April 24 Diary Entry
For those who have been following my posts and articles, you have heard the news that the sales of the restaurant industry hit their lowest point at the end of March. Since then, sales have been improving slowly on a week-to-week basis. In recent weeks, the Mirus Index has shown an increase in sales on a same-store basis.
Since Easter, the rate of sales increase accelerated to about 16%, that is until a couple of days ago.
So, what happened?
April 22 and 23 were suddenly negative after a long string in positive increases over the previous week. This isn't really a surprise because April 22 was the first day to compare to a very strong day the previous week. You can see in the chart below that April 15 saw an increase of 23.3%. the small negative growth on April 22 was due to the strong previous week. Combined, the growth rate is about 10% for both weeks. Not bad in such crazy times.
So, I will provide an update soon that will either show this is a short-lived phenomenon, or the start of a new trend.
Until then, please be safe!
April 20 Diary Entry
Things appear to be improving quickly for restaurants that are still operating. The chart below shows the 21 day period from March 31 - April 20, 2020. Each day is compared to the same day from the previous week. Easter is one of the holidays in the date range that has a significant negative effect on restaurant sales. The Sunday after Easter traditionally has a big lift over the previous week, and this year was no different with sales increasing over 60% (it has been clipped in the graph to avoid distortion).
Over this period sales have increased almost 10% while the same period last year experienced a sales decline of (-1.02%). In the week following Easter, the median increase over previous week is 16% - and that is eliminating the Easter distortion. The aggregate dollars for all locations still operating has been increasing for three weeks in a row.
Why are we seeing this type of jump in sales?
Keep in mind that the numbers here are only for restaurants still operating. Overall sales for Mirus clients, including restaurants currently closed, are still down more than -50% on average.
There are lots of factors that are changing quickly, causing the sales to jump around. However, my take on this trend is that both customers and restaurant operators are learning how to adapt to the new situation. Customers are learning how to buy curbside, for example. And, restaurant operators have developed innovative menus such as family bundles to help drive sales. The new normal is settling in, at least to some degree.
While some restaurants continue to close their doors, others are opening up. We know of one client who shut their restaurants down entirely for a few weeks. They spent the time on menus and getting the technology deployed for them to do curbside. Their plan is to reopen locations slowly, one market at a time. There is a lot of confidence behind those decisions, and it is good to see.
On April 20, the governor of Georgia announced that the dining rooms of restaurants could start to reopen on Monday, April 27. We know that decision contains a lot of risk, but also a lot of potential upside. It will be a watershed event and I hope it goes well because a setback would be devastating emotionally and economically.
Soon, we will be measuring the re-emergence of restaurant dining. How different do you expect life to be after Covid-19? Will the industry ever get back to the volumes of business it was experiencing in January 2020? Stay tuned!
April 13 Diary Entry
The restaurant industry started the year 2020 stronger than any year in more than a decade, although the impact of Covid-19 was already working its way into the numbers. Between March 12 and March 16, city by city, state by state shut down the restaurant dining room. All of the sports leagues also suspended operations. Curbside, takeout, drive-thru and delivery were now the only service channels for restaurants. That is when it hit the fan. Since then, is there any good news?
First, it looks like we have reached another plateau in the sales trend for all Mirus clients. If you have a restaurant operating today, it is likely doing a little better than last week.
Second, the more we learn, the more complexity we see. For example, we now see in the data that there have been three cycles of decline and recovery since the end of January. The first sales decline we can see in the data is in early February, after the first set of cities had confirmed cases. The first confirmation was on January 21, 2020 in Washington state, and the first person-to-person transmission was confirmed in Chicago on January 30. The World Health Organization and the US declared a health emergency at this time, leading the first wave of restaurant sales declines.
The image below illustrates three cycles so far. This chart compares each day’s sales to the same day from the previous week. The first declines start on Feb 1 and last a week before sales recover a bit the following week. The second decline starts Feb 18 followed by the second recovery a week later. The big wave of sales declines started in early March, and by March 17 the restaurants that were still open were operating at about 50% of last year. The declines continued until about March 27, at least on a week-to-week basis. However, the first indication that a new bottom had been reached was on March 22, when the decline in sales dollars versus last week was smaller than the day before. In essence, we were clawing our way back to "0" from March 22 to March 27.
Compared to last year on a same-store basis the Mirus Index is still recording declines in excess of -50%. But, when compared to the previous week, we have seen steady positive gains for the past two weeks. For the restaurants that are still operating, things have started to improve. From March 28 to April 11, sales are have grown about 5.3% for restaurants still operating.
Mirus Index is a measurement of same store sales and traffic across the Mirus client base. This data comes directly from thousands of restaurants across the country and includes data from every type of restaurant - from ice cream stands to fine dining. Sourcing the data directly from these restaurants protects accuracy.
Over the past decade the Mirus Index has been in sync with the larger benchmark measurements. It only includes restaurants that are open each day this year, and the same days from the previous year - something Mirus calls Matching logic. So, if a restaurant was completely shut down yesterday but was open last year, it is not included in the Index. The effect is to understate the negative in the current pandemic.
The restaurant sales impact of COVID-19 continues to get worse through March 18. For background purposes, the following picture shows what Mirus Index was reporting during the first two months of the year. The results were very encouraging given the sales trends over the past few years. February was softer than January, but this was the best start to a year for the industry in years.
The last two weeks of February may contain some effect from COVID-19 in a few markets but the impact to the overall industry was small. Things started changing in March, and for many restaurants the decline in sales and customer traffic drove the industry negative on or around March 3rd.
By March 16, several cities, counties, and some states ordered restaurants closed for dine-in eating, and some cities shut down restaurant operations totally. The news of new restrictions on restaurants continues through the date of this posting.
If you are a restaurant operator and your restaurants are fully operational today, you are considered lucky. We have evidence that some restaurant brands are actually seeing a small bump in sales compared to last year, mostly in locations with drive-thru operations.
Since March 1, sales and traffic have plummeted. As mentioned earlier, these measurements do not include restaurants who have ceased operations this month. Overall, we are measuring a decline in total restaurants sales around <75%> versus the same time last year.
I feel disappointed in the local, state and federal governments with a bias against restaurant operators. There are a range of restrictions we see across the country. In some cities, restaurants can operate takeout and delivery, and others have forced complete closures, yet they allow grocery stores to operate with hundreds of people standing in line to check out.
In the US, half of the food dollars are spent in restaurants. The effect of these edicts/decrees/statues is to push the dollars that ordinarily would be spent in restaurants into the grocery vertical. I question whether grocery is any less safe than a restaurant, and I am sure the grocery chains are happy with a huge increase in their revenues.
Hopefully, cities and states with rethink their rules and allow restaurants to operate with reduced occupancy to maintain social distancing. Restaurants are trained to clean, and I believe most are able to maintain a safe environment, or at least as safe as a grocery store.
We all have a voice, and I ask you to consider letting your mayor and state government officials know that you want your local restaurants to be allowed to re-open.
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Mirus provides services in data management and solutions in custom reporting for the restaurant industry.
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