Business World

Domino’s internatio­nal results miss views; stocks slide

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Domino’s Pizza, Inc. reported quarterly internatio­nal same-restaurant sales that fell short of analysts’ estimates, overshadow­ing strength in the United States and sending its shares down almost 10% in morning trading on Tuesday. Domino’s internatio­nal same-store sales rose only 2.6%, almost half the 5% growth analysts estimated in a Consensus Metrix poll. Sales in some internatio­nal markets were challengin­g in the second quarter adding the dollar’s strength, particular­ly against the British pound, also reduced internatio­nal royalty revenues.

NEW YORK — Domino’s Pizza, Inc. reported quarterly internatio­nal same-restaurant sales that fell short of analysts’ estimates, overshadow­ing strength in the United States and sending its shares down almost 10% in morning trading on Tuesday.

Domino’s internatio­nal samestore sales rose only 2.6%, almost half the 5% growth analysts estimated in a Consensus Metrix poll.

Sales in some internatio­nal markets were challengin­g in the second quarter, Domino’s Chief Financial Officer Jeffrey Lawrence said on a conference call, adding the dollar’s strength, particular­ly against the British pound, also reduced internatio­nal royalty revenues.

The average value of the dollar against a basket of major currencies had risen almost 4% in the quarter ended June 18, compared with the year-earlier period.

Chief Executive Patrick Doyle said issues in the internatio­nal business were “easily categorize­d as correctabl­e.”

The company’s franchise, Domino’s Pizza Group Plc, UK’s biggest pizza delivery firm, said on Tuesday its like-for-like sales growth in the first half of the year was lower than a year earlier.

Domino’s weak internatio­nal results were in contrast to those of rival McDonald’s Corp., which reported better-than-expected sales across all geographie­s and highlighte­d strength in UK, China and Japan.

However, same-store sales at Domino’s- owned outlets in the United States, its biggest source of store revenue, jumped 11.2% in the second quarter, crushing the 7.70% rise analysts had expected.

Net income rose to $65.7 million, or $ 1.32 per share, in the quarter ended June 18, from $49.3 million, or 98 cents per share, a year earlier.

Domino’s said the adoption of a new accounting standard in the first quarter boosted profit by 21 cents per share in the latest reported quarter.

The company’s revenue rose 15% to $628.6 million, marking its fifth straight double-digit quarterly growth in percentage terms.

Analysts on average had expected a profit of $1.23 per share and revenue of $614.4 million, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Domino’s internatio­nal outlets totaled 8,601 units, while in the United States it had 5,399 restaurant­s at the end of the quarter.

 ??  ?? THE SIGN of a Domino’s Pizza restaurant is seen in Paris, France, October 27, 2016.
THE SIGN of a Domino’s Pizza restaurant is seen in Paris, France, October 27, 2016.

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