Matt Clark
Analyst · Baird. Your line is open
Thank you, David. Let me first provide a high-level recap of our first quarter results versus our expectations I outlined last quarter. Total revenues of $927 million finished towards the high end for the range we provided. Adjusted net income margin of 4.9% exceeded the high-end of the guidance range we provided. Additionally, during the first quarter, we strengthened our liquidity position and balance sheet through the issuance of $575 million of 2% convertible notes due 2030. The proceeds were allocated to repurchase $276 million of our 2026 convertible notes, buy back 2.4 million shares of our common stock and fully pay down our revolving credit facility balance. In total, we returned $153.8 million to shareholders during the quarter through dividends and share repurchases including the $130 million related to the common stock repurchase concurrently with the issuance. Now turning to some more specific details around the quarter. First quarter total sales at The Cheesecake Factory restaurants were $673 million, up 1% from the prior year. Comparable sales increased 1% versus the prior year supported by 22% off-premise sales mix. Total sales for North Italia were $83.4 million, up 18% from the prior year period. Other FRC sales totaled $87.4 million, up 18% from the prior year. AM sales per operating week were $139,700. Flower Child sales totaled $43.5 million, up 26% from the prior year and sales per operating week were $88,500. And external bakery sales were $12.7 million. Now moving to year-over-year expense variance commentary. In the first quarter, we continued to realize some year-over-yearimprovement across several key line items in the P&L. Specifically, cost of sales decreased 100 basis points, primarily driven by favorable commodity costs. Labor as a percent of sales declined 30 basis points, primarily driven by the continued improvement in retention, supporting labor productivity gains and wage leverage. Other operating expenses increased 40 basis points as expected, primarily driven by timing of marketing and rewards costs and slightly higher facility-related costs. G&A decreased 30 basis points, primarily driven by lower professional fees. Depreciation remained relatively flat as a percent of sales. Pre-opening costs were $8.1 million in the quarter, compared to $5.9 million in the prior year period. We opened eight restaurants during the first quarter versus five restaurants in the first quarter of 2024. And in the first quarter, we recorded a pre-tax net expense of $17.3 million related to loss on extinguishment of debt associated with the partial redemption of our convertible senior notes due 2026, FRC acquisition-related items and impairment of assets and lease termination expenses. First quarter GAAP diluted net income per share was $0.67. Adjusted diluted net income per share was $0.93. Now turning to our balance sheet and capital allocation. The company ended the quarter with total available liquidity of approximately $501.9 million including a cash balance of $135.4 million and approximately $366.5 million available on our revolving credit facility. Total principal amount of debt outstanding was $644 million including $69 million in principal amount of convertible notes due 2026 and $575 million in principal amount of convertible notes due 2030. CapEx totaled approximately $43 million during the first quarter for new unit development and maintenance. During the quarter, we completed approximately $141.4 million in share repurchases and returned $12.5 million to shareholders via our dividend. Now let me turn to our outlook. While we will not be providing specific comparable sales and earnings guidance, we will provide our updated thoughts on our underlying assumptions for Q2 and full year 2025. Our assumptions factor in everything we know as of today including net restaurant counts, quarter-to-date trends, our expectations for the weeks ahead and anticipated impacts associated with holiday shifts. To that end, we are updating our total revenue outlook to align more closely with the lower end of previous expectations. We believe this to be prudent in light of recent economic growth and real disposable income forecasts, which have been revised downward by approximately 1%. Lastly and importantly, we continue to evaluate the potential impact of the tariffs along with the business levers we control to mitigate the effects. At this time, based on the tariffs as currently outlined, we believe we are well positioned to substantially absorb the impact without changing our adjusted net income margin expectations. Specifically, for Q2, we anticipate total revenues to be between $935 million and $950 million. Next, at this time, we expect effective commodity inflation of low-single-digits for Q2. We are modeling net total labor inflation of low to mid-single-digits when factoring in the latest trends in wage rates and minimum wage increases, as well as other components of labor. G&A is estimated to be about $60 million. Depreciation is estimated to be approximately $27 million. We are estimating pre-opening expenses to be approximately $9.5 million to support the eight planned openings in the quarter and early Q3 openings. Based on these assumptions, we would anticipate adjusted net income margin to be about 5.3% to 5.4% based on the sales range provided. For modeling purposes, we are assuming a tax rate of 9% to 10% and weighted average shares outstanding of just above 48 million shares. Now for the full year, based on similar assumptions and no material operating or consumer disruptions, we anticipate total revenues for fiscal 2025 to be approximately $3.76 billion at the midpoint of our estimates. For sensitivity purposes, we are using a range of plus or minus 1%. We currently estimate total inflation across our commodity basket, labor and other operating expenses to be in the low to mid-single-digit range inclusive of the currently proposed tariff levels. We are estimating G&A to be about flat year-over-year as a percent of sales and depreciation to be about $108 million for the year and given our unit growth expectations, we’re estimating pre-opening expenses to be approximately $34 million. Based on these assumptions, we continue to expect full year adjusted net income margin to be approximately 4.75% at the sales estimate provided. For modeling purposes, we are assuming a 10% tax rate and weighted average shares outstanding relatively flat to 2024. With regard to development, as David stated earlier, we expect to open as many as 25 new restaurants in 2025 with as many as eight openings in the second quarter and the remainder in the back half of the year. This includes as many as three to four Cheesecake Factories, six to seven North Italias, six to seven Flower Childs and eight to nine FRC restaurants. And we would anticipate approximately $190 million to $210 million in cash CapEx to support unit development, as well as required maintenance on our restaurants. In closing, we are pleased with our first quarter performance, which reflected steady sales trends, solid operational execution and continued profitability improvements. Our operators executed well across key performance drivers and our new restaurant openings were met with strong demand delivering solid early sales results. The consistency of our execution and the strength of our concepts continue to reinforce our confidence as we progress through the year. We remain focused on making progress against our long term priorities, growing comparable restaurant sales, expanding margins and accelerating new unit development. While the broader macroeconomic environment has become more uncertain, our experience and success operating through a variety of economic cycles underscores the durability of our business With a strategy that has delivered consistent results and enhanced financial flexibility, we believe we are well positioned to manage near term uncertainty and continue delivering sustainable long term value. With that said, we’ll take your questions.