- Darden Restaurants reported quarterly earnings and revenue that missed analysts' expectations.
- Outgoing CEO Gene Lee said the omicron variant hurt customer traffic, staffing levels and its expenses in January.
- The company, which owns the Olive Garden chain, also lowered its earnings outlook for fiscal 2022.
Darden Restaurants on Thursday reported quarterly earnings and revenue that missed analysts' expectations, saying the omicron variant of Covid-19 led to disappointing sales for its Olive Garden chain.
The company also lowered its earnings outlook for fiscal 2022, expecting that food and labor costs will keep rising.
Darden's stock was down slightly in morning trading.
Outgoing CEO Gene Lee said in a statement that the company saw record sales in December, before omicron disrupted customer traffic, staffing levels and its operating expenses the following month. However, Darden's restaurants began recovering from the downturn by February, the company said.
Olive Garden, which accounts for roughly half of Darden's revenue, reported same-store sales growth of 29.9%, missing StreetAccount estimates of 36.7%.
Here's what the company reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:
- Earnings per share: $1.93 vs. $2.10 expected
- Revenue: $2.45 billion vs. $2.51 billion expected
The restaurant company reported fiscal third-quarter net income of $247 million, or $1.93 per share, up from $128.7 million, or 98 cents per share, a year earlier. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting earnings per share of $2.10.
Money Report
Executives on the conference call said commodity inflation rose by 11% in the quarter compared with the year-ago period.
Net sales rose 41.3% to $2.45 billion, falling short of expectations of $2.51 billion. Across all of Darden's restaurant chains, same-store sales climbed 38.1%. Wall Street was expecting total same-store sales growth of 43.5%, according to StreetAccount estimates. A year ago, Darden's same-store sales shrank by 26.7%.
Darden's fine-dining business also disappointed, despite reporting same-store sales growth of 85.8%. The segment includes chains like The Capital Grille and was the hardest hit by the pandemic. Analysts were expecting same-store sales growth of 91.1%.
LongHorn SteakHouse saw its same-store sales rise 31.6% in the quarter. The chain's sales bounced back faster than Olive Garden after building a strong takeout business earlier in the pandemic, but it only accounts for about a quarter of Darden's revenue.
After raising its earnings forecast last quarter, Darden lowered it on Thursday. The company is now expecting fiscal 2022 earnings per share from continuing operations of $7.30 to $7.45, down from its prior outlook of $7.35 to $7.60.
Lee said the war in Ukraine has created greater uncertainty, leading the company to issue an outlook that is wider than usual by this time in the fiscal year.
Darden said it expects inflation to rise by 6%, slightly higher than its prior forecast of 5.5%. It's predicting commodity inflation will rise by 9%. To combat higher food and labor costs, the company plans to hike its prices by 3% for the full fiscal year.
"Obviously, we're going to continue to look for opportunities to price below inflation," Lee said. "... And as inflation creeps up, we're going to have to try to manage through that, but it's going to be a combination of pricing and productivity initiatives."
The company also narrowed its fiscal 2022 revenue outlook. Its sales forecast is now $9.55 billion to $9.62 billion, compared with its prior range of $9.55 billion to $9.7 billion.
Read the full earnings report here.