AOL Money & Finance

Domino's earnings report a nice slice

More

Domino's (NYSE: DPZ) first quarter earnings report showed that the company is weathering the recession to date better than analysts had expected. Net income was up 245% over fourth quarter 2008, and 168% over same quarter a year ago.

However, this and the earnings per share of 41 cents were inflated by $21.2 million realized from early debt retirement. Without this, EPS would have come in at 20 cents, still above analysts' expectations of 17 cents but down by a penny from the first quarter of 2008.

The company jumped at the chance to retire $43 million of 5.261% fixed-rate notes for $22.3 million of cash on-hand and very cheap money draw from its revolving bank account. Continuing on that course, Domino's has already retired an additional $25 million that will show as $12.9 million to the good in the next quarter's earnings.

Although global retail sales finishes down 4.6% on sales of $321.8 million, this was primarily due to the impact of the dollar's strengthening on international sales. Without it, sales would actually have been up 5.6%. Domestic sales fell $12 million, reflecting the declining number of company-owned stores (489 vs. 542 in the first quarter of 2008) as it divests itself of underperforming outlets. Domestic franchise same store sales were up 1.1%, even though the number of those stores also dropped by 88 over the same period. International same-store sales grew by 6.6%.

The next quarter report should be interesting, in light of the recent YouTube fiasco.

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA+17.4610,023.42
NASDAQ+7.122,112.44
S&P 500+2.671,069.30

Last updated: November 08, 2009: 08:18 PM

BloggingStocks Exclusives

Hot Stocks

DailyFinance Headlines

Latest from BloggingBuyouts

TheFlyOnTheWall.com Headlines

BioHealth Investor Headlines

WalletPop Headlines

My Portfolios

Track your stocks here!

Find out why more people track their portfolios on AOL Money & Finance then anywhere else.

BloggingStocks Partners

More from AOL Money & Finance

WalletPop Headlines