Good morning, and welcome to Macy's, Inc's second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Today's hour-long conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Mike McGuire, Vice President and Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Operator. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us to discuss our second quarter 2022 results. As always, with me on the call today are Jeff Gennette, our Chairman and CEO, and Adrian Mitchell, our CFO. Jeff and Adrian have prepared remarks that they'll share, after which we'll provide time for your questions. Given the time constraints, we ask that participants in the Q&A please limit their questions to one single-part question. Along with our press release from earlier this morning, a slide presentation has been posted on the Investors section of our website, macysinc.com. In addition to information from our prepared remarks, the presentation includes supplementary facts and figures to assist you in your analysis of Macy's. Also note that, unless otherwise noted, the comparisons that we'll speak to this morning will be versus 2021.
Comparisons to 2019 are provided where appropriate to best benchmark our performance given impacts from the pandemic. I do have one housekeeping item to share with you this morning. On Thursday, September 8 at 8:05 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, Adrian will be participating in a fireside chat at the Goldman Sachs Global Retailing Conference. This event will be webcast live on our investor relations website, so please circle the date on your calendars and plan to tune in. Keep in mind that all forward-looking statements are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the expectations and assumptions mentioned today. A detailed discussion of these factors and uncertainties is contained in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
In discussing the results of our operations, we will be providing certain non-GAAP financial measures. You can find additional information regarding these non-GAAP financial measures, as well as others used in our earnings release and our presentation on the Investors section of our website. Finally, as a reminder, today's call is being webcast on our website. A replay will be available approximately two hours after the conclusion of this call, and it will be archived on our website for one year. With that, I will turn the call over to Jeff.
Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. As you saw in this morning's press release, our team put together another solid quarter on both top and bottom lines in the face of an increasingly challenging consumer environment. We generated quarterly net sales above our expectations at $5.6 billion, while comparable owned plus licensed sales decreased 1.6%. We also delivered earnings above our expectations, with adjusted EBITDA of $616 million and adjusted diluted EPS of $1. We benefited greatly from the steps we've taken to transform our business through our Polaris strategy. We are quicker and more agile and more prepared for the challenges in the current environment.
Over the past two years, as consumer demand rapidly switched between categories and channels and macroeconomic pressures intensified, our teams have taken disciplined actions and made tough decisions in order to ensure stability and health of our enterprise. We have fortified our model and strengthened our balance sheet, all while delivering an easier and more convenient shopping experience for our customers across channels and the value spectrum. Before we dive into the full details, I'd like to take some time to review how the pressures of the macroeconomic environment are affecting consumer behavior and what that means for us. During the quarter, Macy's brand customers across all income tiers slowed and shifted their spend. Persistently high inflation drove higher prices in food and fuel, and in turn led to higher interest rates in the softening market.
As a result, overall consumer discretionary spending and sentiment weakened compared to the prior year. Constrained consumer spend also shifted from goods to services, with more consumers choosing to spend on vacations, events, and dining out. Despite the weakened environment, for Macy's, we continue to see strength in occasion-based categories, which include career and tailored sportswear, fragrances, shoes, dresses, and luggage. Sales for these categories were up 8% to second quarter of 2021 and up 21% to second quarter of 2019. Like last quarter, pandemic-related categories, which include active, casual sportswear, sleepwear, and soft home, continued to decelerate during the quarter, with sales down 18% compared to the second quarter of 2021 and down 12% compared to the second quarter of 2019. Customers also exhibited more traditional pre-pandemic shopping behaviors, including more in-store shopping.
This shift contributed to a digital sales decline of 5% and conversion that was down 3% compared to 2021. However, versus 2019, digital sales were up 37% and conversion was up 14%. Spending patterns for Mother's Day and Father's Day were encouraging, signifying that despite inflationary pressures, customers continued to shop Macy's for celebrating life's moments with family, friends, and coworkers. Leading up to Mother's Day, we saw strength in beauty, dresses, career sportswear, and women's shoes. Before Father's Day, we saw strength in men's fragrances, tailored clothing, furnishings, outdoor sportswear, and shoes. Combined for the two weeks leading up to both holidays, these categories were up 9% over the prior year. Looking forward, we continue to feel confident in our position as a style source and leading gifting destination.
However, spending trends fell as June progressed, with Macy's brands seeing a decline in customer traffic and spending. Post Father's Day into July, Macy's brand year-over-year sales trended nearly 5 percentage points lower than the preceding weeks of the quarter. Our teams were prepared to tackle this slowdown quickly through the inventory management competencies we gained through Polaris. Our work in this area in the first quarter positioned us better compared to others, and we came into the second quarter prepared to compete in an industry that was largely over-inventoried. During the quarter, we observed that all retailers were working to shed their excess inventory, setting the industry up for higher permanent markdowns and promotional levels. The industry-wide inventory levels, along with the slowdown in consumer discretionary spend, resulted in elevated inventory levels within certain categories. Additionally, supply chain pressures continued to ease as the quarter progressed.
This resulted in receipts flowing in sooner than we experienced in the first quarter, and fallout rates continued to improve, with a 15% fallout rate representing a five percentage point improvement from the first quarter. To better align inventory levels with consumer demand, we slowed receipts in market brands, where we have more flexibility than our private brands. We effectively pulled the appropriate levers to manage inventory productivity while flowing fresh inventory to meet our customer needs. Over the past year and a half, I've spoken to the success our team has had in navigating supply chain volatility. This quarter was no different. The improved use of data analytics enabled the team to respond quickly and adjust our inventory flow accordingly. We ended the quarter with inventory levels up 7%.
We acknowledge that we still have opportunities to improve our inventory balance by channel and store and mix of merchandise categories and brands. We are targeting appropriate inventory levels by the end of the year and plan to be aggressive in taking the necessary markdowns to drive faster sell-throughs in our aged inventory in seasonal goods, private brand merchandise, and pandemic-related categories. Simultaneously, we'll bring in fresh inventory in categories in which customers are signaling demand. As a leading style and gifting destination, we know that the lifeblood of a fashion retailer is its ability to bring in fresh and exciting inventory. We're making strategic decisions to fuel the second half of the year, particularly by rebalancing our mix of market and private brands to ensure that we have the products our customers expect to see over the holidays.
Our current healthy financial position, when combined with the sensible management of our inventory through data analytics and pricing science, enables us to bring in the brands and products to meet demand at a rate higher than we've done in recent history. More than 55% of our offerings during holiday 2022 will be new, an increase of over 30 percentage points from holiday 2019, and we believe this will position us well to meet customer expectations. Yet we see risk in the continued deterioration of the consumer's discretionary spending in some of our categories and the industry-wide glut of pandemic-related category inventory. In light of this, we think it's prudent to recast our fall season. Our lower outlook accounts for the pressures we see in the back half of the quarter and the excess inventory that remains in the industry.
The impact of these factors is reflected in the markdowns and promotions we anticipate needing to liquidate aged inventory and further reduce the merchandise category stock to sales imbalances by the end of the year. Adrian will review this in further detail. We've successfully navigated and weathered these type of challenges and economic downturns before. Today, we are better positioned with our advancements in technology and data science that enable us to meet customer demand while protecting our bottom line. We continue to enhance the customer experience with investments in personalization, our digital platform, and physical off-mall expansion, all supported by investments in our colleagues. Our people enhance our competitive advantage, and we're retaining and attracting the talent needed to advance our strategy.
Our position as a leading omni-channel retailer across the value spectrum, as well as the efficiencies we've built into our business through Polaris, have allowed us to respond effectively to the changes in consumer shopping behaviors across income tiers, channels, and categories. Looking at each of our nameplates, comparable sales for the Macy's brand decreased 2.8% on an owned plus licensed basis. Macy's brand customer count increased 7% to 43.9 million active customers on a trailing 12-month basis. We continue to see strength in our most loyal and engaged customers, our Star Rewards active members, who totaled 29.5 million and accounted for 70% of our total owned plus licensed sales, which is a 5 percentage point rise year-over-year.
Our highest loyalty tier, Platinum, was particularly strong, and we're continuing to grow our active accounts, primarily by new Bronze accounts, our most diverse and younger customer tier. Similar to what we experienced during the first quarter, tourism remains below 2019 levels, although we see strength from Central and South America as well as Europe. We continue to expect international tourism in 2022, consistent with the level we saw in 2021. At our stores and on digital, we're seeing encouraging results from our new brand platform, Own Your Style, which reaffirms our position as a style and fashion authority among our customers. After seeing our branding in the second quarter, polled active customers were more likely to see Macy's as a source for great value and style, with perception increasing 16 and 18 percentage points, respectively.
Our off-price offerings, Backstage and the Bloomingdale's Outlet, are well-positioned to capture demand during an economic downturn. During the quarter, Backstage store-within-store locations continued to post strong results, powered by men's, women's, and kids' apparel, as well as beauty and luggage. Luxury continues to stand out as both Bloomingdale's and Bluemercury outperformed in the quarter versus the prior year period. Comparable sales in the quarter for our Bloomingdale's brand increased 5.8% on an owned plus licensed basis, driven by strength across women's and men's and kids contemporary, dressy apparel, and luggage. Bloomingdale's last twelve months active customer count increased 14% compared to the prior year. Next month, Bloomingdale's will kick off its 150th anniversary celebration that will run through the holiday season and feature special events and luxury designer collaborations.
Building on Bloomingdale's momentum, this celebration is expected to drive continued omni-channel growth and further customer engagement. Comparable sales for our Bluemercury brand increased 7.6%, driven by continued strength in color and skincare. Bluemercury's active customer count increased 9% compared to the prior year period. Overall, we remain focused on investing in the transformation of our operations to differentiate our business, drive market share, and strengthen customer engagement, all while maintaining a healthy financial profile. We're executing on several key initiatives to support our transformation. First, we are continuing to ramp up our digital capabilities, including personalization, that increases engagement with our customers and optimizes our omni-channel experience.
We are optimizing our online platforms to provide better digital experiences following the redesign of our mobile app in 2021, and we have seen strong conversion and growth with active app customers up about 17%. Second, Macy's Marketplace will launch in the coming weeks and will include products in a wide range of categories such as pets, home, kids, baby and maternity, beauty and health, and toys and electronics. We have a great dedicated team in place to build out our marketplace to include hundreds of new brands over the next few months. We look forward to sharing more details in the near future. Third, Macy's Media Network is growing year-over-year across revenue, advertiser, and campaign count. Recently, we started to test a more engaging advertising experience through on-site videos on our desktop platform, offering brands to tell their stories with engaging content.
Fourth, we're making progress on reimagining and rethinking our private brand portfolio, which will begin to take shape in 2023 and scale over 2024 and into 2025. While we're in the early stages of reimagining the portfolio to be differentiated, defendable, and durable, we're excited for what's to come based on the success of our newest brand, And Now This, and the refresh of I.N.C. And Now This, which we unveiled in mid-2021, has seen strong growth compared to more established private brands. During the quarter, we began a rollout of our revamped I.N.C. private brand that has seen encouraging sell-throughs in new products. We look forward to a robust private brand portfolio that better entices existing customers while attracting new ones.
Fifth, we recently announced that by October 15th, we will expand our exclusive Toys"R"Us partnership to include every Macy's location just in time for the holiday and gifting season. We're encouraged by the customer response in the current store locations, and we're seeing an improved sales trend in our kids business, which typically sits next to Toys"R"Us store within store. Toys is a huge opportunity for us with a fair share of market opportunity of $1 billion in annual sales. Sixth, we're taking steps to reposition our physical store footprint to better serve our customers and support omni-channel market sales growth. We're advancing our off-mall, small format store strategy by opening additional locations for both Macy's and Bloomingdale's, including our first replacement location in the St. Louis area. We look forward to sharing the findings in the future as they develop.
Finally, we're executing our commitment to creating a more equitable and sustainable future through our social purpose platform, Mission Every One. During the quarter, we increased our partnerships with diverse designers by refreshing icons of style. To support our sustainability goals, we joined Better Cotton, an organization that promotes better standards and practices in cotton farming. At Macy's, Inc over the past two years, we've built a culture of transformation within our organization that has enabled us to better connect with our customers and adeptly navigate the challenges we have faced while continuing to deliver results that move us towards our goals. Before I turn it over to Adrian, I want to acknowledge and thank our entire Macy's, Inc team for delivering another solid quarter.
Our customers require us to be flexible and disciplined in every area of our operations, and our colleagues are constantly adapting to meet our customers whenever and however they want to shop. With that, I'll pass it to Adrian for a deeper look into the second quarter and details on the rest of the year.
Thanks, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. As Jeff noted, we delivered second quarter results above our expectations. Our financial health, our talented team, and our continued investments in new capabilities, particularly those related to the use of data science and pricing, have allowed us to thoughtfully navigate through this period of uncertainty. Looking ahead, we will continue to remain disciplined by focusing on further transformational investments yielding healthy returns, the effective execution of our Polaris initiatives, and the efficient use of cash. We will do so while remaining financially healthy in order to emerge as an even stronger and more well-positioned business than we are today. At the same time, we remain committed to long-term sustainable and profitable growth, including low single digit compound annual sales growth and low double-digit adjusted EBITDA margins to maximize shareholder value over the long term.
With that, let me walk through our second quarter performance within our five value creation levers before discussing our outlook. First is omni-channel sales. We generated $5.6 billion in net sales during the quarter, a decline of 0.8% versus the prior year. Comparable sales on an own plus licensed basis decreased by 1.6%, which was ahead of our expectations. As you may recall, the second quarter last year benefited from the accelerating economic recovery and government stimulus payments. Despite the absence of these benefits this quarter, 22% of omni-channel markets grew year-over-year with a large portion of those in our Western and Southern markets. The second value creation lever is gross margin. For the quarter, gross margin was 38.9%, down 170 basis points from the prior year period and consistent with our expectations.
Merchandise margin decreased 160 basis points, driven by a year-over-year increase in clearance markdowns within Macy's. These markdowns were largely related to our pandemic categories, seasonal goods, and private brand merchandise. For instance, pandemic categories within Macy's saw a year-over-year decline in merchandise margin rate that was approximately 6 percentage points higher than that of occasion-based categories. Promotional markdowns intensified in July as a result of the increasing price competition across the industry as all retailers work to clear out excess inventory. Additionally, given today's inflationary environment, consumers focused more on price and took greater advantage of easier price comparisons on digital platforms across retailers. We continue to make further investments in our pricing science capabilities to improve the speed and effectiveness of our pricing decisions that are necessary to compete in this climate.
Those investments are focused on further enhancing the current suite of tools we have to support strategic pricing decisions. We are launching additional capabilities to optimize pricing in more categories across locations and channels within the competitive landscape. Partially offsetting the additional markdowns in the second quarter were higher ticket prices and favorable category mix shifts that helped drive an own AUR up approximately 5% for Macy's, Inc. For Macy's brand, AURs with occasion-based categories saw a growth of 12.5% over the prior year. Higher prices and lower promotions drove the results within these categories. AURs within pandemic categories declined 6% due to higher promotional and markdown actions. Delivery expense accounted for 4.5% of net sales.
That's 10 basis points higher than last year, largely driven by higher fuel costs and an increase in the percentage of digital sales fulfilled through the vendor direct channel. Together, these more than offset the impact from the 2 percentage point decrease in digital penetration and the work we've done to reduce cost per package. The third value creation lever is inventory productivity. Inventory turnover for the trailing 12 months improved 15% compared to 2019, while remaining relatively consistent with 2021 levels. Inventory management is and will continue to be a key focus as we leverage our data science capabilities. An example of this is using our analytics to determine the optimal time to take markdowns at the style and location level in order to increase full price sell-throughs and AURs.
It's investments like this that will allow us to maintain healthy margins and strong cash flows over time. Expense discipline is the fourth value creation lever. SG&A expenses increased by $83 million or 4.4% to $2 billion. SG&A as a percent of net sales deteriorated by 180 basis points to 35.4%. As a reminder, when comparing SG&A to the prior year, we had a significant number of open positions in 2021 due to the tightening labor market, and since then have filled the majority of the open positions. Additionally, as of May 1, all of our colleagues in stores and distribution centers are now at a minimum wage base of $15 per hour, if not above.
We continue to adjust colleague compensation to remain a competitive and attractive employer of choice, while at the same time remaining very disciplined in our SG&A productivity efforts. Compared to 2019, SG&A improved 390 basis points, reflecting the impact of the $900 million of annualized permanent Polaris cost savings from the 2020 restructurings. During the quarter, SG&A also benefited from the growth of Macy's Media Network, which generated net revenues of $30 million in the quarter, more than 60% higher than the prior year. Credit card revenues were $204 million, up $7 million from last year. As a percent of net sales, credit card revenues were up 10 basis points to 3.6%.
Similar to last quarter, credit card revenues exceeded our expectations, driven by lower bad debt levels than expected, larger balances within the portfolio, and higher than expected spend on co-brand credit cards. Although we've seen bad debt trends better than our expectations, we're taking a measured view on bad debt for the remainder of the year based on potential early signs of rising credit delinquencies and slower payment rates in the second quarter. Adjusted EBITDA of $616 million for the quarter exceeded our expectations. After accounting for interest and taxes, these results generated adjusted diluted EPS of $1, down from $1.29 in 2021, yet up from $0.28 in 2019 and ahead of our expectations. Lastly, the fifth value creation lever is capital allocation. Critical to our success is our ability to manage our cash effectively and efficiently.
Working capital productivity and maintaining a healthy balance sheet remain top priorities as we navigate through this uncertain environment. Year-to-date through July, we generated $303 million of operating cash flow and invested $582 million in capital expenditures. Year-over-year, operating cash flow was impacted by outflows from accounts payable and accrued liabilities, as well as a net outflow from the change in merchandise inventories, net of merchandise accounts payable, due to the timing of inventory receipts and payments. Year-to-date, free cash flow was an outflow of $206 million. We are laser-focused on using cash to invest in high-return opportunities that will accelerate the benefits of our Polaris strategy, even with economic uncertainties that exist right now. For instance, supply chain monetization.
We are building a faster, more efficient, and more flexible network to move product through our system at a lower cost. This includes a number of projects we've announced this year, including market-based fulfillment centers in select stores and our distribution center being built in China Grove, North Carolina. Our investments in simplifying our technology infrastructure and growing our data analytics capabilities is designed to accelerate the speed of decision-making within our operations and simplify the complexity that existed within our technology infrastructure. This will ultimately lower the cost of doing business. Macy's Marketplace is another high-return investment that is all about assortment and brand expansion under a curated platform and without the inventory handling costs. Finally, personalization is necessary to increase the relevancy, quality, and frequency of our interactions with our customers in order to drive incremental sales and margins.
While investing in our capabilities, we have and will continue to prioritize liquidity and balance sheet health in order to maintain flexibility and the ability to respond quickly to a variety of opportunities as they arise. Next, I'll walk you through our updated outlook for the third quarter and the remainder of the fiscal year. Full details of our updated guidance can be found within the presentation on our website. Our revised outlook for the year reflects a careful view of the impacts and pressures faced by the consumer and those placed on our business, given the weakening macroeconomic environment. The consumer is not as healthy as they were in prior quarters. Studying much of the same industry data that many of you do, we have seen declining retail traffic in areas of weakening apparel sales over the quarter as the consumer faces higher costs on essential goods, particularly grocery.
Wage growth is not keeping pace with inflation, which is putting pressures on savings rates. Our earnings outlook for the remainder of the year incorporates the risks we see in some of our discretionary categories, as well as risks associated with a more pronounced macroeconomic downturn. The actions we are taking are intended to drive sell-throughs and have the available product freshness customers are looking for. Additional markdowns will be taken in order to end the year with inventory at the appropriate levels. For the fiscal year, here's what we expect for Macy's, Inc. Net sales of $24.3 billion-$24.6 billion, a drop of $120 million on both ends of the range from our prior guidance.
Gross margin down roughly 150 basis points from 2021, lower than our prior guidance due to the additional markdowns previously discussed. SG&A as a percent of net sales deteriorates approximately 120 basis points from 2021. Net credit card revenues of approximately 3.3%. We've also narrowed our range for asset sale gains. It had been $60 million-$90 million, and we've changed it to $75 million-$90 million. This reflects an updated asset sale gain expected for the third quarter of nearly $30 million. Our revised annual outlook now puts our adjusted EBITDA margin at roughly 10.5%. After interest and taxes, we're estimating annual adjusted earnings per share of $4-$4.20.
Our outlook does not consider the impact of any potential future share repurchases associated with our current share repurchase authorization. For the third quarter, we expect net sales between $5.16 billion and $5.23 billion and adjusted earnings per share between $0.15 and $0.21, inclusive of the asset sale gains we spoke of earlier. We estimate that gross margin deterioration versus 2021 will be no more than 350 basis points, reflective of the impacts of the markdowns needed to drive higher inventory productivity and improve the composition of our inventory by year-end. It also reflects the risk associated with the competitive promotional climate intensifying within the industry and elevated fuel costs that we expect will persist.
While we are committed to taking the necessary markdowns, the year-over-year growth rate in inventory at the end of the third quarter is expected to be similar to the second quarter to ensure the appropriate freshness and inventory levels for the holiday season. For the fall season, we expect digital penetration to be approximately 35.5%, considering the trends observed at the end of the second quarter and the expectation for digital return rates to remain elevated. In closing, I want to reiterate that our financial health provides us with significant flexibility to respond to changing trends. We're investing in new capabilities to help us navigate through this uncertain period with strength. With that, I'll turn it back over to Jeff for some final words.
Thanks, Adrian. Over the past two years, we have been thoughtful and measured in our decision-making to better prepare us to confront the unprecedented challenges we faced while protecting our business. This would not have been possible without our talented team driving our durable strategy. While there is uncertainty ahead, our financial health and operational efficiencies bolster our confidence that we can effectively manage these difficult short-term pressures. At the same time, we feel confident that we can deliver on our long-term initiatives as part of our Polaris strategy. We firmly believe that we'll be able to traverse the challenges ahead, grow market share and profitability, and emerge from this uncertain period as an even stronger business than when we entered. With that, I'll turn it over to Q&A.
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. Please ensure your mute function is switched off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. As a reminder, please limit yourselves to one question to allow all participants the opportunity to ask a question. Again, please press star one to ask a question. Our first question today comes from Oliver Chen of Cowen.
Hi, good morning, Jeff and Adrian. We've also noticed cautious trends in July. Would love your thoughts on that month in terms of traffic and promotions and how that may interplay with your guidance as well as the level of markdowns you'll need to take. As you think about Macy's as an ecosystem, just to follow up on the marketplace and media, they sound like big opportunities. How should we think about how that may impact the financial model, near or longer term? Thank you.
Hey, Oliver. Let's talk about July. The month of July, really since Father's Day, we saw that the back half of the second quarter was about 5 percentage points lower than the front half. We had a very strong Mother's Day and Father's Day as we quoted in the post. That trend basically was, you know, we took that all the way back through the back half of the year, which informed, you know, where we were gonna be in terms of our guidance. We looked at the promotional levels, we looked at the inventory that was mounting in some of the pandemic categories, as well as though looking at our holiday opportunity and the newness, the gifting opportunities that we have, and how we experience gifting in Mother's Day and Father's Day.
All factored into our guidance. I'd tell you in the third quarter to date is basically conforming to our revised guidance. When we're seeing how back to school is performing and how the first three weeks of August are performing. In line with that. I'd tell you that on Marketplace, we're excited about that opportunity and launches over the next number of weeks. You know, we'll give a lot of detail on that in future calls, but we definitely expect that to be, number one, it's gonna give our customers lots more opportunities to transact on the Macy's brand as well as the Bloomingdale's brand in the future. And then with Macy's Media Network, that one has been a standout for us.
When you look at the numbers that Adrian was quoting in the post, you know, $30 million of revenue in the second quarter. Most importantly, customers are really taking to it and our brand partners are really enjoying the increased interaction that we're providing based on all the traffic that we get on our sites.
Our next question comes from Matt Boss of JPMorgan.
The 8% category growth in occasion-based categories that you cited versus the double-digit drag in the pandemic categories. I guess maybe bigger picture, how has your overall view of the health of the consumer changed relative to three months ago? How are you planning demand for lower income versus higher income cohorts? Then Adrian, just on the gross margin, when we incorporate the markdown actions that you have embedded in the third quarter, how do you anticipate the forward look on inventory as we exit the third quarter relative to the fourth quarter?
Hey, Matt, let me start. Basically when you look at the spend by tiers, it basically slowed at basically the same rate. You know, we're not really seeing evidence yet of trade down going on between different buckets of income levels. What we saw was differences in engagement. Obviously our most productive customers are platinum customers, and Star Rewards were highly engaged, you know, occasional shoppers were less engaged. To your question about occasion-based, you know, those are just very healthy categories for us. The AUR there was up about 13%. You just got real standouts there where you've got, you know, men's clothing, AUR was up 29%.
Missy career, which would be the equivalent of, you know, suiting and wear to work, was up 20%. Luggage was up 20%. We expect those AURs to continue. As we get into those categories that we have excess inventory to supply, as well as where I would characterize the balance of the industry, you know, we expect those to be constrained. Certainly with pricing, you know, transparency, we're seeing those sell-throughs were depressed really since Father's Day. That's what we factored in towards our gross margin, particularly the gross margin that we're quoting for the third quarter of responding to that.
Matt, good morning to you. If I could speak first to the markdown question that you raised, and then I'll go into the inventory. You know, the big headline on the gross margin overall is that it really reflects the actions that we feel are necessary given some of the challenges that you highlighted as we look ahead to the back half of the year. With regards to the gross margin, there are really three things that we're managing through in the fall season. The first, as you pointed out, is really taking the necessary markdowns to clear the aged inventory. Jeff spoke about the seasonal goods, the private brand merchandise, the slow-moving pandemic categories. We wanna work through that inventory and markdown appropriately to increase sell-throughs and position us better going into the next year. We are also managing elevated supply chain costs.
I'd call that out as well. You know, when you think about freight and delivery, fuel costs are currently trending down, but they remain elevated to what we saw earlier in the year. As you think about where we were last year, you know, we saw raw materials like cotton prices increase, and a lot of that is now flowing through this year as we're receiving those receipts. The third thing I'd point to in terms of margin is really just the pressures within certain categories that are experiencing increasing promotional intensity as well as excess inventory across the retail industry. You know, as Jeff spoke about earlier, categories like sleepwear, men and women's active wear, casual sportswear, those are areas where we're gonna have to respond, and we want to make sure that our margin profile actually reflects that.
In contrast, you know, we're also making sure that we're gonna be disciplined on our buys. We are supporting freshness for the holiday season, but we're also very focused on inventory productivity and inventory health. Our pricing sciences, watching the selling patterns in terms of demand and anticipating and quickly responding to those are gonna be the kinds of things that we're doing to manage our gross margin position. Now, as you think about the inventory, the inventory is an important piece to think through. As I mentioned earlier, we're gonna take the markdowns necessary. We're gonna flow the appropriate receipts to support, strengthen the holiday season. The important thing to keep in mind is we will end this year with the appropriate level of inventory.
Now, we do expect relative to last year, our ending Q3 inventory to be at similar levels on a rate basis relative to the second quarter, but that's really responding to the opportunity to be ready for holiday and have strength going into the back portion of the year. That's how we're thinking about both the gross margin for the back portion of the year as well as the inventory.
Our next question is from William Reuter of Bank of America.
Hi, I just have one question. In terms of the accelerated pace of asset monetization in the third quarter with this additional $30 million sale, does this say anything about the pace of monetization over the next couple of years? If we were to think about what we might expect in terms of proceeds in aggregate over the next five years, do you have a sense for what that could be? Thank you.
Good morning, Bill, and thank you very much for your question. As I highlighted a little bit earlier, we continue to be comfortable with our asset sale forecast for this year. We do anticipate having an additional asset sale gain in the third quarter, so that's reflected in narrowing the range to $75 million-$90 million. That being said, you know, we continue to remain very committed to our real estate monetization priorities. You know, as we think about the kinds of factors that are outside of our control that we have to kind of look and manage, it's really the interest rate environment and kind of any kind of slowdown that may exist on the horizon. We continue to be very excited about the opportunity around real estate monetization.
We're watching the macro environment closely, and we're continuing to develop, you know, programs to monetize assets across our network. We have not provided any guidance around what the next five years or three years may look like. We'll certainly speak to what 2023 will look like in a couple of quarters, but we just know that we remain very committed to real estate monetization.
Our next question is from Lorraine Hutchinson of Bank of America.
Hello, thanks. Good morning. I was hoping just to get your views on your expected free cash flow profile for the back half of the year and then also how you're thinking about the buyback. Understanding it's not in guidance, but, if you think that you will continue to repurchase shares with your excess capital in the back half.
Yeah. Just to give a perspective on how we're thinking about both the free cash flow profile and buybacks. In times of uncertainty, our number one focus is preserving cash and maintaining liquidity. That's really paramount for us. As we think about our free cash flow and what's gonna be driving it, one of the things that we're very focused on are continued investments in the kinds of initiatives that's gonna drive margin expansion for us. We also wanna preserve cash to maintain flexibility to support those fresh receipts that we spoke of earlier, to really support the holiday season. We wanna make sure that we're maintaining balance sheet health as we navigate these uncertain times.
Just know that we'll end the year in terms of our cash position in a way that will allow us to support our business goals, but we continue to be committed to our dividend. We continue to be committed to the remaining balance of share repurchase, but keep in mind that our share repurchase is open-ended. For us, just to kind of recap, Lorraine, it's all about preserving cash and liquidity in these uncertain times.
Our next question is from Omar Saad of Evercore Partners.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I actually first just wanted to clarify, in that kind of slowdown that occurred during the five-point slowdown that occurred during the quarter, did both the COVID winning categories as well as the occasion-based categories all slow down that kind of same five points? I was also wondering if you could speak to the performance of your older consumers versus a lot of the younger consumers that you picked up during COVID. You talked about the platinum doing really well. Is that mostly a boomer type consumer? Thanks.
Omar, let me start on the occasion-based categories did not slow down at the rate that the pandemic categories slowed down. When you look at our older customers, you know, when you look at kind of over 40 and under 40, we basically saw about the same level of slowdown between those demographics. As mentioned, the same thing we saw in the income buckets. What really characterized the activity was really their productivity level within the proprietary program. The gold and platinum customers, you know, were retaining their spends and more of the less engaged customers or the less occasion-based categories, those customers downshifted.
Our next question is from Kimberly Greenberger of Morgan Stanley.
Great. Thank you so much. Good morning. I wanted to just make sure I'm doing the math right here on the comp sales in the first half of the second quarter as compared to the second half. If I'm hearing you right, comps were actually around +1% in the first half of the second quarter and down around 4%. Is that right? Am I doing the math on that correctly?
Yeah, you're in the geography right, Kimberly. Yes.
Okay, great. That's super helpful. You know, Q3 to date has sort of continued at that -4% exit rate, it sounds like, Jeff, so far here during back to school.
It's a little better than that, Kimberly, but yes, it's in the ballpark.
Okay, great. Jeff, I just wanted to ask about inventory, because obviously consumer spending trends are changing. They're very dynamic. As you've come through the last three or four months, you've seen the categories that consumers are spending on, change, in some cases dramatically. I'm guessing that you along with the merchant team are sort of rethinking the inventory buying going forward. I know you're sort of adjusting dynamically here through the fall season, but you know, when in the future did you have a blank slate where you could just rebuild the inventory, you know, sort of from the ground with a fresh forecast? In other words, when do you think the buy on the inventory is going to be optimally repositioned, and you'll have it, you know, sort of fully where you want it to be?
Yeah. I think we're in good shape on this subject. Obviously, we've spent a lot of time and effort on this. I would say that the buy for the fourth quarter onward and the stock levels that we will have entering into the fourth quarter are pretty much at the status that we would build from the ground up. You know, there may be, and that's assuming the sell-throughs that we've been getting really since Father's Day in some of the slower categories that they persist. We're taking more aggressive markdowns to ensure that when we talk about the kind of sell-throughs that we got since Father's Day in some of these pandemic categories, in second and third markdowns, that was off about a third from the rates that we were getting, you know, previously in the quarter.
First markdowns were off about a half point. We've taken those kind of sell-throughs, we've applied it to being more aggressive on our hard markdowns and our POS on all those categories. Assuming that, and you saw that in a kind of our guide on the 350 basis points expectation of degradation of gross margin in the third quarter versus 2021 levels. We believe that the stock to sales ratio are gonna be close in the areas that are not trending. We're already at status in those categories that are trending in both market and private brands. We're flowing those goods appropriately. As mentioned, we feel good about the receipts that we've got coming in for the fourth quarter.
We feel that the position that we'll have in inventory at the end of the third quarter, as Adrian mentioned, similar to where we are right now in the second quarter. That's appropriate to where we're going into the holiday season. We expect the holiday buying, you know, still will be starting in the month of October as it did in the pandemic years. We wanna be fully ready for that. As Adrian mentioned, we expect that our stock to sales ratio will be appropriate by category, by channel, you know, entering 2023.
Kimberly, if I could just add a few things and amplify one thing that Jeff mentioned. You know, as a bit of context, when you look at our inventory productivity, we're better than 2019 and relatively flat to last year when effectively we're relatively lean, not only at Macy's, but across the industry. I think that speaks to just the processes and capabilities that we've built around this topic of inventory productivity. There's kind of three things that we're looking at as we look at the business going forward. One is just to Jeff's point, really improving the composition of inventory by category, by brand, and by channel, and doing that in a way while we're still managing our buys very efficiently. The other piece is really leveraging our pricing science.
We recognize that we're gonna have to deliver competitive market prices in this environment, but we're doing it in a way that's gonna improve our sell-throughs and improve, relatively speaking, our margins as well, based on what we've shared in our forecast. The other piece is location level pricing. This is something that we've spoken about earlier, and we're continuing to refine the mathematics and the technology around this, which just gives us much better precision around how we're actually managing at a local store level or by channel, the pricing that helps us to remain competitive in this marketplace. Then the last piece that we're pretty excited about is really tapping into both the vendor direct and soon to be marketplace capabilities to really think about what channel or sub-channel we're supplying those goods in the most profitable way.
Those are some of the things that we're doing to manage through the inventory dynamics that's ahead of us as well.
We can go to Steph Wissink of Jefferies.
Thank you. I have two quick clarification questions. The first, Adrian, is just on the inventory balance year-over-year. Could you help us think about what inflation is in that figure versus units? I think you mentioned cuts in inventory with some of your national brands. Can you share with us a little bit about some of the categories where you're actually cutting inbound receipts? Thank you.
I'll start with the inventory, and then I'll hand it over to Jeff to talk a bit about the assortment. From an inventory standpoint, we expect to end the year in a very healthy position or an appropriate position. You know, as you look at the, you know, third quarter, what we do expect is that the increase relative to last year is gonna be more in line with what we saw coming out of the second quarter. This is really about making sure that we have the freshness going into the holiday season. As you can imagine, last year, having the appropriate freshness and time for holiday was certainly a challenge within the industry. We feel that we're much better positioned on that. As I mentioned a bit earlier, you know, our input costs are higher.
We're managing through inflation with regards to both logistics of getting the product to us as well as the raw materials that are going into the products that we sell. What would be implied there is that we're bringing in product at a higher cost, but on lower units to align with our unit velocity sell-through and our sales profile.
Steph, on the question of the kind of market brands. You know, recognizing that when you talk about kind of the occasion-based categories in the market brands, our demand is up, when you looked at the second quarter, up about 7% and inventories are up 5%. That's about the level that we wanna see, having demand slightly outpace the supply, assuming that the year in question is the right base. When you look at the pandemic categories, if you look at our market brands, we've really been able to cut that back. The demand there is down about 24%, and supply was down about the same. We were able to get those in balance.
I feel pretty comfortable across our brands that we're in line with the categories that our customers are trending with. You know, we're always working through, you know, tweaks, but we're in pretty good shape there. And again, where we've got big opportunities in the third and the fourth quarters, I don't expect issues in supply chain to be able to hamper our ability to flow those goods. We're working with all of our market partners, and we've been doing that obviously in first and second quarters to get the receipts in line with demand. We're basically there now, and as we go through the back half of the year, we're gonna stay very disciplined in that view.
The next question comes from Gabby Carbone of Deutsche Bank.
Hi, good morning, and thanks for taking our question. Just wanted to dig into Backstage. Flat comps for the quarter, which outperformed your Macy's full-line doors. You know, given the kind of excess inventory out there, you know, do you think there is the opportunity to provide customers with even better value at Backstage moving ahead? It sounds like you aren't seeing a trade down to Backstage from full-line stores. Is that correct?
Yeah, that's correct. Gabby, what if you look at the first off, Backstage is continuing to perform well for us. It definitely is a growth strategy for us. We now have 308 locations open in store within stores. We just opened State Street and Herald Square. When you look at just what we've seen all the way through, you know, our journey with Backstage since 2015 is that customers who shop Backstage, you know, in our individual stores that also shop the balance of the store are our best customers. We're getting more frequent trips. They're more profitable for us. Their spends are up quite strongly versus stores who are just shopping in a particular channel.
You know, we have not seen a big shift in the difference. When you look at the variance of the trends of those stores in Backstage versus the balance of the store during the second quarter versus what it was prior, not a difference. We don't see a downshift into where you're seeing more customers from the full price going in the Backstage section. Just the customers that are shopping between them are very healthy customers.
We can go to Paul Lejuez of Citi.
Thank you. This is Tracy Kogan filling in for Paul. I know you noted earlier that you hadn't yet seen the trade down customer in your stores. I was wondering what you've seen in prior periods of consumer weakness, maybe in terms of early signs of the customer trading down. Is it to your private brands? When you do get the trade down customer from other places to Macy's, when have you typically seen that, and where are they trading down from? Thanks.
Hi, Tracy. You know, again, we have not seen a trade down as of yet. I think it really when I just would characterize our business is really just the difference between, you know, the categories that they're spending in right now. From the point of view of where you have an abundance of stock in certain categories, you're gonna need to liquidate those with lower prices. We don't operate in a vacuum. Our competitors are in the same boat, so customers are gonna take advantage of that. Where we still have customer wanted categories and there's more scarcity of product, you know, with us and with the market, we're getting the higher AURs. I mentioned some of those earlier. That's how I'd characterize it right now.
You know, when I would talk about on the Bloomingdale's, we're not seeing any. You know, we're seeing our most affluent customers continue to spend at very strong levels. The 150,000 and above, you know, we have not seen trade down at Bloomingdale's either, and their business continues to be quite robust. But nothing yet and nothing that's informing us from prior recessions that's gonna suggest anything that we haven't put into our guidance for the balance of the fall season.
Next question is from Chuck Grom of Gordon Haskett.
Hey, thanks a lot . Good morning. Adrian, on the credit front, in order to get to 3.3% of revenues for the year implies a pretty big drop in the second half, you know, roughly 10%-14% year-over-year. I guess, can you speak to what's driving that assumption? Are you seeing a big change in credit quality, bad debt? Jeff, just geographically over the past, you know, six weeks, just wondering if you're seeing any major trends across the country.
Chuck, good morning to you. With regards to the credit card revenue, I think the punchline here is that we're just taking a measured view on bad debts for the remainder of the year. You know, we're monitoring credit delinquencies, we're monitoring payment rates. As we look ahead, there are just a number of factors that from our perspective, you know, just continue to take that measured view. When we look at the industry more broadly, we see that inflation is outpacing wage growth. That's just not sustainable for the consumer. We see that consumers are under pressure with regards to elevated gas prices as well as double-digit increase in grocery prices. You know, as we look at some of these different indicators, you know, we're just very thoughtful and very measured about what we believe that bad debt will actually be.
Now that being said, we are seeing increased balances. We are seeing increased co-brand spend. That continues to drive more of a healthy guidance of about 3.3% of credit card revenue as a percent of sales as we think about what the outlook will be for the year.
Chuck, to your second question, the Western and really the Southern markets are performing better than you saw if you take a look at our slide deck. It'll show you that 22% of our omni markets had increases in the second quarter. What you'll see there is the Southern markets definitely performed better. The other comment I'd make that within the quarter is the return of the downtown locations, not so much as a result of tourism, but certainly a return to work. Those return to work and getting the traffic around those buildings with more offices being filled, albeit not certainly at levels that we were pre-pandemic, but certainly better than we were, you know, against the quarter of comparison. That's really helping us.
When you look at like downtown, you know, certainly here at Herald Square, Union Square, you look at, you know, downtown Boston and Washington, D.C., those locations are quite strong. Southern markets and downtown locations would be how I'd characterize the geography question.
Our next question comes from Jay Sole of UBS.
Great. Thank you so much. We got a three-part question. First is, Jeff, can you elaborate a little bit on the toys opportunity, specifically in 4Q? I think you said that toy sales grew 3x over 2Q of 2021, and you see a billion-dollar opportunity. What does that imply about, you know, maybe the opportunity in 4Q? Secondly, thinking about Omicron last year and how that impacted comps and sales, you know, what do you think about lapping that this year? What kind of opportunity would that create for December? Lastly, you know, during the quarter, you announced the acceleration of the growth of the off-mall small format strategy. Could you just maybe give us a little bit of an update there and tell us what you're seeing and what the bigger picture opportunity is for the smaller format stores? Thank you.
You got it. Okay, Jay, let's just take it from the top on toys. The fair share opportunity would be if you take, you know, Macy's percentage, you know, within these categories, and you apply to the overall toy market, that's how you get to $1 billion. That's not to suggest we're gonna get to $1 billion, you know, at the end of 2022, but that's currently what we're really pushing for. When we signed on with Toys"R" Us, and we decided to put, you know, the investment that we went against this, it was recognizing that we had a very small toy business. It was in Backstage and in online. We did not have a developed toy business. This is really putting us in the game.
We do believe that Toys"R" Us offers us the most experiential omni-channel toy experience in America when all is said and done. We'll have 400 Toys"R" Us shops that will be constructed, including some flagships, by October 15th. We're well on our way on that. We have nothing but growth ahead of us with toys over the coming years. With respect to Omicron, frankly, the Omicron really affected us more in the month of January, obviously our smallest month of the year than the month of December. You know, we had a strong January last year. We had a tough January. That's incorporated in our guidance. With respect to off-mall small store format, we're continuing there. We have three formats there that we're really playing with.
The first one is kind of the backfill strategy. That's where we've got, you know, high productive markets, omni markets, and where there is ZIP codes in which our digital business is not as high as the balance of the market, and where there may be opportunities for us to put a new brick-and-mortar. You just saw us open Johns Creek in Atlanta. That would be an example of that. Then we have replacement markets where we basically have stores that we've identified to say, you know, we have about 60 more stores that were neighborhoods that we'd said over time we might close. Those would be examples where by closing those in the past, we've seen us kind of firing customers. How do we have a strategy in brick-and-mortar that retains those customers? Chesterfield's a big one for us. That's in St. Louis.
We're opening up a Market by Macy's in October. We're closing the store that's in the Chesterfield Mall, which is about 2 mi difference in. The Chesterfield Market by Macy's will be in a thriving, you know, strip center. We're gonna see how that works, and we're gonna be testing that. The third bucket is new markets, those places that have strong interest for Macy's, and we see that in the digital, in the buys in those ZIP codes and the opportunity to add a Market by Macy's in the future. You're gonna see that flavor pop into 2023. We're also playing on the Bloomingdale's front. We are in Mosaic. There is another one that we're opening this year.
There's one that we will be opening in the beginning of 2023. We'll give everybody detail on that. The objective on this is recognizing that about 50% of brick-and-mortar business is done off-mall, and how can we play in our ecosystem with a small door format that works for both the Bloomingdale's and the Macy's brands. Our hope is that we're gonna have a scalable model in the future to be able to roll that out at scale.
The next question is from Bob Drbul of Guggenheim.
Hi. Good morning. Just, you know, one question that I have, as you think about, you know, the back half of the year and even into 2023, you know, there's just been a lot of discussion around, you know, your vendors taking price increases. I'm just curious if you've revisited any of the, you know, the direction around the sales over the, you know, since post Father's Day. Thanks.
Hey, Bob.
Hey, Bob, you kind of cut out in the middle of your question. You were talking about vendors and say that again. Ask that again, please.
I'm sorry. The question I have is just on, you know, price increases. Like, there's a lot of vendors that have talked about taking price in the back half of the year or into 2023. Given the change in direction on the trends, are you revisiting some of these initiatives with your vendors? I'm just trying to understand how you're thinking about it going into the back half and the next year.
Yeah. I think if you've got a trending category and you have a price increase, what I say is our manufacturing partners, market partners have done a great job of not just having a price increase, but in many cases, putting more quality into the goods. You know, either more make or more trim, more quality, and that's commanding a higher price point. When you're in a category that is, let's say, occasion-based or, you know, other categories that are not pandemic, in that particular flavor, we're passing down those cost increases, and the customers are responding quite well to it. I mentioned that in, like, men's clothing. I mentioned that in women's clothing as well as luggage. There's brands. I look at Ralph Lauren as a great example of that.
Ralph Lauren has really improved their quality. We're getting much higher AURs there. We're fully aligned with that brand in terms of our strategy together. That includes, you know, improving the customer experience both online as well as in store. If you've got a considered strategy about what you're doing and there's good value in the price increases you're making, customers will transact quite well with that. I think it depends on what category, what brand you're in. As a general comment, I think we're fully aligned with our vendor partners on that strategy.
Our next question comes from Michael Binetti of Credit Suisse.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking all our questions here. I guess a lot of our questions have been answered, but I guess when you look at the year you just guided us to and kind of step back, where do you think about where AUR will end the year, where units will end the year? As you think about spring, I know there's some parts of the assortments you have to start forming up plans a little earlier. Maybe at this point, just how you're thinking about positioning the business for return to growth next year, lapping, you know, some of these AUR increases.
Do you think about growth in terms of ordering units up as you look to spring to drive growth, plans to recapture some level of full price selling against, you know, the guidance for more markdowns in the back half? Maybe just help us think about, you know, how you early on think about driving the business for growth after a year like 2022.
Okay. Michael, let me take the AUR, and I'll talk about how we're thinking about kind of return to growth and let Adrian add anything on that question. When you think about AURs, what we quoted in the beginning of the year pretty much stands where we are right now, which is we think we're gonna be up about 5%. That's what we were up in the second quarter with kind of the ins and outs of, you know, again, you've got pandemic categories, which is a chunk of our business. You've got other, which is a chunk of our business. Then you've got the occasion-based categories, which is a chunk of our business.
When you look at the blend of all of that, you know, we're in the ballpark of that kinda mid-single digit AUR improvement as we look at it versus 2021. As you kinda think about, you know, really in answer to Kimberly's question, we're really talking about just what we're focused on in terms of inventory and ensuring we've got the right inventory by channel, by location, and certainly by category and brand. We do believe that having a better, you know, status across all of that in a stock to sales ratio and making sure that you've got built-in liquidity and just some reserve that is going to be able to respond in season is really important.
That's a discipline that Adrian went through all the tools that we're using, you know, once we get it in to make sure that we're maximizing the profitability, you know, on the way out, but also on the way in and the buy-in, you have that same level of rigor that goes into how we're constructing it. We wanna retain flexibility. You know, we're not quoting yet what our guidance is for 2023, but just know that our inventory and our stock to sales ratios will be in line with those expectations.
Mike, just to add to Jeff's point, you know, we remain committed to our long-term targets. As you heard us speak to in prior calls, we're committed to low single digit sales growth as well as low double-digit adjusted EBITDA margins. You know, as we think about, you know, where we are today, we have to see how the consumer shopping behaviors and how the macroeconomic trends, really how they unfold for the balance of the year before we provide kind of a clear outlook for 2023. That being said, as we think about longer term targets, we remain committed. You know, a demonstration of that conviction that we have is really in the actions that we continue to invest in in the near term.
You know, we're continuing to invest in initiatives that we believe are high return initiatives, whether it's strengthening our pricing capabilities, our Macy's Media Network capabilities, which is our advertising agency, or even building new sales capabilities with things like Macy's Marketplace. We're being very disciplined on inventory management to position ourselves for healthy and profitable growth next year. A lot of the inventory productivity and pricing initiatives that we're referencing are really capabilities that we continue to lean into with strength. I would also say that we're investing in our talent as well. We're investing in our talent to execute a strategy for Macy's that is an evolved Macy's and a changed Macy's relative to what we've been investing over the last several years.
I think the overarching punchline in terms of how we're approaching it is to really, you know, do what's necessary to strengthen our competitive position with a healthy balance sheet, with new capabilities, with a talented team, so that we can take advantage of growth opportunities coming out of this uncertain period over the course of the next six to 12 months.
Kevin, we'll take two more questions.
Thank you. The next question comes from Dana Telsey of Telsey Group.
Dana, you're up.
Telsey, your line is open.
Hi, can you hear me okay? Hi.
Yeah, we can hear you now.
Perfect. Can you expand on the magnitude of the digital returns, what you're seeing there, and is that in store also? Just with the following up with the guidance adjustments, how are you adjusting your holiday plans, including marketing spend, given the current environment? Thank you.
Good morning. I'll start with the topic of returns and then hand it over to Jeff to talk about our holiday plans. If you look at returns overall, returns are higher than last year, but actually lower than 2019. For example, on the digital side in the second quarter, we saw returns were up about 4 percentage points higher than last year, but still 2 percentage points lower than 2019. When you think about what's driving the higher returns, it's a lot of what you would actually expect. There has been a shift in the category mix towards apparel. When you think about dressier, more tailored apparel categories, they tend to have a higher return rate than what we've seen in prior years with the demand around center core and home categories.
If you compare it to kind of the trend that we've been seeing over the years, our digital penetration, for example, in the second quarter, was 8 percentage points higher than 2019. As you know, the digital channel tends to have a materially higher return rate than the stores channel. It's really a combination of mix, a combination of digital penetration, that's really impacting how we think about returns this year versus last year, but we're continuing to see favorability relative to our pre-pandemic levels. The category mix trends that, you know, I've just described, that's all reflected in our outlook for the balance of the year, but that's kind of how we would speak to the returns profile.
Dana, on the marketing is definitely gonna be commensurate with the sales expectations. You know, we had a slight downshift in overall volume for the back half of the year. When you think about the marketing that is going against those sales, pretty consistent to what you've seen in the first half of the year. What I talk about is some of the differences in marketing is that really our upper funnel tactics are really gonna go to branding. When you think about what we're doing with Own Your Style and being a gifting destination, you know, that's what you're gonna see on the upper funnel. The lower funnel tactics, a lot of digital tactics are gonna really be about, you know, item price and more promotion and opportunities with that.
We feel like we've got a good formula on that. It's certainly fitting within our SG&A rate, and it's definitely tied to our expectations on volume trends for holiday.
Today's final question comes from Carla Casella of JPMorgan.
Hi, I'm wondering, just given your updates for your free cash flow and any change in your thoughts towards capital allocation and your leverage target?
You know, we remain committed to our leverage target. We talked about 2 times or below. That's an important, you know, thing for us. You know, if I take a step back for a moment, Carla, just really think about where we are from a cash standpoint. You know, coming out of the second quarter, we're actually quite comfortable with our cash position. You know, just to put it in context, we did not tap our ABL. Our overall liquidity does encompass a $3 billion asset-based credit facility that we did not tap coming out of the second quarter. You know, inventory came in earlier than we expected because we were experiencing higher fill rates and the supply chain loosening. We managed through that. You know, we're managing through softening sales in the back portion of the quarter. Again, we managed through that.
We have no debt maturities on the horizon. You know, from our perspective, coming out of the second quarter, we really maintained our financial flexibility to respond to any potential changes that may be ahead of us. The most important thing we wanna be responsive to is the approach of holiday. That's an important quarter for us, an important period for us. Also having the capacity to respond to any kind of macroeconomic scenario that may be on the horizon. From a cash standpoint, we'll continue to manage our cash efficiently and effectively. From a capital allocation priority, we're continuing to invest in high return initiatives within the business, return capital to shareholders. We're being very consistent with what we've shared in prior quarters as well.
That does conclude the question and answer session for today's call. I'd like to hand the call back to Mike McGuire for any additional or closing remarks.
Thank you, Kevin. Thanks everyone for joining us today and for your interest in Macy's, Inc. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to Michelle Cassiere or myself in Investor Relations. Remember to keep your feet on the ground and keep reaching for the stars, and have a great day.
That does conclude today's conference call. We thank you all for your participation, and you may now disconnect.