Operator
Operator
Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the US Foods Q1 2023 Quarterly Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]. Adam Dabrowski, Director of Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.
US Foods Holding Corp. (USFD)
Q1 2023 Earnings Call· Thu, May 11, 2023
$90.29
-0.79%
Same-Day
+3.00%
1 Week
+3.96%
1 Month
+5.83%
vs S&P
+0.72%
Operator
Operator
Thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the US Foods Q1 2023 Quarterly Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]. Adam Dabrowski, Director of Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.
Adam Dabrowski
Analyst
Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to US Foods First Quarter Fiscal 2023 Earnings Call. Speaking on the call today, we have Dave Flitman, Chief Executive Officer; and Dirk Locascio, Chief Financial Officer. [Operator Instructions]. Our earnings release issued earlier this morning and today's presentation slides can be accessed on the Investor Relations page of our website. During today's call, unless otherwise stated, we are comparing our first quarter results to the same period in fiscal year 2022. In addition to historical information, certain statements made during today's call are considered forward-looking statements. Please review the risk factors in our 2022 Form 10-K for a detailed discussion of these potential factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those anticipated in those statements. Lastly, during today's call, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. All reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures are included in the schedules on our earnings press release as well as in the appendices to the presentation slides posted on our website, except that we are not providing reconciliations to forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures as indicated therein. Thank you for your interest in US Foods. And I'll now turn over the call to Dave.
David Flitman
Analyst
Thanks, Adam. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I've been at US Foods now for about 4 months, and I continue to get more excited about our future each day. I'll start by sharing a few highlights from the quarter followed by my vision for the evolution of our company and then we will go deeper into our Q1 financial results. After a year of strong market share growth and margin expansion, I'm pleased to report that US Foods remains intensely focused on executing our long-range plan, and it showed in our financial results again this quarter. We increased adjusted EBITDA by 40%, expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by 80 basis points and drove case growth of 6%, including 8% independent case growth. We delivered these strong results by profitably growing share, further optimizing gross margins and improving operational efficiencies. We made progress on key initiatives within our long-range plan while taking actions to execute more effectively on fewer but more impactful initiatives. Finally, we prudently allocated capital and continue to invest in the business as we further reduce debt and opportunistically repurchase shares. We have made significant progress against our long-range plan and have strong momentum, thus are reaffirming our full year 2023 guidance. My clear expectation is that we will maintain that momentum throughout 2023 and beyond. While we continue to produce strong quarterly results, we've also made meaningful strides to enhance our organizational structure, our strategy and culture of our company. Over the last few months, I've continued to spend time on the road, meeting more of our associates in getting deeper into our operations. During my travels, I've also met with many customers, investors and analysts to hear their feedback about US Foods. As a result, I firmly believe that US Foods long-range…
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Thanks, Dave, and good morning, everyone. Let's turn to Slide 10. We're very pleased with what we accomplished during the first quarter and the strong momentum we continue to have in our business. This clearly showed in the first quarter results. Net sales were $8.5 billion in Q1, an increase of 9.5% over the prior year. Total case volume increased nearly 6% from the prior year and food cost inflation was approximately 3.5%. As Dave mentioned earlier, case growth was led by 8% growth in independents, 6% growth in health care and 19% growth in hospitality, while chain cases were down 1%. In the first quarter, adjusted EBITDA grew $96 million or 40% from the prior year to $337 million. It was a very strong quarter, especially given the current year had essentially no sequential inflation while the prior year had more significant sequential inflation. In addition to strong EBITDA dollars, our adjusted EBITDA margin increased 80 basis points from the prior year as our gross profit grew significantly more than OpEx. We continued our strong gross profit growth through the first quarter, which we are quite pleased with, as again, in this quarter, there was essentially no sequential inflation. Our adjusted gross profit dollars increased 14% from the prior year. OpEx remained elevated. However, we saw continued improvement, and thus in Q1, the year-over-year cost increase was much lower than it was all of 2022. The improved turnover and impacts from our other initiatives drove increased productivity and are showing up in our results. We will continue to take actions to build upon this progress and still see significant opportunity for improvement in our supply chain operations. We made further progress against all 3 areas of our plan in 2022 and to date in 2023, and we are excited…
David Flitman
Analyst
Thanks, Dirk. I will close where I started. Four months into my role, I am more excited about US Foods in our future than I was the day I joined. During one of my recent site visits, I met Christopher Moore, our night warehouse manager, in Austin. In just 5 months with the company, Christopher quickly led his team to becoming one of our most productive night selection crews and has gained the trust of his associates. Struck by his leadership, I asked him about his background. I soon learned that in addition to his 12 years of experience in food distribution, he had spent 23 years in the Army supply chain, supporting operation Iraqi Freedom and Korean Defense where he received 2 bronze stars. Associates like Christopher are one of the many reasons I appreciate being part of US Foods. As we head into Memorial Day later in the month, I want to thank Christopher, the 120 members of our those who serve Employee Resource Group in all of our military service members across this great country. Additionally, as I have spent more time with our team, I have gained a better understanding of our momentum and areas of opportunity. While macroeconomic factors will inevitably impact results, I believe we are on track for 2024 adjusted EBITDA at or near $1.7 billion. We are focused on building upon the company's many strengths while finding ways to more effectively execute our strategy and accelerate our rate of improvement. I am highly confident this combination will lead to a very bright future for US Foods and all of our stakeholders. Finally, I would like to thank our 29,000 associates for their unwavering commitment and the work they do each day to serve our customers. It's clear that our strategy is working, and we are continuing to make progress against our long-range plan, which is in very large part due to the talented team we have here at US Foods. With that, Cheryl, please open up the line for questions.
Operator
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. Your first question is from Kelly Bania of BMO Capital Markets.
Kelly Bania
Analyst
Congrats on a nice quarter here. Just wanted to ask about, I guess, seasonality. So Q1 is your seasonally weak quarter. And if you look at where this quarter came in from an EBITDA margin perspective, it would seem that you're set up for a pretty strong year here. So maybe can you just help talk about why Q1 might be up 80 basis points, but the rest of the year plan much more conservatively. Any special factors that impacted this quarter versus maybe some conservatism in the outlook?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Sure. Kelly, this is Dirk. I'll take that one. And as you heard both Dave and myself say we're very pleased with Q1. And I think what hopefully everyone sees in the quarter is just all the things we've talked about our initiatives and the strength that we've worked hard over the last year to build really show up in those strong results. And we do think that sets us up for a very good year and are pleased with the results to date. I think overall, what you see is -- you're right, Q1 is typically a softer margin. We're happy with the improvement. We do expect to continue year-over-year improvements and the specific amounts over the course of the year, but I think we are well set up with all the work we have done. And I think to your point on the outlook, it's one quarter into the year. And while we're pleased, we'll update our guidance as we see appropriate as we get further into the year. But happy with where the business stands and our outlook for the business.
Kelly Bania
Analyst
That's very helpful. Dirk, maybe can you just unpack the gross margin a little bit more for us? It seems like you were happy with that in light of no sequential inflation here. But maybe can you help us unpack the impact of just mix on the gross margin, customer mix, in particular, versus some of the internal initiatives?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Sure. Mix is definitely a help, but the lion's share of the improvement is all of the work that we've done over the course of the last year. So mix, as we've talked a lot about, that's why for us, just any growth is not the same and really growing with our target customer types and being thoughtful on other customers that we grow with is so important because mix is a help. But the lion's share is definitely from the -- all the initiatives we talked about from cost of goods, pricing optimization, logistics, et cetera.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Alex Slagle of Jefferies.
Alexander Slagle
Analyst
Congrats to the team and Andrew on the promotion. Had a question on customer mix. You provided an update on that mix in the slides, and you can kind of see the profile gradually moving back towards where it was pre-pandemic, but still a good 500 basis points or so off. I mean do you think it eventually gets back to that profile or perhaps the growth during the pandemic or priorities altered that? If you do were to get back to the previous customer mix and how would that alter your margin and growth profile?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
It's Dirk. I'll take -- I'll start with this one. So yes, as you pointed out, we saw a very strong growth in those other customer types of health care and hospitality as that is a healthy tailwind that we have that we talked a lot about in the last few quarters, and you saw show up again this quarter as part of our strong case growth, especially with those target customer types. And as you noted, as those continue to recover, those will continue to become a larger portion. I think as our view hasn't changed, we largely expect them to get back to where they were prior to that, the combination of the recovery in our new business. And we think just through the continued strong growth that we've demonstrated with independents and the continued new business and then recovery in health care and hospitality, that mix will continue to be accretive to our business and really add to our balanced approach to profitably growing volume and margin expansion.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Lauren Silberman of Credit Suisse.
Lauren Silberman
Analyst
Congrats on the quarter. Dave, I wanted to ask about the 2024 guide at or near $1.7 billion. How much of the guide is contingent on the underlying consumer macro environment? And should we see a more challenging environment, how might your strategy change?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes. Well, just -- great question. I would just say that as I've leaned in more and understood not only just what the basis was for 2024, but importantly, the underlying momentum in the business, that's where you heard my comment. While we can't control the macro, as you just heard Dirk say, we believe our destiny is completely within our control. We've got great focus on the right target customers. Obviously, the industry is resilient through ups and downs of economic cycles. But importantly, the diversity of our strategy and our business mix, I believe, sets us up to win. And you've heard me talk about the excitement in things like the productivity initiatives, the profitability work we have going on inside the company. We've got a long trajectory here of top and bottom line growth. I'm very excited about the momentum, and that's why you heard me reaffirm the 2024 number.
Lauren Silberman
Analyst
Great. And then is there any additional color that you can provide on the cadence of case growth throughout the quarter? And to the extent you're willing to quarter-to-date just given what we've been hearing in terms of an underlying slowdown?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes. Let me just take the second part of your question here, and I'll let Dirk comment. Like you've heard from others, we saw, obviously, the Omicron lapping in January, a little bit of weakness that started towards the end of February, started to bounce back in late March. And we've seen thus far early in the second quarter is recovery and stabilization. And so we're excited about the momentum. We think we have the right focus and we're excited about the future.
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Yes, I think the only thing I would add is we do expect sort of a normalized growth environment because of our strong performance and share gains across the 3 customer types and the recovery tailwinds that we've talked about in health care and hospitality, we are and expect to continue to see some healthy growth levels.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Jeffrey Bernstein of Barclays.
Jeffrey Bernstein
Analyst
Great. I had one question and then one follow-up. From an inflation standpoint, clearly, everyone is talking about the moderation in cost of goods. I know for you guys, it went from north of 8% last quarter to sub-4% this quarter. Just wondering where you see that going over the next few quarters, whether you see potential for absolute deflation in coming quarters? And what the difference -- what the impact would be to your business, if it's stabilized here versus if it went to some level of deflation, how would that change the way you think about your business? And then I had 1 follow-up.
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes. Good question. A lot of discussions around this in the industry. And obviously, we've seen the inflation rate decelerate. But as we said in our prepared remarks, we've had essentially no sequential inflation here for a couple of quarters. You've seen us driven in large part by the initiatives we're driving, continue to expand our margins. So we have a great process around managing inflation and deflation in the company. I have absolutely no concerns about wherever that ends up going forward. And as we said last quarter, lapping of what happens in 2022 was already built into our forecast.
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Yes. And the only thing, Jeff, that I would add is that similar to last quarter, is the places where we've seen deflation have been in the proteins and commodity as opposed to core grocery. And that's the place that we tend to be more fixed mark up and so, therefore, overall, are still seeing again the strong gross profit rates that we've talked about, and that is the fact that grocery is continuing to hold in as we had talked about and expected. We still see us positive, and our outlook there has not changed.
Jeffrey Bernstein
Analyst
Understood. And then the follow-up is just on the market share gains, which Dave, I know you mentioned a couple of times, I'm wondering whether you'd be able to quantify that type of metric for the first quarter, where you think maybe it came from? And conceptually, do you think market share gains would accelerate if the economy were to slow? Do you think you're in a position where the bigger players would see even greater gains? Is that a potential offset to this long macro?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes, I'll answer the second part of your question first. Unequivocally, yes, as the economy slows, I think those of us with substantial scale, will have the opportunity to continue to lean in and take profitable market share 100%. But as you know, that in our target customer segments, we've been focused on taking profitable market share for a long time. And in fact, this quarter represents the eighth consecutive quarter that we've taken share in the independent restaurant segment. So there's no reason that we would expect that to slow down. We're 100% focused on it. We understand it's a very granular data -- with very granular data where our market share gains are, opportunities are, and our team is aligned around it. So I feel good about the momentum, the focus is right on and more to come.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Mark Carden of UBS.
Mark Carden
Analyst
So first question is for Dave. Just digging a bit more into some of your commentary at the beginning of the call. Now that you've been at US Foods for a few months and have had some more time to really dig below the surface, where do you now see the company's biggest current competitive advantage is relative to the industry as a whole? Has it changed much since last quarter? Do you see opportunities to strengthen those? And then you talked about improved and focused execution being an opportunity case as well if you've been surprised anywhere on some low-hanging fruit on the opportunity side that can really be addressed quite quickly?
David Flitman
Analyst
Great questions. We have really strong competitive advantages. And I mentioned this on the last quarter call, our team-based selling model is, I believe, a key differentiator for us. The way we pair up our TMs with our restaurant operations consultants and very experienced chefs, many of which have come out of the industry and understand the back-end operations of our customers and actually many were operators, in fact, in restaurants. That's a real competitive advantage for us. The second one I would point to, and you heard me talk about this earlier as well, is our technology advantage. We are the market leader in technology. In fact, 84% of our transactions are transacted through e-commerce today. Excited about the traction we're getting in MOXe. You need to think about MOXe is putting our entire supply chain in the hands of our operators and our customers. No other company has the capability that we have, anything from ordering to understanding real-time visibility into our inventory, our customers being able to reserve that for their orders. We're second to none. It's great technology. We're rolling it out aggressively across the country. And I really believe that's a strong differentiator for us and one we will continue to invest in.
Mark Carden
Analyst
That's great. And then at this stage, how are you thinking about your chain business growth relative to your independent growth? Are you expecting to pursue any more strategic exits and chains at this point? Are you largely where you'd like to be? And then how are you thinking about the health of independents relative to chains, if we do see a steeper economic downturn?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes. I think we have the right focus on chains. Don't anticipate any other strategic exits at this point. Obviously, the market is very dynamic. We'll make the right decisions for the business going forward. We're opportunistically leaning into chains where it makes sense. Obviously, independents is a more profitable segment for not only us but for the industry and one where we have ample opportunity to gain share. You heard my excitement about 8 quarters of share gain in independents. I do think people are looking for an experience. So that's why they go to independent restaurants. The unique capability of these operators and local markets tailoring to that need. We have great offerings, particularly in our private label, our exclusive brands. Our penetration in independents is about 51%, and that's why you heard me say in my prepared remarks, there's more opportunity to penetrate the market with our exclusive brands. And as the manufacturers supply chains have recovered, we expect that growth to continue to accelerate.
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
I think, Mark, the only thing I would add is I think that back to the independent health is -- there was a lot of speculation of independent weakness heading into COVID, and they were surprisingly resilient. Independent operators are very resilient. And that's also where a lot of the things that Dave talked about with our focus on helping our customers make it and many of them have adapted over these last few years. And so I think they're probably stronger operators than they were even going into COVID.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Edward Kelly of Wells Fargo.
Edward Kelly
Analyst
Congrats on an impressive start to the year, by the way. Dave, I wanted to ask you about the independent case growth number. I mean certainly very impressive. I don't think we've seen a number of this big out of US Foods since they've gone public except for the COVID recovery. Can you talk a bit more about your dig into the inflection here around this? And then I think taking a step back, U.S. has been sort of a story of lower but focus on profitable case growth. And obviously, these numbers are pretty strong. How do you think about like what the appropriate level of overall case growth is for this business going forward in terms of what you're targeting? How does that differ from what's been happening here previously?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes, I think we can grow and we can grow profitably and continue to take share in independents. And what I love about our focus, and I commented on this, I believe, in February, the granularity with which we understand our market share on a local basis is very solid. And our sales teams have rallied around that. They're competitive. They want to win. They understand where the growth opportunities are. We have great brands to take into these independent operators. And so that is at the heart of the momentum. And again, Q1 is just the culmination of the good work the company has been doing for a long time. You just heard me say 8 consecutive quarters of independent market share gains. And so I think that's an opportunity for us to continue to stay focused on where we can win, where we provide differentiated value for our customers. And so I do expect that will continue. Excited about it. The organization is focused on it, and there's no reason we can't continue to take market share.
Edward Kelly
Analyst
Great. And then a quick follow-up just on gross profit per case. I mean Q1 traditionally low point for the year with progress from here. I mean any reason to think that you cannot continue to grow gross profit per case from here despite, let's call it, minimal to no inflation?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
This is Dirk. I'll take that one. Yes, pleased with the gross profit in Q1. I'm not going to comment on the specific quarters, but what I will come back to is the comment that we do expect gross profit this year to be above where it was last year. And we think that as we look ahead, we can continue to grow gross profit through the continued execution of our different initiatives. And that's, again, mostly within our control, and we are optimistic and positive about our ability to do that. In fact, I like to use the word inflection. And so we think that this quarter is an inflection point. We're now it's 2 quarters in a row with essentially no sequential inflation. We've had very strong gross profit. We've continued to not only grow dollars at a very healthy level, but continue to expand EBITDA margins and that balance of profitable growth with those right customer types and margin expansion, we think is a great recipe for a lot of success ahead.
David Flitman
Analyst
And I would just add that the momentum that we have on improving our mix is strong. You've seen that in the results, and that will continue. But that aside, as Dirk has said, I just want to reinforce the point. The majority of our gross profit per case gains are from initiatives that we're driving. I continue to see a lot of low-hanging fruit in that area of the business. And we'll continue to stay focused on driving those outcomes in a way that makes sense for our customers and for our company.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Jake Bartlett of Truist Securities.
Jake Bartlett
Analyst
Mine is on the competitive environment and the pricing environment. The largest distributors have been gaining -- all of them seem to be gaining a significant market share and it suggests that the others, smaller distributors, are losing significant market share. So the question is with supply chain constraints and staffing constraints easing should we expect those smaller competitors to start -- trying to compete more aggressively on price. And this just kind of goes back to the question of sustainable gross profits per case. But I guess if you could just chat about what you think the dynamic is there and what the risk that pricing competition is going to increase significantly?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes. The first thing I would say is that we always operate in a highly competitive market, right? And I don't really see the macro changing that. The big picture of that. Sure, as things ebb and flow, you may see segments of competitors get more aggressive. But I keep coming back to the things that we tell our team internally is let's stay focused on running our playbook. We have great products that differentiate us. We have tremendous scale. We can be competitive where we need to. And obviously, our customers demand that of us. As we're talking about pricing with our customers, they want to understand how we're getting more efficient as a company before we're talking to them about price. And you heard my excitement about the runway we have to control the things that we're driving from an initiative standpoint that will improve our profitability. So I don't want to discount it, but I just want to say that it's not a distraction, and I don't really see that impacting our results going forward.
Jake Bartlett
Analyst
Okay. Great. And then I just want to make sure I understood the message on the guidance and in light of the strong first quarter results, you kind of maintain the annual guidance. My impression what I'm hearing is maybe some conservatism, but I want to make sure that you don't also kind of see some incremental headwinds out there. We've heard from others about perception of the markets, demand is slowing, inflation is decreasing, which might be pressuring margins. But as you're kind of maintaining the '23 guidance reflective of conservatism or some sort of incremental negative that you see cropping up?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Jake, Dirk here, I'll take that one. So yes, Q1 came in a little bit ahead of where we had expected. Very pleased with the start. And really, the way I would read into it is it's 1 quarter into the year. And as appropriate, we'll update our guidance as the year goes on. Anything with inflation or otherwise, our outlook hasn't changed there. Any of that was contemplated in our outlook for the business. So I just -- I land on one quarter in and very pleased with the performance to date and the outlook for the business.
David Flitman
Analyst
And just specifically, we have 0 unstated concerns.
Jake Bartlett
Analyst
Great. Great. And last question real quick. On the case growth, I think in the last quarter, you had a pretty balanced new account versus share of wallet. But if you could just update us there where the case growth is really come from at this point in the independent side?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes. We continue to be excited about our focus on our growth there. In fact, on the independent side of the business, just within the last couple of weeks, we have shipped a record number of customers in the history of the company. So our focus is playing off the success that we've had here for many, many quarters, and the intense focus our organization has on growing that segment of the business. We see new customer generation in the mid-single digits, mid- to upper single digits, and I expect that will continue through the course of time.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from John Heinbockel of Guggenheim Partners.
John Heinbockel
Analyst
Dave, I wanted to start with maybe your thoughts on, hitting on the last topic there, the existing account penetration opportunity and particularly COP, right? If that is an outsized opportunity, how do you attack that? And then do you think the -- you've got enough sales resources to maybe get more intense, right, with those existing accounts, so you'd like to add some sales resources?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes, I think -- John, great question. Look, I'll take the second part of your question first is, we always have room for strong salespeople inside US Foods, and that's something we'll continue to focus on adding the right level and the right number of talent per market where we see the greatest growth opportunities. There are no barriers to our success being driven by me or anyone else in the organization. Our teams understand that where we can find strong sales talent, competitive talent or not, we've got room for those folks inside the company. So you'll continue to see us add prudently and specifically where we see the growth opportunities. On the COP side, I mean we have stock . We have great brands inside the company. We have really good momentum there. And I think it's certainly center of plate is always a focus when you're looking at new accounts. And obviously, if we get into an account where we haven't led with COP, we get it in there as fast as we can. So it's front and center to how we go to market. And as I said, I've got great brands here that the company has built through the course of time. So we lead with confidence in COP.
John Heinbockel
Analyst
Okay. And then maybe secondly, right, when you think about the supply chain capacity, right? Obviously, you've got 1 ecosystem. How do you think -- or how would you characterize capacity today, right? And I don't know how many expansions you're working on or fold-outs, but do you anticipate bringing new capacity on in the next year or 2, 3?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes, we will look opportunistically at that. First of all, what's important to me and I learned this early in my career working for a large chemical company. You got to make sure you can justify that next incremental capacity based on the profitability of that segment of the business, right, and where you're looking at. So that's something we'll make sure we're doing well. But we have no constraints in terms of adding capacity where it's needed. We understand where our growth opportunities are. There are a few markets where we're pinched on capacity today that we're looking at deciding what to do, but there are no barriers to our success right now driven by capacity limitations.
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
And that's always an area we're looking at, John, to really -- we brought on 2 facilities in the past year and as Dave said, continue to look ahead. So that's always front and center. And that's also why growing what the target customer types is important because when you think about optimizing inventory, throughput, et cetera, those use your capacity pretty effectively.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Brian Harbour of Morgan Stanley.
Brian Harbour
Analyst
Yes. I just got a question more on the operating expense side. Maybe if you could talk about labor productivity. Certainly, part of that is just getting more tenure continuing to see improvements in retention. But are there any other specific initiatives you think can continue to drive labor productivity? And then separately, are there any other kind of expenses that you still think are elevated within that line? If there's any sort of maintenance cost or fleet-related type of things that we could think about how those might change for the rest of the year?
David Flitman
Analyst
First of all, we're quite pleased with the leverage we got in the P&L this quarter, and as you've seen the strength of our GP growth versus our operating expense growth continues to improve. We're not there yet. We're not at the promised land, but I'm really pleased with the work we have and the initiatives going on. In addition to the couple that you mentioned in terms of turnover and all that, the things that I talked about in the prepared remarks like our flexible scheduling will enable us to get more productive use of our associate base across the company and that's why we've got these additional pilots going on and with plans to further expand that through the back half of the year. Obviously, new employees, the less tenured folks aren't as productive, it takes time for that to happen. And the better we do -- the better job we do at retaining our associates and keeping them with us, the faster that productivity will improve. But beyond that, we have a lot of initiatives going on, just SG&A productivity, getting more efficient at what we do, anything from corporate to the field and the team is aligned around that work. So we feel good about it.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from John Ivankoe of JPMorgan.
John Ivankoe
Analyst
Maybe a little bit of a follow-up on that. David, towards the end of your prepared remarks, you talked about indirect spend. I forget the word but maybe that being an untapped or an unrealized or even unpursued opportunity for the company at this point. Total OpEx dollars in the company in '22 are around $4.5 billion. How much of that do you think would classify as indirect spend? And -- I mean, how big of a prize, if you want to call it that, can you really pursue from an efficiency and effectiveness point of view as we begin to think about '24 and beyond?
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes, we're excited about that. I'll flip it over to Dirk to answer that because he's knee-deep in that work right now.
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
John, good question. So as Dave said, really focusing on this. And think of this as the strategic vendor management instead of COGS, it's indirect. And so we haven't given a specific number, but it is a pretty large base. So we think just like we haven't quantified the components of the different areas of the long-range plan, we would not call it out if it's not meaningful. And so that work is underway and expect to begin those savings to accrue later this year and into next year. And it's really an area that we've focused on in limited capacity here and there, and this is a more holistic approach that we're taking. So excited about the work that will come out of this. And we think that that's part of what will allow us to continue to invest in the business and at the same time, accrue dollars to the bottom line for earnings growth.
John Ivankoe
Analyst
And strategic vendor management, I mean, that's not new for you guys, but can you talk about maybe some of the newer, bigger ideas that are coming up that maybe you are working on that we might be able to see between now and the end of '23 or is it still too early to name those even if you're working on them?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Strategic vendor management is really -- it's a continuation of the same process that we've talked about over the last year. It's continuing to work with different vendors, though. And it's really a collaborative process with those vendors, and it's all the way from how do we find joint opportunities to grow, are there opportunities to consolidate spend, are there opportunities to for us to be a better customer to those vendors that result in improved cost of goods. So there's not anything new as opposed to it's a very thoughtful and methodical approach to work through our cost of goods base.
David Flitman
Analyst
Yes, it's really a partnership with them, as Dirk said, to take cost out of the supply chain jointly in a collaborative manner. I think the opportunity there isn't new initiatives. As we said, we plan to be through about 60% of our COGS this year. I think that number through the end of last year was about 40%. So that's really the opportunity.
John Ivankoe
Analyst
And in terms of addressing the indirect spend, is there anything that we can talk about outside of strategic vendor management, I mean, something that might be new to talk about on this call or is that still behind closed doors?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
We'll talk a little more specifically, but the way to think about indirect spend is, whether it's facilities to travel to consulting sort of all those kinds of cost base. So there's not a single as opposed to it's looking at across 15 or 16 different types of categories of spend and being thoughtful those opportunities to spend more effectively. So more to come in the future as we get a little further into that. [indiscernible] was also as a later starting initiative in our long-range plan. That's why we're beginning to talk about it now.
Operator
Operator
Your next question is from Andrew Wolf of CL King.
Andrew Wolf
Analyst
I have a couple of follow-ups. First on Dirk, the inflation commentary, you haven't had accelerating or in fact, you've had decelerating product cost inflation for now a few quarters and yet your gross margin has kind of improved against that. Is that -- can we infer from that, that you're -- you've successfully kind of lapped the toughest comparisons of holding gains and periods when inflation was accelerated, inventory holding adds?
Dirk Locascio
Analyst
Yes, yes, for sure. And I think that, Andrew, to your question is, that's why we have been so deliberate in our commentary last quarter and this quarter and why we focus so much on sequential inflation and talking about sequential because when people -- when you're just looking at year-over-year, the fact of what happened a year ago is less important on what's driving right now. So back to my earlier comment with the gains that we continue to see is strong gross profit, we continue to see. That's all the initiative work that we've driven through there that is resulting in us continuing to deliver these good results in gross profit. And as we continue to push our initiatives forward, we would expect to continue to have, again, for 2023, a strong gross profit and gains over '22, even though last year had the inventory gains and this year doesn't. That was all contemplated in our outlook and how we think about the business.
Andrew Wolf
Analyst
Got it. And on the operating expenses and improving the supply chain and really getting productivity up. Just generally, it's obvious that the whole industry had to increase wages and training and hire new people. I mean so there was a lot of cost before the benefit. But Dave, I think you mentioned you're close to -- how far away -- I guess the question is, you have pretty impressive operating expense leverage against that much case growth. And how close are you to sort of an optimal supply chain for the things you can manage like getting productivity where you want it to be and so forth?
David Flitman
Analyst
We have a lot more to do in that regard. I'll just leave it at that. We've got good momentum. We're focused on the right things. The trajectory is good. We've got a lot of positive momentum, but more results to come.
Andrew Wolf
Analyst
I realize there's a lot of internal things that were in process, and I'm sure you and others have new ones. But specifically, in terms of like the investment that had to be made just to get capacity where it needed to be in training people and people becoming seasoned. Just adding a microcosm, not all the other stuff, which is on top of that, but just sort of efficiently operating a warehouse and routing, is that also a lot to come? Or are you just more referring to internal initiatives that go beyond that?
David Flitman
Analyst
I think it's both. I think Omicron through the industry is a curveball. We've all been struggling with that for the past 2, 3 years. You heard me talk about driver productivity and retention is about where it was pre-COVID. We're not quite there yet in the warehouse, so more to come on that sort of stuff. And then you couple that with the initiatives that we have going on that kind of informed my earlier comment about more to come.
Operator
Operator
There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to Dave Flitman for closing remarks.
David Flitman
Analyst
Well, thank you all for joining us today. We hope you have a great rest of the week. The company is strong. We have great momentum and a very bright future. Have a great day.
Operator
Operator
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.