Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pizza sales slow after boom in ’20

Despite pandemic, U.S. diners’ options seen as expanding

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — After a pandemic-fueled boom, U.S. pizza sales appear to be headed back to earth.

Domino’s and Papa John’s pizza chains both said Thursday that their same-store sales lost steam in the fourth quarter compared to the huge increases they saw earlier in 2020. Same-store sales are expected to continue seeing percentage declines well into this year.

Pizza delivery remains popular, but diners’ choices are expanding, with more restaurant­s now offering delivery. In a survey of 3,500 U.S. restaurant operators last fall, the National Restaurant Associatio­n found that 27% had added delivery from a third party like DoorDash, while 17% had added inhouse delivery. Pizza could also be pressured as the pandemic eases and dining rooms reopen.

“We aren’t sure exactly what the new normal will look like,” Domino’s chief executive officer Richard Allison said Thursday during a conference call with analysts.

Louisville, Ky.-based Papa John’s said its North American same-store sales — or sales at stores open at least a year — rose 13.5% in the fourth quarter after skyrocketi­ng more than 20% in both the second and third quarters.

For all of 2020, Papa John’s same-store sales jumped 17.6% in North America. But they’re expected to be up only 2% this year, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet.

Ann Arbor-based Domino’s said its same-store sales were up 11% in the OctoberDec­ember period. That was short of Wall Street’s forecasts, and below the 17.5% growth the company saw in the third quarter and the 16% growth it saw in the second quarter.

For the full year, Domino’s U.S. same-store sales were up 11.5%, well ahead of the 3.2% growth they saw in 2019.

But this year, analysts expect they will rise just 1% as sales tumble from their pandemic highs.

Allison said the lack of federal stimulus checks affected demand in the fourth quarter, and the resurgent virus hurt carryout orders. But he also acknowledg­ed that many independen­t restaurant­s, which weren’t emphasizin­g delivery before the pandemic, are now stronger competitor­s.

“They jumped with both feet into delivery to stay alive,” Allison said in a conference call with investors.

Pizza delivery is also facing a challenge from big chains. McDonald’s says its U.S. delivery demand doubled in 2020. Taco Bell also saw higher delivery sales last year.

Uber Eats, one of the largest third-party delivery brands in the U.S., said its active restaurant partners grew by 75% in the fourth quarter compared with the same period a year ago.

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