Good evening, and welcome to the Texas Roadhouse third quarter earnings conference call. Today's call is being recorded. All participants are now in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. At that time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. Should anyone need assistance at any time during the conference, please press star zero and an operator will assist you. I would now like to introduce Tonya Robinson, the Chief Financial Officer of Texas Roadhouse. You may begin your conference.
Thank you, Josh, and good evening, everyone. By now, you should have access to our earnings release for the third quarter ended September 27th, 2022. It may also be found on our website at texasroadhouse.com in the investor section. Before we begin our formal remarks, I need to remind everyone that part of our discussion today will include forward-looking statements. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, and therefore, undue reliance should not be placed upon them. We refer all of you to our earnings release and our recent filings with the SEC. These documents provide a more detailed discussion of the relevant factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those forward-looking statements. In addition, we may refer to non-GAAP measures. If applicable, reconciliations of the non-GAAP measures to the GAAP information can be found in our earnings release.
On the call with me today is Jerry Morgan, Chief Executive Officer of Texas Roadhouse. Following our remarks, we will open the call for questions. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Jerry.
Thanks, Tonya, and good evening. We are proud of our third quarter results, which were highlighted by strong top-line performance driven by the hard work of our operators. We were especially pleased to see sales growth accelerate month-to-month, resulting in an 8.2% comparable sales growth for the full quarter. This top-line momentum helped generate strong growth in restaurant margin dollars, leading to nearly 24% earnings per share growth. These results were achieved in spite of the continued impact of cost pressures throughout the business. Our August and September periods benefited from strong guest demand, resulting in increased quarterly dine-in traffic compared to both 2019 and 2021. Weekly to-go volumes also remained healthy throughout the quarter at over $16,000 per restaurant. During the third quarter, we completed our semi-annual review of menu pricing for both Texas Roadhouse and Bubba's 33.
Based on our discussions with our operators, we recently implemented a 2.9% price increase. Taking menu pricing is never an easy decision for us. However, we are confident that our commitment to protecting our value proposition will continue to build long-term relationships with our guests, which we have done for nearly 30 years. Moving on to development, we remain encouraged by the performance of our newest restaurants, including Texas Roadhouse openings in smaller towns. This performance confirms our belief that we still have significant growth opportunities for many years to come. As we sit here today, we believe the Texas Roadhouse concept has the potential to grow to as many as 900 domestic restaurants from its current size of just over 600. We are on track to open 23 Texas Roadhouse and Bubba's locations in 2022, with 14 open so far this year.
Our international franchise partners have opened six Texas Roadhouse restaurants with one or two more expected by year-end. We are also pleased that our fifth Jaggers location opened in October. For 2023, our development pipeline remains strong, and we are targeting approximately 30 Texas Roadhouse and Bubba's openings, as well as three Jaggers. Additionally, we have a tentative agreement with one of our domestic franchisees to acquire eight restaurants at the beginning of next year. We also expect our franchise partners to open 12 international and domestic locations in 2023, including three Jaggers. As we look to next year, our strong financial position allows us to invest in our restaurants, focus on our people development, and provide the infrastructure needed to support operational excellence. We will continue with this tried and true approach, which has proven to be a consistent builder of shareholder value.
Finally, over the past month, as part of our annual fall tour, I had the opportunity to see our managing partners. It was great to meet face to face and listen, learn, and take action on their feedback to better support their restaurants. Their passion, along with their commitment to our operating principles, will continue to push us forward to even greater successes in the future. Now Tonya will provide a financial update.
Thanks, Jerry. For the third quarter of 2022, net income increased 18.5% to $62.3 million and diluted earnings per share, which includes the benefit from share repurchases, increased by 23.7% to $0.93. Revenue growth of 14.3% versus last year was primarily driven by a 7.9% increase in average volume and store week growth of 6.1%. For the quarter, comparable restaurant sales increased to 8.2%, driven by 7.7% average check growth. Guest traffic was up by 0.5 point overall, with dining room traffic up 3.3%. We continue to see positive mix driven by year-over-year improvement in the percentage of guests choosing to dine in, as well as dine-in guests continuing to order higher priced entrees.
Our restaurants averaged over $129,000 in weekly sales in the third quarter, and to-go represented approximately $16,300 or 12.6% of these total weekly sales. The to-go sales volumes were consistent throughout the third quarter, with the percentage increasing slightly in the back half of the quarter. By month, comparable sales grew 3.9%, 9.9%, and 10.4% for our July, August, and September periods, respectively. Our sales momentum have continued into the fourth quarter. For the first four weeks of the quarter, weekly sales averaged $130,000, with comparable sales up 8.3% as compared to the same period in 2021.
For the third quarter, restaurant margin dollars grew 12.5% to $152 million and were 15.4% as a percentage of total sales, down 26 basis points as compared to last year. Restaurant margin benefited from a $6.6 million adjustment to other sales related to a change in our historical gift card breakage assumption. As a reminder, in the third quarter of 2021, we had a similar benefit in other sales of $4.8 million. Food and beverage costs as a percentage of total sales were 34.7% for the third quarter, up 9 basis points compared to 2021. This increase was primarily due to commodity inflation of 8.8% in the quarter, mostly offset by the benefit of menu pricing.
With roughly 70% of our fourth quarter commodity basket secured with fixed prices, we have lowered our full year commodity inflation expectation to approximately 10.5%. Looking ahead to next year, we are projecting commodity inflation of 5%-6%. We currently expect the first quarter of 2023 will be impacted by higher inflation as we lap easier comparisons and will moderate as we move through the remainder of the year. While our guidance assumes that the cost of many of the items in our commodity basket will remain elevated, most of our inflation next year will be driven by higher beef costs. Labor as a percentage of total sales increased 24 basis points to 33.5% as compared to the third quarter of 2021, while labor dollars per store week increased 8.6%.
This increase in labor dollars per store week was driven by wage and other labor inflation of 7.7% and growth in hours of 1.8%. These increases were partially offset by lapping a $2.6 million adjustment to our quarterly reserve for workers' comp and group health insurance. Based on current trends, we continue to expect approximately 8% of wage and other inflation for the full year. For 2023, we are forecasting wage and other inflation of 5%-6% with upcoming state mandated increases representing nearly 2% of the increase. Other operating costs were 14.8% of sales, which was flat as compared to the third quarter of 2021.
The year-over-year benefit of sales leverage was offset by a continuation of the higher costs that we are seeing in areas such as utilities, credit card charges, and repair and maintenance expense. Other operating also benefited from the impact of adjustments to our quarterly reserve for general liability insurance. These adjustments include a $4.4 million benefit this year compared to a $3.2 million benefit last year. Moving below restaurant margin, G&A for the third quarter grew year over year by 3.8% and came in at 4.3% of revenue. The primary drivers of the increased year-over-year G&A spend were a $4.1 million increase in cash and equity compensation and a $2 million increase in meeting and travel expense.
These increases were partially offset by a $2.5 million adjustment to the cost of our managing partner conference held in the second quarter and the effect of lapping the approximately $3 million expense for the abbreviated conference that we held in the third quarter of last year. Our effective tax rate was 15.2% for the third quarter, and we continue to expect that our full year 2022 tax rate will be approximately 14%. Assuming no changes to the tax code, we would expect an income tax rate of approximately 15% for 2023. With regards to cash flow, we ended the third quarter with $185 million of cash, which is up $5 million from the end of the second quarter.
Cash flow from operations was $96 million and was offset by $65 million of capital expenditures and $31 million of dividend payments. We continue to expect full year 2022 capital expenditures will be approximately $230 million, increasing to approximately $265 million for 2023. Now I'll turn the call back over to Jerry for final comments.
Thanks, Tonya. Before I turn the call over for questions, as a Florida native, I want to offer my sincere condolences to everyone impacted by the devastation of Hurricane Ian. Thankfully, our restaurants suffered minimal damage, and because of the resilience of our Roadies, we were able to quickly reopen and serve our communities. I also want to thank Andy's Outreach, our employee-funded assistance program, for providing much-needed financial aid to our impacted Roadies. I am so proud to be the head coach of such a people-first company that truly values its employees and provides service with heart to our communities in times of need. Operator, please open the line for questions.
At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from the line of Brian Bittner with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. Tonya, as it relates to 2023, are you able to talk about the percent of the food basket that you currently have locked so we can just better understand what type of visibility you have into the 5%-6% commodity outlook or maybe any other assumptions that you have that's underpinning the commodity outlook for next year? I have a follow-up.
Sure, Brian. We don't wanna disclose any type of data around what we have locked at this point. I'll tell you, just because it's so early, you know, we're still in discussions with vendors and suppliers, and, you know, we'll wait until February to give an update on where we are from that perspective. I'll tell you, though, things really haven't changed a whole lot from what we've been talking about all year, just in the fact that it is tougher to kind of lock up those prices, particularly on beef. You know, those contracts tend to be a little bit shorter maybe than what we've seen, you know, pre-COVID. That really hasn't changed, but we're still really working on that end of the basket.
Overall, you know, just any other information I could give you know, as I said in the scripted, you know, section, we most of the inflation that we're guiding to in that 5%-6% is driven by beef. The rest of the basket, you know, saw some pretty decent inflation in 2022. And so while we still think costs will, you know, go up on those items, it's just not as much of a driver as what that beef is. Beef was one of the better-performing items for us in the basket in 2022. You know, we saw some softness on those beef costs in Q4, just as everyone's read with the kind of, you know, culling of herds and things like that.
We think that we're gonna, you know, maybe see some of that, you know, coming back in 2023 as far as, you know, affecting what supply looks like, along with just drought situations and that impact. We have that built into that 5%-6% to some degree of just expecting supply to make things a little more difficult and supply constraints and things like that.
Well, thank you. I appreciate the first look into 2023 from you. Just as it relates to pricing, I think the 2.9% price that you just took in October, I think that replaces 4.2% that falls off in November. I think you'll have about 6% pricing in place until April. Just confirm that if you could. The question is: how should we think about the pricing strategy for the full year of 2023 in response to this kind of 5%-6% commodity inflation, just so we all, as analysts, can better understand how to think about your COGS margin trends for next year?
Sure. Yeah, in Q4 this year, it'll be pricing will come in at about 6.3%. You're right, you're gonna have just a little bit of impact from that 4.1% that rolls off in November. Then at that point, you'll just be looking at the 3.2% that we took in April of this year, along with that 2.9% that we just did. For Q1, that puts you at about 5.9%. Then it kind of goes down from there, assuming no additional pricing throughout 2023. Really, Brian, you know, I'll just kind of tell you, start that conversation of, you know, we're gonna continue to do two looks at pricing.
We'll do one again, probably starting in March, as we come upon that April pricing falling off, and then continue to do a later year one. We feel like that just gives us more visibility and ability to react to kind of what's going on out there, in the environment. That feels, you know, kind of like what we wanna do. I'll tell you know, the goal isn't necessarily to offset inflation. We wanna make sure that we're really, again, thinking of that value proposition as we usually do. That's really gonna be the more of the focus for us than, you know, trying to increase our margins on a short-term basis.
Okay, thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Eric Gonzalez with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Just, maybe a big picture question on the margins, you know, in light of the full year inflation outlook, which seems to have improved relative to where we were earlier in the year. Just wondering how you're thinking about the margin potential. You know, there's obviously some opposing forces between sales and costs, but maybe if you think you can get back to that 17% plus restaurant margin next year, and what might the assumptions be on throughput inflation and sales that would get you there next year? Thanks.
Eric, I think with the guidance we gave on, you know, commodities and labor, you know, under that scenario, and with the amount of pricing that we, you know, will have in the menu, a lot depends on what we take in 2023, especially in April, as far as, you know, what lift you get there. But it could be tough to get back to 17%-18% next year. It feels like, you know, where we're ending this year feels really good, especially when we think about where we started out this year as far as all of the uncertainty we had on the commodity basket. We were pleased to see things ending that way.
I think, you know, outside of margin percentages, we feel like we can put up a really good year next year of restaurant margin dollar growth, and then store week growth, which is so important for us. From that point of view, we feel pretty good about it.
Thanks for that. Just real quick, maybe on building costs. You know, some of your peers are calling out, you know, delays in permitting construction, and I'm just wondering, has it gotten better or worse over the last three or four months? Maybe if you could talk about how much inflation you're seeing on the construction side year-over-year.
Yeah, I would say that, you know, overall, it's holding right now. Still a little bit of delays. We're definitely getting some tight timelines on some things, but we're getting it done. I think for as far as the material cost, it's been holding. Labor still continues to be probably the bigger challenge even for our partners out there. But, you know, we feel good about it. I don't see it really escalating at this time, but we're getting it done with the numbers that we're baking in for the IRR and moving forward. Right now, just a little bit on the delay side on equipment, just really staying very focused on being able to get it done. Right now, just a little longer than typical, but we're going.
Sounds good. Thanks.
Your next question comes from the line of Jared Garber with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Great, thanks for the time today. Tonya and Jerry, could you help talk about consumer demand a little bit? You noted strong trends throughout the quarter, positive traffic, which is certainly encouraging to see. You know, we continue to hear and see incremental pressures on the consumers. It seems like you guys are bucking the trend a little bit with some of the commentary around consumers sort of trading up to higher priced items. If you could just help frame what you're seeing on a consumer basis for us, that would be really helpful. Thanks.
Yeah, I think, you know, with the 50 basis points of mix that we saw that's in the check number, I mean, that felt really good that we continue to see the consumer, you know, staying up into those items that they had traded up to in 2021. You don't really see anything coming back. Obviously, it's always a little too soon to think about pricing and the flow-through. It seems good right now. We aren't seeing anything that, you know, raises any red flags, so that's definitely a positive. You know, you might, you know, you could say there's a little bit on alcohol, but, you know, who knows what really drives that. It's really nothing too significant. Overall feels good. I think the health of the consumer feels good. Demand continues to be strong for our brands.
We're seeing good traffic growth across all day parts and days of the week. From that standpoint, all good from our perspective.
Yeah, I mean, if you look at July, August to September, it's a very positive trend for us, which is extremely exciting going into the fourth quarter.
Great. I guess just following that, how are you thinking about that demand curve bending, or not, into next year?
I think for us it's still, you know, moving forward, it's focused on driving top-line sales and feeling like we have a lot of opportunity to do so. The to-go transaction stays very sticky and looks, you know, like it's holding, along with those dining room sales going up. You know, that normal seasonality seemed to have come back in play that we talked about in July. We're expecting a very great holiday season, heading into the fourth quarter and then, you know, high gift card sales heading into the new year, a lot of redemptions from that perspective, which are always great things. I think, you know, overall, we would say we feel very confident in our ability to continue to drive sales in a positive way.
Great. Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Your next question comes from the line of Brian Harbour with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Yes, thank you. Maybe just another one on commodities. It sounds like what you're talking about is just kind of a timing issue, where there was some more beef pressure expected in the fourth quarter, but that sounds like it's just getting delayed. I guess the question is there any reason some of that pressure wouldn't materialize in 2022? Or, you know, why has the timing changed for some of those expectations?
Brian, are you talking about beef specifically or just the overall basket?
The overall basket, but it sounds like beef is kind of the main driver of that within the basket, right?
Right. You know, I would tell you we saw some softening. You know, we did see some softening in Q3, Q4 on those beef costs. I think, for a lot of different reasons that, you know, that kind of played out. I think right now, you know, beef inflation across the quarter, the cadence for the year on that is pretty consistent. There isn't anything that's really driving it. You know, there's not much volatility there that we're assuming right now. Some of that is just the timing of what we did in 2022, how we're lapping that. The rest of the basket, you didn't really see those prices kick up until Q2 into Q3, you know, on some of those grocery items, particularly like bread mix, oils, things like that.
That's why it is a little heavier on the inflation number in Q1 as we lap that. Then it as we said on the call, it just moderates from there. That's kind of the way we're looking at it right now. Now, there's a lot of things that could change that. Obviously, you know, we could see supply change faster. Any changes in demand one way or another would have an impact. But right now we're kind of assuming a steady course from a demand perspective, and then just trying to estimate kind of what we think that supply does based on cows and, you know, cows going up for slaughter and things like that.
Okay. That makes sense. Thank you. Tonya, maybe just on G&A. Are there any, you know, would you expect 4Q to kind of be similar to what we've been seeing? Anything unique in there? If I were to think about 2023, do you think it'll kind of look similar if as a percent of sales?
That's our expectation right now. You know, we focus on keeping G&A growth on a dollar basis, less than revenue growth. You know, keeping it pretty in line from, as a percentage of revenue. That's gonna continue to be our focus, on that line. Nothing that I would call out, in either Q4. Now in, heading into 2023, you know, we will be having our managing partner conference in Q2. This is our 30th year celebration, it is a biggie. We're really excited about that. You know, as we continue to get back into the rhythm of those conferences, the cost on that will be a bit elevated compared to what it was in 2022. Outside of that though, those would really be the bigger things I would call out.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Your next question comes from the line of Jake Bartlett with Truist Securities. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. You know, first of all, I wanna start, and then I had a follow-up, but I wanna start with the beef again, just from one other question on that. You know, we see Choice boxed beef down year-over-year currently. I would've thought that would kind of, you know, it takes a little time for you to age it and flow through the system. I would've thought you would've seen actually maybe even beef deflation now or starting the beginning of the year. You know, is your expectation for higher overall inflation a function of the non-beef stuff, you know, items really in the first quarter of 2023? You know, or is there any other nuance as to how you purchase beef, that I'm missing here just by looking at the commodity market? I had a follow-up.
Sure. I'll tell you, we did see some beef deflation both in Q3 and Q4. We saw a little bit of overall beef deflation that kind of helped with that, you know, the overall commodity basket, because you were continuing to see those other non-beef items escalate a bit. That was really positive. We're not assuming any of that, you know, kind of softness, if you will, heading into Q1, you know, based on what we're lapping and the way we're buying. Now, that could change a little bit as we continue to lock up, you know, anything, and you see what the play, you know, kind of the play in the market's gonna be, you know, again, for that supply and for demand. We'll just continue to kind of see how that goes.
Again, this is just a first glance. It is early days, and we will be continuing to tweak these numbers as we get, you know, kind of into the year.
Great. My other question was on the labor inflation guidance, the 5%-6%. You talked about, you know, 2% of it being from, you know, just mandated minimum wage increases. You know, when you think about the other context this morning talked about the expectation for a mild or moderate recession in the U.S. I'm trying to, you know, think about that kind of 5%-6% labor inflation, you know, in that kind of environment. Just, you know, how confident or what kind of visibility you could have, but, you know, how do you get to that kind of such a high wage inflation estimate?
The other part of that is, you know, it seems like in 2022 and even in 2021, there's, you know, abnormal cost, training, turnover was very high. There's training and productivity was low because of all the new people. Are there some offsets to the wage inflation that you're expecting, you know, in 2023?
Just kind of to start with that first part of the question, you know, I'll tell you, when we think about that 5%-6%, as we said, that 2%'s in there that's state mandated. Some of that is just driven by these higher CPI states. You know, there are states that are based on CPI increases. And so with the increase that we've seen in CPI, it's driving some pretty high wage rate increases in those states. Then you have other states like Michigan, who are making some pretty significant changes to their wage structure. And so that all kind of builds up. That number normally would be in the 1-1.5%, so that is a bit more than what it usually would be.
The remainder, you know, it's not just wages for us, it's wages and other inflation, so benefits come into play. As we continue to look for ways to retain and attract talent, we're expanding benefits and improving those. Then also, you know, just as we're thinking about how we continue to retain great talent at the volumes that we're running, and that maybe makes it a little bit different for us because we are running such large volumes, the staffing is critical. Our expectation, you know, even if there were some type of recession or slowdown, we feel like we're very well positioned to kind of meet that challenge. We would continue to need to be staffed. We could continue to drive sales because of our value proposition and then just the demand that we see for our products.
Thank you very much.
Mm-hmm.
Your next question comes from the line of Peter Saleh with BTIG. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you. I was gonna ask a question on beef, but I think that's been beaten to death here. Let me ask on just labor here. Tony, can you give us a sense on the labor availability, how that's progressed through the year? How do you feel about that today? And how has turnover been among the staff over the past couple quarters?
Yeah, I'll answer that for you. It has continued to be easier and better, and I guess more applicant flow throughout the summer, so that is exciting. We really have gotten to a point where we feel very comfortable with our staffing. Again, we're gonna continue to pad that and add some superstars when we get the chance. What was the other part of it?
Just on turnover. Has turnover improved?
Turnover. I'm sorry, yeah.
Great.
Yeah, it actually has. On management and hourly, we've definitely seen through the summer it really settle and reduce. I think we've done a better job of connecting and really painting the picture of where the company's going. I think people are starting to settle into the routine going into the fall, back to school, all of that, and they're settling in. I definitely see us being staffed completely. Maybe still a little bit of a challenge in the back of the house, but overall management very solid. Hourlies are there, and with the reduction of turnover, we feel very good about that, having a little bit more of an experienced workforce out there running the shift. A positive sign there for sure.
Okay. Good to hear. How about the hours, the labor hours growth rate going forward? How should we expect you guys to, you know, grow that given what we're seeing right now in traffic?
I think right now you continue to see it a bit elevated above traffic growth, just like we saw this year or this quarter, you know, as we continue to, you know, get fully staffed and evolve based on the volumes that we're seeing. You know, I think you see that for a little bit. I would expect it to start kind of getting a little bit more back to normal in 2023, potentially, and that would kind of be our expectation. You know, we're always just making sure our operators know, you know, to staff for the sales they have, staff for the sales they want, and make sure they're just making the right call on that. We'll see how that plays out.
Thank you very much.
Mm-hmm.
Your next question comes from the line of David Tarantino with Baird. Your line is open.
Hi. Good afternoon. Congratulations on such strong sales performance. I have a couple of-
Thank you.
Thank you. You're welcome. I have a question, Tonya, clarification on your G&A for the third quarter. I think you mentioned that you got a credit for the manager conference in there. I guess, is it right to think that the underlying G&A was around $45 million, and is that what you expect going forward in the fourth quarter?
You're right, David. That $2.5 million credit, you know, would've brought that number down a little bit. You do have to adjust for that as you're thinking about what Q4 is gonna look like. Yeah.
Okay, great. Thank you. My real question is about unit level returns in the current environment. I know you've seen some, you know, increases in restaurant profit dollars per week in your model, but I think there's also been some cost increases. I was wondering if you could maybe just level set us on kind of where the return profile is and maybe on Texas Roadhouse and on Bubba's and how close or how much margin you have relative to your targets on that metric.
Sure. On the IRRs, you know, we're targeting mid-teen returns for both concepts. You know, we do take into consideration, you know, a little of the current environment as far as what we're seeing happening from a cost perspective. We look at sales in the area around where that restaurant's gonna be as kind of a guideline for what sales we think we can do. We get a lot of input from the market partner for that restaurant because they really understand that area and know what they can do from a sales perspective. All those things kind of go into play. We also look at the TCI, what the restaurant margins, we call it total controllable income at the store level.
We look at TCIs for the stores in that area too, so we can get a feel for, hey, are we being reasonable on our expectation of the TCIs that store can run? It depends, David, really, there's no set number because it just depends on where they're located, what their wages look like. That's really the bigger variable is labor percentages. Commodities, you know, stay pretty similar across the country. It's really more labor, rent, things like that make it, you know, kind of move it. Overall, the returns look really good and Roadhouse has been running. You know, you have Roadhouse restaurants on a look back, you know, after 18 months that are, you know, well above 15%, on a return perspective.
Bubba's continues to be a solid number, but they're working on a lot of profitability, on that side of the business. We're still, you know, the returns are good. We're able to approve sites to open, but we're hoping to see a little more profitability improvement at those restaurants.
That's very helpful. Thank you.
Sure.
Your next question comes from the line of Chris O'Cull with Stifel. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks. This is Patrick on for Chris. Tonya, I wanted to have just quickly follow up on on what you just said, and I was curious if you could break out how much of the 2023 CapEx development guidance will be you know allocated to new units versus maintenance spending. Are there any opportunities to value engineer the Roadhouse prototype at this point to help improve the returns you just talked about?
Sure. I'm kind of crunching numbers right now, Patrick, to try to give you that breakdown. because typically on stores, you know, CapEx maintenance, we are estimating, you know, anywhere from $130 ,000 to $140 ,000 per store for the year. It's kind of the number we expect to hit, and that includes doing bump outs and, you know, cooler bump outs and all of that CapEx at existing restaurants. We do have a number in there for relocation. We do have a fair number of relocations that are expected also in 2023. Overall in that $265 million, about $150 million of it is allocated for new stores, based on the, you know, opening approximately 30.
You have carryover, right, from one year to the next that, you know, from what you're opening last year versus what you're opening, you know, in the even in 2024 will play a part. Then about $30 million in relo is kind of how that looks. That leaves what about $80 million or so just for normal maintenance CapEx at existing restaurants.
That's really helpful. Thank you. I wanted to ask too about traffic relative to 2019. It looks like if my math is right, you're up about a little shy of 13% to 2019 in 3Q in traffic. Can you help us understand how that looks sequentially from 2Q relative to pre-COVID levels and how much that, you know, improvement was sequentially quarter-over-quarter?
I don't have Q2 in front of me right now. Hold on one second and let me see if I can get to that number. So Q2 from a same-store sales perspective, this is all in sales on a three-year stack was 30, about 30% for 2022, Q2 2022 versus 2019. Then obviously for Q3, we came in at about 32% on all in sales. On traffic, that number came in at about 10 and 11 respectively for Q2, Q3.
Got it. Thank you. That's helpful. Just lastly, Jerry, I know you mentioned the managing partner conference and, you know, potential operational efficiencies that you gleaned there. I was just curious, you know, if you uncovered anything noteworthy that was, you know, that would help efficiency in the stores that you guys are thinking about implementing on the back end of that.
I think you're probably talking about our fall tour that we did. We're just out visiting with all the operators over the last five weeks. You know, the biggest thing is we are operating very well. We've got to continue to work on getting them equipment and product in a timely manner so they can do their job. I think the biggest thing we learn is how to help them behind the scenes, whether it be just with our big vendor partnerships. You know, we're really happy with our food and our service and our community partnership and the maintenance of our facilities.
It's a matter of, at our volume, getting them the food, the equipment, and the supplies that they need on a timely manner so that they can open and operate their businesses. What we heard loud and clear is that we need more of all that and which is an exciting thing for us. The fall tour to me is a great opportunity to meet with every managing partner out there to really discuss what we're trying to accomplish, and then how can we help them. Our company's turning 30 years old. We're very excited about that. We are having tremendous results, and I think it's because we're fundamentally sound in what we're trying to be, and that is the best operators in the industry.
I'm very proud of the group and what they've accomplished, and will continue to challenge us all to be the best at what we do.
Great. Thanks, guys.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of David Palmer with Evercore ISI. Your line is open.
Thanks and congrats. A question on the cost one more time. Last quarter, I think you're thinking 9% inflation in the back half, and it seems you were close to that in the third quarter. I guess inflation would be more like the 4%-5% range in 4Q. I'm wondering if, you know, if that's right. Is that easing beef or is it a mixture of things and what would be those things that are perhaps coming down or starting to come down in 4Q?
Part of it, yeah, would be an easing of beef. You're seeing some on other proteins, which are a big part of the basket too. You're starting to see some of that occurring. You know, it's interesting because the inflation in 2022 was just such a all over, you know, the basket. It wasn't really highlighted on one particular item in the basket. You're seeing a little bit of help kind of across the board again, as you kind of see some of that softening occurring. Some on beef, but you know, a lot on some other, you know, some other protein items and some of the other non-protein items in the basket too. You're about there.
That's about where I would expect, you know, David, as you're thinking about, you know, 10.5% for the year. Obviously, you can kind of back into what that might be for Q4. It is. It's gonna be, you know, a lower number than what we saw this quarter.
Yeah. I guess the other thing I was gonna ask you about was the these buy-in of units from franchisees, this is the second year you've been able to do it. Is it all completely random, the timing of this? It feels like you have the right to buy them at predetermined prices. I'm wondering if this might be a gift that keeps on giving where you see more of these coming due and you have the right to buy them in and you can, you know, see the benefit coming up in the coming years. I'm also curious if you could share what sort of prices you pay for these. I mean, is this very accretive? Thanks.
Sure. There really isn't. You know, we do have a predetermined formula that's included in our franchise agreements, but historically we don't use that. We really just have to do a negotiated deal based on where those stores are from an EBITDA perspective, you know, sales perspective, looking at them from, you know, how, the shape of the building and the assets and, the management teams, and just a lot of different things come into play as we're valuing those stores. Really, you know, we like to do them at the beginning of the year because it's just a nice clean cutoff. That's probably more of a driver of the timing than anything else. You know, we've been talking with. We're always talking with our franchise partners, honestly.
We're always catching up on just how things are going, you know, and what they need from us. And then some, you know, we start down the path of having that conversation about, you know, if it's the right time for them and their owners to consider, you know, that buyback. We've been lucky to get two of those deals, you know, a deal done at the beginning of each year. That feels like a really good pace, and we think we do have some continued opportunity for the next couple years to continue to do that. It is a negotiation and, you know, our franchise partners, you know, they've been great partners, continue to be great partners and so, we definitely want it to be, you know, a win-win situation.
Overall, you know, it is very accretive. It adds about 1-1.5% from a store week growth perspective is what this deal will add, so eight restaurants. It's very accretive to the bottom line. I don't really wanna talk too much about multiples or purchase prices as we continue to do some negotiations, but I feel again like it's a really good deal for both parties.
Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Your next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Bernstein with Barclays. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you. First question was just on the sequential comp trends. It seems like you guys are seeing improvement through the third quarter, at least based on the absolute numbers. I'm just wondering whether you think that there's any masking of a slowing macro within there. I know the October comp in the 8% range eased, I guess, from the September and the 10%. Just wondering if you think that compares or maybe a return to some seasonal patterns. Just trying to get a sense for whether you think there is any underlying softness at all, and what initiatives might you implement if trends were to slow, whether it's this quarter or going into 2023.
Yeah, I think that, you know, maybe it would just tick down a hair for September, but it was comparable to August, so as we head into November and gift card sales and the season, you know, it looks like so far we're trending holding very, very well, and we expect that will continue. We will put our big push on gift card sales, which really creates a lot of fun as we get into the holidays and see how things go from there. As of right now, it looks like we'll probably. I think we're gonna be close to that same 8%-10% and have that momentum going into the holidays and running from there. It could change, but we're prepared right now to keep executing and doing what the consumer wants, and I think they'll reward us for it.
Jeff, I'll tell you too, when you go back and, you know, we kind of looked at the October number for that reason, like is there anything there? I think it's really just four weeks. You can't read a whole lot into it. I'll tell you, when you go back and look at 2019 cadence, you see the same pattern as far as July soft, August, September tend to be, you know, a little higher, and then October tends to be a little softer. That gave me some confidence and along with just the performance of mix and things like that to say, "Hey, doesn't feel like an overall softening." I think it's just seasonality, and we feel really good, as Jerry said, about heading into the holiday season.
Got it. If you were to see softening in coming months or quarters, is there a different approach you would take, or how would you go about addressing that as you were trying to meet the, you know, the customer who's feeling a little bit more pinched? I don't know if there's any specific initiatives you might implement or whether you kind of stick with what's tried and true.
Well, I think we'll continue, if we needed to press harder on our Early Dine timeline or even our Wild West Wednesday, we got a couple of things that we could do or press on a little bit harder if we needed to get out there that really screams that value with our Early Dine and our Wild West Wednesday would be the two key components that we could be a little more aggressive on.
Yeah, I think we definitely would wanna take a look at what was driving it, and if it was something we were doing that we had some impact or if it was just an overall softening. At that point we know, stick to what we know and keep doing what we do, and just, you know, work through that.
Got it. Lastly, can you just clarify, I think you said you expect 6.3% pricing in the fourth quarter. Just wanted to confirm what it was in the third quarter. If inflation were to play out as you expect into early 2023, would you be inclined to not take incremental price in April to maintain that value message if we were going into a slowdown? Just trying to, again, clarify if inflation played out as you thought, whether we would see no real increase in that April window. Thank you.
Yeah, I mean, like you said, we'll continue to look at what the environment looks like in February and March and talk to our operators and see what's right for the business. I think we've always been inclined to look at those two pricing opportunities and see what's the right thing for the consumer and the right thing for the business. It's a little early right now. We'll follow our process. We'll start really investigating in February and March to make that April decision, based on the environment that we'll be working in at that time.
Yeah. It's Q3 was about 7.2% on pricing. Jeff, and obviously that Q4 at about 6.3%, I think were the numbers you were asking for, too.
Great. Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Farmer with Gordon Haskett. Your line is open.
Thanks. McDonald's touched on this today for the fast food segment, but do you expect your casual dining peers to remain rational from a, I guess, a discounting or promotion perspective given the elevated inflation backdrop?
I truly don't know. I mean, I think, you know, you hear folks saying they wanna stay away from discounting. It's just my speculation. We don't really follow it a whole lot as far as what others are doing from that perspective. I can see where it would be easy to kind of fall back on that discounting if you were, you know, in their shoes trying to drive sales. You know, Jeff, from us, we stay away from that discounting and things like that, so it's not really something we even follow from a competitive standpoint too much.
Okay. Not to harp on McDonald's too much, but another interesting question came up on their call earlier today, which was sort of juxtaposing the business 2008, 2009 versus 2022 and 2023. You guys did fairly well. I mean, casual, like, dining had a hard time somewhat in that recession, but you guys outperformed. If we theoretically go into a recession in the U.S., how should we think about the performance through the lens of what happened to the Roadhouse business in 2008, 2009 if we were to go into a recession next year?
I think the way we would think of it is, you know, we came in in 2008, 2009, you know, we had negative traffic. Remembering back to that point, I think we came in a little later with that. We were able to hold onto traffic a little bit longer. I think, again, speaking to the value that we have in the menu is really the benefit there, and then coming out, maybe came out a little bit earlier. The big thing for us that we focus on is the fact that following that, we generated 10 years of positive traffic growth. We know that that consistency is what's so important. Really maybe it's more about the things we wouldn't do as far as taking labor off the floor or cheapening the experience.
We're gonna continue to give the guests a great experience. We know that's what matters. I think just from my viewpoint, it's a little different when you look back to 2008 and 2009 because of where the labor market is, and, you know, we really aren't seeing the same labor market today. It'll be interesting, you know, if that does play out, just how you know, how that kind of works and what the impact is. You know, maybe you see costs come down even as you know, as demand's coming down a little bit. You know, I think overall, we control what we can and give the guests a great experience, and that's the kind of the way we would be, we would enter into it.
Yeah. I think the key component for us is if we have to adjust to the volume, we are prepared and ready. But the delivery on the experience for whatever the consumer is coming in the door has go to be. That's where we were rewarded for ten years after is that we didn't change portion sizes, we didn't lose our focus on the food or the service or the experience. Through tough times, you make adjustments, but you still deliver on your promise, and that's what led us into a great ten-year run. If that were to happen, we would expect the same focus from our operators and the same commitment from our company.
All right. Helpful. Thank you both.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Lauren Silberman with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.
Thank you. I wanted to ask another one on comp and the acceleration through the quarter and into October. I guess, what's your sense of how much is driven by underlying industry improvement relative to share gains, just given the value proposition? Any sense you're getting the benefit of some trade down from higher cost restaurants?
Lauren, I mean, we could be. You know, we don't kind of look at it in that way, but there's certainly that opportunity. I think some of it too is just to-go, too, continues to be strong. Even with the dining room guests coming back in on a more frequent basis, we're still seeing, you know, to-go holding in above 16,000 a week. That's. I think that means a lot. I think, you know, we picked up a lot of guests in 2020 and 2021 who didn't know us until then, and I think we're holding onto those guests. Could be some share.
I don't know how we would necessarily prove that out or see that, but you know, I think it speaks to also that you're seeing the guests kind of trade up into some of those higher items and hold on there in 2021 and continue to do that in 2022. Maybe that speaks to some trade down, you know, from a higher guest check. Overall, I just think you know, it's the consistency again of what we offer and keeping the guests coming in the door.
Great. Thank you for that. Jerry, I think you might have mentioned the potential, you guys now see the potential for 900 Roadhouses over time. I think historically you've talked closer to 700-800 in the past. I just wanna confirm, is this an increase from what you've communicated historically? If so, can you just talk about where you're seeing some of those incremental growth opportunities?
Yeah, absolutely. We do believe that we changed that number because we do see the upside and because of the success in some of the smaller communities that we've been able to go in really allowed us to up that number. It is really exciting to see some of the areas that we would typically, probably the smaller communities, and we're having tremendous success, so we're gonna continue to find a good spot for us. Which when we look at the landscape, that means that we have the opportunity. If we continue to do it right and all the world works with us, we think that we can get to that number.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Dennis Geiger with UBS. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you. I wanted to ask another one sort of on the broader steak category. Tonya or Jerry, if you have sort of a view that, you know, the brand is clearly seeing tremendous success, presumably taking share within the category. Curious if you have a sense or if you've done work on sort of broader steak category demand. I know you've spoken to this before, but has the strength seemingly across the category surprised you to date, the demand there from the consumer and, you know, just as far as how you think about that going forward, if it is part of the equation for you thinking about the category?
I mean, I know the other competitors are having some success also. They're maybe not doing the volume that we're doing, so that to me tells me maybe whatever we're doing works a little better from a value standpoint. Staying focused on that piece of it, our offerings, our consistency, our disciplines to the routines of the experience, I think will all help drive that. I mean, our food's made from scratch, and we put a lot of time and effort into it, and I think it really plays out in the taste buds of our consumers. We're winning that battle, and I think we will continue to win it as we fight for it. You know, people love protein and a steak of potato and a salad. A loaded potato, by the way, that's the way you win the game.
Absolutely. One more just on capacity levels and kind of maybe the biggest opportunities to increase traffic. You know, maybe it's days of the week, maybe it's in hours of the day. Tonya, I think you spoke to strength across days of the week, across hours. Just curious about, you know, sort of the biggest traffic opportunities perhaps. Maybe it's bump outs, maybe it's plenty of capacity across all of those opportunities. I'm curious if you could just kind of touch on that as we think about the strength you've seen over the last couple of years. Thank you.
Sure. Yeah. It's, you know, continues to be the same story of the stores that have the stronger sales are the ones that continue to drive strong traffic. You know, I think we continue to have ability on the traffic side of things across the company. I don't know that anyone we would say has hit capacity or doesn't have that ability. I know every operator would tell you they have the ability to continue to drive traffic and they find those ways through a lot of different avenues, whether it's, you know, guest management systems and how they're seating and, you know, KDS in the back of the house potentially, you know, as we're thinking about, you know, that continuing to, you know, roll out to stores. And technology overall, I think helps them from that standpoint.
The way they're doing to-go and managing that in the kitchen. I think overall, yeah, you mentioned all of the things I would mention, whether it's bump outs, adding seats obviously is a great way to go. You know, you see strength on the weekends. I think you still can. You know, that's always our busiest time, and I think you continue to see opportunity, as Jerry mentioned earlier in the day part. You have stores opening a little bit earlier in some cases because there's lines out the door. I still feel very confident. There's a lot of ways to continue to drive traffic, and I think our operators are gonna continue to figure that out.
Yeah. You know, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, we know that we have room to grow, which is exciting. I think the early part of the business, like Tonya mentioned, was our 3:00 P.M. to 5:30 P.M. That's a segment that we can continue to focus on and get folks to come in a little earlier. You know, we know our legendary hours from 5:30 P.M. to 8:30 P.M. are very busy, which is awesome. We can also focus on that 8:30 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. and help maintain or get folks in a little bit later. Those are great opportunities for us, as well as even Saturday lunch. Our Saturday lunches, I think, is an area that can continue to.
It's really strong, but there are definitely segments of the business, and we run nine or 10 shifts. There are hours in there that we can work on the capacity side. The bump outs, all of the other things that we do, the more seats available help us too, and we're continuing to invest in that. Our relocations are bigger restaurants, which are really serving the community at a higher level. We're excited about the relocations when we get an opportunity to build a bigger store with more seating. That shows us that we can continue to grow the sales at the level we're at.
Great color. Thanks, guys.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Joshua Long with Stephens. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you for taking my question. We've touched on a couple different points in the call, but was curious if you could talk about how you think about protecting that overall value proposition outside of just the menu price. You know, culture, your legendary service, that's a huge part of what keeps guests coming back to that. Curious if there are aspects or areas where you're investing in that culture, that experience for your team members above and beyond just some of the, you know, labor inflation that we talked about.
Well, I mean, I think we go to create an environment that people want to wear our uniform and our logo and that means that we have to. For our employees, it's about being a people first company and really focusing on that and really trying to create a mentality or a mindset that people believe in what we're doing and how we're doing it. We're making our food from scratch. We're committed to high level hospitality and partnership. You know, every one of our MPs are bought into the business, and I think that level of community, us going out and doing a fall tour, traveling around to every region and every state, you know, talking to our partners and listening and hearing, that's a part of our culture.
It's a part of us being aware of what their needs are and how can we help them accomplish running their business at the very high level. I think part of our culture is about being committed to helping each level be successful, whether it be an hourly employee, a managing partner or a partner. How do we help everybody? Our folks here at the support center knowing their role and how we execute and how we take care of our partners, that's a big part of our culture, always will be.
That's very helpful. One quick follow-up in terms of the CapEx split out that was offered earlier, very helpful. As you think about the current environment and where construction cost inflation is and just the unit pipelines and some of the delays that we've heard about across the industry, is that an opportunity to perhaps lean into some of the, you know, the maintenance piece or some of those bump outs or, you know, just how nimble can you be or how efficient are you thinking about being in terms of some of those CapEx dollar deployments on a go-forward basis outside of just opening new units?
Well, we go through a pretty extensive process to budget, you know, and it really is more about making sure that we know the projects that are coming up, and we're working with our regional facility managers and our market partners to get done what they need. You know, our goal is really to make sure that we're maintaining those assets. That's the number one focus. It's not as much about, you know, we only have a certain amount of money to spend. It's more about what do we need to spend. Because we know when we take care of the assets, we can drive sales. It does help a lot. That's really what we're focused on when we think about that CapEx. I think, you know, even in times of inflation, we don't necessarily wanna slow that down.
We wanna continue to push and make sure we're taking care of everything. If we see some opportunity from a cost perspective to jump on a few more things, you know, we'll certainly, you know, try to do that. Right now, I think we're living in a little bit of an inflationary environment. We expect costs in 2023 to be, you know, somewhat similar to what they were this year. I think we're just gonna be living with that inflationary environment for a little while. It's not gonna put things down. Yeah.
Great. Thank you so much.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Jim Sanderson with Northcoast Research. Your line is open.
Hey, thanks for the question, and congratulations on a great quarter. I just wanted to follow up on the menu pricing. I think if I understand your process correctly, you've gone through and talked to your partners throughout the country to come up with that 2.9% menu price increase for late October. How does that position you relative to your peers? Did you go through a process of reviewing how other steakhouses and trade areas were taking price up? Does that keep you a little bit lagging or ahead of the game with respect to competitors?
Yeah. I think it's a clear component of where we want to be positioned. Do we know where we stand or stack against our competitors? Absolutely. When we look at our pricing structure and how we do things and how we plate our food, it's an important component that drives the value as well as the presentation. Yeah, we go through an extensive process of making sure we know where our gap is and what we have in our offering, and we feel very good about that process.
Is the way to think of that you're trending in step with your competitors, or maybe holding back a little bit? Just trying to get a sense of positioning.
No, I don't know exactly what they're taking and doing. I just know that we're very comfortable with where we're at.
We're always thinking about that gap, especially like Jerry said, on certain menu items. I think that's where we really keep our focus and our value is on the menu because we don't do that discounting off menu.
Mm-hmm.
That's something, you know, that's definitely, you know, important to our process.
Understood. Just a quick follow-up on the purchase of the eight franchise units. Is there anything to call out regarding maybe unusually strong average weekly sales or exceptional store margin, anything that might impact the corporate averages going forward?
There's always a little bit of savings from a cost perspective, you know, as they come into the company, you know, just from, you know, sheer volume, you know, whether it's insurance, just different things like that. Overall, it's a good, strong group of restaurants, pretty on average with what we see from a company perspective, from a sales perspective. We always expect that we're gonna have a little bit of savings, you know, just again, from being a large company like we are able to get a little bit from that perspective.
All right. Understood. Thank you very much.
Your next question comes from the line of Sara Senatore with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Hi. Thank you, and thanks for staying late for this. I just wanted to ask a question about the three concepts Bubba's 33, Jaggers, and Texas Roadhouse. I know the former two are not big on a relative basis, but given that you have a lens across kind of different models, you know, fast casual if you will versus casual dining and different customer bases, I'm just wondering if you are seeing anything different, you know, whether it's around the price point or the type of customer or the frequency, just as you compare across them with, you know, acknowledging that you have a much bigger sample for Texas Roadhouse than you do for the others. Thanks.
Texas Roadhouse has a dinner concept, has that customer. I think Bubba's probably shares some of that. We're a lunch and dinner and burgers and pizzas, so you know, a little bit of a country theme versus a rock and roll theme, and the energy in both concepts are very well. So I you know, I think we're seeing success in sales and profits in both Bubba's and Jaggers. Like I said, Jaggers, we've only got five stores up and running. We just opened our most recent one a month and a half ago, and we're very pleased with what it's doing. You know, and it's a fast food QSR side, but you know, the food.
We're very pleased in all three concepts of the food that we're serving and the hospitality that we're trying to create and the experience. You know, all three are a little bit different. Bubba's is just, It's an exciting concept. It's fun, it's energetic. Pizzas, burgers, wings, all of the offerings that we have, that makes it very different. It's got a different vibe, so, it's fun, absolutely fun. Jaggers, man, it's just freaking good.
Okay. Thank you. That's noted. In terms of the current environment, you know, again, sounds like just sort of seeing strength across all three as opposed to kind of different consumption patterns depending on, you know, the day parts or the segment that you're addressing, like you said, you know, kind of QSR, fast casual versus full service.
Yeah. I mean, Roadhouse and Bubba's both generating traffic growth, so that's really good to see. Bubba's has a little less pricing in the menu than Roadhouse does, so comps are a little lower because of that. From a traffic perspective, looks really good. Jaggers, you know, it's really early days. We are seeing, you know, good success, and we have four restaurants, so, learning a lot on that concept and seeing some really good success and consumer uptake on that. It's a lower average check. Obviously, drive through, and that makes it a bit different. But we're seeing some good uptake from, you know, the consumers. Really, it's resonating with them. I think as Jerry said, it's the food. The food is phenomenal.
Got it. Right. Good food, good prices, is working. That makes a lot of sense. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Strelzik with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you. Thanks for squeezing me in. I'll lump two questions together here. The first is on the pricing conversations that you had with your partners. Did you note any maybe change in the tenor of those conversations this time given kind of the dialogue around the consumer environment, less inflation that you're facing versus the prior several maybe rounds of those pricing conversations? Was there more variance maybe in the feedback? That's the first question. The second question is just on the value proposition, which obviously you're very comfortable with and you know the trends are very strong. I guess if we were to go into an environment where you know we saw a lot of deflation or the food away.
food at home, excuse me, environment got much more value oriented, would that kind of change the way that you think about it? Or how would you go about preserving the value equation then? Do you see that as a risk at all? Thanks.
Well, I'll tell you, Andrew, on the last question, we haven't seen that necessarily historically, you know. Food away from home has varied over the years and you don't necessarily see, you know, a lot one way or the other from that, I don't think. Maybe that's because we're a steakhouse, which kind of elevates, you know, people's expectations and what they're coming out for. They wanna come out and have that great experience, have that big steak and all of that, so it doesn't play as much a part for them when they see value, you know, in food at home. I don't know for sure, but that could be some of it.
I would say that's kind of the way I would see it from that perspective. Then the first part of your question, you were talking about pricing. I tell you know, we took less pricing than what's rolling off. I think that speaks to the operators, you know, being comfortable, with, you know, how things are looking and versus, you know, a year ago when we were facing some pretty big uncertainty from the inflation standpoint, particularly on the commodity side, and labor continuing to go up and all of those things. I think overall, they do feel, you know, and the tone was very good and, they do feel good about their ability to drive top-line traffic.
Great. Thanks.
Your next question comes from the line of Brian Vaccaro with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Hey. Thank you. Just two quick ones for me. Just wanna circle back on sales. You obviously saw a nice acceleration in the three-year trend over the last three months. As you think about Q4, Tonya, is there anything unusual or calendar shifts, et cetera, we should be mindful of? Or is that a reasonable run rate to think about working through our fourth quarter assumptions?
There really isn't anything from a calendar shift. I think for Christmas shifts from a Friday, Saturday to a Saturday, Sunday, so it's still kind of that weekend event. You know, there could be some positive benefit, you know, maybe a little bit because you lose Friday, but we're not really thinking. Halloween going from a Sunday to a Monday could be slightly positive, but you know, we're not really building a whole lot in from that perspective. I don't think there's anything. You know, we are lapping kind of the Omicron impact from last year, so we think that could be you know, a positive for the rest of this quarter, so as we head into you know, January, February. That's really all I can think to mention, Brian.
Okay. Great. On the other OpEx line, you've digested some very high inflation in that line this year and last. I'm curious there if there are certain costs in that line that are starting to plateau. As you think about 2023, could you see inflation in that line flatten out if not potentially turn deflationary given how unusually high they've been in recent years?
I mean, I think that's always possible. I think some of the items you're seeing in their utilities, they just tend to be they tend to ride pretty big waves of volatility, so we'll see kind of how that plays out. Some of the positive performance on the other operating line is masked a bit because of that benefit that we had. The benefit from that GL insurance reserve is masking some of the inflation, is what I mean to say. We are still seeing continued inflation on credit card charges. That's more just usage on credit cards, the types of payments that are getting processed. Utilities, repairs and maintenance. Maybe there is some opportunity as supplies get a little bit easier, it's easier to get a hold of equipment.
Maybe we see a little less on the R&M side. We'll see. I would like to hope so, but I think it might be too early to say.
Okay. All right. Thank you.
Thank you.
There are no further questions. I'll turn the call back to Ms. Tonya Robinson for closing remarks.
All right. Thanks, Josh. Thanks, everybody, for being on the call tonight. If you have any other questions, don't hesitate to reach out. Everybody have a good evening. Thank you.
Thank you.
This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.