Bloomin' Brands - Earnings Call - Q2 2017
July 26, 2017
Transcript
Speaker 0
Greetings, and welcome to the Bloomin' Brands Fiscal Second Quarter twenty seventeen Earnings Conference Call. It It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Mark Graff, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. Mr. Graff, you may begin.
Speaker 1
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. With me on today's call are Liz Smith, our CEO and Dave Deno, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial and Administrative Officer. By now, you should have access to our fiscal second quarter twenty seventeen earnings release. It can also be found on our website at bloomanbrands.com in the Investors section. Throughout this conference call, we will be presenting results on an adjusted basis.
An explanation of our use of non GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures appear in our earnings release on our website as previously described. Before we begin formal remarks, I'd like to remind everyone that part of our discussion today will include forward looking statements, including a discussion of growth strategies and financial guidance. These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our forward looking statements. Some of these risks are mentioned in our earnings release, others are discussed in our SEC filings, which are available at sec.gov. During today's call, we'll provide a recap of our financial performance for the fiscal second quarter twenty seventeen, an overview of company highlights and a discussion regarding progress on key strategic objectives.
Once we've completed these remarks, we'll open up the call for questions. With that, I'd now like to turn the call over to Liz Smith.
Speaker 2
Thanks, Mark, and welcome to everyone listening today. As noted in this morning's earnings release, adjusted second quarter diluted earnings per share was $0.28 versus $0.29 last year. Combined U. S. Comp sales were down 0.3% in Q2.
This result included a continued improvement in sales trends at Outback, where we again posted positive comps with a 130 basis point sequential improvement in traffic. Overall, we are pleased with our Q2 results and we are on track to deliver our comp sales and earning objectives for the year. We have seen some strengthening of casual dining sales trends over the past two quarters since the significant pullback of the industry in Q4 twenty sixteen. We have also seen improvement in key indicators such as employment, confidence and wage growth that suggest the state of the consumer is better. While this improvement is positive, we have yet to see a meaningful change in measured CDR industry traffic.
We believe there are a few factors impacting these trends. First, we see continued increases in new restaurant openings. Excess capacity in the industry pressures traffic at existing restaurants. The second trend is the growing prevalence of dining in home, which is at levels not observed since 1992. The good news is that dining in home increasingly is not limited to cooking at home.
We believe our investment priorities are appropriately aligned with this landscape. It is more important than ever to elevate the three sixty degree experience in our restaurants to provide differentiated dining occasions. And that effort is well underway and gaining traction. Each brand has a unique approach. Over the past two years, we have spent a lot of time staying close to our customers to develop the optimal set of benefits including price that is right for each brand.
As a reminder, we have three key strategies to achieve sustainable long term growth. First, current and ongoing investments are prioritized towards elevating the total customer experience. This encompasses food quality and portion enhancements, service upgrades and improved ambiance. Second, we have been reducing reliance on straight discounting and have been reallocating these dollars towards our investment. Third, we have been building incremental sales layers such as the Outback remodel program, the Dine Rewards loyalty program and the rapidly emerging off premise business.
We remain committed to moving away from shorter term sales tactics towards longer term customer experience layer. We will be patient as this strategy takes hold and will not overreact in the face of monthly category volatility. Additionally, the incremental revenue potential of delivery and CDR continues to strengthen. We are building the capability to ensure we deliver the experience consumers expect in off premise signing. Turning to our Q2 results by brand.
Outback's Q2 comp sales were up 0.3% with a meaningful sequential improvement in traffic. We are pleased with how the brand is progressing as we elevate the customer experience. Last quarter, we announced the rollout of our next wave of initiatives that were focused on steak preparation, portion sizing and reduced complexity. The benefits of these investments are gaining traction and are showing up in improved brand health measures and the quality of the traffic. We have seen this in our social media score for intent to return with Q2 gains across all four key measures in food, service, price value and portion.
We expect this healthy traffic to continue to build over time due to the frequency of our core consumer. We have also been aggressively completing the multi year rollout of the Outback Exterior Remodel Program and relocating Outback restaurants as quickly as quality sites become available. In 2017, we expect to complete 150 remodels and 16 relocations. Outback is a strong differentiated brand with qualified sales layers to restore long term growth. At Carrabba's, Q2 sales comps were up 0.4%.
We have refocused our efforts in 2017 to ensure Carrabba's is the restaurant of choice for authentic Italian dining and special occasions. This is illustrated through the celebration of the service, experience, and the heritage of Italian cooking. In addition, we are returning to less overt marketing programs and more direct marketing to our loyal core customer with a real focus on building off premise via family bundles and delivery platforms. Turning to Bonefish, we continue to enjoy high brand health and consumer satisfaction metrics that reflect the return to a simple focus of fresh fish and polished casual. In Q2 of this year, we were lapping our first and only television campaign, which supported the brand relaunch.
As a result, Q2 twenty seventeen marketing spend was down 50%, which we knew would represent a challenge. However, we were still disappointed that the brand's strong customer satisfaction scores did not translate into better results. Despite this, we remain confident in our ability to grow comps of the brand over the medium to long term given the many incremental sales layers that are in front of us. Among those are expanding our launch opportunity and growing our nascent off premise business. We will not activate these new layers until we return the core dinner business to growth.
We will be patient in letting this traffic build back organically. We are also making progress against the new emerging sales layers of Dine Rewards and Delivery. The Dine Rewards loyalty program is performing very well and just surpassed its one year anniversary last week. We now have over 3,900,000 members enrolled. Since its launch, it has consistently received high marks for its simplicity and value relative to peer program.
Dine Rewards is attracting a healthier consumer and is now attaining the higher end of the 1% to 2% traffic lift contribution we saw in test market. As it relates to delivery, we are currently in approximately two fifty restaurants and have been pleased with the consumer response and overall results thus far. We recently conducted additional off premise research which validated our optimism. We will continue to invest in the necessary systems, infrastructure, and people to accommodate the higher potential volumes the research suggests. These investments will ensure that our service and experience is best in class, which will enable us to capture a larger share of this exciting opportunity.
Now turning to international. Brazil posted comps up 13, which represented the highest quarterly comp since 2014. This quarter we ran a marketing program featuring our signature Outback ribs and it was very well received by the Brazilian consumer. In addition, service and operations continued to execute at a high level allowing the Outback business to perform extremely well in a tough environment. We are also seeing success with Abrachio and now have 10 restaurants.
As a reminder, Italian is the second largest segment in Brazil with no clear market leader providing us with significant runway for future growth. Our brand strength combined with the under penetration of casual dining in Brazil gives us confidence to continue investing capital in Brazil for high levels of return. In conclusion, our portfolio is performing in line with expectations and we are pleased with the progress we are seeing behind our initiatives. Our investments in the core experience, off premise and international are paying off. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Dave Deno to provide more detail on Q2.
Dave?
Speaker 3
Well, thank you, Liz, good morning, everyone. I'll kick off with discussion around our sales and profit performance for the quarter. As a reminder, when I speak to results, I'll be referring to adjusted numbers that exclude certain costs and benefits. Please see the earnings release for reconciliations between non GAAP metrics and their most directly comparable U. S.
GAAP measures. We also provide a discussion of the nature of each adjustment. With that in mind, our second quarter financial results versus the prior year are as follows: GAAP diluted earnings per share for the quarter was $0.35 versus negative $08 in 2016 adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.28 versus $0.29 last year. There are a couple of differences between GAAP and adjusted numbers in the second quarter that are worth mentioning. First, GAAP earnings are higher than adjusted earnings in the second quarter of twenty seventeen, primarily due to $7,300,000 of gains associated with the refranchising of 54 restaurants and a $4,600,000 of certain income tax benefit.
We removed both of these gains from adjusted results. Second, we are lapping $39,600,000 of asset impairment charges in connection with the 2016 sale of our South Korean business. These charges are not included in the 2016 adjusted results. Total revenues decreased 4.2% to $1,000,000,000 in the second quarter. This decrease was driven primarily by our successful refranchising both domestically and internationally as well as a net decline from restaurant closures and openings.
This was partially offset by a positive benefit from foreign currency translation and increase in franchise revenues. Combined U. Comp sales finished Q2 down 30 basis points. At Outback, Q2 comps were up 30 basis points with traffic down 80 basis points. This is Outback's second consecutive quarter with positive comps and more importantly traffic is strengthening.
We saw 130 basis points sequential improvement from the first quarter. Our Q2 traffic was the highest since the second quarter of twenty fifteen. We continue to see progress in our efforts to build healthy traffic growth with the brand. At Carrabba's comp sales were up 40 basis points. This was Carrabba's highest comp sales result over the last eight quarters.
At Bonefish Grill, comp sales were down 2.6% primarily driven by lapping the brand's first ever television campaign in 2016. We chose not to replicate this activity in 2017 and it had an impact on traffic. And at Fleming's comp sales were down 1.3%. We continue to reduce our reliance on discounting across the portfolio. In Q2, this strategy had the largest impact on Fleming's where discounts were down 25% versus Q2 last year.
All this has a negative impact on traffic, it allows us to reallocate spending into key investment areas. Turning to Brazil, Q2 comp sales were up an impressive 13%. The investment in Brazil has been a big success for our company. These restaurants continue to perform at a very high level and give us confidence that we can capitalize on the growing opportunities in this market. Adjusted restaurant level margin was 15.2% this year versus 15.5% a year ago.
The decline was driven primarily by wage inflation, operating expense inflation, the impact of service and product enhancements at Outback and higher rent from our sales leaseback initiative. These items were partially offset by the benefit of increases in average check, productivity savings, lower advertising expense and lower insurance costs. Turning to G and A, after removing all adjustments from Q2 twenty seventeen and Q2 twenty sixteen, general and administrative costs were $75,100,000 and $68,300,000 respectively. The increase in G and A is primarily related to the timing of our annual Managing Partners Conference. The conference took place in the first quarter of twenty sixteen, but was not held until the second quarter of twenty seventeen.
I would now like to draw your attention to our international business. International profits and margins were up significantly versus a year ago. International adjusted operating margin was 8.4%, which is up three ninety basis points versus Q2 last year. Importantly, consolidated margins will improve as our international business becomes a larger part of our portfolio. On the development front, we opened five system wide locations in the second quarter, all of which were international locations.
During the quarter, we made great progress in our capital structure. We are close to wrapping up our very successful sale leaseback initiative. We now have less than 50 properties remaining to be sold and thus far we have received $650,000,000 in proceeds. In total, we expect over $700,000,000 in proceeds once the total program is completed. We are utilizing the proceeds from these transactions to repurchase shares.
Since the last earnings call, we have repurchased $155,000,000 of stock. This is a significant win for our company and for our shareholders. Since the beginning of the year, we have repurchased $233,000,000 of stock and given current valuation levels, we will continue to opportunistically repurchase shares. We now have $95,000,000 remaining on the $250,000,000 authorization, which will expire October 2138. Also of note, last week, the Board of Directors declared a cash dividend of $08 a share payable on August 23.
As it relates to our 2017 guidance, we are reconfirming all aspects of the guidance which we provided in February except for a couple of items. First, we have had some favorability to the tax rate versus prior expectations. We now expect the GAAP effective income tax rate to be between 2122%. We also expect the adjusted effective income tax rate to be between 2425%. This is down slightly from prior guidance of 25% to 26% for the year.
Second, we now expect to open approximately 30 new system wide restaurants in 2017 versus our prior expectations of between forty and fifty restaurants. This revised outlook reflects a reduction in the expected number of international franchise locations. We expect the pace of franchise development to pick up as we enter 2018. This change does not have a material impact on total revenues or on our capital expenditure expectations for the year. All other aspects of our guidance remain unchanged, including the guidance for adjusted EPS and comp sales.
We are pleased with our progress thus far in 2017 and we'll continue to update you as the quarters progress. Now there are a couple of important aspects to the quarterly flow of our earnings in the 2017 that I'd like to mention. First, Outback check average is expected to be modestly negative in Q3, which is a big change from the first half. We are rolling off some menu pricing in Outback that we are choosing not to replicate as part of our investments back into the business. In addition, the timing of the Outback promotional calendar will have a negative impact on Q3 check average.
We expect this trend to reverse in Q4 where PPA will be positive. Second, 2017 is when we have our fifty third week. It falls between Christmas and New Year's Day and is the busiest week of the year. The benefit from this extra week is significant. As a result, the fourth quarter is expected to be our highest earnings growth quarter for the year.
Given these items, it is likely that your third quarter EPS is too high and your fourth quarter EPS is too low. So please take this into account as you work on your models. Having said that, I would like to mention again, we are on track to achieve all of our financial objectives for the year. We are confident we are making the right and necessary investments both domestically and internationally to support long term growth. We remain disciplined stewards of capital and our improving capital structure provides us increased flexibility to return cash to shareholders.
And with that, we will now open up the call for questions.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Michael Gallo with CL King. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 4
Hi, good morning. Good morning. Just two part question. As we parse out the improvement in traffic trends at Outback, obviously, the best we've seen in a while, and the outperformance versus the industry, certainly the best we've seen in a while. I wanted to parse out where you're seeing that?
What's some of the bigger sales layers that are driving that? How much of that's coming from loyalty versus delivery versus the investments? And whether you're seeing a material change in that traffic at lunch versus dinner? And then as you get into the back half last year, obviously, the traffic compares will ease significantly as you lap the reduction of discounting. I was wondering about how you feel about being able to actually get the traffic positive given the momentum you're seeing in that business?
Thanks.
Speaker 2
Sure, Michael. So just a couple pieces of color for you on that. Outback traffic does continue to strengthen. And as I said in my prepared remarks, we anticipate that it's going to continue to build through the year. So we don't give quarterly guidance, but the trajectory that you're referring to is something that we expect to continue and to finish out the year strong on Outback traffic, a reflection of the investments that we made.
When you talk about what's the impact of individual investments, I think the key thing for us is that it's the totality of the investments that are coming together in general to elevate the three sixty degree experience. So you're seeing increase in customer satisfaction across every single metric. When you look at the rolling and the timing of the impact, certainly some investments happen earlier than others. So we get a more immediate benefit from the Exterior Remodel Program. Although keep in mind that the Exterior Remodel Program this year is still back half weighted.
So we did about onethree of the 150 in the first half, but there's still twothree of the 150 to come. That 400 to 500 basis point lift tends to come pretty quickly. When you look at the Dine Rewards program, it had a really good impact on Outback. We're up to 3,900,000 users and we really like what we're seeing. That impact is rolling through and it's at maturity.
You look at delivery, when we put it in, we've talked about that being incremental, 80% to 85%. So that shows up. And then the reduced discounts, you know, that also, as we talked, that's a contour that comes out rather quickly. But when you look at the medium to longer term impacts, the menu simplification and reduction in complexity that we did, that plays out over time. But again, I think you'll see that in the brand health measures strengthening on service and consistency and reduction in any type of problems associated with complexity.
The other customer facing investments in portions and quality and labor investments, given the frequency of the category of two to three times a year, that's that longer term twenty six to thirty nine month build that we've talked about. So net, we feel really, really good about how all the investments that we are making in Outback are building that traffic growth, restoring the brand health, and bringing that kind of higher quality traffic back in on a sustainable basis.
Speaker 4
Thanks very much.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Gregory Francfort with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 5
Hey, guys. Maybe the first one just on overall pricing levels in the industry. Think it's interesting you guys let the average check or some of the pricing roll off in the third quarter. Do you think there needs to be a broader check reset for the category? And is that something that you expect might happen in the next year or two just for overall casual dining?
Speaker 2
So I think that you know, we've talked a lot about what the role is of pricing. And I think it depends on the individual brand and the individual value equation. So I don't want to make a general statement on pricing for the category. Let me talk about our brands. We certainly know that part of our, you know, equation is total benefits divided by price and that we have to have affordable pricing.
And when we don't have that, you know, we see some traffic erosion. So for us it's about having accessible price points all along the value chain. We certainly have to have them at the entry price level. But there is still a role very much for, you know, customers wanting to pay for great experience. We see the most compelling thing moving our customer is total benefits, the ambiance investments, the quality upgrades, the increasing portions, everything that's happening at an affordable price versus, reverting back to more value pricing, if you will.
So pricing is certainly important. It has to be affordable relative to what you're putting on the plate and the experience in the box, but it's a very different answer for each of our brands. It will certainly continue to be, one of the key levers that we do, across each of our brands, but I wouldn't make any blanket statements on value pricing for us as it relates to the biggest levers for growth.
Speaker 5
Got Got it. That's helpful perspective. And maybe I'll
Speaker 0
just draw one more. What was the
Speaker 5
level of food deflation in the quarter? And maybe just with respect to the cost of sales line, how much of that year over year change was due to deflation maybe being offset by a certain impact from the investments you're making?
Speaker 3
Yes. We were we've been planning food costs for a while. We talked about our productivity initiatives, please don't forget that. Our A versus T management has kicked in and helped. The deflation side has helped as well.
But that we did make some investments in our products like Liz has talked about. But overall, food cost came in quite nice for the quarter because of the commodity deflation and the productivity initiatives that allowed us to invest behind the business.
Speaker 6
Got it. Thanks, Dave.
Speaker 7
Thank
Speaker 0
you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Bernstein with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 8
Great. Thank you very much. Two questions. Just one, Liz, talked about the pivot away from discounting and I would agree that it seems like the right long term decision even though it has shorter term implications. But do you see any change in the competitive landscape with peers, I guess, either doubling down on their discounting or perhaps following your lead with less discounting?
Do you think that should play out over the next twelve months or so? And then I had one follow-up.
Speaker 2
Well, you know, I think everybody take our brands. We have four distinct brands in our portfolio. And each one has a different quote unquote answer depending on what the consumer wants to see in terms of investment and benefits and the balance of affordable pricing. So honestly, I think every competitor out there has their own value equation that they're familiar with and that's what they're making their decisions off of. So I wouldn't say that one action that we're taking on one brand is relevant to everybody else's brand or even indeed the same growth algorithm for the other three brands in our portfolio.
I think it's about really staying close to your consumer, using the data and the research to figure out exactly what is motivating them. We see for our portfolio that's increasingly investing and elevating that customer experience. People want to go out and they want to have that eatertainment, that three fifty degree experience, that signature service, signature app, signature moments. But it has to be at affordable pricing. So there's certainly a role of that.
But I really think it differs for every individual brand. I think the key for us has been really getting out and mining that data about what is most motivating.
Speaker 8
Understood. I didn't know if you had seen maybe from your competitive landscape whether others were being more or less aggressive.
Speaker 2
Yeah. We've seen kind of nothing that makes us feel like what we do to ourselves is the most important thing for restoring growth and that stays for us.
Speaker 8
Got it. And then just on the franchising that you guys announced in April of 50 some odd locations. I'm just wondering more broadly how you thought about that, whether that was opportunistic or a conscious decision to increase the franchise mix, whether you share any color in terms of the terms or the performance of those stores versus the system? Perhaps what stops you from increasing further? I mean, I'm just wondering big picture when you talk to the Board about that, why not do hundreds more units?
What's the limiting factor?
Speaker 3
Sure. Well, me before I get into some of details, me step back and talk about just what we've done Liz and I have done since we've come on, and that's really addressed our portfolio. You look at what we've done with Roy's, we refranchised Korea, we had a wonderfully successful sale leaseback plan. And looking at our portfolio in The U. S.
As part of that. Now before I talk about The U. S. Specifically franchising, our core competency is owning and running restaurants. That doesn't prevent us from looking at different markets where we feel that maybe a better marketplace to go would be have some franchisee run it.
In this particular case, that's what we decide to do. But we will continue to look at that, but we clearly want to own and operate the restaurant. It gives us flexibility as we go forward with our strategies. And we have remarkable cash flow in a lot of places in The United States that we really do well. And I also want to say that we are as we franchisees, look at we want to have great partners.
So that all comes together, Jeff, with our overall strategy. But I want to emphasize again, our competency is owning and operating company restaurants.
Speaker 8
Understood. Thank you.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jon Ivankoe with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 6
Hi, thank you. First a housekeeping question and then another question if I may. On the extra week in the fourth quarter of twenty seventeen, certainly understand the influence on average weekly sales or average unit volumes there. But will that also affect same store sales? Or will you make an adjustment and do it on equivalent weeks?
Speaker 3
We'll do it on equivalent weeks, John.
Speaker 6
Okay. And then secondly, just looking at U. S. Versus international, despite what is a huge gap in restaurant level margins, the overall operating margins were relatively the same. And I understand there's the different composition to store ownership, what have you.
But how close are we at an inflection point, especially in Brazil to begin to leverage the infrastructure that's currently in place to where you can actually see some larger gains in overall operating income? And can that be a later 2017 event, twenty eighteen, nineteen? Just in terms of you think about the overall price of that market, when do you expect to slow down the growth in overall G and A or restaurant support spend?
Speaker 3
Sure. First of all, like Liz mentioned, we were really pleased with the 13% comps in Brazil. I mean hats off to that team. What a remarkable accomplishment. And we did see big time growth in margins during the quarter.
I think John, the one thing that we are seeing in our base business, the operating margin expansion in our base business in Outback Steakhouse in Brazil, what we are seeing is we also are investing ahead of growth in places like China and Abrachio and that does bring down operating margins a bit. But we are leveraging our the operating margins in our base businesses in Brazil and we are taking some of that money and investing it in places like China and Abrachio to move the business forward. And as those investments take hold, yes, we will have operating margin expansion even further in our international business.
Speaker 6
Well, let me just take that opportunity on the China piece. I mean, as core competency of owning and operating and running restaurants, I mean, does that also exist in China? Or are you looking at various ownership options there over time for any number of different reasons?
Speaker 3
Yes. We own and operate the restaurants in China today, but we are also looking at other opportunities to joint venture or partner with people. It's a huge country, as you know, John, with 40 huge cities and there's different answers for each one of those. And I think we clearly have the expertise in China and here in Tampa to make some of those decisions. So right now we're just building the business model and making sure the economics work.
And then as we go forward we'll look at equity ownership, we'll look at joint ventures, and we'll look at franchise. But that's a big part of our growth equation. And
Speaker 6
I think
Speaker 2
John, just to build on that, I think you're going see a different answer for a different section of China. So we're kind of going to make the right decision for the different sections and that will be partner dependent.
Speaker 6
And is the model currently in a place, the sales investment and margin, like something where we can begin to talk about that it's an investment that makes sense? Or is it still kind of very long term in terms of when that might drive value at the store level?
Speaker 3
Yes. We're making progress, John. We've got more work to do, but we're pleased with the progress we're making. We think we have an economic model that's coming together for us. We're also looking at some other opportunities to invest in different ways in China with Outback.
So I think we got to think through the restaurant size, some of those things as we go forward. But right now we do have an economic model that we are working on to grow.
Speaker 2
The other thing that I think is Shanghai is a very challenging market from a cost standpoint. Kind of when you get to a restaurant level profit margin that you're operating at there, you can quickly leverage that as you go outside of Shanghai. And so our first store that's now opened in Hangzhou is our most profitable well, it's highest sales and most profitable because you have lower investment. And so what we like is that early indications are is that this kind of business brand will play very well in those Tier two cities.
Speaker 6
Thank you.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of John Glass with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 9
Thank you. Just going back to the Outback brand, where are you in the reduction of discounting? Have you wrapped it up? In other words, I think you began in the back half of last year. So is this quarter represents sort of the final quarter of that progression?
Did you alter the pace of it somehow? And how comparable is the back half of this year to the back half of last year on that initiative?
Speaker 2
Yeah, you know, that's the right way to think about it, John. We are tapering off that. And so I think, you know, for the back half for us, as we as I indicated on the call, you're going to see, you know, traffic growth behind the investments and the reallocation of spending, but kind of that incremental quarter after quarter heavy lifting on Outback is tailing off as we exit the year.
Speaker 9
But did you change the pace of it? I mean, I'm trying to understand the dynamic between your traffic improvement versus the check, which was less of a driver. I mean, historically, you got off a discounting or less discounting. The check grew more, traffic was less. And so you've seen less of a check improvement.
So did you discount more? In other words, was the difference in check from the first to the second quarter, the check decline?
Speaker 2
Well, it also has to do with the cadence of our promotions, right? So we had, from the May through June, had our Aussie four course meal for $14.99 So don't think of it as a change in the philosophy of quote unquote discounting. You know, we're still if you look at our straight discounts, we're still very much down on the offers. We're down on the percentage when we do offer. So it has to do kind of more with a mix.
Speaker 9
Okay. And then how does the refranchising impact the store margins? Is it it's enough stores that it's material from a total percentage of the base. Is it going to change your store margin profile in the back half?
Speaker 3
No, John. It's pretty modest for us. So it doesn't really have a big impact on restaurant margins. It's 54 restaurants.
Speaker 9
Okay. Okay. Thank you.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jason West with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 10
Yes, thanks. Just wondering if you guys will be willing to quantify the amount of pricing that's rolling off here in the third quarter? And then secondly, just looking at the big picture here, I mean, you've obviously seen some improvement in the Outback comps, is outperforming the industry pretty nicely. But your EBIT dollars are down significantly still, especially in The U. S.
Business. So just trying to understand, is there an opportunity here to maybe take some G and A out as you refranchised and get the EBIT dollars up? Or now that we're starting to lap some of the discounting to John's question, will we start to see those margins really turn more positive and EBIT dollars turning more positive here going forward? Thanks.
Speaker 3
Yeah, sure. We're not going to parse out the pricing by quarter obviously for competitive reasons and things. Liz talked about some of our philosophy there. On the EBIT side, don't forget we've made some investments in Outback in service, in food costs, etcetera, to help make our business move forward. And that's still we're still lapping some of that.
So that's why you'll see some of the EBIT piece. On overhead measures, I think if you look at how we've managed the company since we've gone public, clearly we are managing for no overhead growth in areas that the customer doesn't see. And we're investing ahead of growth in other key areas such as digital, international, etcetera. So we'll continue to do that. But on the EBIT side, we are really pleased with the investments that we're making.
You're seeing it in the comps. You're seeing it in the traffic. And Liz talked about some of the things and how they come together. So on the EBIT side, once we roll through some of those investments, yes, you can see some improvements. But I want to make sure that people know that these investments clearly are coming together and working.
Speaker 6
Okay, thanks.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Farmer with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 11
Thanks. You guys did touch on it, but over the last three years, Bluewind has seen very little, if any, net new unit growth. So just looking forward over the next three years or so, what role do you expect unit development to play in reaching your EPS growth target, which I think is you can remind me, I think it stands at 15%?
Speaker 3
It's we've talked about 10 to 15% for EPS targets. And so on net new unit growth, what we one of our core strategies is to grow what we own in The United States. And one of the big parts of that is our exterior remodel program and coming up our interior remodel program. But Jeff, don't forget we've got we've been filling our relocation pipeline and we've got 16 relocations this year and the sales gains are very, very good, higher than our expectation actually. And so we're going to continue to build that pipeline.
We think we have at least 100 relocation candidates. So as we go forward with the Outback business, please factor that into your thinking.
Speaker 2
Also I think we talked about we will opportunistically open up new Outback restaurants. And I think we talked a couple years ago about there being probably 40 to 50 of them. Last year we opened six. You'll continue to see them. We're really pleased with the fill in.
We also will continue to, opportunistically and where it makes sense, continue to open new units. We just opened two on Fleming's and they're performing extremely well in Plano and Pasadena. But as Dave has said in the past, the majority of our new unit openings will continue to internationally. And that is showing significant returns on investment. But we will still open them opportunistically where it matters on where we should and could on our existing brands.
The bigger opportunity for us is just that constant remodel program, the relocation program, which really have great payback.
Speaker 11
All then just a quick capital allocation follow-up. So I think your lease adjusted leverage ratio is something just above four times. Over last few years, you guys have pointed to a target of roughly three times. You're well above that, I think, for all intents and purposes. You're comfortable being well above that three times target.
But having said that, what should we be thinking about your updated thinking on capital allocation priorities? How do you expect to spend a lot of that operating cash flow that's coming over the next couple of years?
Speaker 3
Yes, sure. We look at our net debt adjusted EBITDA roughly in the high 3s. Our goal over time is still to get closer to three. We can get there through EBITDA growth in other ways. We've had a very successful share repurchase program we've talked about as we've done various cash management things.
But we'll continue to make progress on our debt ratios and we'll continue to exercise under our existing share repurchase authorization because the share price is very attractive.
Speaker 0
All right, thank you. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Karen Holzluth with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 12
Hi. Just a question on delivery for you. So it looks like the rollout of units that are offering it continues to expand. From the websites, it looks like the breakdown right now is about 200 units that are being run-in house, about 50 that then would be third party, which compared to only a handful of third party units was my understanding at the end of the first quarter. If you could maybe just sort of walk us through your thinking of in house versus third party puts and takes.
And then a little bit bigger picture, how now that you're two fifty units and six to nine months into the process, where are you focused on continual improvements to the customer experience?
Speaker 2
Sure. So, Karen, the first thing I want to say is that, the exciting thing about off premise and our belief all the research that we've done that it's a 25%, incremental opportunity that's large a 25% increase, potential that is largely incremental, I. E. It could represent 25% to 30% of the volumes flowing through CDR boxes. And then it's largely incremental.
Part of the excitement we have against that strategy is it's going to start with the consumer. And we are going to allow the consumer to have and deliver in whatever way the consumer chooses. So we are going to pursue an omni channel approach. If the consumer wants to go through a third party runner, it will be available through a third party runner. So it's not an eitheror necessarily.
You see that in the hospitality industry, okay? There's an omnichannel approach that's really customer centric. What we are finding though is that we have a different, profile in general around the margins of who orders through third party versus who orders direct. And so these things can be very complementary. In terms of building our own network, we're currently, as you said, in I think we said two forty six of our locations between Outback and Carrabba's.
What we're seeing is exactly what we've talked about, about the incrementality, the desire. We see that our highest target value customer is those that when we hook them into delivery, they increase their the total pie of their business opportunity. The opportunity for us is to continue to deliver world class service and world class delivery options. They like the fact that when somebody comes to their home, it's a Al Fakher Carrabba's employee that can speak about the food, that can do the connection. The other benefits it confers to us by having that direct relationship is obviously we own the data.
We own the relationship. We can market directly with them. We can surprise and delight them. They participate in our Dine Rewards program. When they order directly for us, that's a qualified visit.
Dine Rewards has been really successful, visit three times, get 50% off the board. So there's a whole ecosystem built around doing it yourself, that is very attractive. At the same time though, the customer needs to be able to get our product and enjoy our product however it is they want to engage, and we will make that possible.
Speaker 12
Great. Thank you. Thanks.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Vaccaro with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 13
Thanks and good morning. Liz, I just wanted to clarify something and circle back on a comment you made on traffic earlier in the Q and A. Did you say that you expect Outback traffic growth in the second half of the year, I. E, year on year improvement? Or are you talking more about sequential improvement versus where you were in the second quarter?
Speaker 2
I don't want to give direct traffic quarterly. Let's just say that we continue to see sequential improvement, right? If you look back over the last four quarters, you've seen significant sequential improvement. Now have the highest traffic recorded since 2015 on a 0.8 base. And we continue to see that sequentially improve in Q3 and Q4.
And I don't want to peg it to year ago, but improving off a 0.8% base does have some good runway and does augur well for continued traffic improvement.
Speaker 3
And that is, as everybody knows, I believe, which is a state for effect, that's significantly above the industry. So we're very pleased with some of investments we're making in Outback.
Speaker 2
I think the other thing I'd say is that I think we all lived through Q4 of last year, right, which was a very kind of a puzzling time on the pullback. So I think everybody is appropriately going into the Q4 period saying, are we going to see another type of change in the sales pattern, etcetera? We think that we're going to be settling in the industry till last year and that that's more typical. So again, we're being prudent in how we're laying it out there, but you did hear me correctly in saying that we believe the traffic will continue to sequentially improve.
Speaker 13
Okay. Thank you. And Dave, I wanted to circle back about your third quarter comment specifically versus where expectations were previously. Is that I'm just curious, is that driven by sales expectations? Maybe you mentioned the average check dynamics at Outback that weren't reflected in expectations?
Or is there also a margin dynamic that we should be aware of versus prior expectations that you would highlight either G and A, store level, etcetera?
Speaker 3
Yes. No, we talked about the pricing year on year and then you guys can flow through your models and how that would come out, Brian. So that's probably the biggest thing Along with also another big thing is just the fifty third week and making sure that you think through that because it's such a big week at the end of the year. So it's the we talked about in the script on the pricing piece at Outback Steakhouse, PPA and then the fifty third week. Those will be the two pieces.
Speaker 13
Okay. That's helpful. And then one more if I could, just a bigger picture margin discussion. If you look at your margin outlook for the year, there's obviously a lot of moving pieces lapping the sale leaseback rent, layering in investments and savings and then obviously the extra week impact. But your guidance would seem to reflect a pretty positive inflection in store level margins in the second half of the year.
Can you walk us through some of the primary drivers of that leverage?
Speaker 3
Yes. I don't want to get into quarterly guidance on margins, Brian, but let me just kind of step back and talk about some of the key things that help us drive margins. And that is the productivity, especially A versus T and you saw that come through in our food cost. Comp sales growth is an important piece of the margins, continuing to manage G and A, all those things coming together to help grow our margins as we go forward. I'm not going to get into though Q3 margin, Q4 margin, etcetera.
And I think we've laid out pretty consistently what we expect for the year given some of our investments, given some of our sales trends, given our productivity and other areas.
Speaker 13
Okay. And last one on the margin front. What's your food cost expectation for the year in terms of inflation or deflation on the commodity Yes.
Speaker 3
We will be within the range that we laid out previously. We might be the deflation might not be quite it'd be at the lower end of the range potentially, but for commodities flat to down 1%, we're comfortably within that range and we'll probably be a little bit on the lower
Speaker 13
end. All right, thank you.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Matthew DiFrisco with Guggenheim Securities. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 7
Thank you. My question is with respect to just to follow-up on those margins a little bit and looking at the prime cost. I guess the prime cost looked like if you just sort of take labor and COGS together, over 62%. Historically, you've been sort of those two numbers combined on a relative basis about 60% or so. I wonder, is this sort of the new direction that you think the prime cost will be holding at given sort of the heavier lifting having to do to present the customer value equation to get positive traffic or a return to positive traffic?
Speaker 3
No, I don't think we'll get into longer term guidance at another time, but I don't think this is kind of the new normal or anything like that. I think one of the things that we continue to watch closely and manage is labor rate inflation. And that's looking at 4% to 4.5%. And we will continue to work on productivity on that side. We certainly don't want hurt the customer experience, but we've to look at all the things that restaurant companies look at as we continue to manage labor.
And then of course sales gains help expand margins as well. But I don't want to say that I'm not here today to provide guidance on prime costs going forward, but I don't think you can necessarily say either that those two prime costs are the new normal.
Speaker 7
But directionally without taking price, that seems to be absent the extra operating week, at least the pattern. I mean, can't see anything disrupting that aside from a significant lift in traffic. Would that be sort of the correct math as far as looking at the pressures that you just incurred in 2Q and the cost environment with labor and with commodity costs. If you don't take price, wouldn't that sort of still hold up throughout the quarter absent the extra operating week?
Speaker 3
Yes. I just wanted to make sure that we didn't say that we're not taking price. I want to make sure that we that's still in our overall levers and everything else. This was a flow over time. So there are many things we can do to manage our margins, that being how we look at discounting, how we look at pricing, how we manage productivity, we look at mix, how we manage our labor.
So I think and again, I'm not going to get into Q3, Q4 margins, etcetera, just so that we have many levers in our portfolio to manage our margins going forward and we're not here to provide any guidance for the balance of the year on any particular prime cost, but just know that we actively manage these levers as we look at our business.
Speaker 7
Okay. And then I'm sorry if I missed it, but did you quantify how much that extra operating week is going to be as far as EPS for the year? No,
Speaker 3
didn't. We just mentioned that it's a big week and for you to take a look at your models between Q3 and Q4.
Speaker 7
So meaning a big week then, it's going to be more than in that quarter what it would represent then of onethirteen or whatever, onefourteen, onethirteen. Will be more than that.
Speaker 3
It's Christmas week to New Year's week and that's all of you know that's a big business for casual dining and restaurants in general.
Speaker 7
Okay, great. Thank you.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Strelzik with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 14
Hey, good morning. I had another question on delivery. Where do you think that those dining occasions are coming from? You referenced more eating at home and some of that are not all accruing to grocery. So is that really where you think you're seeing it from?
And on the cost side, are you prepared at this point to give us some way to think about what the costs associated with the delivery investment will be? And is that included in the $25,000,000 reinvestment? I'm assuming no, but
Speaker 13
just wanted to clarify.
Speaker 2
Sure. So I'll take the first piece on the consumer and where that's coming from. Mean the interesting thing about delivery is that what you're seeing is you're seeing a return to dine at home to levels that haven't been observed since 1992. But the good news is that dine at home doesn't just mean any more cooking at home, right? It means I'm enjoying food at home at levels at increasing levels that haven't been seen, much haven't been seen since kind of 1992.
The great thing is that they want different ways to enjoy food at home. And so we have moved our set of brands, which used to be just dine out, into the in home occasion, which is four times the size of when I decide to go out. So that's why we're seeing the incrementality. So we know that the reason we're seeing that 80%, 85% incrementality is that we are participating in a whole separate occasion, four times as large, which is called when I want to dine in my home, not necessarily cook in my home. So that's how that's playing out.
I'll let Dave talk about the investment side,
Speaker 3
the kind Sure, sure. No, the off premise piece is part of our investing ahead of growth bucket, we say. The Outback service and food pieces are separate. And I think it's a bit too early to talk about what we're seeing on the cost side and everything else. When the time comes, we'll be happy to do that, but
Speaker 2
It's still scaling.
Speaker 3
Yes, it's scaling and we're working through it. So I it's a little bit early, but like Liz has said, we've liked what we've seen so far in this opportunity.
Speaker 14
If I could ask one more on the loyalty side as well. It sounds like you're seeing most of the usage accrued to Outback. Is that right? Or are you kind of seeing it more broadly across the brands? And reaching maturity kind of at the time line that you have at the high end of what you saw in the test, Are you surprised that that's as quick as it was?
Or is that more consistent with what you had seen in the test? Do you think maybe we could continue to see that build from where we are today?
Speaker 2
So the first one is that the portfolio was broadly benefiting, which is what we had hoped for and we're seeing cross usage, which is also the benefit of having four brands, you can kind of dine around the table. So it's performing as we had hoped it was. In terms of the ramp, I mean, we're delighted with how it's doing, and we're up to 3,900,000 customers. What we also like is that, it's continuing to grow every month. We're continuing to add more customers.
What we also like though is that it's giving us a really, really rich data set. We've increased our data set 60% on data profiles that we have of our direct customers, I think since 2014, I want to say. So that's giving us the ability to have this direct marketing relationship with more of our customers. We know all about their preferences, what they want and what they do. And so one of the really interesting areas for us in loyalty is now continuing to mine that data and what are kind of Loyalty two point zero things that we can do now that we have that relationship.
Speaker 14
Great. Thank you very much.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Sharon Zackfia with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.
Speaker 15
Data analytics from Loyalty. I guess maybe in addition to the analytics you're doing kind of what are you learning or what is surprising you about your customers? And then in terms of that marketing, are you doing segmentation? Are you at the point where you're doing true personalization at this point? And maybe as a follow-up too, are you integrating loyalty as well into delivery?
Speaker 2
Okay. So a couple of things. In terms of data analytics and what we're seeing from loyalty,
Speaker 3
you
Speaker 2
know what, for proprietary reasons I want to stay away from kind of unlayering the data and what we're finding with loyalty. We, you know, like any loyalty program, your early interest and your bigger enthusiasts are the ones that know you. And so it's not playing out dimensionally different as the circle broadens on loyalty on how our curve is unfolding than you've probably seen in the past. In terms of data mining on loyalty, great question. I would say, you know, we're building the tools to be able to mine the data.
And in the past we've used like an innings analogy. We now have increasing data. We're increasingly that's the investment ahead of growth in technology and IT. So we're increasingly building the tools to be able to. That's something that's going to fold out over the next year in terms of our ability to mine sophisticated and do personalization at a routine and customary level.
We're probably still in the second or third inning, which is really exciting because we know when we do the personalization, we're able to get click through and open rates two and three times what I'd call like a generic, targeted a generic message. So, a lot of that, Sharon, is in front of us as we build those tools. And in terms of delivery, when you order and deliver direct from us, yes, it does count as a qualified visit, and we are seeing that, and that is very well received.
Speaker 15
Great, thank you.
Speaker 0
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that's all the time we have for questions today. I'd like to turn the floor back to Liz Smith for closing comments.
Speaker 2
Well, appreciate everyone joining us today, and we look forward to updating you on our portfolio on the Q3 call. Thanks a lot.
Speaker 0
This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.