Revolve Group, Inc. (RVLV) Earnings Call Transcript & Summary
August 2, 2023
Earnings Call Speaker Segments
Operator
operatorGood afternoon. My name is Audra, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Revolve's Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Erik Randerson, Vice President of Investor Relations at Revolve. You may begin.
Erik Randerson
executiveGood afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us to discuss Revolve's Second quarter 2023 results. Before we begin, I'd like to mention that we have posted a presentation containing Q2 financial highlights to our Investor Relations website located at investors.revolve.com. I would also like to remind you that this conference call will include forward-looking statements, including statements related to our future growth and profitability, market opportunities, macroeconomic and industry trends, business, operations, and marketing initiatives and investments, international expansion, our stock repurchase program, growth in active customers, our inventory balance and management, and our outlook for net sales, gross margin, operating expenses and effective tax rate. These statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause our actual results to differ materially from these statements, including the risks mentioned in this afternoon's press release as well as other risks and uncertainties disclosed under the caption Risk Factors and elsewhere in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including, without limitation, our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, and our subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, all of which can be found on our website at investors.revolve.com. We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements or information except as required by law. During our call today, we will also reference certain non-GAAP financial information, including adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow. We use non-GAAP measures in some of our financial discussions as we believe they provide valuable insights on our operational performance and underlying operating results. The presentation of this non-GAAP financial information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for or superior to the financial information prepared and presented in accordance with GAAP. And our non-GAAP measures may be different from non-GAAP measures used by other companies. Reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to GAAP measures as well as the definitions of each measure, their limitations and their rationale for using them can be found in this afternoon's press release and in our SEC filings. Joining me on the call today are our Co-Founders and Co-CEOs, Mike Karanikolas and Michael Mente; as well as Jesse Timmermans, our CFO. Following our prepared remarks, we'll open the call for your questions. With that, I'll turn it over to Mike.
Michael Karanikolas
executiveHello, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. I'll begin with a recap of our second quarter results, and then I'll conclude by highlighting key operating priorities, investments and growth initiatives we are very excited about. Net sales decreased 6% year-over-year to $274 million in the second quarter, a slight improvement from the 7% year-over-year decline in April 2023 discussed on last quarter's conference call. As you've heard from many companies, the U.S. remains very challenging for consumer discretionary spending, particularly for our younger consumer demographic. Net sales in the U.S. decreased 7% year-over-year partially offset by international net sales increasing 4% year-over-year, highlighted by exceptional growth in Mexico, which has become one of our most important international markets. Our gross margin was 54%, a meaningful sequential improvement compared to the first quarter's 49.8%, yet as expected, gross margin remained lower compared to the second quarter of 2022 when our mix of net sales at full price was exceptionally high. Net income for the second quarter was $7 million or $0.10 per diluted share, and adjusted EBITDA was $10 million or 3.8% of net sales. Our profitability was significantly lower than last year's second quarter primarily due to the decline in net sales, the lower gross profit year-over-year and continued pressure on operating expenses in large part due to a higher return rate. We view the current macro environment as a near-term headwind on our path towards resuming attractive growth rates and margins over longer-term horizons, as we have demonstrated with our long-term historic track record of attractive growth and profitability. And importantly, challenging operating environments create opportunities for financially strong and cash-generative companies like REVOLVE to further separate from the pack by continuing to prudently invest through the cycle, while some industry peers have no choice but to play defense. With that in mind, I'll now recap several important growth and efficiency initiatives that we believe will further strengthen our foundation for profitable growth over the long-term. We are currently extremely focused on driving cost efficiencies within our global shipping and logistics operations to help offset cost pressures resulting from a higher return rate year-over-year. As an update on this important initiative, this week, we plan to launch a new process that we expect will drive meaningful efficiency gains for future periods by consolidating all return shipments coming back from Canada to the United States. And separately, in the United Kingdom, we also just began to hold certain product returns in the U.K. for local refulfillment to U.K. customers without shipping the products all the way back to the U.S. as we historically have done. This initiative both reduces shipping costs and provides even faster service to our valued customers in the region. These are significant wins in 2 large international markets that demonstrate great execution and results in a short period of time as we have focused on leveraging our scale to drive efficiencies and continued improvement in our best-in-class customer service. Most importantly, our team is aggressively pursuing a long list of initiatives that we are confident will help us gain significant further efficiencies in the coming quarters. I look forward to sharing our progress in this area as we move forward. We continue to expand the use of AI and machine learning across several key areas of our operations to drive growth and efficiencies. During the second quarter, we launched a new type of AI-powered merchandising that leverages image recognition to recommend visually similar items to customers. So illustrating impactful use case, when the consumers are looking at our product on REVOLVE that is currently out of stock, our AI technology engages with the customer to recommend visually similar items. This enhancement demonstrated a notable conversion lift in our A/B testing conducted prior to launch. Separately, we are continuing to advance efforts to integrate AI into our own brand design, which we view as an exciting opportunity to enhance creativity and accelerate the product development cycle. We are also actively leveraging technology in evaluating solutions to optimize our return rate. Consistent with our customer-first focus, our efforts to reduce return rates over time will not detract from the customer experience. In the third quarter, we will be experimenting with several new initiatives, including a virtual try-on in size comparison feature tool that went live last month, and we are testing a wide range of tools and visuals to better communicate product finish, such as enhanced fit rating customer reviews, detailed product fit guides and video content within product detail pages. Shifting to international expansion. We recently appointed our first ever Head of Greater China to further strengthen the foundation for future expansion in the region. We plan to further build out our local team on the ground in China to expand key relationships and brand awareness, which is important since the marketing and social media channels in China are different than in all other markets we operate. Considering the size and importance of the China e-commerce market, we believe now is the right time for us to invest in a more meaningful way. To illustrate our growth potential in China, I'm excited to share that REVOLVE is the #6 ranked fashion brand on the Tmall Global Marketplace during the month of June. This recognition and success contributed to our continued growth in China in the second quarter, and illustrates the level of interest in REVOLVE in this very large market. Lastly, to continue on the international team, we are also expanding our borders for talent acquisition. After demonstrating during the pandemic that a distributed workforce can work very efficiently for many functions, we have begun expanding our hiring scope well beyond California into select overseas markets. In the past several months, we have successfully attracted talent for technology, customer service and other functions and countries outside of the U.S. It's exciting because hiring engineers in the competitive U.S. market has historically been a real challenge for us due to our very high standards in hiring outstanding talent overseas provides an added benefit of being able to efficiently work on development projects around the clock. While we expect this important initiative result in some cost efficiencies, it is not our primary focus. We're most excited about is meaningly expanding the available talent pool to even further raise the bar on our exceptionally high standards as demonstrated by our achievement of record Net Promoter Scores every year for the past few years. We have recently opened our first overseas office to guide this important effort. I'm pleased with our team's execution on these important initiatives that are key building blocks for our continued long-term growth and profitability. Our long-term mindset and strong balance sheet, combined with our conviction in the strength of our business model and confidence in our team to execute through the short-term challenges and over the long-term, led our Board of Directors to authorize a $100 million stock repurchase program. Since we view the current environment as a near-term headwind, we remain confident in our longer-term opportunity to drive growth and profitability, we view stock repurchases as an attractive and accretive use of our capital. We authorized the stock repurchase program with confidence to nearly $270 million in cash and no debt on our balance sheet gives us financial flexibility to remain opportunistic to invest in the business across multiple dimensions in our efforts to drive shareholder value. In summary, while we certainly face more near-term challenges in the current environment, we will remain nimble and continue to focus on our hallmarks of technology innovation, operating efficiency and brand building to capture more share in the very large market. We remain squarely focused on investing in the long-term opportunity ahead of us, leveraging our 20 years of operating experience and our competitive advantages to guide us through these uncertain times. Now over to Michael.
Michael Mente
executiveThanks, Mike, and hello, everyone. Our headline numbers for the second quarter during a very challenging macro environment aren't reflective of what we believe is our long-term growth potential. Despite the short-term challenges, with our strong business model and focus on the long-term, we have been able to deliver an important operating priorities that should prove to be beneficial in the years to come. I'm particularly pleased with our early momentum in driving efficiencies in our shipping and logistics operations and in our innovations to leverage AI to drive further operational efficiencies, optimize processes and enable deeper connections with the next-generation consumers. Speaking of connecting with customers, a highlight of the second quarter was the unveiling of our first ever physical experience with FORWARD here in Los Angeles, inspired and curated by Creative Director Kendall Jenner, the destination launched in early June and it's incredible showcase of the FORWARD brand and our luxury brand partners. A private opening night reception hosted by Kendall Jenner and attended by many other A-listers created meaningful buzz and has continued to gain strength as favorable word-of-mouth has spread. Many of our high-value FORWARD customers, flew into Los Angeles for the opening night event, demonstrating a strong interest among our most loyal customers. The brand elevating experience has enabled us to engage deeply with FORWARD customers, connecting with them in ways we have never done before. Traffic flow and customer interest have been great, customer feedback has been exceptional. We are learning a great deal in sharing on consistent basis that customers love our selection and curation more than long established luxury destinations in the area. Many of our top 4 customers based in Los Angeles have enjoyed the opportunity to preselect items online, to try on in-person and also can get return items they had previously purchased online from FORWARD or REVOLVE. This has driven traffic flow and conversion, demonstrating synergies with our e-commerce operation that we'll consider as we continue to evaluate whether physical retail has a place in our growth strategy long-term. Another takeaway from the experience is that our luxury customers truly embrace the preowned handbags in our new FORWARD -- the new offering discussed on prior investor calls. In fact, during our recent day at Forward pop-up, we sold 2 [indiscernible] vintage handbags for more than $35,000 each in a single day. The continued success of the FORWARD Renew offering further validates the demand for [purely handling] some of our customers. As a result, later this quarter, we plan to meaningfully expand our growth potential in luxury resell by offering Renew to the much larger set of customers of REVOLVE as well. Finally, our FORWARD brand partners have been incredibly supportive of efforts to engage our community in a truly differentiated destination. We have hosted around 20 impactful events with our [ wierd ] luxury brand, including Versace, [indiscernible], Blumarine and Anastasia Beverly Hills just to name a few, with many events focused on our emerging beauty category. Additionally, several of our luxury brands have created exclusive offerings for the FORWARD experience that are not available anywhere. If you're in Los Angeles before August 13, please drop by and see us at 8804 Melrose Avenue in West Hollywood. The second quarter was a very busy period of investments for brand marketing, anchored by the successful REVOLVE Festival event that I talked about last quarter's conference call. The Forward physical experience as well all time events to support our best-performing international market. In June, we hosted a weeklong brand activation with a series events in Mexico City to showcase the REVOLVE brand and lifestyle and spread the word about our outstanding service levels that have been integral to our growth in customer loyalty around the world. The events drove tens of millions of social media and press impressions, often emphasizing a consistent theme that going shopping in Mexico has never been so easy as with Revolve. Most exciting is that our impactful events serve as a catalyst in driving a spike in new customer growth at [ customer expo ], which has already been in triple-digit year-over-year growth territory even before the event. Mexico is now a top 5 international markets for us, demonstrating how we can leverage our branded, operational excellence to capture the very large international opportunity. Our impactful marketing has also contributed to the success of recent own brand collaborations. Helsa our brand collaboration with Elsa Hosk was exclusively available on Revolve and FWRD continues to perform incredibly well. We just had our fifth Helsa [ drive ] and it was the most successful yet. We also launched an exclusive new collaboration with model and social media personality, Cindy Kimberly has resonated very well with our increasingly global customer base. As mentioned on prior investor calls, with softening consumer demand in recent quarters, combined with our elevated inventory position entering 2023 led us to be more conservative planning own value inventory buys, own brand requires a deeper inventory commitment first half and third-party brands. Just successful our recent collaborations, [indiscernible] of our own brand platform and serves that as a positive indication of the own brand potential long term. I'll close with the update on our continued successful journey to expand into Beauty and [ Men ], 2 areas that offer exciting growth potential. Both categories continue to grow at attractive rates in the second quarter, double-digit growth on a combined basis benefiting from increased focus under our new leadership lead area and continued improvement to our brand assortment. I continue to be confident that once we optimize the product in some of these categories, the business will follow because these are very large market segments. And considering that we have earned our customers' trust and attention by consistently exceeding their expectations. We have several exciting brands in the queue to onboard in the third quarter, particularly in the beauty category, which should help beauty -- because given more important source for acquiring new customers and [ innovate ]. It's noteworthy that some of our recent beauty investors have generated a significant portion of the recent sales volume through our partnership with TikTok Shop. It's still early days, it is extending to see validation of the potential of TikTok as a new channel for growth. In closing, the current environment is clearly impacting demand for many consumer discretionary items, particularly the apparel in the U.S. but we take the long view. We remain on offense, energizing and investing for growth and expansion for years to come. I'm more excited than ever of my confidence the long term is underscored by our recently announced $100 million stock repurchase program. Mike and I own nearly 45% of the outstanding common stock, and we continue to see the significant runway for growth over the years to come. I want to express my sincere thanks to the team for keeping us at the forefront of innovation and maintaining an unwavering focus on the customer. Now I'll turn it over to Jesse for a discussion of the financials.
Jesse Timmermans
executiveThanks, Michael, and hello, everyone. I'll start by recapping our second quarter results and then close with updates on recent trends in the business and commentary on our cost structure as we look ahead. Starting with the second quarter results. Net sales were $274 million, a year-over-year decrease of 6%. Linearity of our net sales comparison year-over-year was fairly consistent throughout the quarter. Revolve segment net sales decreased 4% and Forward segment net sales decreased 15% year-over-year in the second quarter. The Forward comparison reflects softening demand among our luxury customers, particularly in the U.S., consistent with commentary from several luxury retailers and brands in recent months. By territory, domestic net sales decreased 7% and international net sales increased 4% year-over-year. Active customers, which is a trailing 12-month measure, increased by 34,000 customers during the second quarter. This growth expanded our active customer count to 2.5 million, an increase of 14% year-over-year. In the near-term, we expect further moderation in the quarterly growth of active customers. Our customers placed 2.3 million orders in the second quarter, an increase of 1% year-over-year. Average order value was $301, a decrease of 1% year-over-year. Shifting to gross profit. Consolidated gross margin was 54%, above the high end of our guidance range. The decrease of 198 basis points year-over-year primarily reflects a lower mix of net sales at full price compared to the second quarter of 2022. Moving on to operating expenses. Fulfillment costs were 3.4% of net sales, slightly higher than our guidance, a deleverage of 71 basis points year-over-year was primarily due to a year-over-year increase in our return rate. Higher wages for our fulfillment center staff and utilization not yet fully optimized in our recently extended fulfillment network. Selling and distribution costs were 18.6% of the sales, slightly better than our guidance This increase of 68 basis points year-over-year reflects higher cost for customer shipments, primarily due to the higher return rate year-over-year. We are aggressively pursuing initiatives both to reduce our shipping and logistics costs and to address the increasing return rate. Our marketing investment represented 18.8% of net sales, an increase of 91 basis points year-over-year, reflecting increased investment in brand building during a very active quarter for our impactful marketing events including REVOLVE festival and the many events at the Forward Top-up. General and administrative costs were $28.6 million or 10.4% of net sales, slightly lower than the outlook we provided last quarter. The year-over-year decline in G&A costs primarily reflects a $5 million accrual for a legal matter in the second quarter of 2022. Our effective tax rate was 25% and net income was $7 million or $0.10 per diluted share, a decrease of 55% year-over-year that was impacted by the net sales decline, a year-over-year decrease in gross profit and continued pressure on operating expenses. Adjusted EBITDA was $10 million, a decrease of 61% year-over-year. Moving to the balance sheet and cash flow statement. Inventory at June 30, 2023, was $205 million, a decrease of 2% year-over-year, very close to the 6% year-over-year decrease in net sales. It was the fourth consecutive quarter when we have narrowed the spread between our year-over-year inventory growth and year-over-year net sales growth. Net cash used by operating activities and free cash flow in the second quarter were negatively impacted by a $15 million increase in inventory when compared to the first quarter of 2023, in part due to the continued pressure on net sales. For the 6 months ended June 30, 2023, net cash provided by operating activities was $35 million and free cash flow was $33 million, an increase of 42% and 49% year-over-year, respectively. Cash and cash equivalents as of June 30, 2023, were $269 million, an increase of $31 million or 13% year-over-year, that was $14 million lower on a sequential basis compared to the first quarter of 2023. Our balance sheet as of June 30, 2023, remains debt free. Now let me update you on some recent trends in the business since the second quarter ended and provide some direction on our cost structure to help in your modeling of the business. Starting from the top. The top line pressure we experienced in the second quarter has continued with net sales for the month of July 2023, down a mid-single-digit percentage year-over-year. We believe the uncertain macro environment continues to weigh on our customers' purchasing behavior and consistent with the second quarter results, [ during July ] year-over-year net sales comparisons in the REVOLVE segment continued to outperform the Forward segment, and year-over-year net sales comparisons for our international business continued to outperform our domestic business. Shifting to gross margin. We expect gross margin in the third quarter of 2023 of between 52% and 52.3%, implying a much smaller year-over-year decrease than in recent quarters. Only 85 basis points in the midpoint of the range compared to a nearly 2-point year-over-year decline in the second quarter and an almost 5-point year-over-year decline in the first quarter of 2023. For the full year, we are narrowing our gross margin expectations to a range of 52% to 52.5%. Fulfillment. The continued top line uncertainty and higher-than-expected return rate are leading us to take a slightly more conservative view of fulfillment efficiencies for the full year 2023. We expect fulfillment as a percentage of net sales to be around 3.3% for the third quarter of 2023 and now expect fulfillment to represent 3.3% of net sales for the full year 2023. Selling and distribution. We expect selling and distribution cost efficiency to improve on a sequential basis and represent around 18.3% of net sales for the third quarter of 2023 and 18.3% of net sales for the full year 2023. The slight increase from our previous full year guidance primarily reflects a higher-than-expected return rate. The full year 2023 outlook for selling and distribution costs includes our assumption that we will generate increasing cost efficiencies in the second half of 2023, resulting from a variety of shipping and logistics efficiency measures we are pursuing. These benefits will partially offset the negative impact of the expected higher return rate year-over-year. Marketing. We expect our marketing investment in the third quarter of 2023 to represent approximately 15.8% of net sales. A 3-point sequential decrease from the second quarter and an 80 basis point decrease year-over-year compared to the third quarter of 2022. For the full year 2023, we expect marketing to be within the range previously communicated up 16% to 16.5% of net sales. General and administrative, we expect G&A expense of approximately $29 million in the third quarter of 2023 and $115 million for the full year 2023, at the high end of our prior full year outlook range. And lastly, we continue to expect our effective tax rate to be around 24% to 26%, consistent with the past several quarters. To recap, while we view the current environment is quite challenging for consumer discretionary spending, we are focused on delivering shareholder value over the long term. Our team is investing significant time and energy into a broad range of exciting initiatives that we believe can extend our competitive advantages and benefit Revolve for years to come, particularly as the broader macroeconomic environment improves. Now we'll open it up for your questions.
Operator
operator[Operator Instructions] We'll take our first question from Anna Andreeva at Needham & Company.
Anna Andreeva
analystA couple of modeling questions from us. First on gross margin. Just trying to understand what drove the beat to guidance for the quarter? And inventories are in pretty good shape at down 2. So what's driving that gross margin decline in the third quarter versus the previous guidance for margins to be directionally up. Is there any additional carryover at Forward that you guys are working through? And then secondly, just on marketing, has been managed really tightly and even a bigger dollar decline in 3Q. So just curious how do you guys think about that trade down in preserving margins by managing marketing down versus the company returning to growth? And can you talk about some of the savings? Where are they coming from? And how sustainable are those?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveAnna, This is Jesse. I'll start and then maybe kick it over to Mike and Michael for some of the marketing questions. There's a lot there. We just start with gross margin. The guide down from Q2 to Q3 sequentially is largely seasonality. We typically see our highest margin in Q2, and then it takes a step down in Q3 to the tune of anywhere from 2 to 3 points. So we feel like margins -- healthy margin is in line. To your point, there is some additional carryover from Forward. We feel like inventory overall is healthy that differential between the sales growth and the inventory growth has compressed again this quarter and down to 4 points. So we feel good about that. But it is taking a little bit longer on the Forward side. So there is more, I guess, more compression on Forward than there is on the Revolve side. So I think that covers gross margin and inventory. Some of the other cost savings, if you're referencing just the general cost savings. A lot of initiatives at play. The team is working hard on those. And those are starting to take effect if you look at the selling and distribution guidance that we've given. That factors in some sequential improvement in that line item. And that will carry forward more importantly into 2024 and beyond.
Anna Andreeva
analystOkay. That's really helpful. I guess, on the marketing side, should we expect a similar under 16% run rate as we look into next year as well as you guys are finding some of those efficiencies?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveGot it. Maybe on the market modeling quick before Mike jumps in. I think in that 16% to 16.5% zone is where we like to be. There is volatility quarter-to-quarter. Q2, of course, is a larger investment quarter with REVOLVE Festival that typically falls in that quarter. And then we had the 20 events at the Forward pop-up. So there is quarter-to-quarter volatility. But in that 16% range is a good place to be. And we are gaining more efficiencies on the performance marketing side, and then Mike?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes, exactly. I would just echo that thought. With brand marketing, it's very timing dependent, depending on which events we want to do at a time that we think makes sense. And a lot of it's opportunistic. It's important on the brand marketing side to keep things new and exciting and fresh. So that kind of drives the timing more than say, hey, we want this quarter to come at this percent and that quarter to come in at that percent. And then more broadly, with marketing, we want to continue to invest in marketing in a big way. It's important for long-term growth. So there's going to be plenty of dollars going towards that, particularly on the brand marketing side. With performance marketing, we talked about on past calls how we were tweaking things to try to get a little bit more efficient there. And I think we've made some good moves there. And hopefully, that will continue through the coming quarters.
Operator
operatorWe'll move to our next question from Randy Konik at Jefferies.
Randal Konik
analystI just want to get a little more color first on the return rate strategy change or policy changes and give us some perspective on how meaningful you think those changes can be to the -- not the next quarter, but like let's say, over the next 4 to 8 quarters, in improving efficiency there. Maybe give us a little bit more quantitative impact there. And then the other thing I just wanted to ask just around gross margin. Forward's gross margins have obviously come in pretty significantly. Where is the bottom do you think in those gross margins? And when do you think they bottom over the next -- do they think -- do you think they bottom to the next 1 to 2 quarters? Just kind of give us a little help there as well.
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. So on the return rate side, we're not focused on policy changes at this point. One of the things we are working on that we didn't mention it in the prepared commentary was that, yes, we are looking at a slight tweak from a policy standpoint, for small subset customers. But the focus is on making changes that are going to impact return rate in a very helpful way for customers. We're hopeful we can drive meaningful improvements there. We think we have great initiatives and projects that make a lot of sense, but we're going to be trialing some of those in the third quarter. At this time, it's too early to say how much of an impact those sorts of investments can make. But we're certainly excited to see what they can bring to the table. And then on the forward gross margin side, I would defer to Jesse in terms of any commentary on how you guys should model and project that.
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. Yes, I think you got it, Randy and -- we are close to the bottom there. I'd say, over the next 1 to 2 quarters, we'll be in this zone before things start to rebound. And then I think Important to remember that last year, especially in that kind of back half of '21 into the first half of '22 and especially in this 2Q '22. We are checking at really record full price mix. So that Forward margin -- and both on Forward and Revolve was really healthy. So I don't see us getting back to the high 40s anytime soon, but creeping up into that mid-40% range again over time. But to your point, I think, troughing out over the next 1 to 2 quarters.
Randal Konik
analystGreat. And can I just ask one more last follow-up here. Just on the commentary around the younger demographic trends. Maybe give us a little more color on what they're doing or not doing or in terms of price hesitancy or category changes or as it is there? Just give us a little more flavor of what they're doing or not doing in terms of their shopping behavior?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. So what we've seen is, certainly, there's a lot of caution in terms of their discretionary spending. Last year, they were feeling great and bullish about the future and very excited to engage in the world after the COVID lock-ups. And also, a lot of them refreshed their wardrobe. And then there's kind of cycles there. So we're seeing a bit of a rebound the other way, in the wardrobe refresh cycle. And also where consumers are putting their dollars where more dollars are going towards experiences and services and fewer dollars towards goods, particularly discretionary goods, particularly among that younger demographic or that more aspirational demographic that has to watch their pocketbook a little bit more closely.
Operator
operatorWe'll go next to Edward Yruma at Piper Sandler.
Edward Yruma
analystI guess first, just to click down on the return rate again. Are you seeing -- I know some of the increase in return rate was due to mix shift and kind of more aggressive. But are you seeing kind of more of the -- I'm buying and can return everything, which seems to be more of a sign of a macro? Or is it still kind of more of the sizing issues that hopefully you can ameliorate with tech tools over time? And then as a follow-up on the Forward question, I guess, I know lead times there can be longer. Are you taking a different kind of short- to medium-term positioning against that luxury, younger consumer that may be more impacted by some of these macro pressures?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. So on the return rate side, what we're seeing is very macro-based. It spans across categories, across order types, across customer types, across cohorts of merchandise and whether we look at recent cohorts of merchandise or, say, bestsellers from 1 or 2 years ago. We're seeing the increase in return rates across the board, right? So it's clear there's not some kind of sizing difference or quality difference or something like -- going on, that's very macro-based behavior. And again, we're seeing it in other retailers as well. That said, there's a ton we can do in terms of making the process easier for consumers to understand what items are going to work great for them, and we think we can make a meaningful impact in that zone regardless of what's going on the macro side of things. And then switching gears to Forward and kind of our outlook there. Yes, our outlook in the medium term is more of caution in the luxury zone, particularly for those aspirational customers that are reaching up and that's reflected in our inventory purchase plans.
Operator
operatorOur next question comes from Mark Altschwager at Baird.
Mark Altschwager
analystIs there anything beyond the macro you can point to that you believe might be contributing to the ongoing sales pressure? I guess, any opportunities you see from a product or marketing execution standpoint that you think you could move the needle in the coming quarters, should the macro remain a headwind?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. We think the primary headwind is certainly on the macro side. But at the same time, our expectation is that we outperformed the market, right? And we believe we're not at the level of outperformance we expect to be right now. So we're certainly looking inward to see what we can do certainly to accelerate things, make sure we connect better with the consumer. And that includes all fronts, both on the marketing side and then also the merchandise side.
Mark Altschwager
analystAnd then just following up on gross margin, the lower outlook versus the prior forecast. I guess the seasonality in the business hasn't changed versus when you guided earlier in the year. So just to understand, is the more cautious gross margin outlook for the back half, all a function of forward taking longer to clean up? Or is there any element of planning higher promotions that REVOLVE to drive traffic and conversion?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. No, it's in part, and I would say mostly that Forward dynamic and just the timing around those buys and working through that inventory. There is also an element on owned brands. Whenever we're in the inventory correction periods, we pull back on own brands more than on the third party given the depths that we have to produce there. And of course, own brand has a much more premium margin than that of the third party. So that has an impact in the near term. So that is certainly part of it. Promotion and promotional activity out there, we still see it as being elevated, especially in those higher price points and just the market still being flooded with that luxury product and the combination of that with the consumer struggling, as Mike talked about.
Operator
operatorWe'll go next to Kunal Madhukar with UBS.
Kunal Madhukar
analystOne, just to reconfirm. Your turn rate for the quarter was around 60%. That's what I'm estimating. So just wanted to reconfirm that number. And then as we look at your AOV. The AOV has remained pretty firm. I was thinking maybe the AOV would decline simply because the mix of full price might be much lower. So how are you looking at AOV for the rest of the year? How are you thinking about that?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. First, on the return rate, you're plus or minus in the right zone there, that's a 50%, which, of course, is much higher than last year. And -- we kind of addressed that earlier. Then on AOV, yes, we're pleased with the AOV. It is coming in just a touch call it, $1 or $2 lower than we had initially anticipated, and that's largely due to the softness on Forward, which, of course, carries a much higher price point than REVOLVE. But full prices coming back. It's not at the levels of last year when we were checking out those record full price levels. It was 85% for the full year last year. We expect to be several points lower than that this year. But still at or above the pre-pandemic 2019 level. So we feel good about the -- shifting back into the full price mix, AOV is holding despite some pressure from the mix of Forward sales.
Operator
operatorWe'll go next to Jim Duffy at Stifel.
Jim Duffy
analystI'm hoping you can speak more about category performance. Beauty continues to grow. Which categories have seen the most pressure from the consumer pullback in discretionary spend? And then hoping you can discuss it in the context of the inventory, with the inventory, yes, net sales has improved, but the year-to-year is influenced by elevated levels a year ago. So your days inventory is still elevated.
Michael Mente
executiveYes. We speak for some categories. We're seeing softness in the apparel categories, fashion apparel as well as [ dresses ] which for us is a large category. So we separated now. As you mentioned, beauty is growing and strong. As well as handbags and accessories. So on a high level, it's kind of like the [ broader ] apparel across -- as Mike mentioned earlier, across the board, price point styles, occasions and things like that.
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. And then maybe on the inventory, Jim. Yes, we're still planning conservatively for the balance of the year, as Mike mentioned. So it will be plus or minus in the same zone with new buys down in the double digits. But we feel good about the balance of the net sales and year-over-year inventory growth despite top line coming in softer than we had initially anticipated.
Jim Duffy
analystOkay. And Jesse, the gross margin guidance seems to imply inflection in the fourth quarter, if I've done my math correctly, is further inventory improvement central to delivering on that?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. I wouldn't necessarily say inflection. Probably plus or minus in the zone a little bit lighter than in Q3. But on a year-over-year basis, maybe that's what you're referring to an inflection...
Jim Duffy
analystI think, yes...
Jesse Timmermans
executiveLast year in Q4 is when that pullback started to happen. And mix started to pull price into the markdown.
Operator
operatorWe'll go next to Simeon Siegel at BMO.
Simeon Siegel
analystJesse, did you, or could you comment on AOV or ASP, maybe specifically for REVOLVE versus FORWARD to mitigate that mix? Could you also remind us of the sales cadence for the quarter from last year, maybe just how to contextualize the mid-single-digit July comment? And then Michael or Mike, anything else just how you're thinking about longer-term active customer opportunity and just maybe -- whether there's any meaningful difference you're seeing in the new customers versus the prior?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes, thanks, Simeon. And hope you're having a great summer as well. On the AOV, I would say, we commented on it a little bit earlier and that we're happy with where it's at despite FORWARD coming in softer than we had anticipated, and FORWARD, of course, carries that higher price point. So within 1% of being flat year-over-year, we're happy with. That's -- or sorry, REVOLVE is holding us better than FORWARD. FORWARD is where we saw more decrease in the AOV. So some dynamics at play there and that kind of feeds into inventory discussion and kind of softness in the luxury more aspirational, consumer and working through that inventory. And then on the seasonality or kind of month-to-month seasonality, I think is where you were going on the Q3 is, month-to-month, it's plus or minus in the same zone for July, August, September, within a point or 2 on the year-over-year growth last year.
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. And on the new customer side, I think that's certainly one of the bright spots in the current environment that we're continuing to attract new customers at a healthy rate. July new customers came in at a very solid number. And in general, retention on our cohorts has been good. It's just we're comping periods in 2021, in particular, but including parts of 2022 that were elevated over historical norms on some of those cohort retention numbers are for both new and existing customers. So there's been a pullback in consumer spend among our demo, but we're really happy to see that we're continuing to attract and bring in new customers at a healthy rate.
Operator
operatorOur next question comes from Janine Stichter at BTIG.
Ethan Saghi
analystYou've got Ethan Saghi on for Janine. Can everyone hear me okay?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes.
Ethan Saghi
analystOkay. I just have one question for you guys. I'm just curious, with student loan repayments resuming in the fall, how are you thinking about that with regards to your planning and outlook for the back half of the year?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. We are being cautious -- I'm sorry, Mike, if you want to jump in -- but I would say from the planning perspective, being cautious and that comes through on the inventory side and continuing to -- until we see some green shoots there, taking a more conservative stance. And to some extent, we feel like maybe some of that student loan kind of that looming student loan repayment is already impacting the consumer and her buying behavior.
Operator
operatorWe'll go next to Lorraine Hutchinson at Bank of America.
Lorraine Maikis
analystYou've spoken about a lot of initiatives around the selling and distribution expenses. Can you talk through the timing of when you think some of these mitigation strategies will kick in? And then what's the longer-term goal for this line item?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. No, we're pleased with the progress there. I think we commented last quarter that we've got a couple of dozen individual initiatives within this line item, of course, all that different sizes and scales and timing. But they're already starting to kick in. If you look at the selling and distribution cost per order, that's down in the mid-single digits, low-single-digits year-over-year. So it's already starting to take effect and offsetting some of that return rate pressure, at least on a per order as per unit basis. We're also starting to get some relief on the fuel surcharges. If you remember last year, Q2 is when that fuel surcharge really peaked in. It started to step down in Q3, Q4, a little bit more in Q1 and now even more in Q2. So feel good about the progress there. And then if you kind of back into where we think the back half of the year is going to be working from our 18.6% this quarter, 18.3% next quarter and then 18.3% for the full year, that implies that there is some efficiencies starting to take place in the back half of this year, but more importantly, into next year. And the goal there is to get that number to be back in at least the high 17s over the midterm.
Operator
operatorWe'll go next to Oliver Chen at TD Cowen.
Jungwon Kim
analystThis is Jonna, on for Oliver. I'm curious about more international expansion plans. It looks like you're investing across different countries, how large these that international trends over time? And also curious on China specifically, how large do you think that business can grow both REVOLVE and FORWARD potentially? And if you've seen any sort of different noticeable difference in terms of customer demographic behavior in China versus the U.S.?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. So long-term, I think international is a huge expansion opportunity for us. We would hope long term to achieve 1/3 of sales or more perhaps approaching 50%. But those are long-term aspirations and there's many steps from here to there. China, in particular, is a huge market where we feel like we haven't -- our brand hasn't penetrated in the same way as the U.S. But we feel like in the echelons of Chinese influencers who matter, we do have penetration in. We're really excited about the new Head of Greater China that we brought on, that has a lot of the operational expertise on the marketing side to help us out in that zone to really market the REVOLVE brand in a much bigger and broader way than we have historically. So that's a huge opportunity for us. Obviously, China is an incredibly huge market for luxury and also aspirational luxury as well. So our hopes is that over the coming years, we can grow that into a huge market. But we'll keep you posted with our progress. This is the first step of many in terms of the expansion of the brand marketing in China. And it's probably going to be 6 to 12 months before we start seeing some of the initial progress from those new steps.
Operator
operatorWe'll move to our next question from Rick Patel at Raymond James.
Rakesh Patel
analystJust a follow-up on earlier question on promotions. Can you talk about the outlook as you think ahead? Because inventories are in better shape now, but if the environment does end up being soft like it is now, how are you thinking about the use of promos going forward? And I'm curious what gross margins in terms of discounting in the back half versus last year?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. I think on the promotion comment, that was more of a macro comment in it. We do see elevated promotions out there still and on top of a pressured consumer. That said, we tend to kind of blaze our own trail when it comes to working through that inventory. We don't necessarily compete head-to-head with others on the promotional front, especially on REVOLVE. More so on the FORWARD side where there's more comparable product and more softness there. But we've worked through the inventory fairly well over the last several quarters and feel good about the health there. So we'll continue on this path and be conservative in the new buys for the back half of the year until we see some green shoots again. And our expectations are factored into the margin guidance that we gave.
Rakesh Patel
analystAnd can you talk about the savings related to efficiency in shipping and logistics. It sounds like that's factored in the guidance also. But just curious how much of a tailwind this would be and how meaningful this could be as we think about margins beyond this year?
Jesse Timmermans
executiveYes. Yes. Working from 18.6% of this quarter getting to an 18.3% for the full year implies already some efficiency gains this year, and that will continue into next year as a lot of these initiatives didn't start to kick in and won't start to kick in until the back half of the year. And the goal there is to get that back into the 17s over time, not commenting on exactly when that is. But I would say over the -- kind of over the midterm, we think we can get there -- next year at some point, maybe the full year doesn't quite get there, but next year at some point. And then we haven't talked about fulfillment yet either. A lot of capacity and utilization gains we had there. So there'll be further efficiencies, especially as we head into next year and optimize the space on our fulfillment network, layering more automation, more processes and just efficiencies with scale as we lap this increasing return rate and get back into growth mode.
Operator
operatorNext, we'll go to Noah Zatzkin at KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Unknown Analyst
analystThis is Ashley on for Noah. One on international growth. I know you guys called out Mexico and China, both extreme, but just conversely, are there any countries you maybe highlight that are trending softer relative to your expectations? And then with the share buyback, does that take the possibility for M&A off the table for now? Or how are you thinking about the opportunity there?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes, definitely. So in terms of softer markets, generally, we're seeing the western more developed markets softer, which includes, obviously, the U.S. as well, but on the international side, those western markets, so Europe, U.K., Canada, Australia, generally a lot softer than we would like to see. And then in terms of the -- on the share buyback and the M&A, it doesn't take M&A off the table, but certainly, we feel like we have a healthy cash position and we recognize this is a great opportunity to put some of that cash to work and what we believe will be a very accretive way. And it's one of the luxuries of being such a cash-generative business where we're able to achieve growth and cash generation at the same time. Where we feel like we can invest and grow the business at the same time as returning capital to our shareholders.
Operator
operatorAnd we'll take our final question from Janet Kloppenburg at JJK Research Associates.
Janet Kloppenburg
analystCan you hear me now?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes.
Janet Kloppenburg
analystI -- a lot of questions have been asked around the inventory, but I was just wondering if you could talk a little bit about selling trends where you are happy with the response rate and where the full price selling is good. And if there's any directional change in what your core customers are spending money on perhaps more casual versus dress up or categories like that, accessories, et cetera. And I was also wondering if you could break that segmentation down between the domestic customer and the international customer?
Michael Mente
executiveYes. Speaking to merchandising, we feel good about our inventory position because we're seeing the slowness across the board. It's definitely not too much of this, I need more of that. We feel like we have the right merchandise in appropriate zones, just not top line and demand is just not quite there. We've historically always been strong going out. Of course we continue to see going out dress it will be important of course being the summer time, this time they are seasonally, there's a lot more casual, warm weather, casual clothes, vacation clothes, things like that. So historic strengths, feeling really good about the development of some of the more nascent categories, some of these also might not historically be as known for. Quietly making progress behind the scenes in that as well. Maybe I'll let Mike or Jesse speak to the international trends? Or differences?
Michael Karanikolas
executiveYes. On the international side of the business, in those developed markets, we're seeing certainly similar trends as we're seeing on the domestic side, which is -- once you account for the very big macro shifts in demand from the COVID period to the post-COVID sort of exclusion in going out close where -- we're generally seeing across the board. The demand is not quite where we'd like it to be. But we feel good about our progress with our various initiatives on the inventory front, revolving, inventory is in a very healthy place. And then some of those longer-term areas that have been growth areas for us such as beauty are continuing to show growth even through kind of this macro environment that's a bit tougher for us.
Operator
operatorAnd that is all the time we have for questions today. I will turn the call back to management for closing remarks.
Jesse Timmermans
executiveThank you, everyone, for joining our call. It's clearly a troubling time, but I can assure you that we're very, very focused and quite, quite pleased despite our top line numbers. And our financial results in this quarter not being far from where we want to be. We're quite pleased with the progress we're making and being solution. So excited to join with you guys in 2 months' time.
Operator
operatorAnd this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
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