car counts? And I guess, what are you expecting for price in the second half of the fiscal year, just given a lot of noise around tariffs?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Why doesn't Brian take the comp and then why don't I expand a little bit on our thoughts there?

Brian D'Ambrosia

Analyst

Yes, Bret, in the quarter, we were down mid-single digits in traffic, up mid-single digits in ticket, netting out to the up 1% overall comp.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

So just a couple of comments from me on the comps. Remember that in the second quarter, we were up 1.1%. So it's the third consecutive quarter of positive comps. And I think we did see some consumer demand softness in September and October. But I would say from experience in performance improvement assignments, working with aftermarket and retail companies, you usually expect some unevenness in comp store sales. And the things that we've been doing in the last 4 months to implement digital marketing in half our stores now, which ramped up steadily through the second quarter and still hasn't touched more than half of our stores makes us think that in the next couple of quarters, we're going to see some real benefits from our marketing efforts. And I would say same for the efforts in improving performance in the stores. So we remain pretty comfortable that we're going to see positive comps for the fiscal year.

Bret Jordan

Analyst

Okay. And a question on working capital. Obviously, you benefit from the payables program, and there's been a lot of noise around that recently. Have you seen any changes as far as the risk spread that is being expected by the banks participating in your working capital program?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Nothing related to the risk spread. We did have a pricing adjustment back when we did our amendment to the credit facility for this period of time over the next 5 quarters. Our current spread is 225 basis points over SOFR. That's reflected in our supply chain finance facility, but no changes outside of that change.

Bret Jordan

Analyst

Okay. So nothing recently with all the noise around a particular event?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

No, not at all.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Thomas Wendler from Stephens.

Tom Wendler

Analyst

We saw some nice improvement in gross margins this quarter, expectations kind of flat gross margins year-over-year now. Just digging into the 50 bps improvement from material costs, can you maybe speak to the drivers there? What kind of wins are you seeing with vendors? How is this kind of being impacted by changing product assortment?

Brian D'Ambrosia

Analyst

Yes. I will -- I'll take the overall gross margin question and let Peter answer any color that he wants to add on the vendor question. As you said, gross margins increased 40 basis points in the quarter. That was driven a 70 basis point improvement with higher comp sales and benefit from store closures that improved our occupancy costs as a percent of sales. Material cost was 50 basis points improvement as a percent of sales, and that is primarily due to better service category margins that we saw in the quarter. And then partially offsetting those was an 80 bps increase in tech pay as it relates to wage inflation year-over-year. As we look out for the rest of the year regarding gross margin expectations, we expect gross margin for the full year, as you said, to be consistent with 2025. And importantly, this means that we expect higher gross margins in the second half of '26 compared to the prior year period. All of this is dependent on comp sales levels, of course, and our ability to continue to manage price adjustments with our cost increases, both for material and labor. And we continue to expect to see a benefit from our store closures in the second half as it affects gross margin.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

And Tom, maybe a couple of comments on vendors. One of the great things about our particular business is we have 8 to 12 vendors that matter, and we have good relationships with all of them, tires and parts. The vendors are happy about the things that they've heard from us, and they really like the things that we're doing with our marketing program. So in the second quarter, together with the strengthening of our merchandising department with the joining of Katy Chang, we've gotten more marketing support from more vendors for the things that we're putting into place. So I think we're going to continue to feel pretty good about the marketing support we get from all of our vendors.

Tom Wendler

Analyst

And then you mentioned some softness in the consumer you were seeing. Is there any kind of distinct consumer that's having some more troubles than others? Are you guys seeing any more trade down? Are you still drawing the line at Tier 3 tires?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

I think that the lower income consumer is probably feeling a fair amount of pressure right now. I think it's reflected in what you read in the papers and see elsewhere. But I want to remind everybody that what we offer is a service that's nondiscretionary and that everybody needs. We have customers at all economic levels, and we have products for everyone that wants to shop at our stores. So I think that over time, the services that we're providing are going to enable us to capture good market share and comp store growth, as we've said before, in any economy.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from David Lantz from Wells Fargo.

David Lantz

Analyst

I guess tire units declined mid-single digits in the quarter. So curious how you're thinking about the overall tire backdrop as we enter peak selling season here over the next couple of months.

Brian D'Ambrosia

Analyst

Yes. I think as we're looking at tire units, we're encouraged by what we believe is relative outperformance to the industry. A lot of the dynamics that have been in place regarding tires are still in place, being a high-ticket category. It is an area of sensitivity for our consumers and customers' wallets. As we look forward, we believe, as Peter just said, that even in a tough backdrop, which we clearly think that we're in relative to the consumer, we're doing a lot of things that are going to move the needle for us in terms of units and overall tire sales, which is obviously 50% of our overall sales. And that's really driven by the marketing, merchandising and in-store execution that Peter talked about in his prepared remarks. So we feel that we've got a lot of momentum as we're scaling those initiatives into the back half of this year and think that, that helps to support our business against that soft macro backdrop.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

We recommend another question. I think Brian answered it well.

David Lantz

Analyst

Perfect. Yes. So I guess the next one would be just expectations on SG&A for the second half, considering softer comps in September and October. And if there's been any change to the expectation that, that should be flat on a dollar basis?

Brian D'Ambrosia

Analyst

Yes. Great question. So as we talked about in our remarks, we demonstrated good cost control in the quarter. SG&A was $2.8 million lower than the prior year quarter. And if you adjust for nonoperating items such as our net store closing costs or impairment charges, consulting costs related to the operational improvement plan, we were actually $4.7 million lower than the prior year in Q2. And the decrease largely being driven by the reduction in SG&A for the store closures. So regarding our expectations for all of 2026, we continue to control expenses, but we do expect to further invest in our marketing initiatives, which will partially offset the savings that we did see in Q2 from the store closures. So as such, we expect G&A in Q3 and Q4, excluding any of the nonoperating items, to be running above where we were in Q2 and closer to that flat compared to prior year, not necessarily running consistent with what we just saw in this past quarter.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

David, I want to go back to your question about tires for just a second as I reflect on that. One of the things that we did in September was promote on the website and in the drop-downs that we have tires for everyone. And as I mentioned just a few minutes ago, we've had excellent support from all of our tire vendors. I think as we move into, to your good point, the selling season as the weather turns cold in the north, we've got the right tires for everybody. And I think having the right Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3 and Tier 4 tire is going to matter in increasing our ability to sell units in the next couple of quarters. So we feel good about where our tire positioning is, and we emphasize that we have tires for everyone in the promotions in the fall.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Brian Nagel.

Brian Nagel

Analyst

First question I want to ask, and I apologize, it's repetitive, but just looking at the trajectory in comps. So here, you stayed positive in the current -- in the quarter which just reported, but it's moderated from basically mid-single-digit type gains a couple of quarters ago. As you mentioned, I mean, there's pressures on the consumer that's well documented. But I mean is there a better way to explain what's happening here? I mean how much of that comp deceleration is a tougher environment versus maybe something more internal at Monro?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

I think it's a pause in the market, to be honest with you. And I think that the value that we're going to get from the incremental marketing and the store performance initiatives is going to show up in this quarter. Time will tell, but I don't think that there's anything in any of the data that we've seen as we've implemented more digital marketing in more stores that suggests we're not going to get positive growth going forward. For example, in every single tranche of stores that we've added, and we started adding stores to digital marketing in July and increased it 100 to 150 stores a month. We've seen positive calls compared to the rest of the chain, positive comp store sales across the board, every time we've added more stores to the mix and positive gross margin dollars. So for every dollar of advertising investment, we're getting more than that back in gross margin dollars. One of the reasons that you're seeing pretty positive results in our gross margin rate. And if you think about where we are at the moment, in the second quarter, we were probably 1/4 to 1/3 in terms of marketing support. That's going to change further in the next couple of months. As we said early on, we're going to add more stores to digital marketing effort. Final thing I would mention that encourages us about our ability to generate incremental comp store sales positive is we have focused our efforts on the digital marketing in the second quarter, and now we're adding another 350 stores to our call center. So we will have more stores in the call center in another week, and we'll have more stores that are supported with digital marketing. All of the data dating back to the summer says, as you do these things, comp store sales increase.

Brian Nagel

Analyst

That's very helpful. Then I guess my follow-up is somewhat related. So you started your prepared comments just talking about, I think what you referred to as kind of the high-value customers. And then I think you referred to better performing stores within the Monro network. So the question I have is, do you -- is there a way to quantify to the extent that those customers, those stores or some type of road map for the total company, can you quantify the outperformance of the comp -- the sales or comp outperformance of those cohorts versus the chain?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

So I don't want to say too much about this for competitive reasons, but one of the things that we've done in the last 3 months is a customer segmentation that's very revealing. It further supports our view that a minority of our current customers are really, really good customers. And they're customers that I would describe as value-oriented. They're looking for a bundle of services, not just tires, not just oil changes, but a number of things. And so one of the things we're doing with our content in marketing is reaching out to those customers and potential customers. So now not only in customer acquisition, but also in CRM to reach back to our good customers from the past. And we are offering those bundles of services that we think all the data says they're interested in. Another important segment is a wealthier newer vehicle owner. And those folks want good service. And so in the content that we're providing there online, we're appealing as a trusted adviser to that type of customer. And so the customer segmentation now enables us to share different types of messages with the customers depending on what their needs are. Again, I don't want to go on too much about this. We're still developing the customer segmentation, but our advertising is now reflecting what we've learned.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from John Healy from Northcoast Research.

John Healy

Analyst

I just want to ask to put your consulting hat on a little bit here. Maybe help us understand how you get to the conclusion that things are slowing down kind of across the industry. I mean there's a lot of mixed data points. We don't see kind of negative same-store sales of the parts and service side on the franchise dealers. And I get that the mix and the repair work is different. But would love to see how you benchmark Monro, what you benchmark it to and maybe any sort of data series or just opinions on kind of how you would look at it from a consulting lens to kind of evaluate the comp performance kind of year-to-date?

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Sure. Well, one of the things I love about Monro is it's a service business. It provides tires and it provides parts and the parts have to be attached in all of our locations. And so the skill of our technicians really is part of the value that the customer sees. Again and again, when we talk to customers and our own labor, we hear that. So I would compare us less to the part sellers and more to other service providers. And there aren't a whole lot of public comps that match up exactly with us. That's one thing that's frustrated me a little bit when people look at the market and say, oh, you compare well to this particular set. We're a little bit different. We're just more of a service business than we are a retailer, but it's the combination of those things that really drives what we can deliver to the customer. And another thing I just want to emphasize is we have scale across the country with 1,116 stores that enables us to provide services on a local level that are needed. So think of us more as a service business than a parts seller. It's a real difference.

Brian D'Ambrosia

Analyst

The only thing I would add there, John, is we -- on the tire side, we have syndicated data that we subscribe to, a couple of different sources for us and some publicly available, some more proprietary. But our comparisons on the tire side are against that data set. On the service side, as Peter said, there's very -- a lot less transparency there for us to be able to compare against. But highlighting the fact that we did have significant outperformance in a couple of our large service categories, including brakes and front-end shocks in the quarter, we feel pretty good. And we talked earlier in the margin commentary that those also drove some of the margin outperformance in the quarter as well.

John Healy

Analyst

And then just one question on cash flow and kind of capital allocation. Any thoughts on just kind of the -- any perspective you could provide on just the safety of the dividend here? I think you guys paid out what, $17 million kind of year-to-date, but not sure we're tracking there on a kind of an earnings basis to this point this year. So just your ability and willingness to keep the dividend maybe ahead of what potentially could be just the underlying earnings of the company.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Yes. When we look at the dividend, we're looking at our ability to fund the dividend as well as all of our capital allocation priorities, including our scheduled debt repayments on finance leases, our CapEx program, investing in our business and of course, maintaining a conservative balance sheet in this operating environment. And our cash flows support all of our capital allocation priorities, and we believe that to be true for the balance of FY '26 and beyond that. So we don't view it as much on a net payout ratio against income because we generate a lot of cash flow relative to our net income. So that payout ratio still makes sense to us.

Operator

Operator

We currently have no further questions. So I'll hand back to Peter for any closing remarks.

Peter Fitzsimmons

Analyst

Thanks, Claire, and thanks again, everyone, for joining us today. I'm optimistic about the opportunities in front of us, and I believe Monro is well positioned to capitalize on positive industry trends as we focus on driving profitable growth. Having said this, we still have a lot of work to do. But with our recent progress, we now have a stronger foundation to create long-term value for all shareholders. I look forward to keeping you updated on progress in the quarters to come. Have a great day.

Operator

Operator

This concludes today's call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.