Earnings Labs

Noodles & Company (NDLS)

Q1 2016 Earnings Call· Tue, May 3, 2016

$11.84

+3.05%

Key Takeaways · AI generated
AI summary not yet generated for this transcript. Generation in progress for older transcripts; check back soon, or browse the full transcript below.

Same-Day

+0.45%

1 Week

-0.54%

1 Month

-13.79%

vs S&P

-15.79%

Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good afternoon and welcome to today's Noodles & Company First Quarter 2016 Earnings Conference Call. All participants are now in a listen-only mode. After the presenters' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I will now introduce the Noodles & Company's Chief Financial Officer, Dave Boennighausen.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Thank you, Jamie. Good afternoon, everyone and welcome to our first quarter 2016 earnings call. Here with me this afternoon is Kevin Reddy, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Let me start by going over a few regulatory matters. I'd like to note that during our opening remarks and in response to your questions, we may make forward-looking statements regarding future events or the future financial performance of the company. Any such items, including our guidance about our anticipated results in 2016 and details related to our future performance should be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements are only projections and actual events or results could differ materially from those projections due to a number of risks and uncertainties. The Safe Harbor statement in this afternoon's news release and the cautionary statement in the company's most recent Form 10-K are considered a part of this conference call. I refer you to the documents the company files from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission, specifically the company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for its 2015 fiscal year. This document contains and identifies important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in our projections or forward-looking statements. Now, I'd like to turn it over to Kevin. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Thanks, Dave, and good afternoon. During our last earnings call, we discussed the strategies we are deploying to create momentum in our results and capitalize on the inherent strengths of the brand. Noodles & Company remains a truly unique differentiated brand with a significant strength with one of the most important and largest future demographic groups, millennial parents and their families. Over the last several months of 2015…

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Thank you, Kevin. As Kevin mentioned, revenue in the first quarter of 2016 increased 8% to $114 million driven by new restaurant development offset by the closing on 16 company restaurants during the fourth quarter of 2015. For the quarter, we reported adjusted net loss of $1.7 million or $0.06 per diluted share and adjusted EBITDA of $5.4 million. In the first quarter, comparable restaurant sales were flat at company restaurants, declined 50 basis points at franchise restaurants and declined 10 basis points system-wide. Company results included pricing of approximately 1% and system-wide results were negatively impacted approximately 50 basis points by the shift in the Easter holiday. From a cadence perspective, excluding the Eastern holiday and short-term weather events, comparable sales results were similar throughout the quarter. During the first quarter, we opened 15 new restaurants system-wide including 14 company owned and one franchise location. We completed the quarter with 507 restaurants system-wide comprised of 436 company and 71 franchise restaurants. We still anticipate approximately 50 openings system-wide in 2016 including 40 to 45 company openings and 5 to 10 franchise locations. Of the 40 to 45 company restaurants, we expect all but a handful of locations to open before the fourth quarter of this year. As Kevin mentioned, our real estate strategy calls for the infill of existing markets as we look to optimize the profitability and the efficiencies in our current footprint. Along with new sites and maturing markets, we have also begun our remodel program. As of today, we have remodeled seven restaurants as well as replaced exterior signage at several others. Our initial results are encouraging, but it remains a little too early to understand the sustained benefit from the remodel program. But we are pleased with the initial response from our teams and our…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our first question comes from David Palmer with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

David Palmer - RBC Capital Markets LLC

Analyst

Great. Thanks. Good afternoon. I was wondering if you could touch on how you're trending with regard to take-out versus dine-in and dinner versus lunch?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Sure, Dave. So from a take-out perspective, we continue to see increases primarily in the online ordering platform. That's been a little bit more driven in the lunch occasion as we've been trying to really target those folks that speed of service is so critical and really as we said online ordering is the throughput equalizer for us. We've had a little bit more traction on that front. That's how we continue to believe there is a lot of opportunity in both day parts, actually to go is a little bit higher for us at dinner than it is for lunch because of families coming home and getting it on-the-go. So, we think there's opportunity across all day parts.

David Palmer - RBC Capital Markets LLC

Analyst

And just building on that... M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Right now, most of that is being driven by online and the app with some organic growth in that. I think as we make some of the physical plan changes in that area we have to go and pickup that will help accelerate it as well.

David Palmer - RBC Capital Markets LLC

Analyst

And just building on that. I know your – you will try to improve the prospects of getting delivery going. Could you talk about the future of delivery for Noodles, obviously your food travels well. What are the challenges and opportunities you see with delivery? Thanks.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Sure. So, it's a somewhat fragmented marketplace when you think of all the different partners that are out there doing delivery. We do have a very strong partner in Olo, which is our online ordering platform. We're working very closely with them to be one of their initial, if not their absolute initial first client to be able to utilize their platform from a delivery perspective. From the challenge perspective, I'd love Kevin to way in as well. I mean the most important thing is absolutely making sure that the guest experience is right. And that the food gets delivered correctly on time and hot. So that's something that we certainly are betting very closely with all of our perspective partners. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. I think there is two realities. One as Dave mentioned, the third parties are a bit fragmented, it's a small percentage of the system, but where it can, it works well. The other area of opportunity is when does it make sense for us to deliver internally. And we have – we've made adjustments to our policies to insurance coverages, we're putting some catering leads in restaurants, some local field community sales, specialist to help us to take advantage to mine those opportunities. And we now have the ability for some key team members to be able to participate in the delivery of some of those catering orders and to be compensated a little differently for that. I believe that's going to see us remove some of the current barriers that existed to that, and will give us a little more incremental lift and accelerate it at a slightly faster pace.

David Palmer - RBC Capital Markets LLC

Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from David Tarantino with Robert W. Baird. Your line is now open. David E. Tarantino - Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. (Broker): Hi. Good afternoon. Dave, could you clarify some of the components of what you're seeing so far in Q2. I think you mentioned that Easter benefit and then also extra pricing that you're expecting in Q2, so could you talk about what's in the number so far and then if you have an impact for the estimated weather impact, perhaps you could talk about that as well?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Sure, David. So, as a reminder, where we sit quarter-to-date from a company-owned perspective, we are at negative 0.2% from same-store sales. The Easter shift has been a benefit of, a little bit over a 100 basis points thus far in the quarter, then from a pricing perspective somewhat similar in terms of the benefits. Where we are seeing some drop has been, little bit in the industry environment, which as we look at our channel checks, as we look at Black Box has been showing some softening. We have seen our trends relative to Black Box actually improve from both the traffic and a comparable sales perspective. The actual quantification of weather, haven't done a lot with that yet. I can tell you that Colorado in particular had snow about twice with the averages. I mean, it's unfortunately been coming on Fridays and Saturdays, which are our too busiest days, but we've not fully quantified that yet. David E. Tarantino - Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. (Broker): Got it. That's helpful. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. David, this is Kevin. I think too, I mean, we think over the last four, four-and-half weeks, with the Easter shift and a couple of those storms in there, there's been a fair amount of volatility on a day-today basis. What we do feel comfortable with is that, the guidance that we had previously put out there is the right guidance and we should hold that guidance for the year.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah. The one final thing I'd mention when you think of the components of the quarter-to-date same-store sales is that our comparison was the most challenging that we have actually for the full year of 2015, if you look at the comparison – sorry, comparison was a positive 1.5%, quarter-to-date till yesterday and that gets softer as we go through the balance of Q2. David E. Tarantino - Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. (Broker): Great. That's helpful. And then I guess the comments implied that you haven't yet taken the price increase in Q2 or if you did, you took it very recently. So, I guess...

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

We took it recently. That's correct. David E. Tarantino - Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. (Broker): Okay. Thank you for clarifying that. And I guess given the desire to get back to positive traffic and how choppy the industry has been, perhaps could you talk about kind of what's given you the confidence to take such a level of price increase, kind of move it up towards 2.5% and at this stage of the game and why not be more patient on that front until you see signs that traffic is starting to come back in a positive way? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: David, this is Kevin. I think we have been – historically I think you're aware, we've been very patient, we probably ran six years just slightly above 1% a year. What allows us to feel somewhat comfortable is we've got a lot of detail on our customer, OSAT scores, we read a lot of the comments, we stay close to the guests. So, we see those improving. We also have been announcing some new menu news and new ingredients, improved ingredients, some more premium products in our newer recipe. So, we feel there's value there and we have some room based on both research and reaction within our test markets. So, it's a very good question, we're cautious about it, we don't think we've been piggish about it. We think it's also necessary in some of these markets with greater labor pressure.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah. And to add to that, I mean as a reminder, we actually went about 15 months without increasing price at all until the very, very tail-end of Q4, we did a modest increase. We introduced the Kids Meal. That was a very important part as Kevin mentioned with the menu and that really has had a very strong impact on our value proposition. We did do a modest price increase. As we've shifted our strategy to have kind of three smaller chunks during the course of the year instead of one larger one, we should shift that strategy and have our first one really at the beginning of Q1. We monitored very closely to see how did that impact traffic, how did that impact mix, did not see a negative response to that, and that's continuing in the few weeks that we've had this most recent price increase, even as we've had that increase our gap relative to Black Box from a traffic perspective has improved. David E. Tarantino - Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc. (Broker): Great. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Andy Barish with Jefferies. Your line is now open.

Andrew Marc Barish - Jefferies LLC

Analyst · Jefferies. Your line is now open.

Hey, guys. Can you give us kind of where you stand on the investment sort of back into some food items and how that will shake out with the overall commodity basket for the full year?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

So from a food items perspective, we're about 80% contracted right now Andy. There's some produce items that we're not able to do so. The commodity environment in general is relatively favorable. Where you'll see us mostly do investment is going to be in the steak product actually and I think you'll see in the summer actually us launch an antibiotic-free, naturally raised, actually a different cut that we feel really good, it's been testing incredibly well. So, that's going to be our next step from an investment in our food quality. As we said on the call, we still expect that we'll be able to actually get some leverage on the COGS line and get down to about 26.5% for the balance of the year, and that includes even the investment in steak. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: And we've factored that into the guidance and what we're forecasting in it. It's actually, I think in the environment that we're in and the outstanding work the supply chain team is doing, we're getting a good outcome to accelerate some of our objectives there.

Andrew Marc Barish - Jefferies LLC

Analyst · Jefferies. Your line is now open.

And can you give a quick update on sort of Kids Meals and what impact that's had on the business if you care to quantify and then does marketing coverage kind of move up as you move through the year from that 35% to a somewhat higher level down the road?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

I'll address the Kids Meal and then if Kevin can talk on media and if we're going to expand beyond the 35%. From the Kids Meal, we have been very pleased with some of the results we're seeing in terms of increasing frequency, because we have seen that value proposition and the value scores from our family guest increase. Difficult to qualify the absolute overall impact on same-store sales, but we have seen of those guests that are ordering Kids Meals that they are coming a little bit more frequently. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. On the 35% of the market, restaurants that are really receiving some of the more traditional broader media, that number is probably going to stay close to the same, maybe a tad of increase. We are touching a greater part of the system because we are clearly doing social, digital, and other channels, our EClub, and that's being activated across the entire system. So, we're reaching probably closer to 45%, 50% easily of all of our restaurants, and it's only our smallest ones where we're really driving through local relationship marketing.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

I think it's an important part of our infill strategy because what we're going to see as we develop and execute on that strategy is you'll have a lot more markets that will start getting into the economies of scale necessary to do more media. So, I'd expect over time that will continue to go up.

Andrew Marc Barish - Jefferies LLC

Analyst · Jefferies. Your line is now open.

Thanks, guys.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Andrew Strelzik with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

Andrew Strelzik - BMO Capital Markets

Analyst · BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

Hey, good afternoon, everyone. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Good afternoon.

Andrew Strelzik - BMO Capital Markets

Analyst · BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

I wanted to first ask, are there many metrics that you can provide about the Asian exploration and also the renovated Pad Thai? It seems like particularly on the Asian exploration it's more aggressive from a taste profile perspective than maybe some of the recent LTOs prior to that. And I'm wondering is that a bigger differentiator such that you're getting better performance and now you're talking about with the Veracruz, another kind of more aggressive taste profile. Is that kind of where the innovation is going because you're seeing better performance there?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah, it's a bit early to release product mix numbers and everything else, but what we are seeing, clearly I think a stronger profile. We're reaching a little bit further in terms of the taste profile, spice levels, excitement around that, that is what we're hearing back from our guests is that they appreciate that, they like it, it's making the dishes a little more unique and a lot more craveable. So, I think you'll see the culinary team continue to push the envelope a little bit, still serve the mainstream with a twist. And you'll see that definitely in the Veracruz salad and the Napa salad.

Andrew Strelzik - BMO Capital Markets

Analyst · BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

And then you mentioned the pricing coming with menu news and now it's going to be accelerating. Should we read that as the pipeline of innovation is more robust or there's pretty significant news on the horizon or is there really no correlation there?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

There is going to be absolutely more innovation. I think the Gochujang sauce that we incorporated into the Korean Meatball absolutely has other applicability through our menu. So, we are currently looking at an item that we could be launching in later this summer. And we will be going into more of a consistent, maybe a trimester approach to our LTOs, focusing on the salads next and then introducing potentially Gochujang sauce based item later on in the year as well. As Kevin mentioned, we're not going to sacrifice, though, some of the inherent strengths of the brand. We have that with the Mac & Cheese, with the Pesto Cavatappi, and some other dishes. So, we felt that it was most critical to fix the Asian and salad lineups, which we really have actively done. And then you might see us move more towards really reinforcing some of the inherent strengths in some of those comfort items.

Andrew Strelzik - BMO Capital Markets

Analyst · BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

And then my last question you mentioned the first foray into TV. And I'm wondering, your perception of how that was received and if may be that might open up new or maybe more select, but still new marketing opportunities going forward? Thank you.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah. I think it does. We're running in a midsize market. Certainly, I think what – when you can impact all the senses of sight and sound, and everything else through TV, I think our food and experience communicate in a much more impactful way and we're looking for ways in some of those medium to small markets where we can buy that channel more efficiently to maybe put some more muscle behind because we definitely are seeing awareness go up and traffic go up in a measurable way. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. And I think that the brand positioning that we launched last fall was made different and then that's what we think makes us so special. And TV is a great avenue for us to really get across those aspects as Kevin mentioned.

Andrew Strelzik - BMO Capital Markets

Analyst · BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

Great, very helpful. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Jason West with Credit Suisse. Your line is now open. Jason West - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (Broker): Yeah. Thanks, guys. Dave, I just want to clarify the pricing comments. I though you said you're running 1% quarter-to-date, but you took the price increase a few weeks ago. Just trying to understand if I heard that right?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yes. We ran 1% during Q1. And then when you compare Q1 to Q2, we layered on an additional about 1.5%. So the full quarter for Q2 is going to be in the neighborhood of 2.5% year-over-year and then we might have a very modest price increase one more time later on this year. Does that help or...? Jason West - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (Broker): Yeah but the other 1.5%, the new 1.5% was taken earlier in April, it sounds like.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

That's exactly right. It happened a couple of weeks ago. Jason West - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (Broker): Okay. Got it. And then bigger picture, it'd be helpful to get your guys' perspective on what you think is happening with the industry. Is the weakness you've seen in April, was that similar to what you saw in March, you were already seeing that, or is this a new phenomenon? Do you think it's really concentrated in the weather markets, like Denver? Are you seeing a more broad-based industry trend in this direction and in some of the other markets where you guys operate? I think you guys have better visibility on the segment Black Box and things like that than we do.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah. I mean, there is so much noise when you look at just a four-week or five-week timeframe. You had the Easter shift, which has its own impact there has just on that particular day, but that can often linger in for a little while after that. Weather certainly has hit in some of our markets. March was relatively strong. So we didn't see any softening necessarily there, I can't say as we talked about the Black Box Index and indicate some softness during Q2, I think some of our other folks in the industry have also been pointing to a little bit of softness as well. But again, it's only four weeks to five weeks, Jason. So we don't – we've seen a little bit of momentum in the right direction in the last several days, but it's a pretty small sample size. Jason West - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (Broker): Yeah, I think the assumptions within your question are more right and wrong. Clearly, it's the deceleration was it – happened a little more in April and not so much in March. A little more skewed towards markets that had some severe weather and some storms. And I think the other industry factor is that the promotional activity and levels tended to pick-up much more aggressively in April across the sector as instead of the first quarter with maybe the notable exception of one brand that's been heavily discounted. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. The only other thing I would add to that was when you look at the comparisons in two year growth, this was our most difficult comparison was in April. And I think the industry also probably had some more challenging comparison. So, I think from a two year perspective, it might not be as off as it may first appear. Jason West - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (Broker): Okay. That's helpful. And then you mentioned there another large brand that's had some issues. On the last quarter you said if you look, you're not seeing any real statistical difference when you're near that brand or not. Just if you can give an update on if you're seeing any benefit or detriment as Chipotle is trying to fix their issues? Thanks.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Again, we have a large amount of our restaurants that are within a quarter mile to Chipotle and as we've sliced and diced and analyzed our restaurants that are in their trade areas, we have not seen any difference in their performance relative to others. So, we don't currently see anything, Denver is an interesting case study I think for the entire fast casual space. At the same time, when you look at Black Box, it had been slowly declining before any news broke out last fall. So, it's hard for me to really gauge if there has been an impact. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. I don't think we have any more specific data to come to a different conclusion than that. Jason West - Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC (Broker): That's helpful. Thanks.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Jake Bartlett with SunTrust. Your line is now open.

Jake Rowland Bartlett - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc.

Analyst · SunTrust. Your line is now open.

Great. Thanks for taking the question. Dave, just to start, and I hate to go back to the pricing, but I'm still a little bit confused about the cadence of when you took the pricing, because feels like second quarter, if you just took 1.5 point and you started with 1 point, then you're not going to have 2.5% as an average throughout the quarter. But the real reason for the question is because it seems like you're taking less pricing than you intended to as of the last call. So is that right, that before I had it that you were going to take 2% to 3% in the second quarter, had taken some additionally in the first quarter. Maybe just clarify those two things, whether you've dialed back your pricing strategy a little bit and maybe just clarify exactly when you're taking this pricing?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah, sure. Absolutely. So, the 2.5% – we're running really just barely north of that as we said two day, like 2.6%, 2.7% in that range. So, the 2.5% that you see is a weighted average for the second quarter. From dialing back, yeah, there was a little bit, we expressed it, the range of where we expect that we could land. We did ultimately decide to go on the low end of that range, looking at some of our traffic trends that were going in the right direction, we wanted to continue that momentum, the commodity environment was becoming more favorable. So, we did end up on the lower end of the range that we discussed at the last call.

Jake Rowland Bartlett - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc.

Analyst · SunTrust. Your line is now open.

Okay. And then to clarify the Black Box data out of Colorado and Denver, is that indicating that fast casual is losing share from the overall pie and others, like QSR, are gaining share? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: It's so hard to tell because fast casual, Black Box has a very large presence there, but at the same time, they don't have one or two of the largest names. So, I think I'd be – it would be inappropriate for me to say what's going on from the overall category perspective.

Jake Rowland Bartlett - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc.

Analyst · SunTrust. Your line is now open.

Okay. And then maybe if you could talk about some of the changes you're making on the marketing front and the messaging. It sounds like you're going more towards product-specific traffic driving message. But you also made the comment that you're thinking of doing that in some of the other markets. Maybe just discuss the reasoning for that. Are you moving away from the Made Differently message or the more wholesome food message or anything like that, or anything we should read to your marketing strategy? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. It's a good question for clarification. We deeply believe in how we launched or made different brand positioning. That is going to live through everything that we do. We clearly have it online and in video and social and digital. What we believe is more appropriate is to tell that story in conjunction with new menu news. So, what we're doing is making it more – we're building on that same foundation with specific new menu news, new product launches, new and improved ingredients where it make sense. We believe those more specific messages tend to fall more into traffic driving and promotional activity than more simply brand building. So, that's how we're doing it. We're not leaving it, but we're making it more specific and elevating it to a more actionable place. So, we see it as the natural continuation of the brand positioning.

Jake Rowland Bartlett - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc.

Analyst · SunTrust. Your line is now open.

Great. And then last question, I might have just missed it, but did you mention what you expect or what you've seen from the remodels and what impact you've had on sales, the sales lift, and also whether these 75 units are going to be all company-owned over the next two years?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

So, the 75 restaurants you're referencing are on the company side. We're working with our franchise community, sharing our best practices in what we've learnt, so they will be able to follow suite. We haven't disclosed what the actual overall impact is. I think generally the research that we've done and when we've done re-models in the past as you'd be looking for about a 5% lift on $100,000 type investment, and we're right in the ballpark there where we'd expect to be and we think we can actually increase that as we start incorporating more merchandising and to go elements but unfortunately Jake, it is little bit too early to really understand what the overall impact is going to be on the system from a sustained perspective.

Jake Rowland Bartlett - SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, Inc.

Analyst · SunTrust. Your line is now open.

Got it. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from John Glass with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. John Glass - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Thanks very much. Just first back to the second quarter, based on your comments where pricing is now and quarter-to-date comps, is it your expectation that traffic will be declining at a higher rate than in the first quarter and the second quarter? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah, I think ultimately John, I think it's early to tell. There has been so much movement from an Easter perspective and some of the holiday shifts. And again the comparison gets significantly easier as you go through the balance of the quarter. So I would not necessarily say that we expect to have a traffic decline. Quarter-to-date through Q2, relative to Q1, yes, the math absolutely shows there has been a decline, but I think from a two year perspective, we've been pretty consistent. So we think the full quarter absolutely could still be showing the upward momentum. John Glass - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Okay. And if Denver is a little off from a market perspective, were the other markets, or what other markets were offsetting it from an improvement standpoint this quarter, last quarter? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Where we're seeing the most positive momentum has been in the markets where we're either doing the infill strategy and building brand awareness and those efficiencies or they've been in the markets where we've been doing media. Those have been the two areas and one reason why we're continuing to execute that strategy that we've described earlier.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

And I just want to make a quick comment about Colorado because, it means clearly a market that's under a little more pressure nationally and within the sector, but a couple of reasons why, I'm confident we're going to show improvement in Colorado and consistently throughout the rest of the year. I mean, first and foremost, I mean it's a market where we have excellent top of mind awareness. We really have outstanding real estate here and a great footprint. I think we're entering the summer with one of the strongest operating teams we've had in the last few years. We're clearly supporting a competitive environment with media and promotion and the remodels that we're doing, I think are smart and targeted. So, all those things on top of a market that may be under pressure. But at its core and foundation is an excellent market with good brand awareness and excellent economies of scales. It gives me confidence that we got the right things within a very difficult environment to improve over our peer group. John Glass - Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC: Then just lastly, 2017 development, I know you talked about early this year, front loading it, and you said it's going to be lower next year. Where are you in the thought process about 2017 now? Has there been changes on how you think about what you want to spend on restaurants on a per restaurant basis or finding prototypes, just given maybe a newer reality of lower EVs? Any thoughts on either of those, please? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Sure, so we'll start with the 2017 pipeline in general. So, we absolutely are shifting some of our capital allocation from new restaurants into more remodels. You can expect a slower…

Operator

Operator

. And our next question comes from Joe Buckley with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open.

Joseph Terrence Buckley - Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Analyst · Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open.

Thank you. Just a couple of follow-ups. I think you mentioned it was an LTO mismatch in the second quarter, somewhat behind the relatively slow sales in April. Is that correct? And if so, could you just elaborate on that a little?

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Sure, so last year at this time, Joe, we did launch the BUFF Bowls. I mean our BUFF Bowls have had a nice steady niche audience. We did a good amount of promotion when we originally launched those at the very beginning of Q2 of last year. This year the salad launch that Kevin discussed, that is going to be later on in May. So from a timing perspective they didn't quite overlap; one reason why we had the tougher comparison during April.

Joseph Terrence Buckley - Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Analyst · Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open.

Okay. And then would you have handy what, I think you mentioned off-premise sales were up to 43% and online sales 6% in the first quarter. Do you know offhand what those percentages were in the first quarter a year ago? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Sure. So from an online perspective it was about 3.5% and overall to go was in the 41-ish% range, since it's been up a couple hundred basis points.

Joseph Terrence Buckley - Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Analyst · Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open.

Okay. And it seems like you are promoting the online pretty aggressively. Could you talk a little bit more about that and how you're trying to convert more of those off-premise customers to doing it online? And maybe connected to that, is the catering, can you do the catering online yet or is that still the toll-free number? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: We do have catering online and we are definitely promoting it through the website and everything else. The targets to build it really, we mentioned Leap the Line and the Tax Day Promotion, those have been very strong. So, we're going to continue doing that. We're clearly targeting high volume lunch businesses. We've got our teams talking to those guests. We're pinging them where we can through social, digital media. So, it's really a much more aggressive outreach targeted to that super heavy user of that space. And I think we'll just continue to see it grow organically.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Yeah. The only thing I would add to that, on the catering side, there are platforms that do delivery on catering. Our food does do well when it's the small, we call it a-la-carte catering. When you have a full buffet though, like when we're doing a very large group, when you're doing a graduation party, something along those lines, we do think the human touch of being able to be there, set it up, talk to the guests, make sure that everything is going well, that's something that you don't necessarily want to outsource. So from that perspective, we're still developing more so on the internal mechanisms, internal processes that allow us to execute the catering offering.

Joseph Terrence Buckley - Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Analyst · Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open.

Okay. And just last one, you mentioned delivery at some of your best stores, it's a 15% mix. What kind of stores are those? Are those urban stores or any particular characteristics standout? M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Generally, they're central business district locations, college locations also we see some nice success from a delivery perspective.

Joseph Terrence Buckley - Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Analyst · Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Your line is now open.

Okay. Okay, that's helpful. Thank you. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Thanks, Joe.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Thank you, Joe.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. And our last question comes from Keith Siegner with UBS. Your line is now open.

Keith R. Siegner - UBS Securities LLC

Analyst

Hey. Just a quick one on value. With the fourth quarter numbers, you talked about how the value scores had gotten better, after lagging, the kids meals had helped to kind of cement in that value proposition. First quarter, we saw a huge change in the industry's approach to value, significantly more competitive behavior. You talked about you're taking less pricing than you originally discussed, but it's still a good amount of pricing. How do you think you stand in terms of relative value position now? Do you have any contingency plans in case this tough value focus continues a little longer against weakening industry conditions? Where do you stand on value and what's the plan? Thanks.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

So, I would start off. I think certainly we do have a pretty smart and really nice plan when it comes to promotion. So, you saw some that Joe alluded to in terms of our online promotions that we've been using with our email database we have been utilizing a little bit more direct mail. So, from a promotional perspective, without discounting the brand to the extent that it would impact the value proposition, we certainly have been very targeted from that perspective. Also we're in the nascent phases of a loyalty program, which we've looked at actually be potentially testing in the next couple of months. That's something we think would be absolutely a very important vehicle and really driving home the value proposition and building guest engagement with our customers. M. Kevin Reddy - Chairman & Chief Executive Officer: Yeah. And we believe from the research and data that we're collecting is that, our kids meal has really strengthened the value with probably one of the most price sensitive groups out there, which is the family. So, we feel good about what we've seen there and the reality is I know there's always a lot of talk between how related is price to value. There is certainly correlated but we also have seen that strong operations, exhibiting the behaviors that create great hospitality and becoming someone's favorite restaurant that better your core operations are the better you are at those areas. They positively impact value ratings. So it's not just price, we're keenly watching that indicator, but as our other measures around customer satisfaction and OSAT scores improve, we feel confident there. The right metrics are headed in the right direction.

Keith R. Siegner - UBS Securities LLC

Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This does conclude today's program. You may all disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

David J. Boennighausen - Chief Financial Officer

Management

Thank you, Jamie.