Finance

In this article

Domino’s in Denmark
Francis Dean

Domino’s Pizza shares were down more than 3% in premarket trading after the pizza chain’s third-quarter revenue fell short of estimates and its U.S. same-store sales turned negative.

The pandemic brought skyrocketing demand for Domino’s pizza in its home market, but as consumers were vaccinated and states relaxed restrictions, investors began to worry about pizza fatigue. Last quarter, despite facing tough comparisons, U.S. same-store sales still rose 3.5%.

The company’s third quarter seems to be the turning point. U.S. same-store sales shrank by 1.9%, although the metric was up by 15.6% on a two-year basis. StreetAccount estimates forecast that the company would report U.S. same-store sales growth of 1.8%.

The decline in U.S. demand led the pizza chain to fall short of Wall Street’s revenue estimates. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting net sales of $1.04 billion, but Domino’s reported $998 million in revenue for the quarter.

Outside the U.S., the company’s business is faring much better. International same-store sales climbed 8.8% in the quarter, up 15% on a two-year basis.

Domino’s earned $3.24 per share during the quarter, topping the $3.11 per share expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.

Although Domino’s shares were down more than 5% at one point on Thursday, the stock has climbed 19% this year, bringing its market value to $17 billion.

Read Domino’s press release.

Articles You May Like

USD moves to a new session high. EURUSD falls to 100 hour MA target.
Oil – private survey of inventory shows a draw vs. the build that was expected
Gold trades in tight range as market focuses on US economic data
Fed’s Goolsbee: Makes sense to wait to get more clarity before moving
Danaher shares jump 7% as the turnaround in biotech spending finally arrives