Domino’s Pizza: great business, shame about the price

By Phil Oakley Feb 16, 2012

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Domino's Pizza (LON:DOM) has been a great success story. Since it listed on London’s AIM market in 1999, the shares have risen more than 20-fold. But can it keep on delivering for investors?

A brilliant business model

Most of the 700+ Domino’s stores are franchised. People pay around £280,000 to own and operate a franchise. The company then provides them with the support (ingredients, equipment, marketing etc) needed to grow sales and profits.

You only have to look at franchised businesses such as McDonald’s and Holiday Inn to see the attraction of franchising. Franchisees pay royalty streams based on their sales back to the parent company, but they also have to deal with most of the costs of running the business.

This is great news for the franchisor. It gets a stream of cash without a lot of extra costs. If the number of franchises grows, then the profitability of the franchisor begins to mount up.

Domino's Pizza operating margins

Dominos Pizza operating margins


This is exactly what has happened with Domino’s Pizza. Its 2011 results show operating profit margins of 20.8% on sales of £209.8m. What’s even more impressive are its investment returns.

Domino’s has invested £77m in its business. With profits of just over £43m, this equates to a return on investment of 55% - not many businesses can do this.


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A very expensive stock

So no doubt about it, Domino’s is a great business. The problem for anyone thinking of investing in the stock is that the market already knows this.

At 470p a share, it trades on 22 times expected 2012 profits. That’s punchy. Sure, it’s down from levels of nearly 600p seen last year, but Domino’s still has to deliver strong profits growth to justify even its current price.

So how likely is that?

Well, Domino’s has ambitious growth plans for the UK and has just set up in Germany. During the next ten years it plans to grow its total number of stores from 726 to at least 1,200 – an increase of 65%.

These new stores will take time to mature and deliver good profits, but should provide some growth.

But what about the existing stores? Here the outlook is arguably less rosy.

Domino's Pizza like-for-like sales

 Dominis Pizza like-for-like sales

The company’s pizzas are good - but they’re also quite expensive. With UK consumers strapped for cash, they may not buy as many. They may trade down and buy pizzas from the supermarket instead. And the decline in the group’s like-for-like  sales growth suggests this may be happening.

The sales performance is still respectable, but is it good enough to generate the profits growth needed to justify the current share price? New products such as stuffed crust pizzas and online ordering will help, but the economic climate is against it.

Whilst sales are still holding up, we are worried that like-for-like sales could turn negative - as happened in Ireland. This is important, as the group’s profits are very sensitive to changes in sales. Falling sales means less royalty revenues and a potential big hit to profits. At current levels, the share isn’t priced for this scenario.

What about dividends?

Domino’s shares offer a prospective dividend yield of 3% - not bad, but hardly stellar. And on top of that, it’s paying out two thirds of its profits and virtually all of its free cash flow in dividends. In other words, it can’t realistically grow its dividends much more rapidly than earnings.

So even though it’s a great business, the high share price means the risk/reward balance simply isn’t worth it. We reckon there’s a good chance that profits growth could disappoint in the future. It’s time to take some profits if you haven’t already.

Comments (5)

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  • 1. Christopher

    (17 February 2012, 10:43AM)  Complain about this comment

    This has been the story for years. I kept putting off buying Dominos and each time the price rose. Eventually I bought some, far too expensive as the commentators said, and I now have some quite cheap shares yielding 5% or more on cost

  • 2. Ian Harris

    (17 February 2012, 11:35AM)  Complain about this comment

    These did very well for me, but it was amazing how the price dropped dramatically when growth slowed. I realised a huge profit, but I kept some, because I think they will continue to do well, if not as well as in the past.

  • 3. jason

    (17 February 2012, 08:57PM)  Complain about this comment

    The Dominos growth story may well have room to run but the shares look pricey to me so I've just bought DP Poland, an AIM company that has the Domino's franchise for the WHOLE of Poland! Thousands of Poles are returning home with 'western' lifestyle ideals and a taste for pizza.

    Any thoughts....?

  • 4. jason

    (17 February 2012, 09:00PM)  Complain about this comment

    The DP story is great but I feel at this price, I'm late to the party. Bought DP Poland instead. An AIM company that has the DP franchise for the WHOLE of Poland!

    Thousands of Poles have returned home with 'western' lifestyle aspirations and a taste for pizza.

    Any thoughts?

  • 5. Phil

    (19 February 2012, 09:15AM)  Complain about this comment

    Hi Jason

    Just had a look at DP Poland. Whilst its early days, it could be quite interesting. At 65p per share, the whole business is valued at just over £16 million. It now has 12 outlets in Warsaw and the next year or so should tell you whether this business has got legs. If it matches anything like the UK experience then you may have made a shrewd purchase. Watch out for more share issues though. If it wants to expand in other towns and cities it will need more cash and will probably ask shareholders for it. This is not a problem if the long-term prospects are good. That said, the prospect of fresh share issues can depress the share price at times.

    Best wishes


    Phil

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