Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc.

Q3 2021 Earnings Conference Call

10/21/2021

spk02: Good day and welcome to the Chipotle Mexican Grill third quarter 2021 results conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ashish Kohli, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
spk06: Hello, everyone, and welcome to our third quarter fiscal 2021 earnings call. By now, you should have access to our earnings press release. If not, it may be found on our Investor Relations website at ir.chipotle.com. I will begin by reminding you that certain statements and projections made in this presentation about our future business and financial results constitute forward-looking statements. These statements are based on management's current business and market expectations, and our actual results could differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Please see the risk factors contained in our annual report on Form 10-K and in our Form 10-Qs for a discussion of risk that may cause our actual results to vary from these forward-looking statements. Our discussions today will include non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation to GAAP measures can be found via the link included on the presentation page within the investor relations section of our website. We will start today's call with prepared remarks from Brian Nickell, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Jack Hartung, Chief Financial Officer, after which we will take your questions. Our entire executive leadership team is available during the Q&A session. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to Brian.
spk05: Thanks, Ashish, and good afternoon, everyone. Chipotle's third quarter results highlight strong momentum in our business, fueled by a multi-pronged growth strategy and a passionate team that's delighted to see more guests coming back into our restaurants. We continue to retain about 80% of digital sales, but have now recovered nearly 80% of in-restaurant sales. While COVID impacts will likely persist for a few more quarters, we are hopeful that the worst is behind us and society can shortly return to a more normal environment. Personally, I'm thrilled to welcome our Restaurant Support Center leaders back to the office beginning in November, which will allow us to optimize creativity, camaraderie, and effectiveness, key elements that help make Chipotle a unique and powerful brand. For the quarter, we reported Record quarterly sales of $2 billion, representing 21.9% year-over-year growth, which was fueled by a 15.1% increase in comparable restaurant sales. Restaurant level margin of 23.5% was 400 basis points higher than the 19.5% we reported last year. Earnings per share adjusted for unusual items of $7.02, representing an increase of 86.7% year-over-year. digital sales growth of 8.6% year over year, representing 42.8% of sales, and we opened 41 new restaurants, including 36 with a Chipotle. And I'm pleased to report that Q4 is off to a great start. These results highlight that our key strategies continue to resonate with guests and allow us to win today while we create the future. While we regularly get asked what's next, I believe our current growth drivers have plenty of runway and will be critical to us reaching our longer term goal of 6,000 restaurants in North America with AUVs above $3 million and improving returns on invested capital. To remind everyone, we're focusing on five key areas. Number one, opening and running successful restaurants with a strong culture that provides great food with integrity while delivering exceptional in-restaurant and digital experiences. Number two, utilizing a disciplined approach to creativity and innovation. Number three, leveraging digital capabilities to drive productivity and expand access, convenience, and engagement. Number four, engaging with customers through our loyalty program to drive transactions and frequency. And last, but certainly not least, number five, making the brand visible, relevant, and loved. Let me now provide a brief update on each of these, starting with operations. Well-trained and supported employees consistently preparing delicious food and delivering excellent guest experiences are at the heart of our success. We're fortunate to have amazing employees at our restaurants who have stayed focused on safety, reliability, and excellent culinary despite the dynamic and challenging environment. I've said it before and I'll say it again, our people are our greatest asset, and I can't thank them enough for all their efforts. We're extremely proud of Chipotle's world-class employee value proposition that includes industry-leading benefits, attractive wages, specialized training and development, access to education, and a transparent pathway to significant career advancement opportunities. We believe these efforts are helping to attract and retain great employees, which is more important than ever given the challenging labor environment we're all experiencing today. Over the past 18 months, we've made operational adjustments to adapt to our constantly changing environment in support of our in-restaurant business as well as our record-breaking digital business. As a result, we've had to allocate labor as needed among the different roles, including the DML and the frontline, depending on available staff to accommodate the needs of our customers and our restaurant teams. This flexibility has allowed us to keep our frontline open, given our ability to divert orders on the digital lines as needed to overcome periodic staffing challenges. This is part of the normal business balancing that occurs at the discretion of onsite managers and has not had a material impact on our business in the past. This was true pre-pandemic and is more relevant now as dining room volumes recover. The good news is that I believe we're finally getting back to pre-pandemic operations and I couldn't be more excited. We're fortunate to have a dedicated digital make line and a dedicated dining room serving line. Our frontline represented nearly 60% of our business or $1.1 billion of sales for the quarter. It is big and it is growing. We are committed to ensuring guests on the front line get the customized meal they want, made with real ingredients, excellent culinary, and faster than anywhere else. We still have some work to do, but our goal is to provide exceptional throughput as speed of service is a foundational element of convenience that our guests truly value. Therefore, we are committed to teaching, training, and validating the five pillars of throughput every day during every shift to ensure we meet our high standards and provide a great guest experience. While taking good care of guests is always a top priority, utilizing our stage gate process to continue innovating is critical to our growth. The great news is that Chipotle is delicious food that you feel good about eating, which creates an emotional connection with our customers, and they love to see ongoing innovation from us. As a result, we introduce new menu items on a regular cadence, as it helps bring in additional customers, drive frequency with existing users, and gives us an opportunity to create buzz around the brand. Recently, we launched smoked brisket for a limited time across all our US and Canadian restaurants. Our culinary team spent the last two years developing the perfect smoked brisket recipe that is unique to our brand and pairs flawlessly with our fresh, real ingredients. This is our third new menu item this year, following on the success of our cilantro lime cauliflower rice and handcrafted quesadilla. Early customer feedback on this entree, which is expected to last through November, has been very positive, and we're delighted to see an increase in both check size and transactions. Quesadillas, which we launched as a permanent digital exclusive offering in March, continues to perform well and is also helping attract new customers to Chipotle. By the way, if you haven't had a chance to try the brisket quesadilla, you really are missing out. And we're far from being done. Plant-based chorizo is currently being tested in a couple markets, and our talented culinary team is in the early stages of developing other exciting menu items. All that being said, our stage gate process is not limited to new menu innovations. We use it for many parts of the business, including development. As you know, we validated new restaurant expansion in Canada earlier this year. Impressive unit economics with AUVs and margins equal to or above those in the U.S. led us to accelerate development in this market. We've opened one new restaurant in Canada year to date and have several more planned before year end, including our first ever Chipotle that's scheduled to open next week. Similarly, we are now in the early stages of using this process to learn, iterate, and eventually validate expansion in Western Europe. COVID slowed our ability to execute several critical initiatives. However, with restrictions easing, we're making nice progress and have implemented some of our digital assets, as well as begun to test alternative formats and explore new trade areas. The recent openings have exceeded expectations. So while we continue to view international expansion as a medium to longer-term opportunity, I remain quite optimistic about its future contribution to the Chipotle story. A more near-term pillar of growth has been our ongoing digital transformation, which is helping Chipotle become a real food-focused digital lifestyle brand. During the third quarter, digital sales grew nearly 9% year-over-year to $840 million and represented 43% of sales. We're not surprised to see the mix moderate as the world continues to reopen. However, we're pleased to see our digital sales dollars continue to grow despite lapping tough comparisons. In fact, our year-to-date digital sales of nearly $2.7 billion are just slightly below the $2.8 billion we achieved during all of last year. Digital is proving to be sticky as it's a frictionless and convenient experience that has been aided by continuous technology investments to improve operational execution, innovation, and the customer value proposition. As a result of the pandemic, many new consumers were introduced to Chipotle via our digital channels and are now using us for alternative occasions. The thing I love about having two separate businesses is that they serve different needs that will likely prove to be incremental and complementary over the long run. This is reinforced by the fact that different guests are accessing Chipotle through different channels. Currently, about 65% of our guests use in-restaurant as their main access point. Nearly 20% use digital as their primary channel, and the remaining 15% to 20% use both channels. We're encouraged by this dynamic as it gives us several future opportunities, including the ability to convert more of our in-restaurant guests into higher frequency digital users. Not only are we pleased with the level of digital sales and overall mix, but we're also delighted to see that our highest margin transaction, digital pickup orders, is gaining traction. This channel represented slightly more than half of digital sales in Q3. As always, we're not being complacent and continue to look for ways to enhance convenience and access through alternate restaurant formats, digital-only menu offerings, and leveraging our large and growing loyalty program. Speaking of the loyalty program, we're excited to have more than 24.5 million members, many of whom are new to the brand. This gives us a large, captive audience to engage with and distribute content that promotes our values as well as motivates our superfans. We continue to leverage our CRM sophistication by focusing a lot more on personalization and using predictive modeling to trigger journeys, primarily for new and lapsed customers. These personalized messages are more brand related as opposed to offers or discounts, which is allowing us to optimize program foundation and economics. All these efforts, along with the use of enhanced analytics, are allowing us to consistently attract more visits from loyalty members than non-members. No doubt, the loyalty program has moved from a crawl to the walk stage, and we still have a lot of room to grow. Offering new ways to engage with Chipotle is essential to the ongoing evolution of our digital business. Our first enhancement was Rewards Exchange, which provides greater customization and flexibility to redeem rewards and allows guests to earn rewards faster. More recently, we announced Extras, an exclusive feature that gamifies Chipotle rewards with personalized challenges to earn extra points and or collect achievement badges in order to drive engagement. As the program grows, so does our ability to provide sophisticated and relevant communications to our guests, which will ultimately deepen the relationship between members and the brand. We are pleased with our progress to date, but believe with ongoing investments and further leveraging of data-driven insights, we can get even better. Amplifying all the growth initiatives I've mentioned thus far are the collective efforts of the marketing team, which are designed to make Chipotle more visible, more relevant, and more loved. We believe that real food has the power to change the world and using custom creative across a wide variety of media channels that allow us to drive culture, drive difference, and ultimately drive a purchase. For example, we use numerous campaigns to stay relevant via important sporting events such as the basketball championships where we hit a million dollars worth of free burritos and our TV advertising. We also utilize social media including our website to authentically highlight real food for real athletes during the broadcast from Tokyo And of course, to celebrate the launch of Smoke Brisket, we offered an exclusive peek to our loyalty members prior to a full launch, supported by a media plan across online video, digital, and social media platforms, as well as traditional TV spots. All of these helped attract new guests into the Chipotle family, as well as increased frequency of existing users. We're fortunate to have an innovative marketing team that wants to be a leader, not a follower, and our marketing organization is built on a culture of accountability that encourages new ideas, is committed to experimentation, and is ruthless on measuring returns, and isn't afraid to pivot to different opportunities if they don't perform to our high standards. Every day, this team is focused on driving sales today while enhancing our brand for tomorrow. Chipotle is committed to fostering a culture that values and champions our diversity while leveraging the individual talents of all team members to grow our business, elevate our brand, and cultivate a better world. Our team has proven their ability to be resilient and successfully execute against macro complexities. Again, a huge thank you to our nearly 95,000 employees for all their efforts. As a result, I believe we are better positioned to drive sustainable, long-term growth than we were before the pandemic, which makes me even more excited about what we can accomplish in the years ahead. With that, here's Jack to walk you through the financials.
spk12: Thanks, Brian, and good afternoon, everyone. We're pleased to report solid third quarter results with sales growing 21.9% year over year to $2 billion, as comp sales grew 15.1%. Restaurant level margin of 23.5%, expanded 400 basis points over last year, and earnings per share adjusted for unusual items was $7.02, representing 86.7% year over year growth. The third quarter had a gap tax benefit that I'll discuss shortly, which is partially offset by expenses related to a previously disclosed modification to our 2018 performance shares and transformation expenses, which netted to positively impact our earnings per share by 16 cents, leading to GAAP EPS of $7.18. As we look ahead to Q4, there remains uncertainty on several fronts, including COVID-related impacts, as well as inflationary and staffing pressures. But given our strong underlying business momentum, we expect our comp to be in the low to mid double digits, which is encouraging considering there will be about 200 basis points less in pricing contribution during Q4 versus Q3, as we've lapped some of our delivery menu price increases, and our brisket LTO will be for a partial quarter as compared to the full quarter of carne asada last year. Let me now go through the P&L line items, beginning with cost of sales. Our supply chain team has done an outstanding job navigating the numerous industry-wide disruption, which led to food costs being 30.3% in Q3, a decrease of 200 basis points from last year. This is due primarily to leverage from menu price increases which are partially offset by higher costs associated with beef and freight that unfortunately are continuing to worsen. It's hard to predict how much of these headwinds will ultimately be temporary versus permanent, but they're likely to persist for the foreseeable future. In addition, Q4 will also include the higher cost brisket LTO, which collectively will result in our food costs being in the low 31% range for the quarter. Labor costs for the third quarter were 25.8%, an increase of about 40 basis points from last year. This increase was driven by our strategy to increase average nationwide wages to $15 per hour, which is partially offset by menu price increases, sales leverage, and a one-time employee retention credit. Given ongoing elevated wage inflation and greater new unit openings, we expect labor costs to be in the mid 26% range in Q4. Other operating costs for the quarter were 15.1%, a decrease of 170 base points from last year due primarily to price and sales leverage. Marketing promo costs for the quarter were 2.4%, about 20 base points lower than we spent last year. While Q3 tends to be a seasonally lower advertising quarter, the timing of some initiatives also shifted into Q4 this year. As a result, we anticipate marketing expense to be around 4% in Q4 to support Smoked Brisket and for the latest brand messaging under our Behind the Foil campaign. For the full year of 2021, marketing expense is expected to remain right about 3% of sales. Overall, other operating costs are expected to be in the mid 16% range for the fourth quarter. Looking at overall restaurant margins, we expect Q4 to be in the 20% to 21% range. Our Q4 underlying margin would be around 22% when you normalize marketing spend and remove the temporary headwind from the brisket LTO. And the remaining cost pressures will continue to evaluate and take appropriate actions on menu prices to offset any lasting impacts. Our value proposition remains strong which we believe gives us a lot of pricing power. Despite these challenges, we remain confident in our ability to drive restaurant-level margins higher as our average unit volumes increase. G&A for the quarter was $146 million on a GAAP basis or $137 million on a non-GAAP basis, excluding $7.6 million for the previously mentioned modification for 2018 performance shares and $1.6 million related to transformation and other expenses. G&A also includes about $100 million in underlying G&A about $28 million related non-cash stock compensation, about $8.5 million related to higher performance-based bonus accruals and payroll taxes and equity vesting and stock option exercises, and roughly $600,000 related to our upcoming All-Manager Conference. Looking to Q4, we expect our underlying G&A to be right around $101 million as we continue to make investments, primarily in tech, to support ongoing growth. We anticipate stock comp will likely be around $27 million in Q4, although this amount could move up or down based on our actual performance. We also expect to recognize around $5.5 million related to performance-based bonus expense and employer taxes associated with shares that best during the quarter, as well as about $1.5 million related to our all-manager conference. Our effective tax rate for Q3 was 14.7% on a GAAP basis and 19.7% on a non-GAAP basis. Both rates benefited from our option exercises and share investing at elevated stock prices. In addition, our GAAP tax rate included a return to provision benefit for additional NOLs generated on our 2020 federal income tax return and carried back to prior years. For Q4, we continue to estimate our underlying effective tax rate to be in the 25% to 27% range, though it may vary based on discrete items. Our balance sheet remains healthy as we end the Q3 with $1.2 billion in cash, restricted cash and investment with no debt, along with a $500 million untaxed revolver. During the quarter, we repurchased $99 million of our stock at an average price of $1,813, and we expect to continue using excess free cash flow to opportunistically repurchase our stock. However, opening more Chipotle's continues to be the best return we can generate. During Q3, despite a few delays in opening timelines, we opened 41 new restaurants with 36 of these, including a Chipotle. While we're experiencing construction inflationary pressures, subcontractor labor shortages, critical equipment shortages, and landlord delivery delays, our development team is doing an excellent job opening these new restaurants. In fact, we currently have more than 110 restaurants under construction, and while timing is somewhat unpredictable, this gives us confidence in ending the year at or slightly above the 200 new restaurants, with now more than 75%, including at Chipotle, versus our prior expectation of 70%. Also, the team has done a nice job building a robust new unit pipeline, which we believe will allow us to accelerate openings in 2022. But because of the challenges I just mentioned and how they could impact the timeline, we'll provide 2022 opening guidance during our Q4 call. As of September 30th, we had a total of 284 Chipotle lanes, including 12 conversions and 8 relocations. They continued to enhance access and convenience for our guests while demonstrating stellar performance. And while it's early days, Chipotle lane conversions and relocations are yielding encouraging results. We'll leverage our StageGate process to learn and refine our strategic approach to accelerating our Chipotle portfolio. I'd like to close today by thanking all of our Chipotle team members for the exceptional results we're reporting today, as well as their hard work and dedication in helping sustain our long-term, powerful economic model. Maintaining a 40% pass-through on incremental sales as we expand AUVs will lead to higher margins and improving cash-on-cash restaurant returns. You can see why we remain optimistic about our future. With that, we're happy to take your questions.
spk02: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then 2. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. And the first question will come from Andrew Charles with Cowan. Please go ahead.
spk07: Great, thanks. And Brian just avowed that brisket quesadilla sure is killer. Jack, you noted the 4Q food and labor challenges. You know, if we think ahead, I think the more important question is that what is the business capable of achieving at $3 million sales volumes in terms of restaurant margins? Is 27% to 28%, is that still the right level? Or do you think the industry labor pressures and, to some degree, the freight challenges that you mentioned, does that make that margin level more aspirational? Thanks.
spk12: Hey, Andrew. Listen, thanks for the question. No, we still believe that that kind of margin range at $3 million is still very much in play. Listen, it's very much of a labor challenge right now. There's food inflation, as we talked about. We don't know how much of this is temporary or transitional. versus permanent. But what we do know is we've got what we believe is great value. Our customers continue to appreciate Chipotle. They love the convenience. They love the value. And so we believe we've got pricing power really better than almost anybody, if not everybody in the industry. So we'll be very patient. We're not going to cover inflation that hits in one quarter or another immediately, but we will carefully consider the fourth quarter. what action we will take. You know that it is about this time of year that we do consider what kind of pricing we will take. But we'll be patient and watch and see what happens with inflation, how much stays permanent. But we've got the pricing power to ensure those margins are in exactly the range you just talked about, Andrew.
spk07: Got it. My other question is on brisket. The fact that it's ending a little bit earlier in November versus what you saw at carne asada last year, is that just due to the supply that you kind of just ran out, or was that kind of the case all along that November was probably the targeted end date?
spk05: We're probably ending a little bit shorter than we originally planned, but that's just a direct result of the great response from the consumer and the great execution of our operators. We got a great product. People have loved it. And, you know, it's driven both incremental transactions and check for us. So we're really happy with it. And I'm guessing we'll probably do Brisket again at some point in the future.
spk07: We're looking forward to that. Thanks, Brian. Yeah.
spk02: And the next question will come from Sharon Zaxia with William Blair. Please go ahead.
spk00: Good afternoon. I guess a question kind of building on Brisket. I know you... had indicated, Jack, that COGS would be up some sequentially. Can you kind of break that out into brisket versus just underlying inflation? And then I'm curious with brisket, I think it's the highest priced protein you've ever had. I mean, what does that, what has that taught you about where you can go on the menu?
spk12: Yeah, Sharon, you know, brisket, it's about a 50 basis point impact. And inflation is probably another about 100 basis point impact, and you've got pushes and pulls beyond that.
spk05: Yeah, and then just to your question about the pricing, I think it just demonstrates the value proposition and the pricing power that we have in our business that I think Jack alluded to earlier. So we're really happy with the value proposition and the strength of our business.
spk16: you know, in the event we feel like we need to pull that pricing lever, we have the ability to do it. Thank you.
spk02: And the next question will come from David Tarantino with Baird. Please go ahead.
spk13: Hi. Good afternoon. Just a couple of questions. One, I wanted to clarify your fourth quarter comps guidance. I guess if I look at the two-year comps performance you delivered in the third quarter and what you're projecting in the fourth quarter, it does imply a fairly meaningful step down in that metric. And, Jack, I was just wondering if that's the right way to measure the business or I guess, you know, I know there's differences in comparisons if you look further back, but I guess how are you viewing that? the two-year comm metric as a, as a guidepost for your business?
spk12: Yeah, David, I think you have to go back further because if you think about it, uh, it was, uh, back, you know, two years ago. So it'd be, if you look at a three-year look now, uh, when we first launched carne asada, that was a huge hit. And then we relaunched carne asada and it, you know, jumped over the original carne asada results. And now we've got brisket that's, you know, that's kind of, went on top of both of those years. And so I think a two-year doesn't take into account the strength and the strong comp we had in the fourth quarter back in 2019. To go back to 2019, the fourth quarter comp was by far a higher comp. So I think a two-year doesn't quite look at the whole package. When we look at the underlying trends, with the exception, David, of the pricing that rolls off to about 200 base points related to delivery that we took last year, we think the trends are holding up nicely. Great.
spk13: Thank you for that. And then, Brian, I wanted to ask about Europe. Your commentary there sounded fairly optimistic. So you mentioned that you're seeing better than expected performance from some of the recent openings, and I'm just wondering if you could elaborate on what changed for the recent openings and what exactly are you testing in the stage gate process, and how long will it be before you –
spk05: make a judgment on whether whether you have the model right for for accelerated expansion yeah so i would say the kind of the biggest difference is the first time we opened our restaurants with our digital uh make lines as part of the opening and also having the access point of delivery as well so uh and then we experimented with how big um really the seats are so all the restaurants you know have a nice dining room, but some of the dining rooms are more like the size of our restaurants in New York City versus the size of a dining room you might find in a traditional suburban outlet. And the good news is we're seeing great results in both executions. And it's great to see the power of our digital business with the great customized in-restaurant experience that you get. So I would say that's been the biggest shift. And then We've also gone back and put in the digital assets in all of our existing restaurants. And we're starting to see that take hold as well. So it's very early. A lot of these restaurants just opened in the last month or weeks. And we're really happy, though, with the way that it started. Hopefully, we can continue to get learnings in an environment over the UK and then ultimately France, where COVID is not putting restrictions on the business. I think you're right in interpreting we're really excited about the results we've seen, but it's early days and we want to make sure it performs ongoing, not just at the opening.
spk13: Great. Thank you very much.
spk02: The next question is from Jeffrey Bernstein from Barclays. Please go ahead.
spk03: Great. Thank you very much. Two questions as well. The first one in terms of specific cost outlook seems like lots of attention on the commodity and labor front. Jack, I'm just wondering, maybe you can share what it was maybe in the third quarter in terms of inflation. And more importantly, as you look out, whether it's the fourth quarter or any kind of directional thoughts, I know you mentioned what's transitory, what's permanent, but just your thoughts in terms of what it might be like as we look out into 2022. And then I had one follow-up.
spk12: Yeah, you know, Jeff, I would say, I mean, listen, we're dealing with the same inflationary environment that all restaurants and really all businesses are dealing with nowadays. Some of it comes from labor, and I'm not talking about labor on our P&L. I'm talking about our supplier labor. Everyone's dealing with the same kind of challenge. Some of it is raw material shortages as well, and so it's very hard to predict. You know, I would say the inflation in the quarter is was not that bad. It was mid single digit type inflation, but you've seen the same kind of list that we have seen that there are forecasts for some materials, not necessarily what we're buying, that are into the double digits, sometimes well into the double digits. Now, we're not really seeing that. I mean, we're seeing isolated spikes, but most of our ingredients are okay. They're all pressured to the upside. And what we want to do is really take a look, be patient, and see how much of this is really because of things like shipping, like things that come in from outside this country. The freight is astronomically high, and the ability to get the supply we need is very, very challenging. So we want to see how that normalizes. There's material shortages, not just with our food and paper, but also with our openings as well. some of that is going to normalize as well. So there's a lot for us to learn. Definitely, there's upward pressure. And the thing that I would just tell you is we feel very comfortable that any inflation that is affecting our margins today, we have the ability to offset it. It's just a matter of let's be patient. Let's wait and see what holds and what is transitory. And we'll make the right moves at the right time, but we'll be patient about it.
spk03: Understood. And then the follow-up was right on that topic in terms of menu pricing and the thought process and determining the right level. Just wondering whether your goal would be to fully protect the margin, obviously removing the transitory, but if you felt like there were more permanent pressures, is the goal to fully protect the margin, or do you think about more of the long-term traffic trends and maybe don't necessarily take the full pricing that you could otherwise potentially do? I'm just wondering what's that thought process like? Maybe you've learned something with delivery. I know you took a very large increase there, wondering whether you're seeing the the desired result of consumers shifting to more the Chipotle site or any kind of learnings from that that you could apply to broader pricing decisions? Thanks.
spk12: Yeah. Jeff, it's a great question. And I would say that our ultimate goal, so this is, this would be over the longterm, maybe the medium term is to fully protect our margins. Okay. We, we have great value when you look at our pricing versus other restaurant companies for the quality of the food, the quantity of the food and the quality and convenience of the experience. Um, we offer great value. So we believe we have room to fully protect the margins, but we're not going to do a quarter by quarter. So we're not going to worry about pressure on a particular quarter on the margins. We're going to watch it for a few quarters and see what happens. But ultimately, our expectation, I think it gets back to the first question about when we get the $3 million volumes, do we expect the margin to be that same kind of 27, 28-ish percent? We absolutely do.
spk05: Yeah. And the only thing I would add to that is along those lines, the good news for us is We still have tremendous growth. We still have a lot of work that I think can always be ongoing to drive more efficiencies and cost out of the business. And then on top of that, we've got this great value proposition that allows us to take advantage of pricing once we understand the combination of growth, cost efficiencies, and then our value proposition. So that's why I think you're hearing Jack say he's very confident in our ability to, at the end of the day, capture the full margin. and earnings possibility out of our business as we grow beyond $3 million averaging volumes.
spk03: But that 17% increase you took on delivery that you mentioned last quarter, I mean, I'm assuming something of that magnitude is having an impact in terms of shifting consumer preference or not necessarily?
spk12: First of all, I would just clarify, we didn't take it all at one time. We took about seven last August. We moved that up to 13% in the fourth quarter, and then we moved it up to 17%. It was done in stages, Jeff, so we could see what the consumer response was. We just didn't see that much movement. You see a little bit of movement. We did see order head move up a little bit, but We were pleased with the way that our consumers responded, and we felt strongly all along that that channel, it's a high convenience channel with a high cost, and that channel really needs to bear those costs, and we're really happy with the way it ended up.
spk16: Thank you.
spk02: And the next question is from David Palmer from Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.
spk11: Thanks. Just a quick follow-up on the price elasticity on delivery particularly. What do you think that was? What do you think the volume trade-off was?
spk12: You know, I don't know that there was one that I can measure that accurately, David, because we did see delivery ease, but we also saw dining rooms open up as well during those periods. We didn't see much of any resistance back in the third quarter of last year when we took the 7%. When we took a 13%, COVID was starting to worsen as we moved into the holidays. So there was so much noise going on. It's hard to say we lost a specific amount of sales in delivery. So we saw some softness there, but there are other things going on as well. And then of course, our latest price action, you know, that was happening when the economy and restaurants were opening up again. But when we look at the net-net, at the whole picture of what our overall sales were and then between channels, we're really pleased with the overall sales trends and we're happy with the way the channels have shifted to the point where that shifting is moving back into our highest margin order ahead and our second highest margin, you know, coming to the restaurant and order. So the way we've ended up throughout, you know, the whole last year as we took these actions, we think we ended up in a really good spot.
spk11: Yeah, I was going to ask about that mobile order and pickup. It's got very high incremental margins. I would imagine the advantage because of labor efficiency would be quite large right now and growing because of the cost of labor. It looks like mobile order and pickup mix may be moderated a little bit. Could you talk about that mix and If there's any plans that you have, you think levers that you can pull with the database that you have to encourage that behavior and possibly help your margins. Thanks.
spk05: Yeah. You know, luckily the order ahead business continues, you know, to make nice progress. And obviously as we open more and more Chipotle lanes, we see that business get even bigger. And, you know, you're right, David, the efficiency of that, you know, that order or that, transaction is the best margin transaction in our business. So we love opening more Chipotle names. Our marketing team, our digital team, they continue to drive customers to that access point because it's highly convenient. I think actually I just saw some numbers on this where the time from your order to actually your food being ready is now less than 10 minutes in our business. So we've gotten even faster at this space to make it even more convenient. And, you know, just to give you perspective, you know, a couple of quarters ago, that was in the 12 minute range. So, you know, we're getting better. And as we continue to provide, I think, more convenience, more speed and get more Chipotle lanes, you're going to continue to see that occasion continue to grow. And I think it's great for the business and it's great for our customers.
spk11: Thank you.
spk02: The next question is from Nicole Miller with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
spk10: Thank you. Good afternoon. I want to ask a little bit about labor and how you're getting informed there. You're obviously ahead of the curve on benefits, but just thinking about some of the decisions you have to make, let's say if a digital make line or digital closes, what are you learning about the labor pool when will you decide if some of those pressures are transitory or not? And if they're not, what would you do? Do wages go up? Do you have to overstaff to account for not enough bodies or is it just simply, you know, so much demand?
spk05: Yeah. Well, so the approach we are taking is we're doing this team by team. So it's a restaurant by restaurant, uh, approach and we're fortunate, you know, that, um, we've got great leadership throughout our organization. So when you go into a restaurant that is struggling with staffing, we seek out to understand why. Do we have the right leader? Do we have the right culture? Once we understand that, we make sure we've got the right wages, the right benefits, and people understand the true career opportunity to grow at Chipotle. And what we find is, look, once we know we've got the right leader and people get recruited into a great culture, they understand the career growth opportunity, we do a really good job then of winning that hiring competition. Then, obviously, in each of these markets, we have to make sure that our wages continue to be competitive. Again, this is another opportunity that I think is unique to Chipotle that we've got the ability to move, if we need to, on a restaurant-by-restaurant basis and put ourselves always in a strong footing. we never want to find ourselves falling behind. We always want to be leading when it comes to attracting and retaining the best people. And you know, that's our approach. Um, you know, it's, it's really, it's a simple approach. We want the best people, we want them rewarded correctly, and then we want them to develop so that they can grow with us.
spk10: Thank you for that. And then, um, I think I actually lost track of, of price. I think it was 10% in the quarter, but if it's going to be like 200 basis points lower, I either had too much rolling off or maybe some more came on. So could you talk about price, maybe a little bit of color by month in 3Q and then 4Q? Thanks.
spk12: Yeah, I mean, I'll do it by quarter, Nicole, but it didn't change that much by month either. There's roughly about 10% in Q3. That's going to drop to about 7.5% or so in Q4. And just to remind you guys of the component, you know, 10 sounds like a lot. It's the 4% that we took in June to support the higher wages. It's roughly 2.5% related to delivery, and that's weighted based on our delivery business. There's our national pricing that we took last year. That's, you know, 2 or a little bit more than 2. And then there's a final piece. you know, miscellaneous, which we took some beef action last year or early this year when beef prices started to spike. Now beef has spiked again, so we're behind on that as well. So those are the components. I only break that out that way because all the action we have taken has been very targeted, very specific, and very purpose-driven. And then we will move down to that seven and a half in the fourth quarter because a good part of the delivery process pricing that we took in the third and fourth quarter of 2020 completely rolls off into the fourth quarter.
spk10: Thank you for that. Appreciate it.
spk02: And the next question will be from Lauren Silverman with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
spk01: Thanks for the question. On loyalty, can you share any metrics on how customers spend or frequency changes once customers join the rewards program? And then I know early, but anything you can share on what you're seeing with Chipotle Exchange and extras and which cohorts you're seeing the greatest responses from?
spk05: Yeah, sure. So what we have demonstrated over time is people that are in our rewards program or our loyalty program, they come more often and they spend more. And what we've definitely seen is the rewards program has also, I think, created another level of engagement where those that before weren't participating, now are being influenced with the opportunity of these different incentives. I don't know if you're enrolled in our program, but you'll see something like a shriek, where if you come X number of times, you get a bonus points. The thing that's attractive about that is not everybody wants to wait to redeem for a full-size entree, and this opens the door for them to redeem faster, get kind of rewarded for taking action as we see people continue to engage in the rewards program. So it continues to work really well. It takes advantage of new users, medium users, or heavy users that want to engage with the brand, and then we're able to influence their behaviors, resulting in more frequency and higher tickets.
spk01: Thanks. Definitely enrolled in the program. One of the best. On staffing, where are you seeing the greatest challenges? Do you see it more in recruiting new staff or retention and any differences that you can call out in the labor environment across the market?
spk05: Yeah. So, you know, I would say it kind of ebbs and flows. You know, this is unfortunately the cycle when the restaurant gets understaffed. becomes a much harder job for the individuals that are working there. So we work aggressively to go recruit, train, so that we do retain those that are with us. And I would say the greatest challenge has been when kind of the dining rooms reopened, we needed to staff up quickly to catch up with the demand. And that was harder than we had hoped. But luckily, you know, I think we took a lot of the right actions where we've got a lot of our restaurants now in good footing. And now we have these scenarios where, you know, things pop up and you have to deal with it accordingly. You know, whether it's exclusions as it relates to COVID or kids going back to school. You know, you're in kind of the normal course of having to make sure that you're always recruiting. And then we've got to make sure we're getting people trained up, they're being successful in their job, then they stay with us. And then ultimately, you know, they're able to hopefully get a general manager job and progress into our organization to above store leadership as well. So, you know, our focus has been on making sure that we're getting these restaurants staffed and trained correctly because that's the best remedy for retention.
spk01: Thank you, guys.
spk02: And the next question is from Chris O'Call with Stiefel. Please go ahead.
spk15: Thanks. Good afternoon, guys. My question relates to Chipotle lanes. I was hoping you could provide some color on the average volumes, margin, and investment in that format versus the traditional format. And my second question is that given the Chipotle format really unlocks the use of different real estate sites, how much does the format increase the domestic unit potential of the brand?
spk12: Yeah, listen, I'll start with the performance. The Chipotle lanes typically open up somewhere in that 10 to 15% range higher on sales. Their margin obviously is higher for two reasons. One, because the sales are higher and we know that our higher volume restaurants flow through a higher margin. And then there's also the efficiency that we talked about where much more of the digital business, first of all, the digital business is usually 10 to 15% higher. So if we're doing 45%, so say in a non-Chapult Lane, we'd be doing 55 or higher. you know, in a Chipotle and it's fused towards order ahead, our highest margin transaction. So the return is much, much better. The incremental investment cost generally is going to be about 75, 85,000, something like that. So with those kind of sales and those kind of higher margins, it's by far a superior return. In terms of Chipotle and The Chipotle in the typical restaurant that you'll see open up, it's not any smaller than a typical restaurant, so it doesn't take a different footprint. What we are experimenting with, though, is a smaller footprint with a Chipotle where we might be able to go into a same location. The same location would be where you've got two restaurants already. They could be very, very high-volume restaurants, and there just isn't really enough room to economically put a third restaurant there. in between those two? Well, if you can reduce the footprint, which reduces the rent, reduces the investment cost, and because we have higher margins with Chipotle and because customers, more than 50% of them want to go through the Chipotle and order ahead and pick up, well, it's mostly digital and almost half of that is order ahead and pick up. We do have an opportunity economically to drop in a restaurant in between those two high volume restaurants. We're in the early days of that. We're just experimenting with that, but we think that that's got some legs going forward, and that, Chris, would be incremental. Those would be deals that we wouldn't have done without the Chipotle format.
spk15: Just as one follow-up, I know digital-only Chipotles are still in the testing phase, but does that format potentially allow you to have a much broader menu with items maybe more difficult to execute than you could in a traditional format?
spk05: I mean, it definitely allows for some additional flexibility innovation on the menu you know as evidenced by our quesadilla so that's something that I think our culinary team and our marketing team continue to take a look at regardless though you want to you know the one thing that's great about Chipotle is people can get the customization that they want and also that we can provide it you know a really exciting speed and so we just we have to be careful that we don't create complexity that slows us down even in the digital channel, which, look, the digital channel gives us some additional flexibility, but I love the fact that, you know, we're now posing in on people being able to order off-premise, have their food ready to be there in less than 10 minutes. You know, that's really exciting for us. So we're going to keep an eye on the throughput for digital, just like we keep an eye on the throughput on our front line. So it definitely opens the door for some things. I just want to make sure, you know, you understand that at the end of the day, we still want to have great speed even in our digital business.
spk17: Understood.
spk15: Thank you.
spk17: Yeah.
spk02: And the next question comes from Jared Garber with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
spk08: Thanks, and appreciate all the commentary on top-line growth and margins specifically. I wanted to switch topics a little bit and think about unit growth here. It seems like the unit growth number in the quarter came in a bit lighter than some of the expectations, but you maintain that full year guide. Just wondering if you could comment on the construction and the permitting environment and what you're seeing from that perspective, and if there is any risk that some of these new units need to get pushed out into next year.
spk12: Yeah, Jared. I made a few comments in the prepared comments as well, but it's a challenge. It's a challenge in all the areas you just mentioned. It's a labor challenge for our contractors and the subs. It's a material challenge. And it's also a permitting challenge. It's one reason why we mentioned that even though we've opened 137 restaurants so far, we've got about 110 or over 100 restaurants that are under construction. There's not a risk that we won't get the 200 opening. I don't think there's a risk that we won't get to or beyond 200. But more than a previous year, more than a typical year, there's timing risk in that. And so I think we'll get to that 200 plus, but I think it gives you an idea of how robust our pipeline was without these timing risks. We would have been well beyond 1200 or well, well beyond the 200 for next year. I also mentioned that we've got a very robust pipeline. So the good news here is our pipeline is really, really, really strong. We're doing everything we can to try to work through the timing issues. Like we're pre-ordering supplies, for example, so that, you know, we're not going to run out because we're pre-ordering things. We're doing everything we can to work with our contractors, but if they have short labor or if they have exclusion because people are exposed to COVID, the construction site does shut down. Those are things that are just unavoidable. We're navigating as best we can through that, but most important is the pipeline is really, really strong. The quality when we open up these restaurants is really, really good, so it gives us great optimism. And the timing issues, we're just going to navigate the best we can.
spk08: Thanks, I really, really appreciate the color there. And then just one more sort of on that. I know you're kind of holding off on giving 22 guidance in terms of unit growth, which you typically do in the third quarter, but fully understand the volatile environment there. If you were to think about sort of a normalized environment without without some of these timing issues, and especially as it relates to kind of the very healthy cash balance you have, is there any reason that outside of, again, COVID-specific or supply chain impacts, we shouldn't be starting to think about accelerating levels of unit growth in 22 and maybe even 23 and beyond?
spk12: Yeah, listen, our pipeline will support that acceleration. So then it really does come down to timing. And it's not just about the capital. I mean, just because we have the capital doesn't mean we'll accelerate, but it's a combination of Good sites are available. The openings are strong. We're getting now to 75% of our new openings are Chipotle, which you heard us talk about the performance there. And so there's every reason to continue to invest in this success. And so you definitely will see some acceleration. Awesome. Thanks so much.
spk02: And the next question is from John Tower from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
spk04: Awesome. Thanks for taking the questions. I got a few. So Just a clarification first on the fourth quarter same-store sales guidance. Right now, are you guys trending towards the higher end of that range, given you're expecting some mixed ship lower as well as some pricing rolling off?
spk12: Yeah. October results are good so far. So we didn't see a fall off at all in October. But, you know, in terms of the range, there's a lot of uncertainty going on. We still have, you know, two and a half months to go. So I'd hate to want to be more specific at this point. Got it.
spk04: And then just going to the, I think, question earlier or some of the labor challenges you alluded to in the press release and on the call, did that impact same-store sales specifically throughput at all during the quarter?
spk05: I mean, look, you know, obviously a fully staffed restaurant outperforms an understaffed restaurant. One of the things that's terrific for our business, though, is the fact that we have both the digital make line and the front line. we're able to flex that digital make line so that we can keep the integrity of our frontline experience. So, you know, we never have to close our restaurants, you know, and what we're able to do is then, you know, allocate accordingly. The other thing that we've learned that's another benefit of this digital business is, you know, We have restaurants within a couple miles of each other, and delivery doesn't get impacted if you shift from one restaurant to another. So if we have to throttle back our digital business in one restaurant because we're a little light on staffing so that we can keep the front line running smoothly, the good news is we've got another restaurant right around the corner that is able to fulfill that digital order. And so we don't see a lot of drop-off in the business that way. You know, at the end of the day, I wish all our restaurants were fully staffed, and I know we're missing sales because not all of them are fully staffed. So there is still upside in getting our staffing solved in every single restaurant. The good news is we're in really good shape for the majority of our restaurants. Our teams have done a phenomenal job, and it's going to be something, though, that we're going to have to continue to work hard and You know, it's one of those things where it's not going to get any easier. So, therefore, we have to continue to get better at recruiting, training, and keeping these restaurants staffed. So, we're fortunate that we've got these two businesses and we've got the flexibility. But, you know, I wish every restaurant was staffed. It'd be a better job for everybody and it'd be a better experience for every customer.
spk04: Got it. Thank you. And then just one more follow-up on the pricing decision. Can you walk us through how you're thinking about you know, the fourth quarter or maybe it's not even the fourth quarter, but in terms of taking incremental price from here, is it the belief that, you know, you're going to see protein inflation well into 22 and therefore it makes more sense for pricing to be taken now? Or I guess, can you walk us through the thinking around why or why not to take any more pricing, you know, sooner rather than later?
spk05: Yeah, I think the one thing, and Jack mentioned this, is we traditionally always look at how we want to approach pricing for the next year in the fourth quarter. You know, one of the things we're obviously evaluating is where is labor going to land, not just in our restaurants, but across, you know, a lot of our suppliers. We don't see wages as one of those things that's temporary and going backwards. Now, there's other things like freight and transportation. some of those things where we think those are more temporary. So we just want to understand where those things are. And the good news is we've got a great value proposition so that if we realize we need to take a little more or take a little less, we have the flexibility to do it. And then when you marry that up with all the growth that we have in this business, we don't want to get ahead of the pricing if we don't need to. So we're not afraid to use our value proposition, but I want to use it when we really have to use it. And we've demonstrated that if we need to take pricing, we will, and the business has the pricing power to do it. But we want to make sure we're taking pricing because it's stuff that's permanent, not stuff that's temporary. And we also want to think about how we blend that with all the growth and other cost-saving initiatives we've got going on.
spk17: Got it. Thank you.
spk02: And the final question today will be from Dennis Geiger with UBS. Please go ahead.
spk14: Great. Thank you, Brian. Just wanted to ask a little bit more on some of the key incremental drivers of sales growth over maybe the coming months and quarters, you know, just curious based on what you've said, if it's, if it's kind of fair to think about incremental benefits from, from a few, I guess, including, you know, that dining room traffic goes from 80%, you know, to, to a hundred, uh, at some point, you know, digital sales remain incremental in that scenario. obviously the additional pricing that you just spoke to, you know, I guess staffing up and maybe the efficiency from, from the crews, I'm just getting better as, as dining room traffic comes back. Curious if it's, if it's kind of fair to think about all of those as incremental from here. And then if there's any others that you would, that you would call out, you know, kind of above and beyond everything that's been working and supporting momentum to date. Thank you.
spk05: Yeah, sure. So look, I definitely think, um, you touched on a lot of them, which is we still have opportunities for better throughput on our frontline. I just mentioned that we're continuing to get faster on our digital business. So just running the operation, to your point, as we continue to get more fully staffed with more trained, well-developed people executing against the great pillars of throughput that we know we need to execute, there's upside in the business there. There's also upside in you know, the strategies that I outlined in the beginning of the conversation today, which is, you know, we're going to continue to take advantage of our huge and growing rewards program. You know, we've got, we're closing in on 25 million or 24 and a half million, you know, that's like a 40% increase versus where we were a year ago this time. So, you know, obviously you're not going to continue to grow at that clip, that database, but what we are growing is our capability and taking advantage of that database to drive behavior, engagement, commitment to our business. Obviously, we'll continue to smartly use menu and culinary innovation, so that's not going to stop. When you think about our access that we're providing to people, I think our value proposition is going to really shine through going forward. I just think that's another huge advantage. Even as I look around, I would put our Chicken burrito is up against a lot of food out there, and when you start to look at where pricing is going on a lot of other menus, our value proposition, I think, looks even more compelling. So I don't know what that's worth, but what I do know is I like being in a position of a really strong value proposition going forward, given the environment that I think we're all going to be facing.
spk17: Great. Thank you.
spk02: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Brian Nickell for any closing remarks.
spk05: Yeah, thank you. And thanks, everybody, for joining the call, and thank you for all the questions. Obviously, very proud of our results for the third quarter, and I think it speaks volumes to our strategy, our culture, and our ability to commit ourselves to great execution in, you know, a constantly evolving environment. You know, I continue to be very optimistic about our ability to get to $3 million plus AUVs with really, you know, I think impressive earnings growth behind that. So I'm very confident that we're focused on the right strategies. There's a lot of growth in those strategies. And then I love what our, you know, innovation pipeline is looking like, whether it's experimentation in new assets, cost opportunities, international. There's just a lot of growth in our business, both in the U.S. from a new unit standpoint, as well as average unit volumes. And then as you think about the model that we take outside the U.S. So very proud of the team. A huge thank you to them again. It's been a challenging environment, but I think we're demonstrating the strength of the Chipotle culture, the Chipotle purpose. If you don't have those things, I don't think you get the results that our company were able to achieve in the most recent quarter. So thank you again for taking the time, and we'll talk to you next quarter. Take care.
spk02: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation.
Disclaimer

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