Restaurant Brands Asia Ltd (NSE: RBA) Q3 2025 Earnings Call dated Jan. 29, 2025
Corporate Participants:
Rajeev Varman — Group Chief Executive Officer, Whole-Time Director
Sumit P. Zaveri — Group Chief Financial Officer, Chief Business Officer
Kapil Grover — Chief Marketing Officer – India
Gaurav S. Ajjan — Head of Strategy and Investor Relations
Analysts:
Naveen Trivedi — Analyst
Avi Mehta — Analyst
Aditya Soman — Analyst
Jay Doshi — Analyst
Tejas Shah — Analyst
Amnish Aggarwal — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Restaurant Brands Asia Limited Q3 FY ’25 Earnings Conference Call hosted by Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing the star zero on your touchstone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr Naveen Trivedi from Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Naveen Trivedi — Analyst
Thank you. On behalf of Motilal Oswal, I’m Navin Kiwedi. Would like to welcome you all to the Brand 3Q FY ’25 earnings conference call. On the management today we have Mr Rajee Garma, Whole-Time Director and Group CEO; Mr Sumit, Group CFO and Chief Business Officer; Mr Kapri, Group CMO; and Mr Gaurav, Head of Strategy and IR. I would now hand over the call to the management for the opening remarks. Over to you, sir.
Rajeev Varman — Group Chief Executive Officer, Whole-Time Director
Yeah, this is Raj Verman Rajiv, Verman, you can call me he is the one. Good afternoon, good evening. Thank you for joining the call. I’m going to briefly kind of outlay the strategy and the KPI results on-top line and then hand it over to Sumit, who will then carry you through the numbers and then over to Kapil. So I’m going to spread this between Indonesia and India like I always do. So first, you know, I just want to make sure that everyone is aware that we have crossed 500 restaurants as a brand in India. If I recall, I started this brand along with my team in 2014. Actually, we put the company together in 2013, we spent a year putting the concept together, products together and so forth, supply-chain and so forth. We opened our first 10 restaurants in 2014 between November 9 and December 31st. That was in 2014. Today, 2024 December, we have closed that 10 restaurants to 510. So we have put 500 restaurants between December 31, 2014 till this December 31st.
So thanks to the entire team that works extremely hard to make it one of the fastest-growing brands in this country and probably one of the fastest to reach 500 restaurants. And thanks to all the supporters out there who not only support us through their investments, but also, you know, being a very good customer to our brand as well. Now if I look at the priorities for India, it’s — we have kind of stayed still on what we wanted to do and we continue to do that and will continue into the next year. So the top three things that we are working on, which I shared with you last-time was one is to grow dine-in traffic, right? So we had a respectful delivery business with a one of the highest traffic coming into our delivery business. And we wanted to now start building the dine-in business post you know, now it’s almost two years post COVID. So we are focused on that. We have built a very strong and couple will share that with you and you get into marketing, how we’re doing in terms of building that business. But dine-in continues to be positive, not just in sales, but also in traffic. We continue to drive more-and-more people every single quarter into our restaurants. So very, very happy about that and we’ll continue to focus on driving more-and-more business into our dine-in restaurants.
The second focus area in-building this is through innovations. And we shared with you that we had kind of rolled-out the veg puff in the past and now we are sharing with you we are the first brand in India to have launched the chicken puff as well in India. So that including all other innovations, including the cafe and so forth, we have continued to drive traffic into our restaurants through these initiatives. Second big bucket for us is the digital-first brand as I’ve outlined last-time. And today, again, starting only about 18 months ago when we had no self-ordering kiosk, all the orders were taken on pause and between this last 18 months, we have taken this portfolio of 510 restaurants to 437 restaurants with SOKs, self-ordering kiosks. 90% of our sales that comes into our restaurants, 90%, I repeat that is digital. It’s either through our kiosk, where the customers place it or it’s through our table ordering their QR codes on the table or it’s our app, which allows you to order not only delivery, but also dine-in and we are doing a big push through building our business through the dine-in app as well. So again, 90% of those orders are regional, 437 restaurants have SOKs or cures and they also have a table ordering and so forth and the digital journey.
Now we’re going to move the balance in this next quarter, we will reach and have, you know, close to 100% of our restaurants with this King’s journey, which we call the digital journey, which means SOKs and so forth. So that’s one big, big initiative that we are focusing on. Now the app is another one that we are continuing to grow on our downloads year-over-year, it’s about 30% growth on downloads of our digital app and Kapil will kind of dig into a little deeper on how we are using that in-building our business over there. The next pillar is for us is profitability, right? We told you that we are wholly focused on the restaurant profitability, but also laser-focused on making sure that digital — our delivery business is — we improve our profitability on that digital business. So as we look at Q3, the delivery profitability has gone up by 70 bps and we continue to push that in the northern direction. If I go from this perio to the KPI results for India for Q3 FY ’25, as I said, we reached 510 stores, that’s 46 stores over last quarter, which means we built 46 stores in this quarter, 69 stores year-over-year. INR494 crores in revenues, which is 0.7% quarter-over-quarter and 11.2% year-over-year. Average — our average ADS or average daily sales was 114. Now SSG was only negative 0.5, basically flat SSSG and which means that the ADS of all these stores that were comping over last year was basically what it was. And then the new stores, which is roughly 90, 80, 90 stores that we’re not comping, they have bought down the ADS roughly by about 5,000. But those are new stores.
And like we always say, the new stores usually reach the average 80s in two years. So that we are hoping to catch-up. Our gross margin, 67.8%, improvement there 0.3% quarter-over-quarter and 0.7 year-over-year. Restaurant EBITDA is a good part of — in-spite of having a lower radius and literally flat sales in terms of SFSG. As a company, we delivered $59.6 million, which is about INR596 million, which is INR59 crores in-restaurant level EBITDA. This is numbers that I’m giving you, 14.5% quarter-over-quarter and 9.7% year-over-year. So that’s a well done job with tighter sales delivering a higher profit. Then finally, company-level EBITDA, again, a very good story here. We have delivered INR30.9 crores in total company EBITDA, again an improvement, 26.7% improvement quarter-over-quarter and 2% year-over-year. A steady performance again in-line with our goals, which is to make our business more-and-more profitable each day. We continue and most of this profits will share with you and Sumit is speaking is driven by many initiatives that we have shared with you in the past, whether it is utilities, whether it is gross margin, whether it is rent — rents at the restaurant and so forth. So all these initiatives, including some prices that we take from time-to-time have grown our profitability in that direction.
Now just coming to Indonesia. Indonesia, we have spoken extensionally about. I just want to kind of update people that may not know you know, of course the war in Gaza or the shooting has been put on-hold you know there’s a halt on on the war over there some good sentiments of that is flying into Indonesia, with the US being involved in bringing that you know, ceasefire in effect, right? And we are seeing an increase in traffic in our restaurants, which is a good thing because people initially didn’t want to be seen in our restaurants or in any of the US brands Indonesia. So that’s a good thing that people are now coming in and we see a positive traffic in our restaurants. The last couple of months have been very good. January has been a good month-in terms of recovery in Indonesia in terms of traffic into the restaurants. However, we have closed stores there in the past and we have shared those with you in the last meeting. We continue to run 147 stores, which is 15 stores less year-over-year that we run. On the Popeyes front, we run 25 stores. We are not building any stores there for the next couple of years as we have told you in the past as well. Our revenues were at this is again IDR and Sumit will share with you any INR numbers, but 269 billion, which is still negative 9.6 year-over-year. And then we go to average daily sales, which is at $17.6 million. SSSG, which was deeply red last quarter has come down to only negative 4.1%. So we see that kind of positive drift of people coming back into the business.
Popeye’s average you know ADS or average daily sales was at $14 million. This is a definite area of focus and couple will touch on what we are doing in terms of both Burging and Popeyes and Indonesia and we’ll get you on speed on that. There was $39.5 billion in terms of a company EBITDA loss. This is again pre-India’s number idea. And I’ll just give you our strategy again over there is very simple. We want to continue to now strengthen and bring back our restaurants business and there are multiple strategies. Value has been instilled. The products, as I’ve told you in the past, now we have the full range of chicken products over there. We have rationalized the restaurants. So we have closed those restaurants with very low volumes as well as high losses. So we can optimize that piece in there for our portfolio. We continue to work diligently with landlords in terms of reducing rents and that work will continue through the next year as well to make sure that those restaurants which are in the brinks of becoming positive that they start becoming in terms of restaurant-level EBITDA will turn positive. And then we bought down corporate overheads as when we took over this business, it was at about INR65 crores. We have brought it down to around INR45 crore INR46 crores and we are working further to bring it down.
And in the next quarter, we will make some significant gains on that as well. So all fronts will fix the product-line, fix the infrastructure, which is the restaurants, getting in dine-in with new marketing and again couple will talk to you about what we are doing in terms of marketing over there and then reducing corporate overheads as we kind of shrunk down the portfolio to about 147 restaurants. So that’s basically the strategy, good vibes over there. You know the new government over there has — has said that they will aim to add 80% kind of growth versus 5% initially that they were sitting on. There’s a lot of pro-India, Indonesia conversations, five MOUs have been signed between the two countries. And I think there’s going to be some good leverage we can use from our distribution system here in India moving forward into Indonesia. So those are the key highlights for Indonesia and India.
And then with that, I will turn it over to Sumit Zavery, who will walk you through the numbers on both of them.
Sumit P. Zaveri — Group Chief Financial Officer, Chief Business Officer
Thank you, Raj. I’ll just quickly take you through the India and Indonesia performance on the financial side. I’m on Slide 10. We ended, as Raj mentioned, we ended the quarter with 510 restaurants, added 69 restaurants. Parallel to as we were adding stores, we also kind of continued or to increase our footprint on the cafe side. We are currently having 433 restaurants having cafe. Large part of that or literally the entire growth at the moment on cafe side is on account of new-store additions that we’ve done. The gap of close to around 80 restaurants that we have, we will keep continuity to evaluate and as the — as we feel opportunity is right, we will add cafe in the balanced part of the portfolio as well. Our digital has been our focus this year. We want to take the journey forward to make sure that we understand and know our customers better. This is — this year we’ve made the investments on the digital side. Currently, we’ve covered around 437 restaurants, which — where we’ve completed our digital investments there. We will over next quarter or so, you will see that number would have ramped-up to the entire part of the portfolio and we are working on this because we want on the layer of this. We want to now go to the next layer of CRM and royalty once we’ve completed the cycle of our investment.
So that’s literally how we expect this part of the journey to go-forward. As far as ADS is concerned, yes, our SSG for the quarter has been flat. Our ADS stands at INR114,000, largely or slightly lower than what we’ve seen in the previous quarter or the same year last-time is more because of the new stores that we’ve — that we’ve opened. But at the same time, we made sure that this — while the EDS might have come down, we’d kind of make sure that we bring efficiencies on the — at the store-level on the P&L. And as you can see in the bottom part of the chart, consistently, we’ve been growing our store-level EBITDA from 7.8% to 12% and trying to kind of make sure that it remains in a reasonably good range of while the EDS remains in a very tight in a tight margin. So that’s something which we’ve been working hard on. As far as company EBITDA, it is really reflecting the trend on restaurant EBITDA. We’ve been growing it up — growing it back up to 6% over last four quarters as you can see from 2.4 very clearly, we’ve moved back to 6.2% with PDS at INR114. We feel very strongly about our journey on restaurant and company EBITDA side. We’ve been talking about gross margins. You can see that we moved from 67.1% to 67.8%. We continue to remain positive on that part of our journey and the trend that we’ve been talking about in the past, we will kind of continue to take steps over to get to that our goal on the gross margin side.
Going on to overall performance, while I’ve always spoken about the larger part of the overall India performance part, just to kind of reflect one-line which I would like to kind of highlight that we’ve been focusing parallelly on the G&A side, you would realize that we’ve kind of now maintaining the G&A on a total basis of around INR27 crores to INR28 crores. We would remain tight on this going-forward as well and see how we can kind of bring some more efficiencies as a percentage to revenue going-forward or going-forward as well. So with that, I’ll quickly run on to Indonesia part of performance. Indonesia part, the growth — the revenue stands at INR143 is a revenue combined for both the brands put together a drop of 9.5%, but that’s predominantly because of — because of the store closure decisions that we’ve taken over last year to make sure that the numbers could kind of start looking better. Last year-on account of where the market was, we had taken in order to kind of rise sales-through delivery, we had to take certain actions on — which dropped our margins. We’ve moved back from 55.8% as you can see to 57.8%.
Some part is correction that we’ve done on the delivery side of the pricing and then certain other initiatives as dine-in part of the business comes — comes back. So we will kind of — we feel positive that we’ve actually been able to come back to 57.8% and then work towards how do we take this forward. As you can kind of — and then as we kind of make the recovery in Indonesia, we would — you would see us some amount of marketing investments to happen from our side to revive or bring sales back. As Raj was saying, we have seen early shoots of dine-in sales improving and which is also reflected in our occupancy other expenses line. The increase over quarter-on-quarter or over last year is largely represented by somewhat by the marketing investment that we made in Indonesia to just start recovering sales back.
We might see some part of the trend also into next year as we want to continue to recover Thailand sales. Parallelly, while we are working on improving the sales, we do understand that we need to be really tight with our corporate G&A. We’ve continued that journey in improving the overall corporate G&A number in Indonesia. For the quarter, as you can see, now we stand at INR10 crores for the quarter from the INR15 crore that we had last year same quarter. So we are kind of definitely moving on this side and we would kind of work further down to see how we can further optimize these costs. And that part of the journey will continue. But we are strongly focused on how do we kind of get the overall Indonesia performance to where we wanted to be.
I would kind of not get into the consolidated performance having gone into India and Indonesia and rather turn the — turn the page to Kapil who can take us through the marketing initiatives for India and Indonesia.
Kapil Grover — Chief Marketing Officer – India
Thanks. Thank you, Sumit, and good evening to everyone. I’ll start by talking about the India business. India, our strategy has been very clear and consistent. Our number-one pillar, value in any retail business, more so food retail, the life science of the business is footfall in the stores and we continue to focus on that. There are three parts to our value strategy. This is a 24 79, which is the price point strategy for driving new footfall in. We’ve got two Wed at 79 Chicken at 99 and we’ve seen very good traffic growth for the whole year and including the last quarter in dine-in on the back of this program. Now we have a new layer, which is the app deal. So consumers who use the BK app get exclusive coupons. That’s another way of delivering value to the consumer. And the third component of value is shareable meals, which we launch these thematic meals every season from New Year’s to Valentine’s to Diwali and these are shareable meals with two burgers at a good value for the consumer for these occasions.
So all these three dimensions of value help us grow traffic in dine-in. As I mentioned, we had a strong quarter on dine-in traffic and sales growth. In dine-in, now what we have done, as consumers come into the stores, we have strengthened our snacking portfolio. We started the year-by launching the veg pizza puck, which gave us phenomenal results in many markets in the country. Then we added the chicken pizza puck, which is a first-in the QSR and it’s also giving us very good responses to consumers. So with these products, if you look at our snacking portfolio, which is the largest daypart and the most important category — one of the most important categories in any QSR business is because consumers added on to their main items and use it for multiple occasions, we have a fairly strong menu now with the puffs, with the fries, loaded fries, high-fried red strips, boneless chicken wings, fried and grilled wing and nuggets and all of these products with the portfolio. In addition to that, cafe, an important layer-in our business, our focus has been on driving awareness.
Now we have 433 cafe distribution points, so to say, on-the-ground in-stores. The focus remains on driving awareness and we’ve been doing a lot of interesting social media engagement programs to make sure we connect with the Gen Z and the millennials to make sure they are aware that there is coffee available at Burger King and very good-quality coffee available. To give you one example, we did an activation on roast the roast, right? So you had coffee in multiple places as consumers, as fans. Tell us about your poor or good coffee experiences. We will talk about it and we’ll make sure that we give you a great cup of coffee at DK Cafe with the 100% Arabica beans for free-to come and try our product, right, and multiple other such programs. The recent one was the Fortune teller, which gave us about 6,000 participations, which is quite fantastic on a social media contest.
Also in dine-in, I’m on Slide number 18, we continue to drive digital transformation. Raj spoke about it, Sumit spoke about it. As we get more-and-more customers in the store, the experience in the store is getting elevated by leaps and bounds. So there is a 100% digital experience in the store. A customer can come in and order on the self-order kios can use the QR code to skip the queue. Their food will be served on the table. So there is a full 360 degree experience improvement in the store. And now about 90% of our orders are coming through these digital channels. So that tells you that the consumers are really appreciating this new-store experience and are coming back more often and liking the experience they’re getting at a store. A component of this digital experience is the BK app. Now that is very important to lay the foundation of the CRM program for the future. What we’re doing here is that we are offering exclusive deals to customers who log-in on the BK app. We’ve seen cumulative installs grow to 13 million, which is almost 30% growth year-on-year. A lot of this has happened through organic visibility at store through a lot of merchandising at the store. We’ve driven app exclusive deals and seen a user base grow by 2.3 times and also orders grow by 3.3 times.
So very good sort of growth. We are in the acquisition phase right now as we reach this sort of phase where I’ve acquired enough users on the app, we will start doing the next phase of engagement and frequency. While we build these experiences in the store, we make sure we connected with the users, our fans, our Gen Z in very exciting content pieces on social media. Just to give you an example in Diwali, given the fact that working stands for taste and at working, we use that insight to build a concept called the Swaska Pataka on Diwali. We use very interesting Diwali packaging, very engaging content, consumers could use artificial intelligence to create their own packaging, put their name and had a lot of fun with that and we got amazing participation on this contest. That was India. Now I’ll switch to Indonesia. In Indonesia, again, going backwards strategic pillars, very well thought through and consistent. We are building a strong menu. Chicken is a big part of the menu there. We’ve got three variants of chicken there now, classic spicy and dumped. Spicy was a miss in our mini. We launched that last year and last quarter we promoted that in media as well. Burgers have been renovated. Whopper is now a much better tasting burger as per the Indonesian palate.
We’ve launched — continue launch LTOs and desserts, which is a popular category in that market. We continue to work with Milo and Nestle to launch these products there. And we have also a strong value proposition at 17k, which we have been promoted through coupons, through social, digital, meta and multiple other platforms. What’s very heartening to see that there is some light at the end of, given the geopolitical challenges we’ve had in the market. In the recent times, we’ve seen some reversal of those headwinds. We see, if you focus on the numbers on Slide number 23, November and December, we started to see our ADS grow. Yes, we are lapping over a weak period of last year, but it’s good to see that especially in dine-in, consumers are now willing to come back to the restaurant, come back to a Western QSR, right? So some bit of that innovation is going away, which is a very good sign, not just for us, we’re also seeing the industry improve across, which is a overall for market in that country.
If you go to Slide number 24, our SSSG in dine-in has become positive now. Again, I would temper that, yes, this is over low periods, but it’s good to see that consumers are willing to come back, right? So that shows us some green shoots in the future. Now this isn’t on the back of the chicken campaign. We were on media in November. We continue to stay committed to the business. That’s why we made the investment in media, in marketing and promoted a core menu item, which is spicy chicken. People love that product there. We saw some good returns on that.
And we continue to innovate on Slide number 25 with whop-off variants, with mushroom steak, with desserts, with coffee to make sure the consumers — we see relevant to the consumers in that market. On the last slide, just to tell you, as I said, we are seeing some improvement in trend. We’ve always seen that improvement whenever we had a consistent marketing efforts. Unfortunately, there have been events that have held us back, but we see that trend coming back and returning, right?
Now, I would hand over to Gaurav to close the presentation.
Gaurav S. Ajjan — Head of Strategy and Investor Relations
Thanks, Kapil. So on the outlook, we have already achieved our target of 510 stores this year. We are currently in the process of finalizing our annual operating plan for next year. Once we do that, we will come back to you in the Q4 update with the outlook for FY ’26 and beyond.
So thank you everyone for joining in. I would request the moderator to please open up the floor for Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touchstone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star N2. Participants are requested to use answer while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue the first question is from the line of Avi from Macquarie. Please go-ahead.
Avi Mehta
Yeah. Hi, everyone. Thanks a lot for the opportunity. My first question, if you could just share your thoughts on the near-term demand trends in India and how do you see the same-store sales growth path for us behaving.
Rajeev Varman
Yeah, so look, I mean, forward, if you look — we look at backwards first, our demand in the restaurant continues to be strong, right? We continue to report and share with you that our dine-in traffic continues to improve, right? So we don’t see that this trend that we are having in our dine-in restaurants or dine-in sales is going to reverse in any fashion, right? So we only improvements are going to come on-top of this. We have taken a strategic decision to optimize our profitability on delivery. So while we have worked very hard to drive more people into our restaurants, which we have done very successfully in the last several months. We have also, on the other hand, optimized the total traffic coming into delivery and increased the profitability of our delivery business. You know in — you will see that fully 70 basis-points this last year.
You’re going to start seeing the full effect of it when you have the full-quarter with all these things in effect that has put in. So you will — as a company, we are focusing on timing traffic and that continues to grow and we think that it’s going to continue the way we are seeing in our restaurants in the last few quarters. And on the delivery front, we will continue to optimize and make sure that we are doing profitable business over there making more-and-more money versus having more traffic there. So these are two strategic pillars of ours. We kind of continue to stay true to that. And I’m pretty strong about both these pillars and I think our traffic and our dine-in will continue the way it has been in the last two, three months.
Avi Mehta
No. So where I was coming from is if I look at the 3Q performance, there clearly is improvement in the same-store sales growth trajectory and that’s congratulations to you guys. Was trying to kind of see if you were to parse it on a monthly basis or if you look at what has happened till-date, does that give you any confidence on this further rising or improving beyond the initiatives because there is a macro-environment which is concerning and that is where this question was stemming from.
Rajeev Varman
Well, look, without making any forward-looking statements, it’s pretty clear that the industry is — you will see the numbers come in. You know there’s a couple of companies already — three companies have released their numbers all show that the negativity is kind of vanishing and the positive sales is coming. So I think you should just kind of project from there like we are all doing. And you know, like I said, we have seen positive sales in our dine-in business and we continue to see that. We don’t see that changing any differently.
Avi Mehta
Perfect. Got it, sir. And sir, secondly, as we explore the path to raise additional growth capital. Could you also share your thoughts on how should we look at capital allocation between India and Indonesia?.
Rajeev Varman
Yes. So Indonesia, we have already said this in the last quarter and I’ll kind of repeat this out here. Our intention is not to build any restaurants there over the next couple of years. Our intention is to make that business profitable. So capital allocation over there is strictly going to be and what Sumit was saying earlier, only to drive sales in the restaurant, which means we will only be looking at strategically spending money in marketing area to drive more and that we will test that through before we kind of spend any capital in trying to bring more-and-more marketing sales. But there will be some strategic spending above and beyond the 5% we spend in Indonesia on marketing next year. And that’s predominantly will be based on thorough analysis of where the market is in the right time to do that exact — that spending. But apart from that, there will be no CapEx allocation to building new restaurants as we are not going to build any Burgings this coming year and we’re not going to build any Popeyes this coming year.
Instead, on the opposite end, we are going to continue to drive a reduction in G&A, overheads, administrative expenses. We have told in the past that we have, you know, reduced our support center, our head office over there to half its size. We have done a significant reduction on our G&A in terms of both people side as well as other expenses that we do. And the final piece over there is we are also working on rent reduction all-around from all the restaurants and we are making some good success — initial successes over there. But predominantly, you will see Indonesia turnaround only when the entire market over there has positivity in terms of same-store sales. And we have seen two months of dine-in positive sales, but we want to stay optimistic, but also stay kind of very true to it. So hang in there and wait-and-watch us kind of turn that business around.
Avi Mehta
Okay, sir. Okay. I mean, that is coming from. So if I hear you correctly, it’s primarily loss funding that would be required. And I was just trying to get a sense on how much do we have — do you think the pain is there? That’s what I was trying to gain. I know part of it may require a forward-looking understanding, but just an appreciation of how do you see the requirement is where I was coming from, but I got an answer. There is more loss funding that you would look for and the expectation is that funding will go down. That’s a fair — that’s a fair way to summarize it, right?
Rajeev Varman
Yeah. Look, see, I gave you both the numbers, right? I told you the top-line is improving in dine-in restaurants and hopefully we’ll catch on the rest of the business. And I also told you that we have cut-down our overhead G&A to from INR65 crores when we took over the business down to INR40 some crores — INR40 crores and then we are working on further reducing it. So all our losses on the administrative side, which is sitting at is going to be cut by that much 40% or whatever that number is, right? So that in addition to increasing our ADS, you should be able to kind of project that. We don’t want to — and on this meeting kind of tell you how much we’re going to allocate or hold. We are going to be very, very judicious with what we put in there. One, because of timing, we want to make sure we don’t put money before, before the right occasion. And second is to be prudent about how much we put in and which channel we put in. But predominantly, whatever we spend there will be to cover the losses or to invest in marketing until the sales over. That’s predominantly what we are looking in terms of spending there. Is that fair?
Avi Mehta
Yeah, that’s fair. Thank you. Thanks a lot, sir. That’s all from my side. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Aditya Suman from CLSA. Please go-ahead.
Aditya Soman
Hi, good evening. Actually, just one question on Indonesia for me. So would it be fair to say at this point that Indonesia from here is sort of looking at the up? I mean, the worst is behind in terms of a demand environment perspective, the whole geopolitical situation as well seems to be at least on the men. So from here on, at least with no further store adds in the region, we should start seeing an inflection in same-store sales growth.
Rajeev Varman
Yeah, three things, right? First is the geopolitical environment seems to be kind of going-in the right direction, right? The war has stopped, there’s some good conversations about US helping that happen. There’s a little reduction in anti-US kind of feelings and I think it will take a little while. It won’t happen overnight. But we’re seeing some positive movements in that in the market. So that’s one big piece, right? The second is we have optimized the store, but we haven’t stopped optimizing. We will continue to look at stores where rent reduction is not possible and where the landlord is not willing to do it or if the rent reduction given to us is not enough, we will optimize — continue to optimize the store.
We are not going to continue to sit there and wait for all the sales to come in. We will get there together. While the market is improving, we are also working towards getting that to a positive cash-flow over there, at least breakeven very quickly. So that’s the second-biggest. The third bucket really is, there is no need to be building restaurants here because we have kind of sat down and done an agreement with our franchiser in terms of this and we are not going to be building — and it’s the right thing, right? You don’t want to continue building restaurants where you’re trying to turn-around existing restaurants. So there is no requirement for us to do that. There is no pressure on us to do that. So we will not be doing that.
Aditya Soman
That is very clear. Thank you.
Rajeev Varman
Thank you.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Chai Doshi from Kotak. Please go-ahead.
Jay Doshi
Hi, thanks for the opportunity. One is what measures have you taken to improve delivery business profitability in India? And is it essentially reducing discounting or have you managed to negotiate better commission or take rates with the aggregators?
Rajeev Varman
Both. So yeah, that’s a simple answer, but there’s a lot of stuff that couple is doing. One is he is optimizing the menu that he has put on the — on the delivery, right? So you know that there is a differential pricing on that menu and there are different deals on different days. So he has optimized that. So that’s step number-one. Yes, we have taken some pricing there, including the product mix over there. There’s other stuff that we have done in terms of what we are selling and what are the packaging charges, etc., et-cetera. But more predominantly beyond all this effort of optimizing these, we have also gone and negotiated and bought down some of our commissions. And we will continue doing that because this is something that we don’t stop doing. This is the area where we want to make sure we are efficient in this P&L. And we have made some very significant gains in the — in a matter of two quarters since we started doing this. And we are not going to stop. We’re going to continue making our delivery business more-and-more profitable and we will not stop until we get it to a double-digit number.
Jay Doshi
Sure. So what is the differential as of now after these improvements differential between delivery business margins and dining business margins for the India business?
Rajeev Varman
Yeah, we don’t share that level of P&L because of competitive reasons. And so I just respectfully say that if you have any micro questions on this that you just reached out to Gaurav, but we don’t generally share those numbers.
Jay Doshi
Understood, fair part. Now in India, what is the ADS you need to get to reach 10% company-level pre-IndAS EBITDA margin. So you’re at 6%, 6.2% this quarter. It’s a seasonally strong quarter. So maybe on a normalized basis, you are somewhere around 5-ish. So for you to move from 5% to 10, where should your ADS settled from 114,000 that you did this quarter.
Rajeev Varman
Yeah. So it’s not just ADS, right? If you know that our overheads are pretty much kind of where they are, right? Sumit was saying we are further going to optimize G&A even in India, not just in Indonesia, even in India. We continue to be a company that continues doing that. It’s just the DNA of our company that we look at-cost every year as if we are looking at it for the first time and start ready in. So that journey is going to continue. Now what happens with that is as you continue to build more-and-more restaurants and your G&A or your overheads are fixed, then that number below, which is the company EBITDA continues to grow. So that’s one of the levers that will continue growing that number from 5%, 6%, 7%, 8% onwards, right? So that’s one of the levers. The second lever is radiance, right? As you improve your restaurant-level EBITDA, of course, that will contribute more towards covering your overheads and going into the company-level G&A. So both these levers are there and they will both help and we are making some very good strides. There was only a time that we were negative company-level EBITDA and then we became positive at 1% or 2% and then 3% and then 4%. So we continue to climb. And this is nothing different than what I’ve been saying for the last four years that have been four, 4.5 years that I’ve been on calls that we will continue moving these numbers forward.
We will continue moving gross margin to the right level, right? We can move gross margin very quickly today as there’s so much gap or headroom in pricing that Kapil has. We can do that, but we are building traffic at the same time we are doing this. So we want to make sure that we are prudent. We are doing this optimally and that we are at the same time improving traffic, minimizing any loss due to higher pricing and at the same time improving gross margin, improving our rent ratios. Utilities, Sumit was talking about that earlier when you’re talking in the P&L, we have made some very good strides on utility. We have reduced utilities. The rates have gone up, but the unit consumption, we have significantly reduced it by many simple things that we have done in the restaurant through engineering. We have a very good engineering team that has complete — launched a complete program end-to-end for all the restaurants. So we have gone through a few restaurants, probably 20% 30%. We will finish all the restaurants by the end of next year with all these modifications that we are doing, which will continue to bring the utilities down as well. So all these put together is going to bring us to that level. It’s just not the ADS.
Jay Doshi
Sure. And one more on Indonesia. So I heard your previous response. So it looks like at this point of time on one-side, you are trying to renegotiate rentals and cut-down G&A and wherever it won’t — it is not possible or viable, you may optimize or rationalize the store network further. And I think overall focus is to get to EBITDA breakeven from INR17.5 crore quarterly loss or let’s say, INR50 crore annualized EBITDA loss. But my question is that if you know, if eventually with a much smaller store count than where you are today, even if you reach EBITDA breakeven, it still doesn’t result in any value-creation from a shareholder perspective. So are you considering — have you thought about whether there is a merit of continuing operations in that market or is there an opportunity to divest in Indonesia business or is that something that you have a timeline that maybe a year down the line if you don’t achieve the milestone or targets you have may have for that geography, would you take a more tough decision?
Rajeev Varman
So yeah, it’s not a tough decision. All decisions that make investors more money and makes our company more money at the right decisions and the easy decisions. They’re not tough decisions for us. See, I’ll tell you two things. First is, we got two great brands in Indonesia, right? We have Popeye’s brand, we have the Burger King brand, right? These brands, Burging brand when in the good days, hey Days, as you call them was throwing about 14% 15% restaurant-level EBITDA, right? We have close to 26 restaurants. So we are not — we haven’t significantly changed the portfolio that we bought. We have closed 26 restaurants which were — which do not have an upside and we’re losing money, right? So that’s what we are. We have just rationalized the portfolio. We haven’t — we are not shrinking it, we are rationalizing it, which means that we will close restaurants that lose money or where we don’t think the economics is right for us, right? So that’s one thing. Now you know what is the decision if we are not successful or if another war breaks out or if you know things go south because of some of the issue and the market is struggling or the economy over there struggling, yes, all options we will always keep on-table.
We will always discuss all options. What is the right thing for investors is the right thing for me. I’m one of the investors in this company, an individual investor in this company. So I will continue to look at this as what is best for all investors in terms of the long-term, right? So that’s no different whether we turn this round or someone else turns this round. But I can assure you that this is a strong brand. I’ve been with this brand for many years. Today probably will be at least 25 years with this brand in so many countries. And I know that this brand continues to be a very strong brand wherever it is. And I know that if we do not have the stamina to turn this around, someone else will turn it around in the future and make money, right? So that’s the reality. So we as a company will be prudent. We will allocate capital at the correct time. We will allocate the right capital in terms of our marketing, not in capex right now. If we see this turning around, we will push it and we will turn-around quickly as we have done with everything that we do. You saw that we started cafes, we finished them in 18 months. Just saw we start digital, we finished in 18 months, right? This one, we had already turned around the company. In fact, in October, beginning of October, we had already reached breakeven and we are going-in the right direction when the war broke out. So we are unfortunately sitting in a geopolitical kind of climate, which is now kind of recovering. So we feel-good about this. We feel-good about the last couple of months. We feel we feel-good about January as we see it in Indonesia. But yes, we are not blind. We will stay true and close to the business and we will make appropriate calls when we cross those bridges.
Jay Doshi
Sure. Just one small follow-up bookkeeping. Has the parent restaurant brand international supported you in any way because this issue is largely because of geopolitical reasons. So have they waved off or reduced your royalty fee? And if not, have you sort of asked for it? What’s the thought process?
Naveen Trivedi
RBI has been a fantastic partner. They have been very supportive. They’ve been behind us and they’ve helped in every way in any way and we are very thankful for all their support. Thank you.
Jay Doshi
Thank you.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Tejas Shah from Avendus Spark. Please go-ahead.
Tejas Shah
Hi, thanks for the opportunity. You sounded quite positive on dine-in recovery in India. While you may not want to speculate on the future, but just wanted to know your view of what would have driven this revival structural factors or just a low-base effect because the macro for consumption is not as conducive as it appears from our optimism here?
Rajeev Varman
Yeah. Very nice question. See, it’s a — we were on value, couple was on value more than a year-ago, right? More than a year-ago. In fact, two years now making — he was 99 and he went to 2 for 79. This is a value offering. It’s not a tactical, it’s a strategy. It’s one of our pillars, we will always be a value leader, right? Now when you are offering a certain — when you look at-the-market and you say the market has shifted to the left, where more-and-more consumption is on the value side, if you can provide a profitable value proposition, which is profitable to you, but it is also a value proposition that market is, you know, which is what the market requires at that point of time. Then you will flourish and you will continue at the headwinds when people were reporting negative sales and especially negative sales in dine-in, couple kept on reporting positive sales on dine-in, right? So I think in the long-run, if you ask me, I think there is a very strong market for people coming in and dining in our restaurants. There are a lot of things that people come into the restaurant for. It’s not just because they’re taking a lunch break or they’re buying something and taking a break. There are celebrations, there are birthday parties, there are meetings. There are — there are so many occasions where people actually get-out and eat at the restaurants. You have mall restaurants.
There is a very small delivery component if there is any. It is entirely driven by people coming into malls, watching movies, shopping and then eating. There are highway restaurants that are completely dependent on people going on the road, stopping at the highway, having, having a break and eating. So delivery is a small component of the high-street business. It’s not an entire business to many of the restaurants that we’re building. So as you look moving forward, there is an immense amount of infrastructure that is coming along highways, whether it is in North or now predominantly in West and South. And you will find these highways coming on where we will be building restaurants that will be on the highways. These will be predominantly dial-in restaurants, right? There is no delivery on a highway restaurant. So you will find that this is going to improve more-and-more and that’s why the focus, Sumit was saying, not just on making delivery business profit profitable, but on utilities, on rents, on all these items, so that the dine-in business also turns — continues to turn positive, right, or become more-and-more positive. So I think I have a strong view now. I actually feel-good seeing the last year and the year before that as well. If I take the two years together, I think I can frankly say that we have seen double-digit improvement in traffic in our restaurants, this dine-in business. And so I feel very positive of dine-in business growth in the future.
Tejas Shah
Got it. Second question, you spoke very enthusiastically about the digital transformation or digital initiatives that we’re taking. Now what is the goalseek here? Like as an external or as an outsider person, how should I judge ROI on this? Will it reflect in better SSG? Net Promoter score is very abstract, so perhaps won’t reflect in financials directly. How would you internally assess that wherever you would have done this digital transformation totally in your stores, what is the — what is the objective parameters that you are tracking to say that this is working?
Rajeev Varman
All right. First of all, I speak enthusiastically about everything in my business. So, yeah. Sure. So, okay, look here. There is a concept call no 100% of your customers, right? Whether a company reaches there or strives to reach there, the goal of every company is to know 100% of their customers. When they come into your pause and they pay money or whatever, you do not know these customers. You do not know whether they are vegetarian or non-vegetarian. You do not know whether they come in for a snack or for a meal. You do not know whether they live in a certain part and buy-in two different restaurants of yours. There’s a lot you do not know about the customer, which means that you do not market to them, you do mass marketing and you hope some of these people catch your marketing. As you learn your customers over-time period, you’re able to specifically market very specific propositions to these customers.
So that is a very, very big requirement for most companies and most companies want to learn about their customers, want to learn how they eat and what they like, where they want to improve and so forth. So that is one big one, right? And that helps sales, it helps CRM. It helps loyalty of those customers as well because now you are basically able to talk to them. Second, with SOKs, you have adequate. So for example, now where we had three tills, we have put four self-ordering tiers or five, sometimes even put six of them, right? So there’s ample amount of SOKs over there where people can spend time and place order at their ease. And what we are seeing is the highest check that you see on orders that are placed on self-ordering cures versus those that are placed on pause where three or four people might be in align and the one in front wants to quickly place order and move so the next person can come in. So lot of benefit from that. The next one, most 90%, as I said, of these sales are all-digital, which means the payment has gone to the bank directly, right? As these payments go directly, there is a significant advantage of money handling significant advantages of processes and systems in-place, right? So all those advantages also you know. So there are multiple benefits that you get with SOKs. It’s a proven concept around the world. It is not something that you know RBA is doing unilaterally.
There’s learnings by different brands, by multiple brands that this is the way it’s moving forward. And interaction with the SOK actually gives a better sense of timing for this customer. Someone who is waiting behind in the line, not interacting, you know, feels a longer sense of time than when they are interacting with the SOK. It actually makes them feel they spend less time placing the order and less time getting the order. So a lot of benefits in addition to fully understanding the customer. There are direct benefits of increase in APC, there are direct benefits of being able to show them all different options. For example, if someone is a vegetarian, they can directly go into the vegetarian menu and then explore all of that, right? So this is something just like cell phones, right? We are now a very digitally savvy country. In fact, I think we are one of the best equipped digitally savvy chemical countries. I’m actually talking to the President of Burging of RBI for the APAC region and he said we are one of the highest digitally — just in the 18 months, the highest percentage of digital orders placed by anywhere in Southeast Asia. It’s undoable that India just started this 18 months ago and is on-top or among the top two digitally where orders are placed digitally. So all these things are help and that’s the ROI business.
Tejas Shah
Sure. So what broadly I was trying to understand that is this just a vanity metric — just a one point, just last point. Is this just a vanity metric or you should as an outsider, I expect that this will convert into stronger SSG to evaluate whether it is successful or not. That’s the only point I have.
Rajeev Varman
Yeah, no, this — like I said, knowing your customer ability to-market them instead of doing mass spending all over, if you have the ability to directly speak with your customer, it’s one efficient, it’s cost-effective, right? It costs you — if some downloads your app, for example, you are able to communicate with this person at low-cost, whereas if you’re sending someone an SMS or a WhatsApp, it costs you money, right? So digitally, one, it is more effective. Second, it is costing less, right? It costs you less as you progress in years to come that it costs you less to reach-out to your customers. And it increases frequency of use of brand. When it increases the frequency of use of brand, it helps SSSG, right? What is sales? Sales is equal to traffic into APC or average per check. If traffic is equal to simple, new people coming in and old people coming in more often. So it actually helps this piece of old people coming in more or existing customers visiting your brand more often, frequency. So yes, it helps in SSSG, it helps in SSTG, right? It helps in APC and health, it helps in total ADS.
Tejas Shah
Got it. Thanks and all the best.
Rajeev Varman
Yeah. Thanks.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Amunish Agarwal from —.
Rajeev Varman
We will take this as the last question, because we have crossed the 6:30 mark. Sorry, go-ahead.
Amnish Aggarwal
Yeah. So, hi, Rajiv, I have two questions. My first question is at this time around, we have not given any target of store openings next year. Even though we have an agreement with Burger King International, which gives us a roadmap till FY ’27.
Rajeev Varman
Right.
Amnish Aggarwal
So is it indicating that we might look at, say, some sort of a slowdown in the store openings in the coming year? That is one. And my second question is that you talked a lot about the cost-cutting on the SG& side or in India, whereas if I look at the last three years, our SG&A has actually gone up from nearly INR60 crores on an annual basis to now a run-rate of around INR27 crore INR28 crores. So why has the increase been so sharp and where all — which all heads are now you’re going to attack to bring it down?
Rajeev Varman
Yeah, please don’t use that word heads. I’m not attacking anyone’s head. Look, two things, right? Number-one, you asked the question about growth. So we are not slowing down, guys, please. We are not slowing down. We are finalizing the agreement with RBI for the next four, five years, whatever FY ’29, we will release those. But we are not slowing down. In fact, I can tell you, is not on the call today because she’s out there, you know, approving sites in Southern you know, India and so we are — we are not slowing down. We continue to grow. This is a good time to be growing. We are getting some good rents and we are making some good progress. So no slowdown there. Now G&A, look, you have to look at G&A as a percentage of total sales or revenues. And we have — if you look at the last four years, you will find that we started at somewhere at 10%, 11% and it’s down to now 5%, 5.5%, I think the last number is 5.8%.
Sumit P. Zaveri
5.5%.
Rajeev Varman
5.5%. So this will continue to go down, right, as we have top-line sales coming in. But above and beyond that, every few years, what I do is I put a pause and I look at existing because what happens with companies is over-time, there is a little bit of bloating that happens because of such local initiatives and so forth and so forth. So we just — Tiwari, our Chief People Officer, Sumit Zaveri, will be looking and reviewing all the departments to see if we have now started to float a little bit in certain departments. And we will do those corrections and that’s — any prudent good company does that on a regular basis so that we are very honest and sincere with our G&A that we spend overhead. So this exercise is starting and it will continue. We are not going to stop this exercise. It will be part and parcel of our DNA and part and parcel of our fabric. We will continue doing these exercises, right?
And G&A cutting is not about just reducing people. Sometimes you don’t need to reduce people. It is other items that are on the G&A list, other things that you can find more efficiencies in, which you did not think when you were a 5,000 people company, you made certain contracts. When you review the same-contract for a 10,000 people company, then you’re able to bring the efficiencies. There are a lot of things that go into SG&A and all those we — this year, we are going to be reviewing it all the way till April 1st. So April 1st, when we press the button and open doors, we are very honest with ourselves that we have done that task and we have got a true GNA there. And you can also compare G&A of multiple companies and you have all those numbers and you can make sure that investors can make sure that we are honest with what we are doing.
Amnish Aggarwal
Okay, sure. And any — your targets you have that how much you can actually bring it down?
Rajeev Varman
No, no, we will not share those targets until the exercise is over.
Amnish Aggarwal
Okay. Thanks a lot.
Rajeev Varman
Thank you. Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this was the last question for today’s conference call. I now hand the conference over to the management for their closing comments.
Rajeev Varman
Yeah. Thank you so much again for joining, guys. I’m actually very proud of my team that has reached this 510 restaurants. You know, a couple of this year with me is Sumit and the entire management team is sitting here and there are some people out in the field. But the entire team, the 10,000 employees that work for us that have done a fantastic job servicing our customers and guests to get us to 510 restaurants. We are going to continue from here. We have in stopped. We have multiple construction sites in-process. We have approved sites that will be going into construction next month. So this will continue in the forward direction. When it comes to sales, fantastic job by couple and his team in getting our dine-in sales in the right direction. He is not going to stop here. He’s going to continue to build that piece of the puzzle and make that more-and-more positive.
When it comes to delivery sales, our first goal is to make sure that whatever sales we are adding on to that delivery sales is profitable, more profitable than what it is today and we will continue to drive that. We continue to complete our digital journey with the balance of our restaurants. We continue to do cafe in the balance of our restaurants. Indonesia will be a turnaround story that will be told in the future. We are working hard-to-do that. We are also prudent as one of the asked us that we will do the right thing if this does not turn-on in a needed amount of time and we will take whatever calls we need to take. So thank you again for joining and appreciate all your support and all the enthusiasm you show for the Burking brand. Please go-ahead and eat tonight’s dinner at one of your Burgings. Thank you, guys.
Operator
On behalf of Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us and you may now disconnect your lines.