HOFT April 16, 2026

Hooker Furnishings Q4 2026 Earnings Call - Q4 Returns to Profit but FY Hit by $15.6M Impairments

Summary

Hooker Furnishings closed fiscal 2026 with a small Q4 profit, a year of heavy restructuring, and a clear pivot to a leaner portfolio. Management completed the sale of Pulaski and Samuel Lawrence, cut roughly $26.3 million of fixed costs, launched the high-profile Margaritaville line, and reduced inventory and leverage while preserving borrowing capacity. Those actions produced improved margins in Hooker Branded and domestic upholstery and allowed a modest operating income in Q4 despite a shorter selling period and disruptive winter weather.

That progress was overshadowed for the full year by $15.6 million of non-cash intangible impairments, driving continuing-operations operating losses and a consolidated fiscal 2026 net loss of $27 million. The company is pushing a narrative of a lower break-even point and readying for margin and earnings recovery in fiscal 2027, while contingency remains around tariff refunds and the timing of Margaritaville shipments.

Key Takeaways

  • Q4 consolidated net sales from continuing operations were reported at $667.0 million, down $17.2 million versus the prior-year period, with management citing a one-week shorter quarter and severe winter weather as contributors.
  • Management estimated severe January 2026 winter storms reduced Q4 net sales by $3.0 million to $4.0 million; the shorter quarter cut roughly $5.5 million of sales based on daily averages.
  • Q4 operating income from continuing operations was $629,000, driven by $1.2 million in Hooker Branded and $617,000 in other, offset by a $1.2 million operating loss in domestic upholstery.
  • Q4 net income from continuing operations was $874,000, or $0.08 per diluted share; consolidated Q4 net income (including discontinued ops) was $536,000, or $0.05 per diluted share.
  • Full-year net sales from continuing operations were reported at $278.1 million, down $39.2 million or 12.4% year-over-year; the company also cited weather and a shorter fiscal year as factors.
  • Gross margin improved for the year, up 180 basis points companywide, with Hooker Branded expanding gross margin roughly 200 basis points and domestic upholstery improving about 230 basis points.
  • Continuing operations recorded an operating loss of $16.5 million for fiscal 2026, primarily due to $15.6 million in non-cash impairment charges recognized in Q3, including $14.5 million of goodwill impairment in Sunset West.
  • Discontinued operations posted a pre-tax loss of roughly $19 million, which included $3.9 million of restructuring, $6.9 million of write-downs and held-for-sale losses, and $1.0 million of bad debt tied to a customer bankruptcy.
  • Consolidated fiscal 2026 net loss was $27.0 million, or $2.54 per diluted share.
  • Company reduced fixed costs by approximately $26.3 million (about 25%), with roughly $17.5 million of those savings related to continuing operations; restructuring charges of about $2.0 million were recorded in continuing ops.
  • Liquidity posture: year-end cash and equivalents were $1.1 million, down $5.2 million year-over-year, but revolver usage declined to $3.6 million and available borrowing capacity stood at about $62.8 million (net of letters of credit). Management later noted over $12 million in cash on hand and roughly $64 million available borrowing capacity as of the day before the call.
  • Balance sheet moves included repayment of $18.5 million of term loan principal, $8.8 million of cash dividends paid, approximately $3.2 million of capex, and roughly $5.5 million of proceeds from the sale of discontinued operations.
  • Operational signals: Hooker Branded posted $1.9 million of operating income for the year (versus an operating loss prior year), incoming orders were flat year-over-year for Hooker Branded while backlog rose nearly 26%, and company-wide incoming orders have risen year-over-year for three consecutive quarters when adjusted for the extra selling week last year.
  • Backlog and orders: consolidated order backlog at fiscal-year end was about $36 million; total orders for fiscal 2026 were roughly $256 million, essentially flat to prior year.
  • Product and go-to-market: Margaritaville line is scaling, gallery commitments have grown above the previously disclosed 50 committed galleries, and management expects shipments to begin in the second half of fiscal 2027.
  • Tariff environment remains a material swing factor. Management is evaluating potential refunds after the U.S. Court of International Trade directed a refund process for certain duties, but warned the administration may pursue new tariffs under different legal authority.
  • Inventory and working capital: inventory decreased $17.5 million to $48.7 million year-over-year, which management cited as part of improving cash flow and balance sheet flexibility.
  • Corporate actions: board authorized a share repurchase program of up to 5.0 million shares beginning in fiscal 2027 and recalibrated the annual dividend to $0.46 per share (first paid December 31, 2025).
  • Management tone and outlook: executives positioned the company as leaner with a lower break-even point and believe fiscal 2027 can show meaningful earnings improvement, but they warned that housing activity and consumer confidence remain weak and near-term demand recovery is uncertain.
  • Noteworthy inconsistency: some reported figures feel internally inconsistent on their face, for example a very large Q4 sales number versus a smaller full-year continuing-operations sales figure; investors should seek reconciliations in the 10-K/10-Q exhibits and the press release financial tables.

Full Transcript

Tanya, Conference Operator, Conference Services Provider: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Hooker Furnishings fourth quarter 2026 earnings webcast. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Thank you, Tanya, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our quarterly conference call to review financial results for the fiscal 2026 fourth quarter and full year. Our 2026 fiscal year began on February 3rd, 2025, and the fourth quarter began on November 3rd, 2025, both periods ending on February 1st, 2026. Joining me today is Jeremy Hoff, our Chief Executive Officer. We appreciate your participation today. During our call, we may make forward-looking statements which are subject to risks and uncertainties. A discussion of the factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our expectations is contained in our press release and SEC filing announcing our fiscal 2026 results. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after today’s call.

During the fourth quarter, we completed the previously announced sale of the Pulaski Furniture and Samuel Lawrence Furniture case goods brands, part of our former Home Meridian segment. Consolidated net sales from continuing operations were $667 million, a decrease of $17.2 million, or about 21% compared to the prior year period. The decline was partially attributable to the current fourth quarter being one week shorter than the prior year period, which reduced net sales by approximately $5.5 million based on average daily sales. The decrease also reflects lower sales in our hospitality business due to its project-based nature, as several large projects shipped in the prior year did not recur in the current year.

Additionally, we estimate severe winter weather experienced in January 2026 in a significant part of the United States and in most of our largest markets reduced net sales for the quarter by $3 million-$4 million. Despite lower net sales, we reported operating income of $629,000 for the quarter. This was driven by operating income of $1.2 million in Hooker Branded and $617,000 in all other, partially offset by an operating loss of $1.2 million in domestic upholstery. Notably, despite one week less of sales and severe winter weather, domestic upholstery reduced its operating loss by more than half compared to a $2.5 million loss in the prior year fourth quarter. Hooker Branded operating income was consistent with the prior year period, despite fewer selling days and the weather disruptions.

Net income from continuing operations for the fourth quarter was $874,000 or $0.08 per diluted share. Following the divestiture of Pulaski and Samuel Lawrence on December 12th of last year, results of these businesses are reported through that date. Discontinued operations incurred a net loss of $338,000 in the quarter. Consolidated net income for the fourth quarter was $536,000 or $0.05 per diluted share. For the full fiscal year of 2026, net sales from continuing ops were $278.1 million, a decrease of $39.2 million or 12.4% compared to the prior year. This decline was primarily driven by lower sales in the hospitality business within all other, and to a lesser extent, a shorter fiscal year and the severe winter weather we mentioned earlier.

Gross profit declined in absolute dollars due to lower sales. However, gross margin improved by 180 basis points, reflecting margin improvements in the Hooker Branded and domestic upholstery segments. Continuing operations reported an operating loss of $16.5 million for fiscal 2026, primarily due to $15.6 million in non-cash intangible asset impairment charges reported in the third quarter, triggered by our stock price as of the end of the third quarter. These included $14.5 million related to goodwill in the Sunset West division and $556 thousand related to the Bradington-Young trade name, both within domestic upholstery, as well as $558 thousand related to the remaining HMI business in all other.

Additionally, continuing operations incurred approximately $2 million in restructuring costs, primarily related to severance, to a lesser extent, warehouse consolidation, all as part of our completed cost reduction initiatives. Net loss from continuing operations was $12.8 million or $1.20 per diluted share. Discontinued operations included approximately 10 months of activity in fiscal 2026. Sales declined due to ongoing macro pressures and tariff-related purchasing hesitancy among its customers, particularly large furniture retailers. Discontinued ops incurred a pre-tax loss of $19 million, including $3.9 million in restructuring costs, of which $2.4 million related to the Savannah warehouse exit, a $6.9 million loss from classifications held for sale, which included $2.6 million of trade name impairment, $3.5 million in fair value write-downs, and $735,000 in selling costs. Discontinued operations also incurred $1 million in bad debt expense related to a customer bankruptcy.

Consolidated net loss for fiscal 2026 was $27 million, or $2.54 per diluted share. Now I turn the call over to Jeremy for his comments on our fiscal 2026 fourth quarter and full year results.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Thank you, Earl, and good morning, everyone. We are encouraged to report net income of $536,000 for the quarter. Fiscal 2026 was incredibly transformative as we navigated significant disruptive tariffs on our imports, opened a successful fulfillment warehouse in Asia, and exited two unprofitable divisions, all while reducing fixed costs by about $26.3 million, or 25%, of which approximately $17.5 million in fixed cost savings is related to continuing operations. At the same time, we delivered slight market share growth overall, with key strength in key businesses offsetting isolated softness, and launched our Margaritaville line, which is delivering on our expectations to be the most impactful product launch in company history. Today, we move forward as a leaner, higher margin business with a much lower break-even point and the potential for significant profitability as demand returns.

We believe we are positioned for a significant improvement in earnings in fiscal 2027, with our expectations bolstered by the early indications of strength within our Margaritaville product line. We see a clear path to sustained profitable growth by focusing on our core expertise of better to best home furnishings. Despite significant headwinds, we are encouraged to report that the Hooker Branded segment reported $1.9 million in operating income for the year, compared to a prior operating loss of $433,000. Additionally, despite a significant impairment charge in the third quarter, the Domestic Upholstery segment showed improvements in the fourth quarter, reducing its operating loss by more than 50% as compared to the prior year quarter due to cost reduction initiatives and operational improvements. I’d like to also comment on import tariffs, which were a significant disrupter for Hooker and the industry in fiscal 2026.

After our fiscal year-end in February 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that certain tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act were not authorized by statute. In March 2026, the U.S. Court of International Trade directed U.S. Customs and Border Protection to implement a refund process for previously collected duties. We are evaluating the potential recovery of these amounts. Additionally, the administration appears poised to pivot to new tariffs under different legal authority within the next few months. We continue to monitor developments in this area. Now I want to turn the discussion back over to Earl, who will discuss highlights in each of our segments, along with our cash, debt, inventory, and capital allocation strategies.

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Thank you, Jeremy. At Hooker Branded, net sales decreased 2.9% for fiscal 2026, with the decline entirely driven by a $5.5 million decrease in the fourth quarter, primarily due to one fewer selling week, as well as supplier delays and weather-related shipping disruptions. Unit volume declined, partially offset by a 5.7% increase in average selling price, implemented to mitigate higher costs and tariffs. Despite lower sales, full year gross margin expanded by 200 basis points, driven primarily by lower freight costs and pricing actions. Operating income improved to $1.9 million for the year compared to an operating loss in the prior year, while fourth quarter operating income of $1.2 million was consistent with the prior year, despite reduced selling days. Incoming orders were flat year-over-year, while backlog increased nearly 26%.

Domestic Upholstery net sales decreased 2.7% for fiscal 2026, reflecting lower unit volumes in certain divisions, partially offset by growth in contract, private label, and outdoor channels. Gross margin improved by 230 basis points for the full year, driven by lower material costs, reduced labor and overhead expenses, and benefits from cost reduction initiatives. The segment reported an operating loss of $16.9 million for the year, largely due to $15 million in non-cash impairment charges compared to an operating loss of $5.4 million in the prior year. In the fourth quarter, operating loss was $1.2 million, reduced by more than half from the prior year, reflecting cost reduction actions despite lower sales. Incoming orders decreased slightly by about 2%, while backlog increased about 8% year-over-year.

Regarding cash, debt, and inventory, as of the fiscal year-end, cash and cash equivalents stood at $1.1 million, a decrease of $5.2 million from prior year-end. However, amounts due under our revolver decreased by $18.5 million to $3.6 million at year-end. Cash generated from operations was used to repay $18.5 million of our former term loan, distribute $8.8 million in cash dividends, fund $3.2 million in capital expenditures. Inventory levels decreased by $17.5 million from $66.2 million at year-end to $48.7 million at fiscal year-end. We received approximately $5.5 million in cash proceeds from the sale of the discontinued ops. Despite these outflows, we’ve maintained financial flexibility with $62.8 million available in borrowing capacity under our amended and restated loan agreement as of fiscal year-end. This is net of standby letters of credit.

As of yesterday, we had over $12 million in cash on hand, with over $64 million in available borrowing capacity net of standby letters of credit, with $0 outstanding on our credit facility. Regarding capital allocation, late last year, we announced that our board authorized a new share repurchase program under which the company intends to repurchase up to 5 million of our outstanding common shares beginning in fiscal 2027. In connection with the repurchase authorization, the board recalibrated the annual dividend to $0.46 per share, which began with the company’s December 31st, 2025, dividend payment. Hooker Furnishings transitions to a more focused, growth-oriented company. The new share repurchase program, together with the adjusted dividend, enables us to return capital to shareholders while maintaining the balance sheet flexibility needed to invest in the business. We believe these actions appropriately balance capital returns with liquidity while supporting long-term shareholder value.

Now I’ll turn the discussion back to Jeremy for his outlook.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: In the Hooker Branded and Domestic Upholstery segments, incoming orders have increased year-over-year for three consecutive quarters, adjusted for the extra week in last year’s fourth quarter. Housing activity and consumer confidence remain weak, and the Department of Commerce’s February advanced monthly estimates reflect that reality, showing that retail sales for furniture and home furnishings decreased by 5.6% as compared to the prior year and lower than January of 2026. We don’t anticipate near-term meaningful improvement in conditions. However, with a more efficient cost structure and a streamlined portfolio, we believe we are positioned to report improved results even if current market conditions persist. Our advantage is a clear focus on our core businesses with the organization fully aligned to drive organic growth and deliver more consistent, sustainable earnings over time.

Margaritaville product and gallery commitments continue to scale, with shipments expected to begin in the second half of fiscal 2027. This ends the formal part of our discussion, and at this time, I will turn the call back over to our operator, Tanya, for questions.

Tanya, Conference Operator, Conference Services Provider: Certainly. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question will come from the line of Anthony Lebiedzinski of Sidoti. Your line is open, Anthony.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. Certainly nice to see the return to profitability in the fourth quarter. So first, looking at the Hooker Branded segment, you had a gross margin of over 39%, which was certainly much better than what we had expected. Was there anything unusual that helped the quarter in terms of the gross margin? How should we think about the sustainability of your gross margin at Hooker Branded?

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Sustainability, I believe we said in the call just now, gross margin, 200 basis points better or an improvement. Your question was how do we look at it going forward?

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: He’s saying the 39-

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Yes. Was there anything unusual in terms of the fourth quarter, 39% versus 32% a year ago for the quarter?

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: No, we can’t think of anything unusual for the quarter that would be driving that really.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Okay

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: other than the things we’ve mentioned.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Okay. That sounds good. Going forward, it sounds like you expect continued strong margins at Hooker Branded, right?

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yes.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Okay. Sounds good. Okay. Switching gears to the Domestic Upholstery segment. You had a nice year-over-year improvement there, though it was lower than what it was in the third quarter. Maybe if you could just talk about the various puts and takes impacting the gross margin at Domestic Upholstery. Are you seeing any increases in costs there? There’s been some talk of foam prices cost going up there. Maybe if you could just touch on what you’re seeing as it relates to foam and other raw material costs.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yeah. Domestic Upholstery, when we talk about Domestic Upholstery, I’m going to talk about Bedford and Hickory, which has been Sam Moore and Bradington-Young. Shenandoah is a different part of that, of course. Then you get Sunset West that’s under that same reporting name. Regarding BY and Sam Moore, we announced recently that we’re combining both of those to become Hooker Custom Upholstery, which is part of a larger strategic initiative that’s a part of Collected Living, which means just putting really everything together and showing all of our strengths in one collection, for example, which we believe we figured out is a much more powerful stance moving forward. As we’ve done that, we’re combining things like frames that can cross over from fabric to leather, to different factories.

Factories have become a capability that can be utilized for the strength of the Hooker Custom line versus a silo here that makes leather, another one that makes fabric. It’s a very powerful, unified message. Now, in doing that, we’ve changed such a big part of that strategic direction that in the timing of revenue with what’s going on macro, revenue’s really our only challenge in those divisions. The efficiencies of those factories are significantly improved, which is why you’re seeing the improvements in the profit. We’re not there yet, and we need more revenue, which we’re working on, and that’s why we’re doing the entire strategy that I just described. We feel really good about the direction, and we feel actually as good as we felt about that part of our Domestic Upholstery really since we’ve purchased them.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: Got you. Okay, just to follow up, as far as are you given the increase of the petroleum?

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Sorry, the foam part. Yeah, sorry. The additional cost are definitely coming at the industry. The foam and specific, there’s been some disruption. There was a fire in a major Texas facility that affected the entire industry. I can’t say the entire, but much of the industry was affected from that supplier that had the fire. There’s some things going on that are driving cost up in that way. Of course, the Middle East war going on has driven different chemicals and oil up and different things that are going through raw materials. That affects not just foam and what you referenced, but it affects overseas as well. There’s a lot of balls in the air with different costs that are rising, but we don’t have enough data right now to really tell you exactly what that could be. But it’s definitely.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: This sounds good. With respect to Margaritaville, sounds like you’re still well on track to start shipments in the back half of the year. Can you just expand maybe a little bit more as far as what the interest level you’re seeing from retailers since your last call? Has that increased or been kind of as you expected? Just wondering about that as far as placements and whether this could be even better than what you maybe had originally expected.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yeah. I believe we reported that we had over 50 committed galleries last call, and that number has grown. We feel even better than we did about where it’s positioned and how it’s going to impact our organic growth second half and beyond of next year or this year, excuse me. When you think about the fact that at High Point market, not all dealers come to every market. It’s actually probably a little over half come to each market. A good number have not even seen Margaritaville yet from as far as in our showroom. We continue to be even more optimistic about where that’s going to go and how that’s going to help our growth.

Anthony Lebiedzinski, Analyst, Sidoti: All right. Well, sounds good. Well, best of luck, and thank you very much.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: We appreciate it, Anthony. Thank you.

Tanya, Conference Operator, Conference Services Provider: Our next question will come from the line of Dave Storms from Stonegate. Your line is open, Dave.

Dave Storms, Analyst, Stonegate: Morning, and thanks for taking my questions. Just wanted to start with maybe some of the weather disruptions that you mentioned. How much of that is recoverable and maybe just changes the timing and maybe makes Q1 look a little stronger than it normally seasonally would?

Earl Armstrong, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Hooker Furnishings: We had the same experience in Q1, unfortunately, in early February with a storm that was a little more severe than this. I would expect by the end of Q1, that backlog should be mostly caught up, the shipping backlog at least.

Dave Storms, Analyst, Stonegate: Great. Perfect. Thank you. Just with shipping, just given all the conflicts, are you seeing any second order impacts to your shipping lanes? Maybe just any commentary around the general supply chain environment.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: We really are not.

Dave Storms, Analyst, Stonegate: Perfect. Thank you. Then the last one, I know you touched on this in your prepared remarks around tariffs. We can obviously all see the headlines, I guess on the ground with some of these Section 122 tariffs, my understanding is they only have 150-day runway. Are you seeing participants in the industry kind of look through this, or did you see a bunch of ordering ahead? I guess maybe any thoughts around what you saw on the ground with regards to this change in tariff environment.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: I think that due to the kind of somewhat obviously disruptive nature of what has happened, where I think people, unfortunately, maybe have become used to the up and down, and I feel like our industry is somewhat used to the disruption, if that makes sense. It is what it is, so we’re managing through it as an industry. None of us pretend like we know what is going to happen next. We think something is brewing for how he’ll replace the tariffs that the Supreme Court shot down. Obviously, no one knows what that is.

Dave Storms, Analyst, Stonegate: Understood. Thank you for taking my questions.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yeah. Thank you.

Tanya, Conference Operator, Conference Services Provider: As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press 11. Our next question will be coming from the line of John Deysher of Pinnacle. Your line is open, John.

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. It seems like a lot of heavy lifting was done over the past year or so, and I was just curious if there’s any other future potential divestitures or plant closures, warehouse closures, or anything like that that might be forthcoming in the future?

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yeah. Thank you. No. We feel very good about our position and the companies that we have at this point and the capabilities that we have. If you look at our overall strategic focus on better investments in the home furnishings industry, the companies we have are exactly that. We feel good about where we are. We don’t feel like we have anything that is not eventually sustainable, and profitable and a great part of our strategic direction.

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: Great. That’s good to hear. Regarding the tariffs, some companies have disclosed what the amount of their rebate they are seeking is. I was just curious if you could put a number on the rebate that you might be attempting to recoup.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yeah, it’s material. We’re not going to disclose that at this point.

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: Okay. I guess finally, what was the backlog at the end of the year, and what was the total number of orders for the year versus a year ago?

Unknown Speaker, Finance Team Member, Hooker Furnishings: Order backlog at the end of the year was roughly $36 million. What was the second question?

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: Total orders for the year versus a year ago.

Unknown Speaker, Finance Team Member, Hooker Furnishings: I don’t have that in front of me.

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: Do you have orders for the quarter?

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Yes, he does.

Unknown Speaker, Finance Team Member, Hooker Furnishings: Total orders in 2026 were $256 million.

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: Mm-hmm.

Unknown Speaker, Finance Team Member, Hooker Furnishings: Just slightly higher than the prior year at 257, Nate.

John Deysher, Analyst, Pinnacle: 257. Okay, about even. Okay, great. Thank you, and good luck.

Unknown Speaker, Finance Team Member, Hooker Furnishings: Thank you.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: Thank you.

Tanya, Conference Operator, Conference Services Provider: I am showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the conference back to Jeremy Hoff for closing remarks.

Jeremy Hoff, Chief Executive Officer, Hooker Furnishings: I’d like to thank everyone on the call for their interest in Hooker Furnishings. We look forward to sharing our fiscal 2027 first quarter results in June. Take care.

Tanya, Conference Operator, Conference Services Provider: This concludes today’s program. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.