Domino’s Earnings: Improving Margins and Not Uber Deal Represent Key Narrative; Shares Fairly Priced
We believe wide-moat Domino’s DPZ second-quarter key narrative ties to improving restaurant-level profitability and flow-through implications for a recovery in unit development, not the firm’s broadly publicized deal with third-party delivery provider Uber Eats. To this effect, the pizza chain saw its company-owned restaurant margins improve materially, swelling 220 basis points to 18.6% from 16.4% in the year-ago period as food costs proved deflationary, while management guided to about an 8% annual increase in franchisee EBITDA in the U.S. (to $150,000 per store) for the full year. As a consequence, we believe that Domino’s should be able to drive unit growth closer to the midpoint of its 5%-7% target in 2024 (up from our prior low-5% expectation), with a strong correlation between franchisee EBITDA and willingness to invest in new stores. As we digest results, we plan to incorporate a modest bump from the firm’s Uber Eats agreement—a 1.4% cumulative lift to same-store sales over the next half decade—and a much quicker recovery to high-teens restaurant margins, raising our 2023 forecast for company-owned restaurant EBITDA margin to 18.2% from 16.1% as the firm’s food basket saw a 2.4% decline in annual pricing. The net effect is a planned low-single-digit percentage increase to our $385 fair value estimate, leaving shares trading in a range we’d consider fairly valued.
Walking through results, Domino’s reported solid second-quarter results, with EPS of $3.08 edging our $2.85 estimates, while $1.03 billion in sales aligned closely with our prior forecast. Same-store sales growth of 0.1% outpaced our estimates for a 1.5% decline, though traffic and mix collectively declined about 4% annually, only modestly better than our estimated 5% decline industrywide. We continue to expect stout near-term sales headwinds, a view corroborated by the firm’s 3.5% drop in delivery same-store sales, but remain optimistic on the chain’s long-term prospects.
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