KS
KURA SUSHI USA, INC. (KRUS)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Fiscal Q1 2025 delivered sales of $64.5M (+25% YoY), positive comps (+1.8%), and improved profitability metrics (Adjusted EBITDA $3.6M, margin 5.5%), while net loss narrowed to $(1.0)M (EPS $(0.08)) .
- Management reiterated FY2025 guidance (sales $275–$279M, 14 new restaurants, G&A ≈13.5% of sales), signaling confidence in unit growth and cost leverage; cash strengthened via a ~$64.4M follow-on offering completed in Q1 .
- Operational tailwinds: pricing and supply chain drove COGS leverage (29.0% vs 29.8% YoY); marketing mix improved via “Perfect Pair” food promotion and IP collaborations (One Piece, Pikmin), while tech initiatives (reservations + self-seating, Mr. Fresh upgrade) target labor and guest experience gains .
- Near-term watch items and potential stock catalysts: sustained comps improvement, execution of tech rollout (store tests in Feb, broader rollout starting April), and guidance durability vs Q2 headwinds (no IP collab, tougher lap); consensus estimates were unavailable via S&P Global at time of query .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Positive comps returned (+1.8% YoY), driven by improved mix and successful IP collaborations (One Piece, Pikmin) and food-focused promotions (Udon + Perfect Pair) .
- Cost control delivered record Q1 Adjusted EBITDA margin for a fiscal first quarter; COGS % improved to 29.0% from 29.8% YoY due to pricing and supply chain initiatives .
- New openings exceeded expectations, including strong performance in smaller DMAs (e.g., Beaverton, WA/Tacoma, WA), expanding the long-term market opportunity and unit economics confidence; six new restaurants opened in Q1 .
Management quotes:
- “Adjusted EBITDA margins have achieved an all-time high for a fiscal first quarter, thanks to companywide efforts to control costs.” – CEO Hajime Uba .
- “We’re off to a great start, and I’m extremely excited for another banner year at Kura Sushi.” – CEO Hajime Uba .
What Went Wrong
- Labor deleverage: labor as a % of sales rose to 32.9% (from 31.9% YoY) on wage inflation and high-labor-cost markets; traffic was -2.3% with price/mix +4.1% .
- Operating loss persisted ($(1.5)M), with restaurant-level operating margin down to 18.2% (from 19.5% YoY), reflecting wage inflation despite COGS gains .
- Near-term marketing cadence: no IP collaboration in Q2 (lapping a strong “Peanuts” campaign), increasing comp risk; management will focus on profitability and alternative promotions .
Financial Results
Multi-Quarter Trend (oldest → newest)
Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024 (YoY)
Estimates Comparison (S&P Global)
Consensus estimates for Q1 2025 (EPS and revenue) were unavailable via S&P Global due to request limits at query time; estimate comparisons will be updated when accessible [GetEstimates errors]. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our comps have returned to positive territory. Our new openings are exceeding expectations... Adjusted EBITDA margins have achieved an all-time high for a fiscal first quarter...” – Hajime Uba, CEO .
- “Total sales for the fiscal first quarter was $64.5 million... COGS % improved... Labor... increased to 32.9%... We opened 6 new units...” – Prepared remarks summary .
- “At the end of the fiscal first quarter, we had ~$111.7M cash and cash equivalents and no debt... reiterate FY2025 guidance...” – Jeff Uttz, CFO (cash level discussed; quarter-end cash per 8-K was $107.7M; call referenced ~$111.7M) .
- “Reservation and self-seating... ambitious goal of full system-wide rollout by end of fiscal year; first test next month; rollout expected to begin April.” – Benjamin Porten, SVP IR & System Development .
Q&A Highlights
- Comps cadence: Q2 likely more difficult (no IP, lapping “Peanuts”), with focus on profitability; full-year comps expected positive .
- Pricing: ~2% menu price taken first week of November; effective pricing ~4.5% in Q1 and a little over 5% in Q2; no firm plan for summer increase yet .
- Labor initiatives: ~100 bps back-of-house improvements; reservations/self-seating targeted for an additional ~50 bps; leverage expected to show more in back half .
- Marketing cost differential: IP collaborations cost about $200k more vs food-focused campaigns; alternative promotions will fill non-IP periods .
- Regional comps dispersion: West Coast strong (+7.8%), Southwest slightly negative (−0.3%) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus for Q1 2025 EPS and revenue was unavailable at query time due to data limits; as a result, beat/miss analysis vs consensus could not be completed and will be updated when accessible [GetEstimates errors]. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Where estimates may need to adjust:
- Momentum in Q1 (positive comps, mix improvement, COGS leverage) vs cautious Q2 setup (no IP collab) suggests models should emphasize back-half upside from tech initiatives and curated IP cadence .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Positive comps (+1.8%) and mix gains show stabilization; watch Q2 comps without IP collab and tougher lap, with profitability execution prioritized .
- Pricing/supply chain are working (COGS % down to 29.0%); if food inflation remains benign, margin tailwinds can persist .
- Labor remains the swing factor: near-term wage pressure, but reservations/self-seating/Mr. Fresh upgrades and station consolidation support leverage in H2 FY2025 .
- Development strategy broadens TAM: strong openings in smaller DMAs de-risk pipeline and support >20% unit growth with ≈$2.5M net capex per unit .
- Balance sheet strengthened: ~$64.4M net proceeds from follow-on; quarter-end cash $107.7M; no debt—provides investment capacity and cushion .
- Guidance maintained (sales $275–$279M; 14 openings; G&A ≈13.5%); management cautious to raise until trends are durable—upside optionality if back-half initiatives and IP cadence deliver .
- Trading lens: near-term volatility around Q2 comps risk and tech rollout milestones; medium-term thesis anchored on unit growth, operational tech-driven labor leverage, and curated marketing strategy .
Notes: Financials and call details cited from Q1 2025 8-K and press release, Q4 2024 and Q3 2024 8-Ks, and Q1 2025 earnings call transcript .