Papa John’s International Inc (NASDAQ:PZZA) Q4 2022 Earnings Call dated Feb. 23, 2023.
Corporate Participants:
Stacy Frole — Vice President of Investor Relations
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Ann Gugino — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Brian Bittner — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Sara Senatore — BofA Global Research — Analyst
Chris O’Cull — Stifel — Analyst
Eric Gonzalez — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Lauren Silberman — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Joshua Long — Stephens Inc. — Analyst
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Alexander Slagle — Jefferies — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Papa John’s Fourth Quarter 2022 Conference Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions]
I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Stacy Frole.
Stacy Frole — Vice President of Investor Relations
Good morning, and welcome to our fourth quarter and full year 2022 earnings conference call. This morning we issued our fourth quarter and full year 2022 earnings release. A copy of the release can be obtained on our Investor Relations website at ir.papaJohns.com under the News Releases tab or by contacting our Investor Relations department at investor_relations@papajohns.com.
On the call this morning are Rob Lynch, our President and CEO, and Ann Gugino, our CFO. Before we begin, I need to remind you that comments made during this call will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements may involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements.
Forward-looking statements should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements in our earnings release and the risk factors included in our SEC filings. In addition, please refer to our earnings release for the required reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures, discussed on today’s call.
Lastly, let me thank you in advance for asking only one question and getting back in the queue for more follow-ups. Rob?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Stacy. Good morning, everyone and thanks for joining us today. I’m pleased to report this morning that we had a strong finish to 2022. For the full year, we reported global systemwide sales of $4.8 billion, up 3% in constant currency over last year’s record sales. We also delivered our third straight year, positive North America comparable sales.
We opened 378 new restaurants, growing our systemwide footprint by 4.5%. And in 2022, we delivered our second highest adjusted operating income in Papa John’s history, second only to last year’s record and more than four times higher than 2019.
Last year, presented our teams and franchisees with one of the most challenging and dynamic environments we have ever experienced. I want to give a heartfelt thanks to our restaurant, supply chain, corporate, and franchise teams around the world for their outstanding resilience against the headwinds facing our industry. Thanks to your efforts, Papa John’s mitigated and successfully navigated the challenges of omicron in increasingly volatile geopolitical environment, unprecedented commodities and wage inflation, and to tap it all off, an end of year winter storm that impacted more than 60% of the U.S. population.
Today, I will discuss Papa John’s business performance, focusing on three key priorities, to strengthen our competitive advantage and better position us for future growth. First, I will discuss our winning product innovations. Second, I’ll provide an overview of our unit level productivity, and third I will lay out details around our domestic and international expansion. I will then pass it on to Ann, who will walk through our fourth quarter and full year results before opening the lines to answer any questions you may have.
Starting with our product innovation. At the heart of Papa John’s success is our innovation mindset, particularly in the areas of menu and digital innovation. Over the past three years, we have made purposeful additions to our menu, ensuring there are incremental sales layers to drive strong sales growth and capitalize on our premium brand positioning. This enables us to forego the blanket short term discounts, we’ve seen elsewhere in the category, contributing to more sustainable and profitable ticket growth, and most importantly, higher customer satisfaction.
We are introducing menu innovations that offer value and variety to our customers. But they also limit added complexity to our restaurant operations and our supply chain. Our menu innovation calendar is expansive flexible and differentiated and allows us to adjust our offerings to customer preferences nimbly, whether that is extending a limited-time offer or building upon existing platforms.
2022 was a robust year of successful innovations. We continued to drive demand and growth on existing platforms like, Epic Pepperoni Stuffed Crust and Pepperoni-Crusted Papadia.
In addition, new items like New York Style pizza and Papa Bowls are great examples of how we continue to build new platforms around our premium ingredients. At the end of December, we launched Papa Bites and the reception from our customers has been extremely positive. This new menu platform was inspired by our Jalapeno Popper Rolls, which we launched back in 2020. We’ve now elevated and expanded this concept to include two additional flavors, chicken Parmesan and OREO Cookie, and we see opportunities to introduce more flavors in the future.
In fact, we just tasted some new flavors last week that I’m pretty excited about. Our promotional calendar is flexible, but our commitment to better is not. As I’ve discussed in previous calls, we view value differently than discounting. Our value proposition comes from offering a variety of great products at accessible price points for all of our customers, whether that’s from our extra large, extra cheesy, extra pepperoni Shaq-a-Roni or our Papa Pairings, which offers multiple items on our menu for just 699 each.
Our barbell strategy balances our menu to offer our premium products, along with value options to ensure all of our customers are getting the products they want at great prices. This strategy contributed nicely to our solid performance in the fourth quarter, and we expect this momentum will carry into 2023.
We’re also excited by our latest patent-pending innovation, Crispy Parm Pizza. This first in the pizza industry product features our thin crust, but with a blend of Parmesan and Romano cheeses on the bottom. Yes, you get crispy cheese on the bottom of the crust, and your favorite premium ingredients on top. While it is still early in its rollout, the customer response we’ve received so far has been fantastic. And we expect this innovation to deliver a lift in both ticket and transactions.
We have also applied our innovation mindset to our digital channels, and continue to invest in our digital capabilities to deliver a best-in-class customer experience. Our website, digital app, third-party aggregator partnerships, and Papa Call call centers are significant differentiators that promote stronger retention and grow our customer base.
Back in 2001, we were the first in the category to offer online ordering, and we’re also the first to launch a nationwide digital rewards program. We will stay ahead of the curve, by continuing to invest in technology, enhancing our digital capabilities, given that today more than 85% of our domestic transactions come through these digital channels.
Our Papa Rewards loyalty program members are our most valuable customers, representing nearly 50% of sale. But they also provide a robust source of data that helps shape our business to better serve all of our customers. Our work to attract more loyalty program members through early access to new menu items and exclusive perks and discounts has delivered outstanding results, enabling us to not only sustain our sales coming out of the pandemic but to grow on top of those record sales.
Today, we have more than 28 million loyalty member accounts, more than double the number of registered members just three years ago. We will continue to explore the additional untapped potential from investing in this channel, including opportunities to increase customer frequency and personalization, in addition to continuing to attract new members.
Another solid contributor to our growth has been our aggregator partnerships. These relationships enable us to reach new incremental customers, and help us service existing customers during periods of peak demand. In fact when staffing shortages were exacerbated by omicron in 2022, we are able to lean into these relationships to increase our delivery as a service option. Papa John’s leads the [Technical Issues] pizza industry when it comes to building these third party relationships, and we will continue to further leverage this channel, to introduce our brand and products to even more customers in the future.
As we look at 2023, we will continue to improve our capabilities to deliver our customers a best-in-class experience, regardless of channel or method of delivery. This brings me to our next key growth driver, unit level productivity. I won’t spend much time discussing the economic challenges that will continue to place downward pressure on the industry, increased key input costs, and consumer price sensitivity, as the challenges of the global economy are already well documented and broadly discussed.
Instead, I will focus my remarks on the proactive steps that we’re taking to ensure operational excellence and continued profitability within this operating environment. We are focused on what we can control, becoming better operators, to deliver better pizza with better service. I am pleased to announce that in the fourth quarter, we launched our back to better operations initiatives, further sharpening our execution and driving better customer experience.
While we cannot control inflation or our customers’ budget, we can’t control how effectively we execute superior operations. As such, we’re leaning into our corporate owned restaurants, focusing on faster service, while optimizing labor allocation, enhancing operational efficiencies, and effectively managing margins.
We’re realizing early wins with improved product quality, faster out-the-door times, and better customer satisfaction, while also optimizing unit margins. For example, our out-the-door time for orders taken in our corporate restaurant is now approximately 20 minutes, that’s nearly 10 minutes faster from where we were a year ago. This work is being led by our Chief Restaurant Officer, Joe Sieve, and his Company operations team.
For nearly a year, Joe and his team have been closely evaluating our restaurant operations and introducing a best-in-class infrastructure, to build a model for unit level productivity and operational excellence across all of our restaurants. These efforts helped to offset some of the macro and operational headwinds that we faced in 2022, and produced positive comps for our corporate locations in the fourth quarter. We expect these efforts will continue to deliver margin improvement and higher sales over the next several years.
Our focus in 2023 is to leverage these insights to drive similar improvements with our franchisees. Finally, expanding our domestic and international footprint is a key aspect to our growth strategy. We believe there is a significant amount of white space to offer our differentiated premium positioning to more customers globally and within the U.S.
This past year we made good headway, expanding our systemwide footprint by 4.5%, with the opening of 378 new restaurants. This includes the opening of six restaurants in Honduras in the fourth quarter, which was a new market for us. At the end of 2022, we were in 48 countries and territories, leaving us with significant white space for further expansion moving forward.
In North America, we achieved record system AUVs of approximately $1.2 million in 2022 versus approximately 900,000 in 2019. And as we mentioned on our last call, we see opportunities for us to implement our winning strategies from our North American playbook and apply them across our global footprint.
Our teams are focused on delivering premium menu innovations, enhancing revenue management capabilities, and ensuring that we have a strong online ordering presence through our app, website and aggregators in all of our markets. It will take some time to implement these best practices across all markets, but so far, we are pleased with the early customer response to our North American menu innovations, when introduced internationally.
The underlying long-term fundamentals of our franchisee model are strong, as our franchisee payback and unit economics remain attractive, despite near-term macroeconomic challenges, affecting our industry. This is most evident in the pipeline we have for new unit openings, as we remain a sought-after brand for new franchisees on a global basis.
Even as we head into another challenging economic year, I am confident that we will open between 270 to 310 net new units in 2023. At the midpoint of the range, this growth would represent a 5% increase in total systemwide units and then nearly 20% increase over last year’s 244 net new units. We are particularly bullish on the long-term opportunity internationally.
Last year, we were pleased with the progress we’ve made in penetrating the Middle East and East Asian markets, and we have a robust pipeline for further expansion in Asia in general. In fact last week we opened our 49th market with four new restaurants in Jordan. Our development team also remains in active negotiations to expand our footprint into more new markets in the near future. Taking all of this into consideration, we remain on track to achieve our projected long-term development target of 1,400 to 1,800 net new units by the end of 2025.
As a reminder, these numbers are inclusive of the 244 net new units we’ve built in 2022. Achieving this net new unit goal would result in annualized net new unit growth between 6% and 8% between 2023 and 2025.
I’d like to close my comments by recognizing our teams for the winning culture that we’re building at Papa John’s. For the second year in a row, Papa John’s was named, both Forbes’ list of World’s Best Employers and Best Employers for Diversity. We also earned another 100% score on the Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s 2022 Corporate Equality Index. We are proud of our team and their commitment to our brand promise of delivering better, which has contributed to the resiliency and achievements of our business, as we navigated the challenges of 2022. Coming out of this year, we are better operators and a stronger company, and we are set up to further build on our success in 2023.
Now I’d like to turn the call over to Ann, to provide more color on our fourth quarter and full year financial results. Ann?
Ann Gugino — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Rob and good morning everyone. From a financial perspective, we are pleased with our 2022 performance, given the many macroeconomic challenges our teams had to navigate throughout the year.
As Rob mentioned, for the full year 2022, we reported increasing systemwide sales, our third straight year of positive North American comps, and solid net unit growth. We also increased our annualized dividend rate by 20% in August, and bought back nearly 40% of our outstanding shares. We’re entering 2023 with a solid financial foundation, enabling us to continue investing in long-term growth and returning value to our shareholders through dividends and share repurchases.
Beginning with our P&L for the fourth quarter, global systemwide sales were $1.2 billion, up 3% in constant currency, and excluding the previously-announced franchisee-suspended restaurants, compared with the same period last year. Net unit growth, particularly in international markets, along with positive North America comps contributed to the higher systemwide sales. This growth is a great example of the strength of our brand and franchisees’ excitement to invest at Papa John’s.
We finished the year with North America comp sales up 1.1% in the fourth quarter, a result of franchised restaurant comp sales being up 1.1%, and Company-owned restaurant comp sales up 0.8%. The key factors that drove the comp sales growth in the fourth quarter for new menu innovations, strategic pricing actions, and our enhanced value platform Papa Pairings.
Our corporate locations also benefited from our back-to-better operations initiatives that was launched in the fourth quarter. For the fourth quarter menu prices were approximately 7% to 9% higher compared with the year ago, primarily due to strategic pricing actions taken during the first half of 2022. As anticipated with strategic pricing actions, transactions were lower year-over-year for the fourth quarter, but in line with our expectations.
Looking to 2023, we expect our sales growth to come from a combination of ticket and transaction growth, as our strategic pricing actions begin to lapse. International comps were down 3.4% in the fourth quarter, but still delivering a three year stack of 20%. Similar to the prior quarter, the challenges we saw in the UK market had a significant impact on our international segment results, largely offsetting the UK performance for solid comps from other international markets, specifically the Middle East.
Total revenues for the fourth quarter were $526 million, up 3% versus the prior year, when excluding the impact of our strategic refranchising of a 90 restaurant joint venture in the first quarter. Turning to margins, adjusted operating income, which we believe is a meaningful measure of our operating performance and a metric, I will reference throughout my comments today, with $38 million in the fourth quarter compared with $42 million for the same period last year.
Adjusted operating margins were 7.3%, down slightly from 7.9% last year, but up sequentially from 6% in the third quarter. The year-over-year decline was in line with our expectations, and primarily reflects higher food inflation and labor costs in our corporate restaurants, which more than offset our strategic pricing actions taken earlier in 2022.
Taking a deeper dive into our operating segment. For our domestic Company-owned restaurant segment, food basket costs were up 13% in the quarter versus the prior year, driven largely by higher year-over-year cheese costs, and to a lesser extent by increases in dough costs. Labor costs also remained elevated in the quarter. Together, these two factors represented approximately 550 basis points of headwind for the domestic Company-owned restaurant segment margins year-over-year.
Our strategic pricing actions somewhat offset this record inflation, resulting in an approximate 250 basis point decline in restaurant level margins compared with the year ago. We anticipate our domestic Company-owned restaurant margins will improve throughout 2023, as food inflation decelerates, and our teams execute on the operational excellence initiatives, Rob discussed earlier.
Most importantly, we remain confident in our ability to offer good value to customers, without sacrificing margins. For our North America Commissaries segment revenues grew by 12% in the fourth quarter year-over-year, driven by the continued acceleration of costs, somewhat offset by lower volumes. As a reminder, our commissary arrangement with North American franchisees enables us to pass through food, labor and fuel costs, on a cost plus fixed margin basis.
As a result, rising costs are slightly accretive to commissary operating income, but dilutive to operating margins. In addition, variances can exist between quarters because of the lag in timings from when costs are incurred to when they are passed through to franchisees, which is why it’s helpful to look at commissary margins on a full year basis.
For fiscal 2022 commissary margins were 6.7%, excluding G&A, D&A and inter-segment revenues. Taking these items into consideration, commissary margins were 3.9% comparable with the prior year and consistent with our expectations. For our international operating segment, operating income was down in the fourth quarter compared with the prior year. As we’ve previously mentioned, the UK is our largest market, and the only international market, where we own the commissary. Since this market is more than just a royalty stream, the near-term challenges we are facing, have had a more pronounced impact on international profits.
Sequentially, we saw improved performance within our international operating segment, including the UK. Additionally, changes in foreign currency exchange rates negatively impacted adjusted operating income in the fourth quarter, by approximately 250 basis points. The cost headwinds we experienced in our domestic Company-owned restaurants and our international segment were somewhat offset by a decline in general and administrative expenses. All together these factors were an approximate 70 basis point drag on fourth quarter adjusted operating margin versus a year ago, and an approximate 70 basis point improvement from what we experienced in Q3.
I’d like to pause and say how proud of our team. In a year of significant commodity and wage inflation for the full year, we still produced $157 million in adjusted operating income. To put this in context, in 2020, our adjusted operating income was $96 million and in 2019 it was $34 million. Needless to say, we’ve come a long way in a relatively short amount of time, while successfully navigating extremely challenging circumstances.
Continuing to earnings. On a GAAP basis diluted earnings per share was $0.66 for the fourth quarter versus $0.67 last year. Q4 2022 results included $0.05 per diluted share, related to the termination of UK franchisees, and in Q4 2021 included $0.08 per diluted share, related to our strategic corporate reorganization.
The termination costs in the UK are a continuation of our commitment to reposition our UK portfolio in a way that ensures our franchisees in this market are aligned to drive above average industry growth over the long-term. Excluding these items, Q4 2022 adjusted diluted earnings per share were $0.71, down slightly from $0.75 a year ago.
Moving on to cash flow and the balance sheet. For fiscal year 2022, net cash provided by operating activities was $118 million. After deducting $78 million in capital expenditures for the development of new domestic restaurants, and investments in technology innovation, we generated free cash flow of $39 million. This was down from $110 million for fiscal year 2021, reflecting the impact of our overall business performance, working capital changes, and a $10 million increase in capital expenditures.
We ended the year with ample liquidity, approximately $440 million in cash and borrowings, available under our revolving credit facility, and have a conservative gross leverage ratio of 2.6 times. We also continue to return significant cash to our shareholders.
During the quarter, we repurchased $30 million of shares, in total we repurchased more than 1.3 million shares in 2022 and have $300 million remaining available for repurchase under our current authorization at the end of the year. We also paid out approximately $55 million in cash dividends in 2022. Based on our strong balance sheet, our Board has declared first quarter dividend of $0.42 per common share or $1.68 annualized.
Through prudent management of our cash flows, we are able to maximize our financial flexibility and our ability to create value for our shareholders, in both the short and long term through a combination of organic growth opportunities, share repurchases, and cash dividends.
Before discussing our outlook, I want to provide update on our UK market and the support we are providing our franchisees, as this market continues to face significant inflation and high energy prices among other challenges.
As we mentioned in our last call, we are committed to supporting our UK franchisees with the needed operational adjustments and investment to manage through the current environment and reposition our UK portfolio to drive above average industry growth over the long term. The next step in our commitment includes a variety of support to help our franchisees through this difficult time, included targeting marketing initiatives of about $2 million to $3 million. We are confident the investments we are making today are setting us up for long-term success, supported by a strong franchisee base.
Now to our outlook. We remain confident in our positive North American comp sales, which we expect to grow between 2% and 4% annually going forward. As we look to 2023 specifically, we anticipate being at the lower end of this range, following three straight years of record sales. And while we’re confident in our positive momentum around comp sales for fiscal 2023, in Q1 we’re lapping our largest January ever when we launched New York Style crust and benefited from consumers staying closer to home, due to the impact of omicron.
As such, we anticipate North America comp sales in the first quarter to be comparable with the first quarter record sales in 2022. Internationally, we’re making progress across our markets, although the macroeconomic environment will be a factor in how quickly we’re able to grow in certain areas, including the UK. Since the UK market represents approximately 20% of our international sales, we anticipate our international comp sales will remain under pressure throughout 2023.
For adjusted operating margins, we anticipate the first quarter of 2023 to be comparable to slightly down sequentially, as commodity and wage costs remain elevated. For the full year, we anticipate margins to be comparable to up slightly, as we benefit from several tailwinds including our operational excellence initiatives, the positive comp performance, and the benefit of 53rd week in 2023.
As a reminder, flow through margin is higher in the 53rd week as we lever fixed costs, primarily in G&A and D&A, which we estimate will have a roughly 50 basis point benefit to our fourth quarter adjusted operating income margins in 2023. Offsetting these tailwinds are the investments we are making in the UK and higher G&A expenses as performance-based compensation ramps back up, along with the return of our franchisee conference in the second quarter after a three year pandemic hiatus.
Additionally, while we expect food and wage inflation to ease over the longer term, it’s difficult to predict when and to what extent it will occur in 2023. We expect capex to be between $80 million and $90 million, as we invest in technology innovation and the development of new company stores.
Full year net interest expense is expected to be between $33 million and $38 million, and we expect our tax rate to be between 21% and 24%, reflecting an impact from the UK, and a lower tax benefit related to equity vesting.
Looking at the longer term, we’ll continue to drive value through innovation, unit growth, operational productivity, and strategic capital investments. As Rob discussed today, our marketing teams are aggressively pursuing top line growth through menu and digital innovations, while our restaurant operations have a renewed focus on productivity coming out of the pandemic.
Process enhancements are resulting in faster service and improved customer satisfaction, giving us great confidence in our ability to drive future margin expansion.
And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Rob for some final comments. Rob?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Ann. As you can tell from our prepared comments today, we expect 2023 to be another great year for Papa John’s, as we execute on our strategic priorities. We’re leaning into and leveraging our barbell strategy of offering both great products and value for our customers. Our back-to-better operations initiative is focused on delivering more profitable growth. And our development teams are accelerating growth in our established markets, identifying attractive new markets to enter, and attracting new well-capitalized franchisees to partner with.
With a continuing combination of insight, innovation and discipline, we’re confident we’ll drive steady earnings expansion and systemwide sales growth for many years to come.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to the operator for Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Brian Bittner with Oppenheimer. You may proceed.
Brian Bittner — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Thanks. Good morning, Rob and Ann. I appreciate all the guidance details that you’ve given us on this call. It sounds like, you anticipate comps in 2023 to be at the lower end of this new 2% to 4% long-term range, which is solid. But you also — I think you said you anticipate traffic to be positive in 2023, can you just clarify that. Is that what you anticipate for the full year or you anticipate the opportunity to turn traffic positive throughout the year? And what are you seeing in your business, that makes you think that positive traffic can be achieved in light of kind of all the macro pressures we’re hearing out there, impacting the delivery segment in general?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Brian. Great question. What I would tell you is that in Q1 we’re seeing strong transactions, particularly at our company restaurants, where we’ve kind of significantly improved our operations, which is creating an improvement in our throughput. And we anticipate being able to bring those insights and that discipline to bear across our franchisee network. We’ve already met with many of our largest franchisees and are starting to implement those procedures and those processes to make us all run more productively.
And so, the other thing I would tell you is, and we’ve said this in the past — I mean we have — pizza has done really well through tough economic times. It is — has a built in value component. We’re still very competitive in the marketplace with lower priced offerings that are going to be in more demand, as the economy and consumer sentiment continues to evolve. So we have a lot of confidence. Q1 is our biggest loss ever. Q1 was an amazing quarter for us last year, and we’re really confident in our ability to continue the momentum that we’re building in Q1 throughout the balance of the year, and that will help us to continue to drive some strong transactions.
Brian Bittner — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Sara Senatore with Bank of America. You may proceed.
Sara Senatore — BofA Global Research — Analyst
Okay. Thank you very much. I just wanted to sort of understand a little bit more about this, the comp trend, and it sort of sounds like we’re still perhaps in the process of normalization of demand post kind of the big pull forward during the pandemic. I guess I asked because the rest of the industry seems to be seeing strong sales. So I was wondering if you could give any color, is the right way to think about this sort of like normalized volumes, and then we grow from here? And are you seeing any difference in your like the demand coming through the third party, the aggregators versus what you might be seeing in your own ordering platforms? I’m just trying to figure out where like the shifts are coming from if it’s delivery overall or delivery in your platforms, and whether or not we can think about this year as sort of where the volumes normalize and then grow from here. Thank you.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Our three year stacks right now for Q4 last year were 26%, and we delivered 1.1%. So I would absolutely concur with you that the volume has normalized. And we — for a long time during the pandemic, we continue to be asked if this was a pandemic impact on our business, all the sales that we had garnered, and whether that was all going to go away when we came out of the pandemic.
Well, I’m happy to say that we delivered positive comps last year. Last year was kind of the year that we came out of the pandemic. It was a record year for us in terms of sales. Our third straight year of positive comps in North America. And so as we look at 2023, we’re guiding to be positive again this year, which would deliver another record year. And so we are building on the foundation that we developed during the pandemic. As everyone on the call recognizes three and a half years ago this company was in a very different spot, and there were a lot of initiatives put in place, and we laid out our strategic priorities. And we mentioned that during the pandemic, we didn’t change any of that, we just accelerated everything. And I feel like the pandemic did help this company get a strong footing and we delivered two amazing record years. Last year was a very tough year. 2022 the cost structure created a really tough P&L year. But we persevered through it and delivered our second-highest operating income in the company’s history.
So this year we’re building on all of that. It is much more kind of stabilized, normalized growth, and we feel like that’s going to be the foundation for us to continue to grow moving forward.
Sara Senatore — BofA Global Research — Analyst
And then just on the ordering channels?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I’m sorry, I apologize. So we are seeing — we’re still seeing growth and strength in the aggregator marketplace models, their growth rates have changed, the trend lines have changed, but they are still growing. They’re a solid part of our business, both on the marketplace side, where we continue to attract new incremental profitable customers and transactions, but also on the delivery as a service side, where we leverage the partnership to really help us manage through some of our peak times and make sure we don’t have to turn off our ordering system.
So I know there’s a lot in the media a lot that has been written about the aggregators, and where they’re headed for us. It’s still a very strong partnership and a strong part of our business.
Sara Senatore — BofA Global Research — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Chris O’Cull with Stifel. You may proceed.
Chris O’Cull — Stifel — Analyst
Yeah, thanks, good morning guys. Rob, the unit growth guidance for ’23 implies a pretty large step up in ’24 and ’25 in order to achieve that 6% to 8% through 2025 growth rate guidance you’ve given. It looks like maybe 100 unit step up or more in those years. So I’m just wondering which markets do you expect to be primarily responsible for that accelerated unit growth in those out years?
And then if you guys could just provide an update on, maybe domestic franchisee, store profitability for the — for 2002 and how maybe it changed year-over-year, that would be helpful.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
So, great question, Chris. Yeah, it is a step up. Last year, obviously was impacted by some of the geopolitical situations across the globe. And we had some big markets that we couldn’t count on development from. This year Ann mentioned some of the investments we’re making in the UK would — at the UK would be a little softer than we’ve been in the last few years because of the situation that they’re going through. But we’re making that up with strength in China, strength in the Middle East, strength in Central America. And what we believe would be stronger domestic development this year and into next year.
We also, as Ann mentioned in her comments, we are in active discussions with partners and large undeveloped countries right now, and we look forward to hopefully being able to announce some of those agreements later this year, which will then have relatively significant impacts on 2024 and 2025. So, it really is a combination of some of the current markets really performing well as Ann mentioned.
If you take the UK, out of our international business, it was positive last year, and we have some really bright spots across the globe with our current franchisees that we are counting on and are seeing strong commitment to ongoing development. And then with the addition of the new markets, that those two things give us a lot of confidence in our ability to hit that range.
And then on the domestic restaurant margin, Ann if you want to kind of comment on that?
Ann Gugino — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. I mean I think certainly the domestic restaurant margin was under pressure for the current year. But we’re still holding onto the AUVs, as Rob talked about, and actually grew the AUVs slightly. So when you look at the dollar profit that’s being thrown off by these units, it’s still very healthy profit, particularly when you look at historically, still at record highs, which gives us great confidence kind of moving forward.
And if you look at our outlook for 2023, we would expect to improve the unit economics from there in 2023.
Chris O’Cull — Stifel — Analyst
Perfect. Thanks guys.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Chris.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Eric Gonzalez with KeyBanc Capital Markets. You may proceed.
Eric Gonzalez — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Hey, thanks, good morning. Ann, maybe a quick clarification, and then my real question. You said North America comps in the first quarter, you expect them to be comparable with the first quarter record sales of ’22, does that mean flat comps or were you talking about the growth rate versus last year?
And then my real question is really about the labor market. And if you could give us an update on the status of the labor market as it pertains to the pizza category? Are you still losing sales due to delivery driver shortages and weather the stores are fully staffed right now?
Ann Gugino — Chief Financial Officer
So, Eric, thanks for the clarifying question. I was meaning that we expect comps to be roughly flat in Q1, and then grow from there.
Eric Gonzalez — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Great, thanks.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So on the delivery driver staffing, we really haven’t talked a lot about our sales being negatively impacted by delivery driver staffing. I think that’s been a lot of the commentary throughout the industry or with our competitors. But we’ve been able to mitigate some of the staffing challenges with our partnerships on the delivery as a service. So we are seeing staffing stabilized. We are seeing improvements in our staffing models. And a lot of the operational improvements that we talked about that we started to see really in the back half of last year, and significantly here in Q1 are helping us leverage our labor to a greater degree, and make sure that we’re able to service our customers.
I mean, I mentioned in the comments that our out-the-door times have gone down from 29 to 20 minutes versus a year ago. You don’t do that, if you have a staffing — delivery staffing problem, right? So we feel confident that we have what we need to continue to drive operational improvements and that’s why Ann talked about her comments that we expect some operating margin improvement in our restaurants through the balance of the year.
Eric Gonzalez — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Great, thanks.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Lauren Silberman with Credit Suisse. You may proceed.
Lauren Silberman — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Hey, thanks so much. I wanted to ask about the operating margins and the guide for, I guess, flat to slightly up for the year. Can you just talk about where the contribution is from the domestic corporate portfolio you expect for margins there, understanding some offsets with the G&A? And then if you can just help us understand what the implied guidance for EPS, I think that would be very helpful. Thank you.
Ann Gugino — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So looking forward, as I said in my remarks, we expect margins — operating margins for the total company to be relatively flat year-over-year. So, as Rob talks about and I mentioned kind of already, we do expect expansion in the corporate restaurants, but that will be offset — excuse me, by investments that we’re making both in international and in G&A.
So as we look specifically at the corporate restaurant margins, we expect those to improve, reflecting some deflation in commodities cost, labor efficiencies from our back to better initiatives that Rob talked about, as well as the benefit of fixed cost coverage on comp sales increases. G&A will be a headwind year-over-year as we ramp up — ramp back our performance-based compensation and bring back our franchisee conference, to give you some additional color there. There was a lot of noise in 2022, so I’ll go back to 2021, use that as your base, add in some inflation, and then a couple of million dollars for the franchisee conference, and that would get you close.
International, we talked about, will be pressured, reflecting a combination of the investments we’re making, which I did quantify of between $2 million to $3 million, and then a bit of near term sales pressure, coming from the UK. So I think those pieces kind of can get you to where you can back into what you think the corporate restaurant margins would be.
As far as EPS, we’re not providing specific guidance, Lauren, but we did in my remarks provide some specifics around interest expense, and the tax rate, and so I think there’s enough there for you to kind of get to the EPS estimate on your own.
Lauren Silberman — Credit Suisse — Analyst
All right. Thank you, guys.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Lauren.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Joshua Long with Stephens. You may proceed.
Joshua Long — Stephens Inc. — Analyst
Great. Thank you for taking my question. I imagine there’s more to come, and given how knew the back to basics operations — operational plan is, there’s probably more to come here. And just curious at a high level, if you could share some of the early learnings and maybe tease out some of the focus points of how that might flow through? I realize much to be shared sale and probably learned at the store level as you work through it, but just curious on early learnings that have gotten you enthusiastic about rolling out this program a bit more?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, great question. A couple of things I’ll tell you. One, for two years during the pandemic it was really about staffing the restaurants, not just driver staffing but staffing in general. We were doing everything we could, and our operators were doing everything they could to keep the restaurant safe, keep the restaurants open. And I think during that time, we lost a little discipline a little focus on some of the KPIs that, you track and monitor, to make sure you’re running great operations as well. We brought in some new leadership. They have kind of restored that focus and that measurement and that discipline.
And frankly, the follow-up on whether or not we’re hitting the KPIs that watching the right performance indicators and hitting the objectives that we have in place. And we changed some of the GM comp model to include operations metrics, not just the financial metrics. So there’s things that we’ve done really kind of blocking and tackling to make sure that we are tracking the right things and following up on those things, some other more kind of functional things.
We’ve improved our make line efficiency through some optimizations. And then we’ve also worked really hard to make sure that we have a great operating model, when it comes to our driver dispatch, utilizing both our company, employees and drivers and our delivery as a service partners, making sure that we are optimizing that model there. I think for a while there was some kind of — some of our operators and some of our restaurants weren’t as efficient as they needed to be and how they utilize their driver labor pool, and we’ve cleaned up a lot of that.
So, it’s not really any rocket science that we’ve incorporated, not like we wrote some new piece of software that’s changing everything. It really is about leadership, it really is about measuring results. And I think it’s just getting back to being great operators, which is effectively what made this company great in the first place. So that’s really the focus area is right now.
Joshua Long — Stephens Inc. — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Peter Saleh with BTIG. You may proceed.
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Great, thanks. Rob, it seems like the challenge right now is really getting traffic back into the stores. Can you just talk about what do you think is the top one or two levers that you have at your disposal to drive traffic? Is it really leaning harder on menu innovation, is it more on operations? It doesn’t sound like, it’s labor based on your prior comments. So just trying to understand what you think the major levers are to drive traffic in 2023?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I mean so — we’ve already seen some improvements in our transaction trends versus a year ago here in Q1. So we’re already seeing traffic improvements. And a lot of that has to do with some of the throughput and the company restaurants where we’ve seen the most impact. But a lot of it also has to do with some of the innovation we’ve already launched, Papa Bites and Crispy Parm pizza have done extremely well. They’re bringing in new customers, they are driving trial of the brand. And they’re also adding check, while we’re driving those transactions because that Crispy Parm is a premium pizza, Papa Bites are being added to existing pizza orders.
So innovation is going to play a big part. We’ve got a full pipeline of new products lined up to go this year, we’re really excited. If they — we’re lucky enough that all of them do, as well as Crispy Parm is doing. Then, I think we’ll be in really great shape. So product innovation and then frankly just a throughput that’s being when you reduce your out-the-door times, you’re able to take a lot more orders. And order loss at the restaurant level is always a challenge on a — at peak times, and we’re seeing a lot more orders just being lost or a lot less orders just being lost through our improvement in operations. So that’s going to drive transaction growth itself.
The last thing I’ll say is, we’ve got almost 20 million loyalty members at this point. We started talking about the loyalty program three years ago. We were at 12 million or 13 million loyalty members. So that’s just a lot more people that we continue to add to our loyalty program, that gives us the ability to send personalized incentives on one-to-one marketing opportunities to kind of — to increase frequency.
Throughout the pandemic, we’ve said this before throughout the pandemic, we brought a lot of new customers, we really didn’t move the needle on frequency, when there is a lot of discussion around pizza fatigue, we weren’t seeing that, we weren’t seeing people come back a lot more often, we’re going to see getting a lot more people.
So I do think that there is a lot of upside opportunity for us to increase the frequency with our best customers in our loyalty platform as the best way to do that.
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Great. And then just, lastly, your menu pricing I believe in the fourth quarter was in the high single digit range. How do we think about carryover pricing in ’23? What would the impact on the comp be? And do you plan on taking any additional price or do you feel like more discounting is in the cards? Just any thoughts on that would be helpful.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. I mean we started taking that pricing last year about this time. So we’re kind of just starting to lap the impact of that pricing. We don’t have much pricing planned for 2023. As Ann mentioned, we are — we do believe that there is going to be some relief in the commodities’ costs that impacted us to such a huge extent in 2022. So that should help with some of the restaurant operating margins, as Ann mentioned, and therefore, we’re not planning on taking nearly as much pricing as we did last year because we don’t believe we’ll need to.
Peter Saleh — BTIG — Analyst
Great. Thank you very much.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, thanks, Pete.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Alexander Slagle with Jefferies. You may proceed.
Alexander Slagle — Jefferies — Analyst
Hey, thanks, good morning. Congrats. Question on UK and just additional thoughts on what you think you need to do ultimately to resolve the challenges in this market. And if it’s just a simple as driving more awareness and brand voice or do you see this more as a first step while you evaluate additional portfolio repositioning work or other support, just any thoughts there?
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, it’s a great question. And I would tell you it’s not as simple as that. I mean it — there is a lot of work that needs to be done in the U.K. I mean, fundamentally, we believe that the U.K. is going to be a great market for Papa John’s. We’ve got our second-largest market outside the U.S. We have brand awareness there, we have scale, we have great operate — a great supply chain, we have the infrastructure. We need to get better at operations. W need to make sure that the challenges that have — that, that market is facing dealt, lead to a significant decline in our ability to take care of our customers.
We’ve got a new team in the U.K., a leadership team that is focused on operations, focused on a lot of the things that we’ve talked about here, improving our corporate restaurants. It really is a back to basics, back the better model over there, where we’re making sure that we’ve got great operators, that can take care of our customers. And then once you’ve got that in place, then you do, try to create more awareness, more opportunities to bring new customers in. We’re right now building out new digital capabilities, our website, our application over there isn’t as robust as we have in the U.S. Our conversion rates of customers coming into those digital platforms is significantly lower than it is in the U.S., so we’re making investments there, to optimize those platforms, and get more customers through the funnel. We’re also leveraging the innovation that we’re developing here in the U.S. to be able to bring excitement and new items to that market. It’s not as — it’s not just, hey, whatever we do in the U.S., let’s put in the U.K. We’re still making sure that there is consumer demand and excitement around those items, that we’re doing a lot more cross-pollinating than we ever have.
So we have a lot of confidence. Obviously, we’ve called out here that it’s not something that we’re going to fix overnight or not — maybe not something that we’re going to fix even in the next quarter or two, but it’s definitely a market that we are committed to and that we believe can be a strong growth market for us in the future.
Alexander Slagle — Jefferies — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. This concludes the Q&A session. I’d now like to turn the call back over to Rob Lynch for any closing remarks.
Robert Lynch — President and Chief Executive Officer
So I’d like to thank everyone on the call for your time this morning, and for your continued support at Papa John’s. To summarize, we are confident about the long-term opportunities for Papa John’s and our progress thus far. It’s often said that it’s easy to look good during good times, but it’s the challenging times that reveal the true potential of a company.
I couldn’t be more proud of how our team has navigated the most challenging year that we’ve experienced together. And entering my fourth year with the company, I continue to be excited about the potential for this differentiated brand. We have a solid foundation, great momentum and are focused on executing our strategic priorities, to continue to build sustainable long-term value for all of our stakeholders. So thank you very much for calling in, and look forward to speaking with many of you later today.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]