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KURA SUSHI USA, INC. (KRUS)·Q2 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- KRUS delivered strong top-line growth in fiscal Q2 2024: total sales were $57.3M vs. $43.9M a year ago, comps +3.0%, and diluted EPS of $(0.09); restaurant-level operating margin was 19.6% and Adjusted EBITDA $2.9M .
- Management raised FY24 guidance on the print: revenue to $243–$246M (from $239–$244M in Q1), unit openings to 13–14, and G&A as % sales to 14.0–14.5% (from ~14.5%)—citing confidence in traffic, operating leverage, and development cadence .
- Call highlights: exclusive DoorDash partnership (expected margin neutral to accretive), loyalty program now ~1/3 of sales, and a robust tech pipeline (robotic dishwasher, smartphone/table-side ordering, “sushi driver”) to drive mix and labor leverage over time .
- Headwinds: labor 32.8% of sales (pre-opening and weather pressure), other costs 14.6% of sales, and Southwest comps flat; analysts noted labor/other costs were above Street expectations on the call .
- Post-period update: KRUS preannounced Q3 softness (California) and cut FY24 sales outlook to $235–$237M, signaling a likely reset to expectations despite Q2’s raise .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Traffic and share gains: KRUS cited significant traffic outperformance vs. the industry (Black Box index −3.5%), helped by brand momentum and promotions (e.g., Dragon Ball), with West Coast comps +8.7% in Q2 .
- Operating leverage and profit growth: G&A leveraged by 190 bps y/y in Q2; Adjusted EBITDA up to $2.9M; restaurant-level operating profit of $11.2M (19.6% margin) .
- Structural growth enablers: Rewards now ~1/3 of sales; smartphone ordering and DoorDash (exclusive) expected to be margin neutral or accretive; early success in automation testing (robotic dishwasher) and development of “sushi driver” .
Selected quotes:
- “We leveraged G&A year-over-year as a percentage of sales by 190 basis points, and grew Adjusted EBITDA by 23%.”
- “U.S. [rewards] members are now responsible for approximately 1/3 of our sales...”
- “Our expectation is that [DoorDash] will be margin neutral to margin accretive... it was really a no-brainer for us.”
What Went Wrong
- Margin pressure in labor and other costs: Labor 32.8% of sales (vs. 31.5% LY) amid higher wage rates, pre-opening costs, and severe weather; other costs rose to 14.6% of sales .
- Regional dispersion and weather: Southwest comps were flat; ~8 heavily impacted operating days (Jan/Feb) increased fixed labor drag .
- Street expectation gap: Analysts flagged labor and “other” lines above expectations, pressuring restaurant margins vs. the Street’s model .
Financial Results
Notes: Q2 y/y sales up versus $43.9M in Q2’23; restaurant-level operating profit $11.2M (19.6% of sales) vs. $8.9M (20.3%) in Q2’23; Adjusted EBITDA $2.9M vs. $2.3M in Q2’23 .
KPIs (select)
Segment breakdown: KRUS reports as a single restaurant concept; no segment revenue disclosure in filings .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategic priorities: “We’ve opened 10 restaurants to date… giving us the confidence to upgrade our revenue guidance.”
- Operating leverage: “We were able to bring G&A costs down to 14.3%... we now expect to achieve even greater G&A leverage for the year.”
- Tech/ops catalysts: “Our table-side mobile ordering… is going smoothly… guests will be able to earn prizes by ordering side menu items.”
- Delivery: “Our expectation is that [DoorDash] is going to be margin neutral to margin accretive… on DashPass you can now get delivery for free.”
- Brand/IP: “Our next IP partner is Dragon Ball… the most exciting partnership we’ve ever had.”
Q&A Highlights
- Margin composition: Pre-opening costs were ~$700K above prior year (~1.2% of sales); majority labor; ~8 days of severe weather drove inefficiency; confidence in H2 restaurant-level margins as pre-opening burden abates and seasonality helps .
- Mix and check: Plate consumption flat at 6.3; mix pressure mainly from non-sushi (e.g., beverages); smartphone ordering expected to lift side-menu attachment .
- DoorDash integration: Expected margin neutral to accretive; throttling used to prioritize in-restaurant guests .
- Development cadence: 5 units under construction; ~5 months from groundbreaking to open (tightening to ~4 months recently) .
- Street lens: An analyst flagged labor and “other costs” running above Street expectations, pressuring modeled margins .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus from S&P Global (revenue/EPS) was unavailable at time of analysis due to data limits, so we cannot provide a formal beat/miss comparison for Q2 2024 (S&P Global data unavailable).
- On the Q2 call, an analyst noted margin lines (labor and other) were above expectations, implying Street models had lower assumptions for those lines .
- Post-period preliminary Q3 update reduced FY24 sales outlook to $235–$237M, which likely necessitated downward estimate revisions after the initial Q2 guidance raise .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Traffic-led share gains continue; despite macro/weather, KRUS outperformed industry traffic and maintained ~20% restaurant-level margins with notable G&A leverage—supportive of the long-term unit growth algorithm .
- Mix headwinds are manageable; tech (smartphone ordering) and loyalty features aim to lift side-menu attachment and stabilize check while preserving KRUS’s value proposition (3% pricing) .
- DoorDash provides an incremental channel without pricing premiums vs. dine-in and is expected to be margin neutral to accretive; disciplined throttling protects the in-store experience during peaks .
- Development remains a core driver; build cycles ~5 months, pipeline robust, and unit guidance increased to 13–14; these bolster multi-year revenue visibility and regional G&A efficiency .
- Near-term watch items: labor/other costs normalization post-pre-opening surge and weather; Southwest comps; and the efficacy of upcoming IP collaborations (e.g., Dragon Ball) on traffic/mix .
- Guidance trajectory: Q2 raise (to $243–$246M) signaled confidence, but the June preannouncement lowered FY24 sales to $235–$237M on California softness—expect models to recalibrate around a more conservative base until trends re-accelerate .
- Medium-term thesis: KRUS’s technology/automation roadmap (robotic dishwasher, “sushi driver”) and loyalty ecosystem are designed to structurally improve labor efficiency and mix, reinforcing the path to scalable profitability as the footprint expands .