NYSE:BJ BJ's Wholesale Club Q3 2026 Earnings Report $86.48 -0.16 (-0.19%) Closing price 05/22/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$86.38 -0.10 (-0.11%) As of 05/22/2026 07:59 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast BJ's Wholesale Club EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.16Consensus EPS $1.09Beat/MissBeat by +$0.07One Year Ago EPS$1.18BJ's Wholesale Club Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$5.35 billionExpected Revenue$5.35 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$2.42 millionYoY Revenue Growth+4.90%BJ's Wholesale Club Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2026Date11/21/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateFriday, November 21, 2025Conference Call Time8:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by BJ's Wholesale Club Q3 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 21, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: BJ's reported continued momentum with its 12th consecutive quarter of market share gains and 15th straight quarter of traffic growth; merchandise comps were +1.8% year‑over‑year and +5.5% on a two‑year stack, led by perishables and balanced across divisions. Positive Sentiment: Membership remains a core strength as membership fee income rose ~9.8% to $126.3M, higher‑tier penetration improved 50 basis points sequentially, and management expects a ~90% tenured renewal rate for the year. Positive Sentiment: Digital and technology are accelerating growth—digital sales were +30% YoY (61% two‑year) and now ~17% of sales, with AI initiatives, a beta AI shopping assistant, robotics (Tally) and an automated DC planned to boost efficiency and convenience. Negative Sentiment: Management proactively tightened general merchandise inventory to mitigate tariff/markdown risk, a move it says will limit near‑term GM sales upside even as it preserves margins and funds member value investments. Positive Sentiment: Real‑estate and capital allocation are bullish—14 new clubs this year with recent openings ~25% ahead of plan, a pipeline targeting 25–30 new clubs in two years, and ongoing share buybacks ($87.3M repurchased in Q3, ~$866M remaining). AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBJ's Wholesale Club Q3 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello and welcome to BJ's Wholesale Club third quarter fiscal 2024-2025 earnings conference call. After the company's remarks, there'll be a question-and-answer session. In fairness to all participants today, we ask you to limit yourself to one question and return to the queue with any additional questions. I'm now going to pass the call over to our host, Ang Singh, VP of FP&A. Please go ahead. Ang SinghVP FP&A at BJ's Wholesale Club00:00:23Good morning and welcome to BJ's third quarter fiscal 2025 earnings call. Joining me today are Bob Eddy, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Laura Felice, Chief Financial Officer; and Bill Werner, Executive Vice President, Strategy and Development. Please remember that we may make forward-looking statements on this call that are based on our current expectations. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that can cause actual results to differ materially from what we say on this call. Please see the risk factors sections of our most recent SEC filings for a description of these risks and uncertainties. Please also refer to today's press release and latest investor presentation posted on our investor relations website for a cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements and non-GAAP reconciliations. Now I'll turn the call over to Bob. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:01:20Good morning. Thank you for joining us to discuss our third quarter results. Our business delivered strong results in Q3 and performed well in an incredibly dynamic environment. Once again, we gained share and grew traffic, marking the 12th consecutive quarter of market share growth and the 15th consecutive quarter of traffic growth. These consistent results are a testament to the value that we provide to our members each day, as we are guided by our purpose of taking care of the families who depend on us. This purpose has never been more relevant, as many of our members are dealing with a considerable level of unpredictability in their everyday lives. This has impacted consumer confidence, which has been at low levels for much of this year, and we are taking these conditions as a call to action to lean even further into value for our members' everyday needs. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:02:12Some of our actions include incremental offers to those members that may need a little bit more help in the current environment. In addition, we're rolling out reduced delivery fees to make our most convenient shopping channel even more accessible. The combination of value and convenience is a powerful unlock for us, and this will help our members realize even more value from their BJ's membership. We've also launched a 10% discount for our team members as a way of thanking those who are on the front lines living our purpose every day. For the quarter, we delivered merchandise comparable comp sales growth of 1.8% and adjusted earnings per share of $1.16. It's helpful to evaluate the performance on the two-year stack basis to normalize for the impact of last year's port strike and hurricane activity. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:03:02Our two-year stack comp was 5.5%, an acceleration of nearly a point versus the first half. Our Q3 comp performance was evenly balanced across our two reportable divisions. Our perishables, grocery, and sundries division grew comp sales by 1.8%, with a two-year stack that accelerated sequentially to 6%. The investments we've made in both Fresh 2.0 and our category management process have driven continued share gains across our consumables franchise. We saw the most strength in perishable categories such as fresh meat, dairy, and produce, aided by our Fresh 2.0 investments. We also saw strength in non-alcoholic beverages and candy and snacking, driven by enhanced assortment and more prominent placement in our clubs. Our general merchandise and services business also grew by 1.8% on a comp basis in the quarter. Consumer electronics comped in the high single digits on success in computer equipment and tablets. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:04:04Apparel, which we've highlighted on several recent calls, continues to grow, comping in the low single digits. The offsets we saw this quarter were in home and seasonal, which continued to be impacted by lower discretionary demand and consumer confidence, as well as some of the decisions we made earlier this year to tighten our inventories in light of the anticipated impact of tariffs. Our services business also contributed to the improved performance in this division during the quarter. Looking at the behavior of our membership base this quarter, we continued to see members across all income levels remain cautious, which tracks with what we broadly see in the consumer confidence data. We saw members exhibiting value-seeking behavior, including higher sensitivity to promotions, increasing purchasing of private label items, and some trade down. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:04:58For example, given the high price of beef, we saw higher purchasing of ground beef versus more expensive cuts. Despite this type of behavior, member trends exhibited stability quarter over quarter across all cohorts when adjusting for the noise from the port strike. While value-sensitive members remain more exposed to the macro backdrop, we did not see any incremental pullback from them. That resilience reinforces BJ's position as a trusted destination for strong value and convenience when it matters most. The environment continues to move quickly, but our teams have not lost sight of the fundamentals. By zeroing in on our controllables, they are advancing our strategic agenda, increasing member stickiness, making our clubs better places to shop, expanding convenience, and growing our physical footprint. These elements are central to creating value over time, and we built further momentum in each this quarter. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:05:57I'll now provide an update on how those pieces are evolving. Our membership results continue to be robust, and we grew membership fee income by nearly 10% this quarter, driven by strong member counts, mixed benefits, and the effects of our recent fee increase. We expect the growth rate to show further improvement into the fourth quarter and to once again deliver a 90% tenured renewal rate for the full year. The core of our membership health is driven by growing the number of members as well as improving the mix of those members. In the third quarter, our higher-tier membership penetration reached another new record, improving by 50 basis points sequentially, and we continue to see more opportunity to push here. We would not be able to deliver sustainable membership growth without parallel improvements in our merchandising. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:06:49We are launching many new own-brands products, which are aimed at improving the member experience by offering excellent quality at an unbeatable price. Some of the products we are excited about include Wellesley Farms-branded tortilla and potato chips, protein shakes, frozen poultry, and coffee pods. This is just a small list of many new high-quality products that we plan to launch at amazing price points. Own-brands products have a multitude of benefits, as they are typically priced about 30% below national brands while offering comparable quality of national-branded items. This gives our members even more compelling value for their hard-earned dollars, which in turn drives loyalty and higher lifetime value. Own-brands products also deliver higher penny profit for us, which we can use to invest back into the member experience, further propelling the flywheel that drives our business. We're excited to see how our customers respond to our improved offerings. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:07:47Our efforts to continue to improve the convenience of shopping our clubs can be seen in the digital growth of 30% this quarter and 61% on a two-year stack basis, driven by strength in BOPIC, same-day delivery, and Express Pay. We're looking to further drive innovation by utilizing AI to deliver enhanced content, highlights, and attributes, making shopping even easier for our members. We also recently beta-launched an AI shopping assistant and personalized member shopping lists, and we're looking forward to taking these live to our members soon. Last but not least, our new club footprint expansion. We opened our club in Warner Robins, Georgia, during Q3, and just last week, we opened our fifth Tennessee club in Smyrna. I'm pleased to report that both clubs are off to a great start, joining the class of 2025 clubs that have outperformed expectations, with membership counts 25% ahead of plan. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:08:44The community reaction at all of our recent openings has been nothing short of phenomenal, and we are proud to serve these communities. Our expansion strategy has been a sustained and accelerating success, with clubs opened over the last five years delivering comp performance about three times the chain average. On deck for new club openings are Springfield, Massachusetts; Sumter, South Carolina; Castleberry, Florida; Chattanooga, Tennessee; Selma, North Carolina; and Delray, Florida. That will make 14 new clubs for the year, the most we've had in many years. We remain on track to add 25-30 new clubs in two years, and our pipeline of new clubs is as large as it has ever been. Speaking of our pipeline, we are excited to announce two more 2026 openings in Foley, Alabama, and Mesquite, Texas, as well as a relocation of our club in Rotterdam, New York. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:09:41Mesquite will be our fifth Dallas-Fort Worth club opening in 2026. We've been impressed with the warm welcome we've received as we've introduced the BJ's brand to the market over the past few months, including our Friday Night Lights sponsorships, which was capped off with South Grand Prairie taking home the trophy in the Prairie Bowl sponsored by BJ's Wholesale Club. The enthusiasm we've seen in these new markets has been awesome, and we can't wait to bring the value of BJ's Wholesale Club to Texas families early next year. As I look at our business, I see improving momentum. Our membership is growing in size and quality. We are making improvements in merchandising and continue to capitalize on the convenience of our digital offerings. As I just said, our footprint expansion is accelerating and successful. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:10:27While the short term may be somewhat unpredictable, I'm confident that our company is in an excellent position to deliver value to our members and make good on our commitments to shareholders. We will continue to act with purpose in building our structurally advantaged business for the long term, and you should continue to expect that we will run the business with lifetime value at the core of our actions. Before I turn it over to Laura, I want to thank our team members. Your dedication to serving the families who depend on us and your commitment to supporting one another make BJ's a great place to shop and a truly special place to work. I'm proud of all that we are accomplishing together. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:11:06Thank you, Bob. I'd like to start by recognizing the outstanding efforts of our team members in our clubs, at our club support center, and throughout our distribution network. Your hard work and commitment to serving our members and communities are instrumental in delivering a solid quarter and advancing our long-term growth agenda. Let's look at our third quarter results. Net sales for the quarter were approximately $5.2 billion, growing 4.8% over the prior year. Total comparable club sales in the third quarter, including gas sales, increased 1.1% year over year as the average price of gas declined mid-single digits year over year. Merchandise comp sales, which exclude gas sales, increased by 1.8% year over year and by 5.5% on a two-year stack. We are pleased to grow traffic and units in the quarter. This quarter, we lapped the surge of business brought by last year's port strike. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:12:19At this time last year, we estimated it to have contributed about one point of comp in September. Moving to this year, September was by far the weakest month as we comped the strike, with August and October generally performing in line with our expectations. We believe it may be helpful to evaluate trends on a two-year stack basis to assess the business, and I'll reference this metric in my overview. Our third quarter comp in our grocery, perishables, and sundries division grew 1.8% year over year, with a two-year stack of 6%, showing slight acceleration versus the first half. Our general merchandise and services division comp also increased by 1.8% in the third quarter, with a two-year stack of about 2%, an improvement versus the declines seen in the first half. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:13:21As Bob noted earlier, traffic and market share grew again in this quarter, and we experienced approximately one point of inflation. Digitally enabled comp sales for the third quarter grew 30% year over year and 61% on a two-year stack. Our digital business's performance is an affirmation of the values our members find in the improved and dramatically more convenient shopping experience. We find that the members that engage with us the most digitally and utilize all of our offerings end up being the most valuable members with the highest lifetime value. We will continue to invest in our digital capabilities to gain even more wallet share of our members. Membership fee income, or MFI, grew 9.8% to approximately $126.3 million in the third quarter on strong membership acquisition and retention across the chain. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:14:30We also continue to benefit from the fee increase that went into effect at the beginning of the year. Our underlying member growth remains healthy, and we continue to improve the member mix. Moving on to gross margins, excluding the gasoline business, our merchandise gross margin rate was flat on a year-over-year basis as we continue to invest in our business and in our members, along with execution towards our longer-term objectives. We expect to continue to invest in Q4 and beyond as we lean into our purpose and do the right thing for our members, which will be the right thing for us in the long term. SG&A expenses for the quarter were approximately $788.2 million and deleveraged slightly as a percentage of net sales year over year. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:15:27Adjusting for the legal settlement benefit that we realized last year, SG&A as a percentage of net sales was about flat year over year. We continue to grow comp gallons and gain share in our gas business. Our comp gallons in the quarter grew 2% year over year, a nice improvement versus Q2's flat performance, and again, significantly outpaced the industry, which declined low single digits on a comp basis over the same timeframe. We have been in a much less volatile gas margin environment this year, with profitability just modestly ahead of our expectations in Q3. Our third quarter adjusted EBITDA was down about 2% year over year to $301.4 million, owing largely to lapping the benefit of a legal settlement last year. Adjusting for the settlement, adjusted EBITDA grew approximately 5% year over year on higher top line and strong cost discipline. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:16:40Our third quarter effective tax rate was 26.9%, slightly lower than our statutory rate of approximately 28%. All in, our third quarter adjusted earnings per share of $1.16 decreased approximately 2% year over year due to the legal settlement. Adjusted earnings per share grew approximately 8% year over year, normalizing for the settlement benefit last year. Moving to our balance sheet, we ended the third quarter with total and per club inventory levels down 1.5% and 5% year over year, respectively, while our in-stock levels increased by 90 basis points. Note that we are operating nine more clubs in our chain compared to a year ago. The favorability in our inventory investment continues to be related to reduced inventory buys. I am proud of our team's hard work to stock even more of our merchandise our members want while improving the operating efficiency of our business. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:17:53This is yet another driver of the flywheel with which we can pass along even more savings to our loyal members. Our capitalization strategy remains consistent. We believe profitably growing the business is our best use of cash, and investments to support membership, merchandising, digital, and real estate initiatives will continue to be funded by our cash flows. We ended the third quarter with net leverage of half a turn. Share buybacks are a key component of our capital allocation framework, and in Q3, we took advantage of the lower share price and repurchased approximately 905,000 shares for $87.3 million. As of quarter end, we have approximately $866 million remaining under our recently renewed repurchase authorization. We will continue to take a disciplined and balanced approach to deploying our capital to maximize shareholder value. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:19:03Looking ahead to the remainder of the year, we are confident in the momentum of our business and our ability to deliver sustained growth, especially in an uncertain economic backdrop. Our teams are focused on controlling the controllables while executing towards our long-term objectives. With regards to guidance, and as we have been speaking to on this call, the macro environment is challenging. We have made decisions to be prudent with inventories in the face of this environment, challenging our ability to grow general merchandise sales. We made that choice in order to allow continued investment in member value in the rest of the business. While it will hamper sales in the short term, we remain confident that this was the right decision. With that in mind, we are narrowing our guidance for the full-year merchandise comp sales to a range of 2%-3% for the full year. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:20:08We are also increasing our range of expected adjusted earnings per share to be $4.30-$4.40. The actions we've taken to support stronger, more sustainable growth are working, and our long-term roadmap is solid. With a resilient business model and clear strategic direction, we're well equipped to keep building on our success and deliver substantial value to our shareholders in the years ahead. Bob, back over to you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:20:45Thanks, Laura. As I noted earlier, we are making progress and building momentum. We're elevating the quality of our membership base while it grows. We're curating a stronger, more relevant assortment at prices that reinforce our value promise. Our digital tools are improving member experience, and our expansion strategy is bringing the BJ's model to new, high-potential markets. Looking forward, our commitment doesn't change. We will keep living our purpose and focusing on the people and communities who rely on us every day while executing on the long-term priorities that drive our growth. Thanks again for joining us today and for your support of BJ's Wholesale Club. We will now take your questions. Operator00:21:28Thank you very much. We'd now like to open the lines for the Q&A. If you'd like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. To remove yourself from the line of questioning, it will be star followed by two. As a reminder to raise a question, it will be star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. Our first question comes from Peter Benedict of Baird. Peter, your line's now open. Peter BenedictAnalyst at Baird00:21:52All right, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask about some of the income demographics and the behavior. It sounded like it was relatively stable, and I think we're hearing a lot this week about kind of that lower end facing some struggles. Can you remind us maybe your exposure to maybe the SNAP program? Talk about the renewal rates you're seeing maybe across these income demographics, just anything further below the surface in terms of behavior across income demographics, both in the third quarter and then as you're kind of entering here into the holiday season. Thank you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:22:37Good morning, Pete. Maybe I'll kick this one off, and Laura can add to it if she sees fit. Our prepared remarks tried to tackle this question because we knew it would be out there. Certainly, everybody is concerned about the low-income consumer. The continued inflation provides clear pressure on that segment of all consumers and certainly that segment of our members. With that said, removing the noise from the port strike and the hurricanes and stuff last year, we saw their performance in Q3 as being pretty resilient. Their purchasing habits were very stable, and we're pleased to see that. There certainly was a lot of noise at the end of the quarter and the beginning of the fourth quarter around the SNAP program and the government shutdown. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:23:33I guess I would say there was a slight disruption in the end of Q3, a more meaningful disruption in the opening days of Q4. Now that that program is back on track, we're recovering. Those participants, as they get access to their benefits, are choosing to come to see us as they have more opportunity to spend. We're encouraged by that showing from those members and from the members in the medium and high-income cohorts that we saw during the quarter as well. Maybe one final point. We're also encouraged going forward by the administration's help recently on the tariff front in reducing the cost of things that are not made or grown in the United States. That should be helpful to all consumers, but most pressingly, the low-end consumers that you referenced. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:24:30Yes. Good morning, Pete. I think I'd just add on top of it, from a membership perspective, we're really proud of our continued membership results throughout the year. We are acquiring members in our existing clubs, so comp clubs, in our new markets and our new clubs that we've opened at the beginning of this year. There isn't anything, when we look at the details of membership, to your question about kind of cohorts, that looks different. We're acquiring members across all the cohorts, and so we're really happy with our continued strength from a membership perspective. Peter BenedictAnalyst at Baird00:25:14That's great. Thanks for the perspective. Good luck. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:25:18Thanks, Pete. Operator00:25:20Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Kate McShane from Goldman Sachs. Kate, your line's now open. Kate McShaneAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:25:28Good morning. Thanks for taking our question. We wanted to ask if you believe that the right long-term pace to our sales growth for this business is in the 3-4% range. If so, why, and what do you think is holding you back from achieving this comp over the last several quarters? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:25:51Morning, Kate. As you know, we've been transforming our business over the last several years with the idea of really four things: one, growing and maintaining a stickier membership; two, improving our merchandising; three, improving our convenience through digital; and then finally, increasing our footprint through real estate expansion. As we talked about in the prepared remarks, all those things are heading in the right direction. Certainly, the things that we're doing sometimes conflict with what happens in the outside world. We certainly have the luxury of competing against great competition, and it's certainly been a choppy economic backdrop out there. We have tremendous confidence in our long-term ability to grow this business from a top-line perspective. We're showing signs of that in all four of those pillars, and we'll continue to work on each of those to get to that point. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:26:54The thing that we try hardest to do, obviously, is put the right products on the shelf at the right value. We made tremendous strides, I think, during Q3 to do that. Our merchandising team has put a lot of effort this year into that idea of greater products at greater values, and we made considerable investments in Q3 with that in mind. We will continue to do that because that's what we believe wins. Value and convenience are really what we're after for our members. We will keep plugging. We're very optimistic in our long-term aspirations. Kate McShaneAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:27:38Thank you. If I could just follow up with one question. You just mentioned the competitive environment. We were curious about what the competitive response has been when opening some of these new markets, particularly Dallas, which has a really strong grocery offering and other club offering already. It sounds like things are going well there, but wondered if you had any more details with the fifth store opening. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:28:04Sure. The real estate growth story, and I'll let Bill talk about it since he's the architect of it, is a great one. It's certainly a continuing sustained success and getting even faster with 14 clubs this year in lots of great markets. Those clubs are doing really well, and we are very enthusiastic about this ability to grow our company, and we've been received well in the markets that we've entered. Why don't I let Bill talk a little bit more about it? Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:28:33Yeah. Hey, Kate. Good morning. I think, as Bob mentioned, we're really proud and excited about the success of the new clubs this year thus far and what's left to come for this year. As we look forward into Dallas next year, the prospect of going in and winning in that market is really important to the team. We've talked about it a couple of times on these calls that the culture that we've built around new clubs is really important, and the team's executing at the high level. As we look back at this year so far, I think 2025 will go down as the best class of new clubs as far back as I can remember. Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:29:14With the success we've had with our eight openings to date now and six more to go for the rest of the year, what we're seeing so far in those new clubs that haven't opened yet with pre-opening membership and the engagement of the community, we know that they're going to be outperformers as well. As we take that momentum from this best class of openings into next year into Dallas, combined with the work that we've done in the market of raising awareness for our brand and engaging with the community, we have a ton of confidence that not only will we compete, but we'll be in a position to have great success there. Operator00:29:58Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Robbie Owens from Bank of America. Robbie, your line is now open. Robbie OwensAnalyst at Bank of America00:30:07Oh, hi. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to follow up on the inventory positioning that Laura talked about. I just wanted to understand how you're thinking about that for the fourth quarter. Is it a positioning that sort of limits sales upside but supports margins? Just what's the pluses and minuses of the tight inventory? Semi-related, Fresh 2.0 was a great tailwind and comp driver. The benefits, the tailwind has slowed here. Is there anything that can re-accelerate? Is there a Fresh 3.0 or something like that that's in the works here to kind of get that to re-accelerate? Thanks. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:30:55Yeah. Good morning, Robbie. Maybe I'll take a shot at starting off, and Laura can fill in. I think what you're referencing is Laura's comments around proactively managing our general merchandise inventory. When we were in the beginning part of the year trying to understand where prices would go and costs would go as a result of tariffs, we made some proactive decisions to manage potential markdowns to allow us to fund greater investment in overall value for our members. I think that was the right decision. I think you want us to do that every day. That is really why we're here. We've taken those dollars and, in fact, invested them across the rest of the business. In Q3, significantly reduced pricing on own brands' water, on several other beverages, on some paper products across our produce assortment. We are really trying to balance those two things. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:32:00We do have a more conservative inventory position from a general merchandise perspective. That was true in Q3. It remains true for the fourth quarter. I do think it will limit the upside of the general merchandise business, but again, allow us to continue investing for the overall value for our members. I think the other story with inventory is really an absolutely terrific performance in managing the overall inventory levels of the company. The team has done a really masterful job in the whole business to have our in-stock rates go up 90 basis points into inventories that are down. We are doing a much better job allocating inventory throughout our chain, making sure that things are where they need to be, when they need to be there, and to be in stock for our members every day. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:32:59We need to keep turning that handle and get better and better every day, but I couldn't be more proud of the team to make a performance like that happen. Anything else, Laura, on inventory? No? Fresh 2.0, I think, was another terrific program. It continues to yield benefits. You know that started out in our produce business. We had terrific produce results during the quarter again. What you're seeing from the perishables business overall is some of the reduced benefits from egg inflation and things that are offsetting some of that great performance. With that said, we've talked about the next iteration of Fresh 2.0 and call it what you want, 2.1 or 3.0. We have made another set of considerable improvements in meat and seafood, and we're looking to doing the same in bakery and other categories as we go forward. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:34:02The mission there is the same, right? Our best members interact with us in these categories. If we can show them the greatest product, the freshest product at compelling values, display it in a way that is compelling, train our team members so that they are experts in all these disciplines, we can provide a better experience for our members, get more people into those categories, and grow the overall traffic of the business. That is certainly the result that we saw from Fresh 2.0 in the produce segment. The early returns on meat and seafood are good as well. We are very optimistic about that program and its ability to drive sales within those categories, but also to get to that further bigger goal of driving traffic in the whole business, which obviously drives lifetime value. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:34:53Some of these investments are expensive, but they're very much worth it in terms of driving the top line and the overall value of membership to BJ's. Robbie OwensAnalyst at Bank of America00:35:05Sounds great. Thanks, Bob. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:35:08Thanks, Robbie. Operator00:35:10Thank you very much. As a reminder, if you would like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from Steven Zaccone from Citi. Steven, your line's now open. Steven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at Citi00:35:25Great. Good morning. Thanks very much for taking my question. I wanted to ask about the implied fourth quarter same-store sales, which you referenced in the release that you've also seen some holiday momentum or, excuse me, momentum to start the holiday season. Can you just talk through your category assumptions in the fourth quarter and then how you think about low-end versus high-end of the range? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:35:50Sure. Again, maybe I'll start, and Laura can fill in, Steve. We certainly, I think, had a good performance in the third quarter. I keep using that word resilient, but into the face of the port strike and the hurricane activity and all that stuff, our sales were a bit higher than we thought they might be in the range of outcomes. The team's preparation for the holiday season, I think, has been fantastic. We've been investing in value. We've got incremental promotions out there. We're continuing our really successful free turkey promotion where if you spend $150 in one basket, you can get a free turkey for your family for Christmas. We're doing a lot of these things to really build on the momentum we saw in Q3 and get our members in our clubs and make them happy. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:36:45With that said, it's a choppy economic backdrop out there, right? We've talked about the low-end consumer at this point, and we certainly have a little bit of a harder hill to climb from a comparative perspective. We had a good Q4 last year, but net-net, while it's a wide range of outcomes that can happen in any quarter, most notably the fourth quarter, we are cautiously optimistic about our ability to put up some good numbers in the fourth quarter. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:37:16Yeah. Good morning, Steve. The only thing I might add to all the commentary Bob just said is I'd remind you about our inventory positioning that we've already talked about for general merchandise. We've factored that into the range of outcomes. That doesn't mean that we will be out of stock in general merchandise. It just means that we've tightened up the buys and we've picked the best of the best assortment. We're ready for Thanksgiving, like Bob talked about, and we're ready for our members for holiday kind of as we roll into December. Steven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at Citi00:38:01Okay. Thanks. The follow-up I have then is on that general merchandise. When we think about the inventory planning assumptions and maybe just talk about the buying environment, how does that look for the first half of next year, right? You made changes to the second half, presumably based on tariff uncertainty. How does that apply to general merchandise plans as we kind of glance into 2026? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:38:27Yeah. Look, I don't want to get too far over our skis and talk about next year, but obviously, the fourth quarter seasonal merchandise was bought in the spring when there was considerably more uncertainty around what the tariff exposures might be and what the consumer's response might be to any increase in prices. Every quarter we go through, we get more and more clarity, and we get more information from our members as well. We obviously alter our buys accordingly. I guess the other thing I would say is Q4 typically is a higher general merchandise penetration and obviously lower in the first quarter. This question becomes a little bit less important as we get into the beginning of the year. Steven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at Citi00:39:16Okay. Thanks very much. Operator00:39:21Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Mike Baker from D.A. Davidson. Mike, your line is now open. Mike BakerManaging Director and Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:39:29Okay. Thanks. Hate to focus on the short-term so myopically, but the guidance, your fourth quarter implied guidance to me, I'm calculating around 2-2.5, something in that range. Correct me if I'm wrong on that. It was at the midpoint of the outlook. If you are in that range, that's a pretty big pickup on a two-year basis against the 4.6 last year. Given all the caution you're talking about, can you square that, or is it more reasonable to think about maybe the low end of the implied fourth quarter guidance, in other words, consistent on a two-year basis? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:40:13Morning, Mike. Look, let's just focus on the fact that we're cautiously optimistic, as I said earlier. We've done a lot of planning, a lot of action around providing our members the right products at the right value. We talked about incremental promotion and building into that. We're certainly where we need to be from a digital perspective. People are loving interacting with our digital properties to get what they need from a convenience perspective. We are trying to act within our purpose and take care of the families that depend on us. That is all those things, right? Getting the products on the shelf. We're doing a fantastic job doing that in an improved way, putting sharper prices on things, which we, again, had considerable improvements in during the quarter, and really trying to take care of all the different communities within our membership. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:41:22We talked a little bit in our prepared remarks about our team members. Maybe I'd take one minute to thank those team members out there every day taking care of our members. They have the hardest job in our company. Guys, I'd really like to thank you for all your efforts. We initiated, for the first time in our company's history, a 10% discount for our team members to really say thank you, to acknowledge that it's tough out there for everybody, and to help our team members through their holiday season purchasing as well. I think we have a lot to be proud of. I think we have some momentum coming out of the quarter. The early days of Q4 have been reflective of that momentum, but we understand that there's a lot of road to go throughout the quarter. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:42:11We're only a couple of weeks in. This weekend and next week are huge for the quarter, as are the remaining weeks in December. We feel like we're in a good spot, but it's very, very early. That thought process really is what drove us to have the guidance that we put out there. Mike BakerManaging Director and Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:42:32Okay. Great. Fair enough. I'll keep it to the one question. Thank you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:42:37Thanks, Mike. Operator00:42:39Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Ed Kelly from Wells Fargo. Ed, your line is now open. 00:42:47Hey, good morning. This is John Park on for Ed. Thanks for taking our question. It sounds like the messaging is that you've been investing in price, but I guess merch margins were flat. What are some of the offsets in gross margins that helps you get there? Anything on Q4 merch margins and how we should think about that? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:43:07Morning, John. We certainly have invested. We widened our price gaps in Q3 considerably with those investments versus competition. I'd like to say thanks to our merchandising team for making those moves. It's important to our company, important to our members for sure. We have many different levers to offset that throughout the business, not just within the margin construct. We will try and be as efficient as possible throughout the business to fund investments in member value. Certainly, some of the offsets that you might think about within the merchandising world would be being more efficient in the distribution centers, trying to be more efficient from a trans perspective, growing our retail media program, which has been growing very, very nicely. The team's doing a great job there. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:44:07There are many different things that we've tried to do so we can pass more value back to our members, and we'll continue to do that. 00:44:19Got it. Great. Thanks a lot. Best of luck. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:44:22Thanks, John. Operator00:44:25Thank you very much. As a reminder, if you would like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, to raise a question will be star followed by one. Our next question comes from Simeon Gutman from Morgan Stanley. Simeon, your line's now open. 00:44:43Good morning. This is Pedro Gale on for Simeon. Thank you for taking our question. Nice job continuing to grow your digital business. Really impressive. Could you comment on the work you're doing in retail media there? Also, more broadly, we've heard some of your peers recently announcing partnerships in agentic commerce. Could you give us an update on how you're thinking about the AI opportunity in e-commerce? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:45:13Laura, good morning. As we've talked about, our digital business is an important part of our strategy. It has been growing by leaps and bounds for years now. 30% during the quarter, over 60% in a two-year stack. It is approaching 17% of our sales at this point. We are at a point that, frankly, a few of us didn't think we'd ever get to. We have a lot to be proud of there. It all comes on the back of convenience. We have an incredibly talented digital team that builds these capabilities for our members to help them get access to tremendous value in a more convenient way than they otherwise might. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:45:58Most of our business, as you know, is in what we call BOPIC, Buy Online, Pick Up in Club, as well as same-day delivery, as well as Express Pay, where you check out in the club using your phone. Well over 90% of our total digital sales are fulfilled by our clubs. We are efficiently building this business. It is certainly a money-making opportunity for us. We are really pleased with the way that it's growing. Included in there is our retail media program that you referenced, and I talked a bit about it a few seconds ago. While still small, our team has been growing that quite nicely as we improve our website, as we improve the way that we partner out there with our advertisers, the way that we really coordinate between our different properties, whether it's our website or our app. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:47:01We are coming up with more ways to engage our members and allow our advertising partners to reach our members with compelling values that, first and foremost, help our members, but also help us and our advertising partners. We will continue to invest in that business in the future. Again, it's still small, but it is growing quite nicely and allows us to make other investments in member value as we go forward. Everyone talks about AI. We are no different. AI is a big part of our future. It is most notably used in our digital group at this point. The use cases would not surprise you. They were on the vanguard of using it to make coding more efficient, making testing code more efficient. They will continue to use AI in consumer-facing avenues as well. I'll give you a couple of examples. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:48:11We talked about in the prepared remarks. We've got beta-launched AI shopping assistants and are using AI to do predictive shopping lists for folks. Probably the thing that's most well along, however, is partnering AI with the robotics that we have in our stores. We have a robot that roams our stores named Tally. Initially, Tally was just helping us with inventory accuracy and price sign accuracy. Now we have taken that much farther where Tally's imagery creates a digital twin of each of our buildings, something that we've never had before because our buildings don't have warehouse management systems. That has enabled really cool things from an operational perspective where not only are we getting better inventories and better price signing accuracy, but we are efficiently spotting problems for our team members to take care of. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:49:11We are efficiently generating to-do lists for our team members in the clubs, finding inventory, what needs more inventory, what should they be doing first within the building. We're using it to really help us spot quality issues in our fresh businesses as well so we can make sure that our standards there are tip-top every day. We're finding new ways to use Tally and the data that it provides every day. I think the thing that's been most effective so far has been using those digital twins to predict the most efficient pick paths for our team members to pick orders for BOPIC or curbside or same-day, where they are about 40% more efficient today than they were before. We'll continue to build on the use of AI. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:50:11We'll continue to focus on long-term investments that really will allow us to continue our mission, which is to offer our folks the best products at the best prices. Probably the next thing up from a robotics and AI perspective will be our automated distribution center in Ohio that will go live next year. That will be, when it gets going, far more efficient than a traditional distribution center and will operate almost entirely in a robotic fashion. It will be fun to see that. I've been out there to see it recently, and I can't wait to see it with all the machinery going in there to see how it works. It is all in the same spirit of providing even greater value for our members. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:50:59Pedro, I'd just add all that commentary that Bob just said about Tally and the robotics we have in our club. There's a close tie to that with the work that our planning and allocation teams are doing that we already spoke about in our prepared remarks. That is producing our in-stock levels that have improved kind of year over year. There is a tie beyond some of the digital efforts into how we're putting product on our shelves and how our teams internally are using the data from Tally as well. Pedro GaleAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:51:44Awesome. Fantastic. Thank you for that. As a follow-up, if I could ask you, if you could comment on the competitive environment, you had nice improvement in merch margin in the first half, a little more even this quarter. To the extent that you can comment, and I totally get it, it's still early, how should we think about the level of investments next year? Are there any particular areas within grocery or gen merch that you're looking to prioritize? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:52:17Look, I do not want to talk too much about next year, but I would just echo the comments that I have already made around the fact that our job is to provide our members great value every day. We have made considerable investments all year in doing so, and I have been pretty creative to find ways to fund it. Having the merch margin results that we had in Q3 while making the investments that we made was a good result. I would anticipate further investment going forward as the competitive environment out there is, I think, consistent, but it is consistently competitive. We need to continue to do our jobs to reward our members for their faith in us and the membership fees that they pay. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:53:03We will continue to try and ride that balance between margin and value, but we will always err on the side of value to try and operate the business for the long term. Pedro GaleAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:53:18Okay. Great. Thank you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:53:21You bet. Operator00:53:23Thank you very much. As a reminder, if you would like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from Chuck Grom from Gordon Haskett. Chuck, your line's now open. Chuck GromAnalyst at Gordon Haskett00:53:36Hey, good morning, guys. On the margin front, just to move down the P&L a little bit, your SG&A per square foot levels have been really tight, which is good, but your peers are up a lot, suggesting maybe some investment in technology in other areas. I guess my question is, how sustainable do you think maintaining that SG&A per square foot at that level over the next couple of years, particularly as you move into Texas? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:54:03Yeah, it's a good question, Chuck. Good morning. Our teams have done a good job over time being very efficient with our buildings, making sure that they're in good shape. They're in far better shape today than they were five years ago. With that said, we need to continue to do that and maybe even accelerate it. I think one of the things that we're seeing out there is our competitors getting sharper with their boxes. We will have to continue to do that, not just because of the competitive environment, but we want to show our members the best box we can every day. I would imagine we'll spend some capital going forward remodeling our boxes. We will obviously continue to spend into our new club pipeline as well. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:54:52We will do that as efficiently as we can, obviously with an eye for the long term. Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:54:58Yeah. Hey, Chuck, I'll just tack on to that as well. In addition to our existing clubs, for the first time ever, we've really started to build a relocation program for some of our older clubs as well. We had great success with our recent relocation in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. We announced this morning that we're going to relocate Rotterdam next year. It's not just an eye to our existing clubs, but also to the long-term future of these strong markets where we may have buildings that are a little bit on the older side. We're taking the opportunity to invest into the future there as well. Chuck GromAnalyst at Gordon Haskett00:55:35Gotcha. Great. Thanks. Then on general merchandise, right, up 1.8% on the stacks, much better than the front half of the year, even with limiting inventory. You talked a little bit about the category improvement. I guess, what do you think it's going to take to get home and seasonal to catch up to CE and apparel and other areas? I guess anything that you guys are excited about as we walk stores over the next couple of months into the holidays. Thanks. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:56:03Yeah. Sure. Maybe I'll start, and you guys can pick up. Look, I think we've done some great things from a general merchandise perspective. As we talked about, we had a strong showing in Q3 from a consumer electronics perspective and from an apparel perspective. Consumer electronics has been a hallmark of GM for a while. It's always been a pretty good business for us. It gets better. We have very talented merchants in that group. Our apparel team has done a great job over the past few years, really making sure that we simplify our assortment and bring in better brands, put great value out in front of our members every day. We need to continue to do those things, right? We might need to simplify our assortment a bit more. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:56:54We need to continue to put great brands out there and put fantastic values on there as well. We need to apply those same lessons to the rest of the business. We are actively at work on those things. We've seen some green shoots in previous quarters. We've talked about those with you, like toys and some of our gifting in previous quarters. I like our toy assortment this year as well. I'm excited about the way our gifting looks in the front of our clubs as well. We need to have more sustained transformation in home and in seasonal going forward. These are probably the toughest categories, particularly the seasonal categories, maybe in the building, but certainly among the GM categories. These are really tough categories. You need to be right on trend. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:57:49You need to be right on style, on color, on price point, all sorts of different things. While we've made strides, we're not done. We're not satisfied with where we are. We need to continue to turn the crank and get better going forward. We were under no illusions that renovating general merchandise would be easy or short in tenure. We've had nice success in the past, and we need to keep investing in that business because it is such an important part of the wholesale club model where it provides that treasure hunt, that emotional connection, those cool wow items that are so important to driving incremental trips. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:58:38Quite honestly, that question around membership renewal is not only tightly linked with the grocery business, but it is really tightly linked with our general merchandise business when you can have more opportunity to save your entire membership fee in one purchase rather than stacking up just good values on smaller ring items. You can save a couple of hundred bucks on a television or a mattress or a great seasonal item. That becomes a really important part of our overall long-term growth of our company. Let me see if the guys want to pile on. No? All right. We are happy with our GM so far. We have got to get better, and we will continue to work at it. Chuck GromAnalyst at Gordon Haskett00:59:25Great. Thanks a lot. Have a nice game. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:59:28You too. Thank you. Operator00:59:30Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Rupesh Parikh from Oppenheimer. Rupesh, your line is now open. Rupesh ParikhAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:59:37Good morning. Thanks for fitting me in. Just going back to your commentary about 2025 clubs, the membership counts 25% ahead of plan. What do you think is contributing to that significant outperformance? Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:59:50Hey, Rupesh, still. Yeah, I always come back to the success with the new club program comes back to the culture that the team's built. I think I've mentioned this a couple of times on previous calls that everyone that is involved with the new club program internally is fully engaged and fully bought in and wants to see us be successful. We started this program way back in 2016, and the reps that we've built along the way, we talked about the goal of making the next opening the best opening in the history of the company. Opening a new club where you have to build up, especially in a new market, a membership base entirely from scratch is not easy to do. It takes a lot of practice and a lot of learnings to do it right. Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club01:00:42We're executing at a higher level than we've ever executed. As we think about going into the Dallas-Fort Worth market next year, as well as all the other markets, a market like Foley, Alabama, that we announced this morning is a really cool, unique market, and we're going to be really excited to be there. We wouldn't be able to do that. We wouldn't have the confidence to do that without all the success that we've built up to this point. Like I said, we're really pleased with what we've done here in 2025. It really has been probably the best class that we've ever opened, at least as far as I've been here. It gives us a lot of confidence going forward. More to come, but excited about what we've accomplished. Rupesh ParikhAnalyst at Oppenheimer01:01:26Great. Thank you. I'll pass along. Operator01:01:30Thank you very much. This marks the end of the Q&A session. I'd like to hand back to Bob Eddy for any closing remarks. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club01:01:38Great. Thanks, Carly. Thanks, everybody, for your attention this morning, for your thoughtful questions, for your interaction, your support of our company. I wish you all a happy Thanksgiving, and we'll talk to you at the end of the fourth quarter. Thanks so much. Operator01:01:51As we conclude today's call, we'd like to thank everyone for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAng SinghVP FP&ABill WernerExecutive VPBob EddyChairman and CEOLaura FeliceCFOAnalystsChuck GromAnalyst at Gordon HaskettKate McShaneAnalyst at Goldman SachsMike BakerManaging Director and Senior Research Analyst at D.A. DavidsonPedro GaleAnalyst at Morgan StanleyPeter BenedictAnalyst at BairdRobbie OwensAnalyst at Bank of AmericaRupesh ParikhAnalyst at OppenheimerSteven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at CitiPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) BJ's Wholesale Club Earnings HeadlinesBJ's Wholesale Club (NYSE:BJ) Shares Gap Down - Should You Sell?May 24 at 5:15 AM | americanbankingnews.comBJ’s Wholesale Club expanding in Florida with 3 new locationsMay 23 at 7:19 PM | yahoo.com$30 stock to buy before Starlink goes public (WATCH NOW!)A little-known stock pick with money-doubling potential over the next year is revealed for free in the first three minutes of a new video. This company is a critical piece of Elon Musk's fast-growing Starlink technology. It could climb 100 percent or more over the next year as Elon brings Starlink public in what may be the biggest IPO in history. No credit card is required to get the ticker.May 25 at 1:00 AM | Paradigm Press (Ad)BJ's Competitive Gas Stations Drew Traffic in 'Record' Numbers in 1Q -- OPISMay 22 at 11:37 PM | marketwatch.comBJ's Wholesale Club posts earnings beat as cheap gas powers salesMay 22 at 11:37 PM | finance.yahoo.comBJ's Wholesale Club: After Q1, The Hold Case Still Makes SenseMay 22 at 3:01 PM | seekingalpha.comSee More BJ's Wholesale Club Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like BJ's Wholesale Club? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on BJ's Wholesale Club and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About BJ's Wholesale ClubBJ’s Wholesale Club, headquartered in Westborough, Massachusetts, is a membership-based warehouse retailer offering a wide range of products and services primarily to small businesses and individual consumers. The company operates large-format clubs that provide value-priced groceries, health and beauty products, electronics, home goods, furniture, seasonal items and automotive supplies. In addition to its in-club offerings, BJ’s features fuel stations at many locations and operates an e-commerce platform for online ordering and home delivery. Founded in 1984 as a division of Zayre Corp., BJ’s Wholesale Club quickly expanded throughout the Northeastern United States. After Zayre’s retail operations were sold in 1988, BJ’s became part of The TJX Companies and continued building its footprint in key metropolitan markets along the East Coast. The company completed a spinoff from TJX in 1997, becoming an independent, publicly traded entity. Today, BJ’s serves members across 17 states, with the highest concentration of clubs in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions and select locations in Florida and other southeastern states. Each club typically spans over 100,000 square feet, combining self-service aisles with club-size packaging and exclusive private-label brands. The company’s digital channel complements its brick-and-mortar clubs by offering everyday essentials, bulk items and special-order products for home delivery or in-club pickup. BJ’s leadership team is comprised of seasoned retail and supply chain professionals focused on member value and operational efficiency. The company emphasizes a differentiated membership model, strategic partnerships with national and local vendors, and investments in technology to enhance the shopping experience and streamline distribution. Through its network of clubs and omni-channel capabilities, BJ’s Wholesale Club aims to deliver a compelling value proposition for both business and household members.View BJ's Wholesale Club ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Ross Stores Earnings Beat Sends Stock To New HighsWas Decker’s Double Beat a Bullish Signal—Or Mere HOKA’s-Pocus?Workday Validates AI Flywheel: Stock Price Recovery BeginsApparel Earnings Winners and Losers: Ralph Lauren Takes OffWhy Walmart, Target and TJX Got Such Different Reactions After EarningsThe Careful Consumer: What Q1 Earnings Reveal—And Where Cracks May AppearOverextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back Half Upcoming Earnings AutoZone (5/26/2026)Marvell Technology (5/27/2026)PDD (5/27/2026)Synopsys (5/27/2026)Bank Of Montreal (5/27/2026)Bank of Nova Scotia (5/27/2026)Salesforce (5/27/2026)Snowflake (5/27/2026)Autodesk (5/28/2026)Costco Wholesale (5/28/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Hello and welcome to BJ's Wholesale Club third quarter fiscal 2024-2025 earnings conference call. After the company's remarks, there'll be a question-and-answer session. In fairness to all participants today, we ask you to limit yourself to one question and return to the queue with any additional questions. I'm now going to pass the call over to our host, Ang Singh, VP of FP&A. Please go ahead. Ang SinghVP FP&A at BJ's Wholesale Club00:00:23Good morning and welcome to BJ's third quarter fiscal 2025 earnings call. Joining me today are Bob Eddy, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Laura Felice, Chief Financial Officer; and Bill Werner, Executive Vice President, Strategy and Development. Please remember that we may make forward-looking statements on this call that are based on our current expectations. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that can cause actual results to differ materially from what we say on this call. Please see the risk factors sections of our most recent SEC filings for a description of these risks and uncertainties. Please also refer to today's press release and latest investor presentation posted on our investor relations website for a cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements and non-GAAP reconciliations. Now I'll turn the call over to Bob. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:01:20Good morning. Thank you for joining us to discuss our third quarter results. Our business delivered strong results in Q3 and performed well in an incredibly dynamic environment. Once again, we gained share and grew traffic, marking the 12th consecutive quarter of market share growth and the 15th consecutive quarter of traffic growth. These consistent results are a testament to the value that we provide to our members each day, as we are guided by our purpose of taking care of the families who depend on us. This purpose has never been more relevant, as many of our members are dealing with a considerable level of unpredictability in their everyday lives. This has impacted consumer confidence, which has been at low levels for much of this year, and we are taking these conditions as a call to action to lean even further into value for our members' everyday needs. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:02:12Some of our actions include incremental offers to those members that may need a little bit more help in the current environment. In addition, we're rolling out reduced delivery fees to make our most convenient shopping channel even more accessible. The combination of value and convenience is a powerful unlock for us, and this will help our members realize even more value from their BJ's membership. We've also launched a 10% discount for our team members as a way of thanking those who are on the front lines living our purpose every day. For the quarter, we delivered merchandise comparable comp sales growth of 1.8% and adjusted earnings per share of $1.16. It's helpful to evaluate the performance on the two-year stack basis to normalize for the impact of last year's port strike and hurricane activity. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:03:02Our two-year stack comp was 5.5%, an acceleration of nearly a point versus the first half. Our Q3 comp performance was evenly balanced across our two reportable divisions. Our perishables, grocery, and sundries division grew comp sales by 1.8%, with a two-year stack that accelerated sequentially to 6%. The investments we've made in both Fresh 2.0 and our category management process have driven continued share gains across our consumables franchise. We saw the most strength in perishable categories such as fresh meat, dairy, and produce, aided by our Fresh 2.0 investments. We also saw strength in non-alcoholic beverages and candy and snacking, driven by enhanced assortment and more prominent placement in our clubs. Our general merchandise and services business also grew by 1.8% on a comp basis in the quarter. Consumer electronics comped in the high single digits on success in computer equipment and tablets. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:04:04Apparel, which we've highlighted on several recent calls, continues to grow, comping in the low single digits. The offsets we saw this quarter were in home and seasonal, which continued to be impacted by lower discretionary demand and consumer confidence, as well as some of the decisions we made earlier this year to tighten our inventories in light of the anticipated impact of tariffs. Our services business also contributed to the improved performance in this division during the quarter. Looking at the behavior of our membership base this quarter, we continued to see members across all income levels remain cautious, which tracks with what we broadly see in the consumer confidence data. We saw members exhibiting value-seeking behavior, including higher sensitivity to promotions, increasing purchasing of private label items, and some trade down. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:04:58For example, given the high price of beef, we saw higher purchasing of ground beef versus more expensive cuts. Despite this type of behavior, member trends exhibited stability quarter over quarter across all cohorts when adjusting for the noise from the port strike. While value-sensitive members remain more exposed to the macro backdrop, we did not see any incremental pullback from them. That resilience reinforces BJ's position as a trusted destination for strong value and convenience when it matters most. The environment continues to move quickly, but our teams have not lost sight of the fundamentals. By zeroing in on our controllables, they are advancing our strategic agenda, increasing member stickiness, making our clubs better places to shop, expanding convenience, and growing our physical footprint. These elements are central to creating value over time, and we built further momentum in each this quarter. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:05:57I'll now provide an update on how those pieces are evolving. Our membership results continue to be robust, and we grew membership fee income by nearly 10% this quarter, driven by strong member counts, mixed benefits, and the effects of our recent fee increase. We expect the growth rate to show further improvement into the fourth quarter and to once again deliver a 90% tenured renewal rate for the full year. The core of our membership health is driven by growing the number of members as well as improving the mix of those members. In the third quarter, our higher-tier membership penetration reached another new record, improving by 50 basis points sequentially, and we continue to see more opportunity to push here. We would not be able to deliver sustainable membership growth without parallel improvements in our merchandising. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:06:49We are launching many new own-brands products, which are aimed at improving the member experience by offering excellent quality at an unbeatable price. Some of the products we are excited about include Wellesley Farms-branded tortilla and potato chips, protein shakes, frozen poultry, and coffee pods. This is just a small list of many new high-quality products that we plan to launch at amazing price points. Own-brands products have a multitude of benefits, as they are typically priced about 30% below national brands while offering comparable quality of national-branded items. This gives our members even more compelling value for their hard-earned dollars, which in turn drives loyalty and higher lifetime value. Own-brands products also deliver higher penny profit for us, which we can use to invest back into the member experience, further propelling the flywheel that drives our business. We're excited to see how our customers respond to our improved offerings. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:07:47Our efforts to continue to improve the convenience of shopping our clubs can be seen in the digital growth of 30% this quarter and 61% on a two-year stack basis, driven by strength in BOPIC, same-day delivery, and Express Pay. We're looking to further drive innovation by utilizing AI to deliver enhanced content, highlights, and attributes, making shopping even easier for our members. We also recently beta-launched an AI shopping assistant and personalized member shopping lists, and we're looking forward to taking these live to our members soon. Last but not least, our new club footprint expansion. We opened our club in Warner Robins, Georgia, during Q3, and just last week, we opened our fifth Tennessee club in Smyrna. I'm pleased to report that both clubs are off to a great start, joining the class of 2025 clubs that have outperformed expectations, with membership counts 25% ahead of plan. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:08:44The community reaction at all of our recent openings has been nothing short of phenomenal, and we are proud to serve these communities. Our expansion strategy has been a sustained and accelerating success, with clubs opened over the last five years delivering comp performance about three times the chain average. On deck for new club openings are Springfield, Massachusetts; Sumter, South Carolina; Castleberry, Florida; Chattanooga, Tennessee; Selma, North Carolina; and Delray, Florida. That will make 14 new clubs for the year, the most we've had in many years. We remain on track to add 25-30 new clubs in two years, and our pipeline of new clubs is as large as it has ever been. Speaking of our pipeline, we are excited to announce two more 2026 openings in Foley, Alabama, and Mesquite, Texas, as well as a relocation of our club in Rotterdam, New York. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:09:41Mesquite will be our fifth Dallas-Fort Worth club opening in 2026. We've been impressed with the warm welcome we've received as we've introduced the BJ's brand to the market over the past few months, including our Friday Night Lights sponsorships, which was capped off with South Grand Prairie taking home the trophy in the Prairie Bowl sponsored by BJ's Wholesale Club. The enthusiasm we've seen in these new markets has been awesome, and we can't wait to bring the value of BJ's Wholesale Club to Texas families early next year. As I look at our business, I see improving momentum. Our membership is growing in size and quality. We are making improvements in merchandising and continue to capitalize on the convenience of our digital offerings. As I just said, our footprint expansion is accelerating and successful. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:10:27While the short term may be somewhat unpredictable, I'm confident that our company is in an excellent position to deliver value to our members and make good on our commitments to shareholders. We will continue to act with purpose in building our structurally advantaged business for the long term, and you should continue to expect that we will run the business with lifetime value at the core of our actions. Before I turn it over to Laura, I want to thank our team members. Your dedication to serving the families who depend on us and your commitment to supporting one another make BJ's a great place to shop and a truly special place to work. I'm proud of all that we are accomplishing together. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:11:06Thank you, Bob. I'd like to start by recognizing the outstanding efforts of our team members in our clubs, at our club support center, and throughout our distribution network. Your hard work and commitment to serving our members and communities are instrumental in delivering a solid quarter and advancing our long-term growth agenda. Let's look at our third quarter results. Net sales for the quarter were approximately $5.2 billion, growing 4.8% over the prior year. Total comparable club sales in the third quarter, including gas sales, increased 1.1% year over year as the average price of gas declined mid-single digits year over year. Merchandise comp sales, which exclude gas sales, increased by 1.8% year over year and by 5.5% on a two-year stack. We are pleased to grow traffic and units in the quarter. This quarter, we lapped the surge of business brought by last year's port strike. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:12:19At this time last year, we estimated it to have contributed about one point of comp in September. Moving to this year, September was by far the weakest month as we comped the strike, with August and October generally performing in line with our expectations. We believe it may be helpful to evaluate trends on a two-year stack basis to assess the business, and I'll reference this metric in my overview. Our third quarter comp in our grocery, perishables, and sundries division grew 1.8% year over year, with a two-year stack of 6%, showing slight acceleration versus the first half. Our general merchandise and services division comp also increased by 1.8% in the third quarter, with a two-year stack of about 2%, an improvement versus the declines seen in the first half. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:13:21As Bob noted earlier, traffic and market share grew again in this quarter, and we experienced approximately one point of inflation. Digitally enabled comp sales for the third quarter grew 30% year over year and 61% on a two-year stack. Our digital business's performance is an affirmation of the values our members find in the improved and dramatically more convenient shopping experience. We find that the members that engage with us the most digitally and utilize all of our offerings end up being the most valuable members with the highest lifetime value. We will continue to invest in our digital capabilities to gain even more wallet share of our members. Membership fee income, or MFI, grew 9.8% to approximately $126.3 million in the third quarter on strong membership acquisition and retention across the chain. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:14:30We also continue to benefit from the fee increase that went into effect at the beginning of the year. Our underlying member growth remains healthy, and we continue to improve the member mix. Moving on to gross margins, excluding the gasoline business, our merchandise gross margin rate was flat on a year-over-year basis as we continue to invest in our business and in our members, along with execution towards our longer-term objectives. We expect to continue to invest in Q4 and beyond as we lean into our purpose and do the right thing for our members, which will be the right thing for us in the long term. SG&A expenses for the quarter were approximately $788.2 million and deleveraged slightly as a percentage of net sales year over year. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:15:27Adjusting for the legal settlement benefit that we realized last year, SG&A as a percentage of net sales was about flat year over year. We continue to grow comp gallons and gain share in our gas business. Our comp gallons in the quarter grew 2% year over year, a nice improvement versus Q2's flat performance, and again, significantly outpaced the industry, which declined low single digits on a comp basis over the same timeframe. We have been in a much less volatile gas margin environment this year, with profitability just modestly ahead of our expectations in Q3. Our third quarter adjusted EBITDA was down about 2% year over year to $301.4 million, owing largely to lapping the benefit of a legal settlement last year. Adjusting for the settlement, adjusted EBITDA grew approximately 5% year over year on higher top line and strong cost discipline. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:16:40Our third quarter effective tax rate was 26.9%, slightly lower than our statutory rate of approximately 28%. All in, our third quarter adjusted earnings per share of $1.16 decreased approximately 2% year over year due to the legal settlement. Adjusted earnings per share grew approximately 8% year over year, normalizing for the settlement benefit last year. Moving to our balance sheet, we ended the third quarter with total and per club inventory levels down 1.5% and 5% year over year, respectively, while our in-stock levels increased by 90 basis points. Note that we are operating nine more clubs in our chain compared to a year ago. The favorability in our inventory investment continues to be related to reduced inventory buys. I am proud of our team's hard work to stock even more of our merchandise our members want while improving the operating efficiency of our business. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:17:53This is yet another driver of the flywheel with which we can pass along even more savings to our loyal members. Our capitalization strategy remains consistent. We believe profitably growing the business is our best use of cash, and investments to support membership, merchandising, digital, and real estate initiatives will continue to be funded by our cash flows. We ended the third quarter with net leverage of half a turn. Share buybacks are a key component of our capital allocation framework, and in Q3, we took advantage of the lower share price and repurchased approximately 905,000 shares for $87.3 million. As of quarter end, we have approximately $866 million remaining under our recently renewed repurchase authorization. We will continue to take a disciplined and balanced approach to deploying our capital to maximize shareholder value. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:19:03Looking ahead to the remainder of the year, we are confident in the momentum of our business and our ability to deliver sustained growth, especially in an uncertain economic backdrop. Our teams are focused on controlling the controllables while executing towards our long-term objectives. With regards to guidance, and as we have been speaking to on this call, the macro environment is challenging. We have made decisions to be prudent with inventories in the face of this environment, challenging our ability to grow general merchandise sales. We made that choice in order to allow continued investment in member value in the rest of the business. While it will hamper sales in the short term, we remain confident that this was the right decision. With that in mind, we are narrowing our guidance for the full-year merchandise comp sales to a range of 2%-3% for the full year. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:20:08We are also increasing our range of expected adjusted earnings per share to be $4.30-$4.40. The actions we've taken to support stronger, more sustainable growth are working, and our long-term roadmap is solid. With a resilient business model and clear strategic direction, we're well equipped to keep building on our success and deliver substantial value to our shareholders in the years ahead. Bob, back over to you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:20:45Thanks, Laura. As I noted earlier, we are making progress and building momentum. We're elevating the quality of our membership base while it grows. We're curating a stronger, more relevant assortment at prices that reinforce our value promise. Our digital tools are improving member experience, and our expansion strategy is bringing the BJ's model to new, high-potential markets. Looking forward, our commitment doesn't change. We will keep living our purpose and focusing on the people and communities who rely on us every day while executing on the long-term priorities that drive our growth. Thanks again for joining us today and for your support of BJ's Wholesale Club. We will now take your questions. Operator00:21:28Thank you very much. We'd now like to open the lines for the Q&A. If you'd like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. To remove yourself from the line of questioning, it will be star followed by two. As a reminder to raise a question, it will be star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. Our first question comes from Peter Benedict of Baird. Peter, your line's now open. Peter BenedictAnalyst at Baird00:21:52All right, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask about some of the income demographics and the behavior. It sounded like it was relatively stable, and I think we're hearing a lot this week about kind of that lower end facing some struggles. Can you remind us maybe your exposure to maybe the SNAP program? Talk about the renewal rates you're seeing maybe across these income demographics, just anything further below the surface in terms of behavior across income demographics, both in the third quarter and then as you're kind of entering here into the holiday season. Thank you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:22:37Good morning, Pete. Maybe I'll kick this one off, and Laura can add to it if she sees fit. Our prepared remarks tried to tackle this question because we knew it would be out there. Certainly, everybody is concerned about the low-income consumer. The continued inflation provides clear pressure on that segment of all consumers and certainly that segment of our members. With that said, removing the noise from the port strike and the hurricanes and stuff last year, we saw their performance in Q3 as being pretty resilient. Their purchasing habits were very stable, and we're pleased to see that. There certainly was a lot of noise at the end of the quarter and the beginning of the fourth quarter around the SNAP program and the government shutdown. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:23:33I guess I would say there was a slight disruption in the end of Q3, a more meaningful disruption in the opening days of Q4. Now that that program is back on track, we're recovering. Those participants, as they get access to their benefits, are choosing to come to see us as they have more opportunity to spend. We're encouraged by that showing from those members and from the members in the medium and high-income cohorts that we saw during the quarter as well. Maybe one final point. We're also encouraged going forward by the administration's help recently on the tariff front in reducing the cost of things that are not made or grown in the United States. That should be helpful to all consumers, but most pressingly, the low-end consumers that you referenced. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:24:30Yes. Good morning, Pete. I think I'd just add on top of it, from a membership perspective, we're really proud of our continued membership results throughout the year. We are acquiring members in our existing clubs, so comp clubs, in our new markets and our new clubs that we've opened at the beginning of this year. There isn't anything, when we look at the details of membership, to your question about kind of cohorts, that looks different. We're acquiring members across all the cohorts, and so we're really happy with our continued strength from a membership perspective. Peter BenedictAnalyst at Baird00:25:14That's great. Thanks for the perspective. Good luck. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:25:18Thanks, Pete. Operator00:25:20Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Kate McShane from Goldman Sachs. Kate, your line's now open. Kate McShaneAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:25:28Good morning. Thanks for taking our question. We wanted to ask if you believe that the right long-term pace to our sales growth for this business is in the 3-4% range. If so, why, and what do you think is holding you back from achieving this comp over the last several quarters? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:25:51Morning, Kate. As you know, we've been transforming our business over the last several years with the idea of really four things: one, growing and maintaining a stickier membership; two, improving our merchandising; three, improving our convenience through digital; and then finally, increasing our footprint through real estate expansion. As we talked about in the prepared remarks, all those things are heading in the right direction. Certainly, the things that we're doing sometimes conflict with what happens in the outside world. We certainly have the luxury of competing against great competition, and it's certainly been a choppy economic backdrop out there. We have tremendous confidence in our long-term ability to grow this business from a top-line perspective. We're showing signs of that in all four of those pillars, and we'll continue to work on each of those to get to that point. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:26:54The thing that we try hardest to do, obviously, is put the right products on the shelf at the right value. We made tremendous strides, I think, during Q3 to do that. Our merchandising team has put a lot of effort this year into that idea of greater products at greater values, and we made considerable investments in Q3 with that in mind. We will continue to do that because that's what we believe wins. Value and convenience are really what we're after for our members. We will keep plugging. We're very optimistic in our long-term aspirations. Kate McShaneAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:27:38Thank you. If I could just follow up with one question. You just mentioned the competitive environment. We were curious about what the competitive response has been when opening some of these new markets, particularly Dallas, which has a really strong grocery offering and other club offering already. It sounds like things are going well there, but wondered if you had any more details with the fifth store opening. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:28:04Sure. The real estate growth story, and I'll let Bill talk about it since he's the architect of it, is a great one. It's certainly a continuing sustained success and getting even faster with 14 clubs this year in lots of great markets. Those clubs are doing really well, and we are very enthusiastic about this ability to grow our company, and we've been received well in the markets that we've entered. Why don't I let Bill talk a little bit more about it? Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:28:33Yeah. Hey, Kate. Good morning. I think, as Bob mentioned, we're really proud and excited about the success of the new clubs this year thus far and what's left to come for this year. As we look forward into Dallas next year, the prospect of going in and winning in that market is really important to the team. We've talked about it a couple of times on these calls that the culture that we've built around new clubs is really important, and the team's executing at the high level. As we look back at this year so far, I think 2025 will go down as the best class of new clubs as far back as I can remember. Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:29:14With the success we've had with our eight openings to date now and six more to go for the rest of the year, what we're seeing so far in those new clubs that haven't opened yet with pre-opening membership and the engagement of the community, we know that they're going to be outperformers as well. As we take that momentum from this best class of openings into next year into Dallas, combined with the work that we've done in the market of raising awareness for our brand and engaging with the community, we have a ton of confidence that not only will we compete, but we'll be in a position to have great success there. Operator00:29:58Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Robbie Owens from Bank of America. Robbie, your line is now open. Robbie OwensAnalyst at Bank of America00:30:07Oh, hi. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to follow up on the inventory positioning that Laura talked about. I just wanted to understand how you're thinking about that for the fourth quarter. Is it a positioning that sort of limits sales upside but supports margins? Just what's the pluses and minuses of the tight inventory? Semi-related, Fresh 2.0 was a great tailwind and comp driver. The benefits, the tailwind has slowed here. Is there anything that can re-accelerate? Is there a Fresh 3.0 or something like that that's in the works here to kind of get that to re-accelerate? Thanks. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:30:55Yeah. Good morning, Robbie. Maybe I'll take a shot at starting off, and Laura can fill in. I think what you're referencing is Laura's comments around proactively managing our general merchandise inventory. When we were in the beginning part of the year trying to understand where prices would go and costs would go as a result of tariffs, we made some proactive decisions to manage potential markdowns to allow us to fund greater investment in overall value for our members. I think that was the right decision. I think you want us to do that every day. That is really why we're here. We've taken those dollars and, in fact, invested them across the rest of the business. In Q3, significantly reduced pricing on own brands' water, on several other beverages, on some paper products across our produce assortment. We are really trying to balance those two things. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:32:00We do have a more conservative inventory position from a general merchandise perspective. That was true in Q3. It remains true for the fourth quarter. I do think it will limit the upside of the general merchandise business, but again, allow us to continue investing for the overall value for our members. I think the other story with inventory is really an absolutely terrific performance in managing the overall inventory levels of the company. The team has done a really masterful job in the whole business to have our in-stock rates go up 90 basis points into inventories that are down. We are doing a much better job allocating inventory throughout our chain, making sure that things are where they need to be, when they need to be there, and to be in stock for our members every day. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:32:59We need to keep turning that handle and get better and better every day, but I couldn't be more proud of the team to make a performance like that happen. Anything else, Laura, on inventory? No? Fresh 2.0, I think, was another terrific program. It continues to yield benefits. You know that started out in our produce business. We had terrific produce results during the quarter again. What you're seeing from the perishables business overall is some of the reduced benefits from egg inflation and things that are offsetting some of that great performance. With that said, we've talked about the next iteration of Fresh 2.0 and call it what you want, 2.1 or 3.0. We have made another set of considerable improvements in meat and seafood, and we're looking to doing the same in bakery and other categories as we go forward. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:34:02The mission there is the same, right? Our best members interact with us in these categories. If we can show them the greatest product, the freshest product at compelling values, display it in a way that is compelling, train our team members so that they are experts in all these disciplines, we can provide a better experience for our members, get more people into those categories, and grow the overall traffic of the business. That is certainly the result that we saw from Fresh 2.0 in the produce segment. The early returns on meat and seafood are good as well. We are very optimistic about that program and its ability to drive sales within those categories, but also to get to that further bigger goal of driving traffic in the whole business, which obviously drives lifetime value. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:34:53Some of these investments are expensive, but they're very much worth it in terms of driving the top line and the overall value of membership to BJ's. Robbie OwensAnalyst at Bank of America00:35:05Sounds great. Thanks, Bob. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:35:08Thanks, Robbie. Operator00:35:10Thank you very much. As a reminder, if you would like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from Steven Zaccone from Citi. Steven, your line's now open. Steven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at Citi00:35:25Great. Good morning. Thanks very much for taking my question. I wanted to ask about the implied fourth quarter same-store sales, which you referenced in the release that you've also seen some holiday momentum or, excuse me, momentum to start the holiday season. Can you just talk through your category assumptions in the fourth quarter and then how you think about low-end versus high-end of the range? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:35:50Sure. Again, maybe I'll start, and Laura can fill in, Steve. We certainly, I think, had a good performance in the third quarter. I keep using that word resilient, but into the face of the port strike and the hurricane activity and all that stuff, our sales were a bit higher than we thought they might be in the range of outcomes. The team's preparation for the holiday season, I think, has been fantastic. We've been investing in value. We've got incremental promotions out there. We're continuing our really successful free turkey promotion where if you spend $150 in one basket, you can get a free turkey for your family for Christmas. We're doing a lot of these things to really build on the momentum we saw in Q3 and get our members in our clubs and make them happy. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:36:45With that said, it's a choppy economic backdrop out there, right? We've talked about the low-end consumer at this point, and we certainly have a little bit of a harder hill to climb from a comparative perspective. We had a good Q4 last year, but net-net, while it's a wide range of outcomes that can happen in any quarter, most notably the fourth quarter, we are cautiously optimistic about our ability to put up some good numbers in the fourth quarter. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:37:16Yeah. Good morning, Steve. The only thing I might add to all the commentary Bob just said is I'd remind you about our inventory positioning that we've already talked about for general merchandise. We've factored that into the range of outcomes. That doesn't mean that we will be out of stock in general merchandise. It just means that we've tightened up the buys and we've picked the best of the best assortment. We're ready for Thanksgiving, like Bob talked about, and we're ready for our members for holiday kind of as we roll into December. Steven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at Citi00:38:01Okay. Thanks. The follow-up I have then is on that general merchandise. When we think about the inventory planning assumptions and maybe just talk about the buying environment, how does that look for the first half of next year, right? You made changes to the second half, presumably based on tariff uncertainty. How does that apply to general merchandise plans as we kind of glance into 2026? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:38:27Yeah. Look, I don't want to get too far over our skis and talk about next year, but obviously, the fourth quarter seasonal merchandise was bought in the spring when there was considerably more uncertainty around what the tariff exposures might be and what the consumer's response might be to any increase in prices. Every quarter we go through, we get more and more clarity, and we get more information from our members as well. We obviously alter our buys accordingly. I guess the other thing I would say is Q4 typically is a higher general merchandise penetration and obviously lower in the first quarter. This question becomes a little bit less important as we get into the beginning of the year. Steven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at Citi00:39:16Okay. Thanks very much. Operator00:39:21Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Mike Baker from D.A. Davidson. Mike, your line is now open. Mike BakerManaging Director and Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:39:29Okay. Thanks. Hate to focus on the short-term so myopically, but the guidance, your fourth quarter implied guidance to me, I'm calculating around 2-2.5, something in that range. Correct me if I'm wrong on that. It was at the midpoint of the outlook. If you are in that range, that's a pretty big pickup on a two-year basis against the 4.6 last year. Given all the caution you're talking about, can you square that, or is it more reasonable to think about maybe the low end of the implied fourth quarter guidance, in other words, consistent on a two-year basis? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:40:13Morning, Mike. Look, let's just focus on the fact that we're cautiously optimistic, as I said earlier. We've done a lot of planning, a lot of action around providing our members the right products at the right value. We talked about incremental promotion and building into that. We're certainly where we need to be from a digital perspective. People are loving interacting with our digital properties to get what they need from a convenience perspective. We are trying to act within our purpose and take care of the families that depend on us. That is all those things, right? Getting the products on the shelf. We're doing a fantastic job doing that in an improved way, putting sharper prices on things, which we, again, had considerable improvements in during the quarter, and really trying to take care of all the different communities within our membership. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:41:22We talked a little bit in our prepared remarks about our team members. Maybe I'd take one minute to thank those team members out there every day taking care of our members. They have the hardest job in our company. Guys, I'd really like to thank you for all your efforts. We initiated, for the first time in our company's history, a 10% discount for our team members to really say thank you, to acknowledge that it's tough out there for everybody, and to help our team members through their holiday season purchasing as well. I think we have a lot to be proud of. I think we have some momentum coming out of the quarter. The early days of Q4 have been reflective of that momentum, but we understand that there's a lot of road to go throughout the quarter. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:42:11We're only a couple of weeks in. This weekend and next week are huge for the quarter, as are the remaining weeks in December. We feel like we're in a good spot, but it's very, very early. That thought process really is what drove us to have the guidance that we put out there. Mike BakerManaging Director and Senior Research Analyst at D.A. Davidson00:42:32Okay. Great. Fair enough. I'll keep it to the one question. Thank you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:42:37Thanks, Mike. Operator00:42:39Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Ed Kelly from Wells Fargo. Ed, your line is now open. 00:42:47Hey, good morning. This is John Park on for Ed. Thanks for taking our question. It sounds like the messaging is that you've been investing in price, but I guess merch margins were flat. What are some of the offsets in gross margins that helps you get there? Anything on Q4 merch margins and how we should think about that? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:43:07Morning, John. We certainly have invested. We widened our price gaps in Q3 considerably with those investments versus competition. I'd like to say thanks to our merchandising team for making those moves. It's important to our company, important to our members for sure. We have many different levers to offset that throughout the business, not just within the margin construct. We will try and be as efficient as possible throughout the business to fund investments in member value. Certainly, some of the offsets that you might think about within the merchandising world would be being more efficient in the distribution centers, trying to be more efficient from a trans perspective, growing our retail media program, which has been growing very, very nicely. The team's doing a great job there. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:44:07There are many different things that we've tried to do so we can pass more value back to our members, and we'll continue to do that. 00:44:19Got it. Great. Thanks a lot. Best of luck. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:44:22Thanks, John. Operator00:44:25Thank you very much. As a reminder, if you would like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, to raise a question will be star followed by one. Our next question comes from Simeon Gutman from Morgan Stanley. Simeon, your line's now open. 00:44:43Good morning. This is Pedro Gale on for Simeon. Thank you for taking our question. Nice job continuing to grow your digital business. Really impressive. Could you comment on the work you're doing in retail media there? Also, more broadly, we've heard some of your peers recently announcing partnerships in agentic commerce. Could you give us an update on how you're thinking about the AI opportunity in e-commerce? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:45:13Laura, good morning. As we've talked about, our digital business is an important part of our strategy. It has been growing by leaps and bounds for years now. 30% during the quarter, over 60% in a two-year stack. It is approaching 17% of our sales at this point. We are at a point that, frankly, a few of us didn't think we'd ever get to. We have a lot to be proud of there. It all comes on the back of convenience. We have an incredibly talented digital team that builds these capabilities for our members to help them get access to tremendous value in a more convenient way than they otherwise might. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:45:58Most of our business, as you know, is in what we call BOPIC, Buy Online, Pick Up in Club, as well as same-day delivery, as well as Express Pay, where you check out in the club using your phone. Well over 90% of our total digital sales are fulfilled by our clubs. We are efficiently building this business. It is certainly a money-making opportunity for us. We are really pleased with the way that it's growing. Included in there is our retail media program that you referenced, and I talked a bit about it a few seconds ago. While still small, our team has been growing that quite nicely as we improve our website, as we improve the way that we partner out there with our advertisers, the way that we really coordinate between our different properties, whether it's our website or our app. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:47:01We are coming up with more ways to engage our members and allow our advertising partners to reach our members with compelling values that, first and foremost, help our members, but also help us and our advertising partners. We will continue to invest in that business in the future. Again, it's still small, but it is growing quite nicely and allows us to make other investments in member value as we go forward. Everyone talks about AI. We are no different. AI is a big part of our future. It is most notably used in our digital group at this point. The use cases would not surprise you. They were on the vanguard of using it to make coding more efficient, making testing code more efficient. They will continue to use AI in consumer-facing avenues as well. I'll give you a couple of examples. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:48:11We talked about in the prepared remarks. We've got beta-launched AI shopping assistants and are using AI to do predictive shopping lists for folks. Probably the thing that's most well along, however, is partnering AI with the robotics that we have in our stores. We have a robot that roams our stores named Tally. Initially, Tally was just helping us with inventory accuracy and price sign accuracy. Now we have taken that much farther where Tally's imagery creates a digital twin of each of our buildings, something that we've never had before because our buildings don't have warehouse management systems. That has enabled really cool things from an operational perspective where not only are we getting better inventories and better price signing accuracy, but we are efficiently spotting problems for our team members to take care of. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:49:11We are efficiently generating to-do lists for our team members in the clubs, finding inventory, what needs more inventory, what should they be doing first within the building. We're using it to really help us spot quality issues in our fresh businesses as well so we can make sure that our standards there are tip-top every day. We're finding new ways to use Tally and the data that it provides every day. I think the thing that's been most effective so far has been using those digital twins to predict the most efficient pick paths for our team members to pick orders for BOPIC or curbside or same-day, where they are about 40% more efficient today than they were before. We'll continue to build on the use of AI. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:50:11We'll continue to focus on long-term investments that really will allow us to continue our mission, which is to offer our folks the best products at the best prices. Probably the next thing up from a robotics and AI perspective will be our automated distribution center in Ohio that will go live next year. That will be, when it gets going, far more efficient than a traditional distribution center and will operate almost entirely in a robotic fashion. It will be fun to see that. I've been out there to see it recently, and I can't wait to see it with all the machinery going in there to see how it works. It is all in the same spirit of providing even greater value for our members. Laura FeliceCFO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:50:59Pedro, I'd just add all that commentary that Bob just said about Tally and the robotics we have in our club. There's a close tie to that with the work that our planning and allocation teams are doing that we already spoke about in our prepared remarks. That is producing our in-stock levels that have improved kind of year over year. There is a tie beyond some of the digital efforts into how we're putting product on our shelves and how our teams internally are using the data from Tally as well. Pedro GaleAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:51:44Awesome. Fantastic. Thank you for that. As a follow-up, if I could ask you, if you could comment on the competitive environment, you had nice improvement in merch margin in the first half, a little more even this quarter. To the extent that you can comment, and I totally get it, it's still early, how should we think about the level of investments next year? Are there any particular areas within grocery or gen merch that you're looking to prioritize? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:52:17Look, I do not want to talk too much about next year, but I would just echo the comments that I have already made around the fact that our job is to provide our members great value every day. We have made considerable investments all year in doing so, and I have been pretty creative to find ways to fund it. Having the merch margin results that we had in Q3 while making the investments that we made was a good result. I would anticipate further investment going forward as the competitive environment out there is, I think, consistent, but it is consistently competitive. We need to continue to do our jobs to reward our members for their faith in us and the membership fees that they pay. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:53:03We will continue to try and ride that balance between margin and value, but we will always err on the side of value to try and operate the business for the long term. Pedro GaleAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:53:18Okay. Great. Thank you. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:53:21You bet. Operator00:53:23Thank you very much. As a reminder, if you would like to raise a question, please signal now by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from Chuck Grom from Gordon Haskett. Chuck, your line's now open. Chuck GromAnalyst at Gordon Haskett00:53:36Hey, good morning, guys. On the margin front, just to move down the P&L a little bit, your SG&A per square foot levels have been really tight, which is good, but your peers are up a lot, suggesting maybe some investment in technology in other areas. I guess my question is, how sustainable do you think maintaining that SG&A per square foot at that level over the next couple of years, particularly as you move into Texas? Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:54:03Yeah, it's a good question, Chuck. Good morning. Our teams have done a good job over time being very efficient with our buildings, making sure that they're in good shape. They're in far better shape today than they were five years ago. With that said, we need to continue to do that and maybe even accelerate it. I think one of the things that we're seeing out there is our competitors getting sharper with their boxes. We will have to continue to do that, not just because of the competitive environment, but we want to show our members the best box we can every day. I would imagine we'll spend some capital going forward remodeling our boxes. We will obviously continue to spend into our new club pipeline as well. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:54:52We will do that as efficiently as we can, obviously with an eye for the long term. Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:54:58Yeah. Hey, Chuck, I'll just tack on to that as well. In addition to our existing clubs, for the first time ever, we've really started to build a relocation program for some of our older clubs as well. We had great success with our recent relocation in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. We announced this morning that we're going to relocate Rotterdam next year. It's not just an eye to our existing clubs, but also to the long-term future of these strong markets where we may have buildings that are a little bit on the older side. We're taking the opportunity to invest into the future there as well. Chuck GromAnalyst at Gordon Haskett00:55:35Gotcha. Great. Thanks. Then on general merchandise, right, up 1.8% on the stacks, much better than the front half of the year, even with limiting inventory. You talked a little bit about the category improvement. I guess, what do you think it's going to take to get home and seasonal to catch up to CE and apparel and other areas? I guess anything that you guys are excited about as we walk stores over the next couple of months into the holidays. Thanks. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:56:03Yeah. Sure. Maybe I'll start, and you guys can pick up. Look, I think we've done some great things from a general merchandise perspective. As we talked about, we had a strong showing in Q3 from a consumer electronics perspective and from an apparel perspective. Consumer electronics has been a hallmark of GM for a while. It's always been a pretty good business for us. It gets better. We have very talented merchants in that group. Our apparel team has done a great job over the past few years, really making sure that we simplify our assortment and bring in better brands, put great value out in front of our members every day. We need to continue to do those things, right? We might need to simplify our assortment a bit more. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:56:54We need to continue to put great brands out there and put fantastic values on there as well. We need to apply those same lessons to the rest of the business. We are actively at work on those things. We've seen some green shoots in previous quarters. We've talked about those with you, like toys and some of our gifting in previous quarters. I like our toy assortment this year as well. I'm excited about the way our gifting looks in the front of our clubs as well. We need to have more sustained transformation in home and in seasonal going forward. These are probably the toughest categories, particularly the seasonal categories, maybe in the building, but certainly among the GM categories. These are really tough categories. You need to be right on trend. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:57:49You need to be right on style, on color, on price point, all sorts of different things. While we've made strides, we're not done. We're not satisfied with where we are. We need to continue to turn the crank and get better going forward. We were under no illusions that renovating general merchandise would be easy or short in tenure. We've had nice success in the past, and we need to keep investing in that business because it is such an important part of the wholesale club model where it provides that treasure hunt, that emotional connection, those cool wow items that are so important to driving incremental trips. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:58:38Quite honestly, that question around membership renewal is not only tightly linked with the grocery business, but it is really tightly linked with our general merchandise business when you can have more opportunity to save your entire membership fee in one purchase rather than stacking up just good values on smaller ring items. You can save a couple of hundred bucks on a television or a mattress or a great seasonal item. That becomes a really important part of our overall long-term growth of our company. Let me see if the guys want to pile on. No? All right. We are happy with our GM so far. We have got to get better, and we will continue to work at it. Chuck GromAnalyst at Gordon Haskett00:59:25Great. Thanks a lot. Have a nice game. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club00:59:28You too. Thank you. Operator00:59:30Thank you very much. Our next question comes from Rupesh Parikh from Oppenheimer. Rupesh, your line is now open. Rupesh ParikhAnalyst at Oppenheimer00:59:37Good morning. Thanks for fitting me in. Just going back to your commentary about 2025 clubs, the membership counts 25% ahead of plan. What do you think is contributing to that significant outperformance? Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club00:59:50Hey, Rupesh, still. Yeah, I always come back to the success with the new club program comes back to the culture that the team's built. I think I've mentioned this a couple of times on previous calls that everyone that is involved with the new club program internally is fully engaged and fully bought in and wants to see us be successful. We started this program way back in 2016, and the reps that we've built along the way, we talked about the goal of making the next opening the best opening in the history of the company. Opening a new club where you have to build up, especially in a new market, a membership base entirely from scratch is not easy to do. It takes a lot of practice and a lot of learnings to do it right. Bill WernerExecutive VP at BJ's Wholesale Club01:00:42We're executing at a higher level than we've ever executed. As we think about going into the Dallas-Fort Worth market next year, as well as all the other markets, a market like Foley, Alabama, that we announced this morning is a really cool, unique market, and we're going to be really excited to be there. We wouldn't be able to do that. We wouldn't have the confidence to do that without all the success that we've built up to this point. Like I said, we're really pleased with what we've done here in 2025. It really has been probably the best class that we've ever opened, at least as far as I've been here. It gives us a lot of confidence going forward. More to come, but excited about what we've accomplished. Rupesh ParikhAnalyst at Oppenheimer01:01:26Great. Thank you. I'll pass along. Operator01:01:30Thank you very much. This marks the end of the Q&A session. I'd like to hand back to Bob Eddy for any closing remarks. Bob EddyChairman and CEO at BJ's Wholesale Club01:01:38Great. Thanks, Carly. Thanks, everybody, for your attention this morning, for your thoughtful questions, for your interaction, your support of our company. I wish you all a happy Thanksgiving, and we'll talk to you at the end of the fourth quarter. Thanks so much. Operator01:01:51As we conclude today's call, we'd like to thank everyone for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAng SinghVP FP&ABill WernerExecutive VPBob EddyChairman and CEOLaura FeliceCFOAnalystsChuck GromAnalyst at Gordon HaskettKate McShaneAnalyst at Goldman SachsMike BakerManaging Director and Senior Research Analyst at D.A. DavidsonPedro GaleAnalyst at Morgan StanleyPeter BenedictAnalyst at BairdRobbie OwensAnalyst at Bank of AmericaRupesh ParikhAnalyst at OppenheimerSteven ZacconeDirector of Equity Research at CitiPowered by