Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from the line of David Tarantino with Robert W. Baird.

David Tarantino – Robert W. Baird Co. Incorporated

First question really is about your comps guidance for fiscal ’12. You’re assuming 2.5%, and you just indicated that you started June very strongly. So just wondering or curious why you’re assuming relatively low levels versus the pace that you’ve been on recently especially from a traffic and mix perspective.

Clarence Otis

Well, David, I think as we put our plans together, we really — we start with the overall macroeconomic environment. We work with our partner, is David Cross, a well-known, well-respected economist. Market Outlook is David’s firm. And so we really do start with GDP growth and all the components that go into that. And then some things that David in his model over many years working with us has identified as drivers of casual dining. And I would say as you look at the range of GDP growth projections that’s out in the marketplace, David’s probably towards the lower end. And so that really is the foundation for what we think the industry’s going to do and then we put together our plans based on what we think we can do relative to the industry. So compared to a range of estimates, it’s conservative. Unfortunately for all of us, David’s been more conservative than most over the last several years, and he’s been more right than most. So that’s where we are.

David Tarantino – Robert W. Baird Co. Incorporated

That’s helpful. And if I could squeeze one follow-up question. On the 2.5% that you’re assuming for the blended comp, are you assuming that Red Lobster and LongHorn continue to lead and Olive Garden lags that figure? Or how do you expect to the comp position to play out?

Clarence Otis

Well, I don’t want to go too much into specifics for each brand, but we expect all of the brands to contribute positively to our same-restaurant sales performance for the fiscal year.

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Steve West with Stifel, Nicolaus.

Steve West

Kind of quick follow-up question on the June comp. You talked about very strong and you really called out the Red Lobster. Can you maybe give a little bit some qualitative color around Olive Garden? Are you seeing maybe some improvements at least in that versus what we’ve seen the last couple of quarters?

Clarence Otis

Well, I think we finished the month really with a promotion — we started the month with the same promotion that we had in May. And so we didn’t see a huge trend change. The big change has occurred just last week really with, as Drew said, the introduction of the most recent — the current promotion that reflects some of the tactical changes that we’ve made that are consistent with all of the observations that Drew offered.

Steve West

Okay. And then real quick, Clarence, on the guidance you guys gave last year, when you guys gave the guidance, you had indicated maybe pushing a little ahead on the comps, but assuming that there would be a consumer rebound finally after so many years. But you also said that if there wasn’t a rebound, you could kind of hedge on the labor side thinking that there would be some labor leverage, and we clearly saw that. Is there any kind of hedging or anything we need to think about as far as comps and maybe margin differences, if you don’t get the comps or if comps are stronger at this time versus what you are guiding?

Clarence Otis

Yes, I’d say there are quite a few. I mean, labor continues to be one of those, but food cost is another. And so we’ve got, as Brad said, a total inflation rate — he outlined I think 5% to 5.5%. We’ve locked in the first half of that for the most part. The second half we have not. We think prices are going to come down even with continued economic improvement. But if the economy flags even more than we expected — expect rather, we don’t see food cost inflation staying at the levels we’ve got in our plan.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of David Palmer with UBS.

David Palmer – UBS Investment Bank

Darden has been protective of its brand in recent years with regard to price discounting going a little too heavy on the price element. Could you give us your thinking about that $15 four-course promotion at Red Lobster. Clearly, that looks like pretty deep value for that brand. Why is that the right move for that brand? Why is that not something that you’ll be regretting perhaps a year from now?

Clarence Otis

Yes. Well, I’ll start off and say the key is putting together a dish that has the right margin structure or an offer that has the right margin structure that taking something that’s built for a margin at x price and trying to deliver it at 25% less. And so Red Lobster’s done a lot of work over the past several months on culinary innovation. And so the offer that they have out in the market right now, the promotion, the 4-course for $15, was created with a very strong margin structure. And so we feel really good about it, good enough that this is an offer that could transition to the permanent core menu.

Andrew Madsen

And the one follow-up I’d add to that is we want to make sure with any of our promotions that we’re delivering an experience that people expect of the brand. And sometimes, if you take a very big discount, and you’re not going to deliver the same experience that they’ve come to expect from you — and this 4-course seafood feast that Red Lobster’s got now is designed to deliver the experience Red Lobster guests love and do it in a way that is very value creating for Darden shareholders.

C. Richmond

David, Brad here. I guess I’d just add one other point of view on that is when we look at it, it is a discount that’s very similar to when we have our Endless Shrimp. But it really delivers a different experience, so we’re touching a different guest to help motivate them to get into the restaurant.

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Brad Ludington with KeyBanc Markets.

Brad Ludington – KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc.

I wanted to ask if — and sorry if I missed this, if you can comment on what kind of price increase level you have built into your guidance, and if there’s a variation between the 3 major brands and in what levels? And then also how you look at that pricing? Are you looking to keep it low to take advantage of the fact that food at home CPI is so high, up about 4.5% in the recent months, I think?

Andrew Madsen

So with our annual pricing every year, the 2 things we’re looking to do is make sure we’re covering the net inflation that’s going into our business model and also preserve the value creation and the relative positioning competitively that each brand enjoys. So historically, we’ve taken pricing in the 2% to 3% range. This coming year what I mentioned is that all of our major brands are going to be at the low end of that range because we know there’s an elevated need for affordability. But we also are very comfortable that, that range of pricing is very consistent with maintaining strong unit economics because of all the proactive cost management that we’ve got going on.

Brad Ludington – KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc.

Okay. And just have you seen any impact in recent months at some of the brands with supermarket inflation up so much? Is that helping drive people to some of the restaurants do you think?

Clarence Otis

We don’t know, I guess, is the answer. I’d say the thing that Drew outlined was that as you look at casual dining over the last 6 months, it’s an industry where same-restaurant sales are strengthening. And so in general, the trend over that period is better months, and that’s despite tougher prior year comparisons. And that’s in the face of elevated gasoline prices. It’s in the face of some of the supermarket inflation. So we couldn’t really just aggregate it, but the industry is holding up well. And that’s consistent with our view that casual dining is definitely a integrated part of people’s lives.

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Matt DiFrisco from Lazard.

Matthew DiFrisco

I’m also just curious, Clarence, I think you said it was 2 incremental value-oriented promotions for Olive Garden. What’s the timing of those? It sounds like you said the first half. Will there be incremental expense associated with those? So is that also somewhat weighing on your single-digit earnings outlook in the first half?

Andrew Madsen

Yes, this is Drew. There are 2 incremental value-oriented promotions in the first half. One is going on now. But just like with the Red Lobster promotion we discussed, the products that have been developed and the price point that’s been established and the traffic that we anticipate generating, we anticipate to be value creating. So we think it’s going to address consumer need for broadly appealing dishes, attractive price points that are going to help us generate profit growth.

Clarence Otis

Yes, I think to be more specific, on the first half of the year in the earnings growth that we talked about, it’s pretty singularly focused on the elevated cost environment — food cost environment that we’re in. And we think of these pretty high elevated levels compared to a year ago where there was very little inflation in the food cost. And as you start to get to the back half of the year when we’re lapping on this, we actually see that prices will be no higher than that and probably to start moving down a little bit.

Matthew DiFrisco

Just as a follow-up to that point. I guess your relative COGS in the fourth quarter, obviously, has the inflation in there, but was there also, I think, a comment that there was some mix effect working in there. So should we — was that all the inflationary pressures out there and something to look for as a proxy for 1Q? Or was there some mix effect as well working against you?

Clarence Otis

I would say the mix effects was maybe 20, 25 basis points of that. It was — we’ve seen the elevated commodity costs, and so that is by far and away the big driver of that. The mix impact was pretty minor. We had Lobsterfest, which delivers a higher absolute margin, but the percentage is a little bit less, or said other way, a little bit higher elevated food cost. And we’ve had some other promotional activity, but they’re delivering margins pretty much as we would expect. So I would stay singularly focused more on commodity food cost as the headwind in the first half of the year — first half of the new fiscal year.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Joe Buckley with Bank of America.

Joseph Buckley – BofA Merrill Lynch

Just a couple of questions on Olive Garden. Have you taken price so far in the first quarter? And then on the sales side, could you talk about cannibalization? As you’ve opened new units over the last couple of years, have you seen some cannibalization? And then lastly, it sounds like you’re adopting the price certainty approach that seems to have been effective at Red Lobster. Is there research behind that, that shows that’s been part of the issue at Olive Garden?

Andrew Madsen

So the new menu for Olive Garden just went in a couple of weeks ago, and with that menu there was some pricing. So that is in the market now. Yes, we are adopting the price certainty approach that’s worked well for Red Lobster. And there isn’t any specific Olive Garden research to that. We have just noticed that, that approach has worked very well for Red Lobster, and we know that there’s an elevated need for consumer affordability. And if they aren’t sure what the range of prices are going to be in a promotion, we want to eliminate that uncertainty and tell them specifically what it is because we think, for Olive Garden $10.95 and $12.95, for instance, are very compelling prices. On the third question, there has been impact to existing restaurants as Olive Garden has opened new units. The cost of that impact is built in to the value creation hurdle that the new restaurants have to earn against, and the new restaurants that Olive Garden continue to meaningfully exceed that earnings hurdle. So we’re very pleased.

C. Richmond

And, Joe, this is Brad. I would say we haven’t seen any change in that amount, that it’s been pretty stable. I would take you back when we talked about Olive Garden margins. Even with that, they’re still continuing to build margins. These are value — significantly value-accretive new restaurants. But yes, they are impacting same-restaurant sales performance a little bit.

Clarence Otis

And I think we dimensionalized what that draw effect was at the investor conference that we had back in February and — 60, 70 basis points, and that hasn’t really changed.

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of John Glass with Morgan Stanley.

John Glass – Morgan Stanley

I wanted to follow up on Olive Garden. I was surprised that you said that you haven’t noticed any way that the consumers have changed the way they’re using that brand. Could you — or perceive that brand. Could you talk about how you know that, how recent your data is? In particular, lunch has been an area that’s been focused on by competitors, so is there any notion that there’s a day part weakness around that, for example, that may be driving some of the flat to declining traffic?

Andrew Madsen

Sure. Well, specifically speaking to day part, the comments I made are through the end of the fourth quarter. So same-restaurant sales at lunch for Olive Garden were positive 3 of the last 4 quarters. They outperformed dinner, in fact, during the fourth quarter. So we haven’t seen any meaningful change in how Olive Garden guests are using the brand by day part. We do think there’s an opportunity to build on the strength at lunch, which is why we’re introducing Panini sandwiches. And we do think that will be a positive. But we haven’t seen a meaningful change, lunch versus dinner. And lunch has always been a strength for Olive Garden. In terms of the other things that you asked about, we look at guest satisfaction in restaurants weekly. We look at brand perception within casual dining monthly and how that stacks up to the other large casual dining brands. And we haven’t seen any shift there either, and Olive Garden remains very strong on everything that we look at in restaurant and perceptually in terms of the broader universe. So we’re pretty convinced that the opportunity for Olive Garden is to improve our execution in marketing on some of the tactics that I discussed earlier.

John Glass – Morgan Stanley

Great. And then just if I could just follow up. Brad, I know you talked about the second half of fiscal ’12 being the stronger one from an earnings perspective. Some of that had to do with the decline — or more favorable food cost, and you gave a lot of detail. But how much maybe losses in some of that, how much is actually known or contracted for that second half of fiscal ’12 right now? And how much of it is just your expectation or estimate of declining food costs?

C. Richmond

Well, on the food perspective, we don’t have as much of that contracted. I think we’re probably in the 20% range or so. But — so it’s more built on the expectation there. But also, I would look to the items that we’ve talked around our transformational initiatives. They continue to build a little bit of momentum as we go through the fiscal year. I mean, you can see where we ended up last year. They came from a strong point, but they continue to build some. So it’s a combination of those, of the expected decline in the commodity prices or just being more, on a year-over-year basis, more consistent, hopefully some decline there and our transformational cost initiatives that help aid in the growth as well.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Omohundro with Wells Fargo.

Jeffrey Omohundro – Wells Fargo Securities, LLC

Just a question on Red Lobster and the $15 four-course promotion. Given the apparently very high mixing of this promo, just curious about how you would anticipate transitioning off of it. I believe Clarence might have suggested the possibility of adding it to the permanent menu. Do you continue to provide price certainty with this promo going forward or would you anticipate a new promo with similar price certainty to replace it? And also would you anticipate running this $15 promo perhaps a bit longer than normal? Maybe you can share with us how you’re thinking of timing on the transition.

Andrew Madsen

Well, most broadly we think it’s important for Red Lobster to offer price certainty in more of their promotions during fiscal 2012 than fiscal 2011. So that is part of our strategy. That doesn’t mean we’re going to run this $15 4-course seafood feast repeatedly during the year. But more of the promotions that we have are going to feature the strategy that we used in the last 8 months of fiscal 2011, where we feature price certainty at a range of prices from $11.99 to $19.99 last year, and that worked very well for us. Whether we put the $15 four-course feast on the menu is something we’re evaluating. We’ve been testing it in market as a promotion and as an addition to the menu. We’ve been very careful to understand what the menu preference dynamics are with that. And we are obviously very comfortable with what we saw, which is why we advertised it. And we think it could potentially be a compelling part of the menu going forward. But that’s still something we’re evaluating. I would say also more broadly, the core menu has an opportunity for some innovation and reengineering as it relates to what we offer and how we price it, and that’s something that the brand is working on now as well. We don’t anticipate that being a major driver in fiscal 2012, but we think there’s an opportunity to go beyond promotions to address affordability with the core menu in fiscal 2013.

Clarence Otis

And I would just underscore one of the things that Drew said. So Red Lobster in fiscal ‘11, price certainty from $11.99 to $19.99. So it’s a range of prices. So we’re not talking about necessarily steep discounts, and their business accelerated going from an $11.99 offer to a $15 offer. So it’s all about, ultimately, the value that you’re delivering to guests, and we think that we’ve got the expertise to deliver value and maintain a pretty strong margin.

Jeffrey Omohundro – Wells Fargo Securities, LLC

And can you share how long the $15 promo is expected to run?

Andrew Madsen

No.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Bernstein with Barclays.

Jeffrey Bernstein – Barclays Capital

A couple of questions. Just first, follow-up on Olive Garden. It seemed like last quarter, you guys were thinking that in order to really implement some change to the menus, it’s going to take you a few quarters and we should, therefore, expect the first half of this fiscal year to be more the promotions that you guys had scheduled a year ago. That seems like that’s now accelerated. I’m just wondering should we now expect these new promotions that we’re seeing now to be all kind of the product of the most recent changes you guys have made and therefore, we should expect more of a first half fiscal ’12 improvement? And how do you guys think of that versus the gap to Knapp-Track and whether you’d view the most recent Olive Garden shortfall as more self-inflicted or perhaps more from a peer convergence standpoint. And then I had a follow-up.

Andrew Madsen

I think there are a number of dynamics that are impacting Olive Garden’s relative competitive performance. We think the biggest one was probably self-inflicted in our promotional effectiveness. And that is why we’ve made the adjustments that I’ve already talked about, and that’s the path we’re on through the first half certainly. I would say that the first half of fiscal 2011, what we’re wrapping on, particularly the first quarter of last year was very strong for Olive Garden. I think they exceeded the industry by about 300 basis points or so in the first quarter last year, and so we are wrapping on a competitively strong period. What was — I forget the second part of your question.

Jeffrey Bernstein – Barclays Capital

Just I know you guys in the past, perhaps during the downturn, focused more on the gap to Knapp-Track versus the industry and on an improving macro, not so much. I’m just kind of wondering how you view Olive Garden versus the industry.

Clarence Otis

Yes, I’ll start just by talking about how we view Darden overall. And so we think that given the portfolio of brands that we have, over the long term we should be at 2% to 4%. And that portfolio has a very strong new unit growth rate — profile, rather, and so overall, when you factor in the units, 7% to 9%, we talked at the Analyst Meeting about where we think the industry will be. So we think we’ve got an industry where same-restaurant sales growth will be more like 1%, 2%, and that’s over the long term. And so there’s a gap implicit in that. Of course, it’s going to bounce around from year-to-year and period-to-period, depending on market dynamics and competitive dynamics. But that’s the long term sort of outlook.

Andrew Madsen

And I forgot, the other question you asked was about industry convergence. And while we think the biggest reason for Olive Garden’s performance to be equal to or slightly below the industry over the February to May period was promotion affecting us, also when you look at the market share growth that Olive Garden has captured over the last 3 years, it’s been very substantial. It’s been more than 10 points on a same-restaurant sales basis and probably another 12 or 13 points on a unit basis. And it is possible there’s a little bit of normalization in that as well as the industry begins to improve and as consumers gradually begin to add back some of the brands and some of the occasions they cut out a couple of years ago. But we fully expect Olive Garden to continue to outperform.

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Sara Senatore from Sanford Bernstein.

Sara Senatore – Sanford C. Bernstein Co., Inc.

Senatore. I just wanted to go back to the big picture question. You had said that you’re starting to see more of the traffic disproportionately come from, I guess, the higher-income consumers. It surprises me then that where the real success seems to be is in these price point specific, very, I would, say strong value proposition. So can you just talk a little bit about is it — are your customers — am I hearing that your customer base is not in that higher income and that’s why we would expect to — you would need to push even harder on value, or just help me reconcile that.

Clarence Otis

Yes. I would say, no, not at all. I think, given our price points are in the higher end of the range of casual dining price points, our customer tends to be a pretty well-heeled customer from a mass-market perspective. But all customers, even those that are accounting for more of the traffic, so the north of $65,000, $70,000, all customers are budgeting with a lot more discipline. And so it really is around price certainty in that environment, not necessarily a price discount. Customers aren’t looking for a discount. But they want to kind of know a little bit more, with a little bit more precision what they’re going to spend when they choose to go out or when they choose do anything else. So we are well positioned because our brands sit where they sit, and that customer base has always been core to them. We do think, though, you’ve got a lot of customers below $65,000 household incomes, and we want to make sure that we stay as relevant as possible to them. And so it is critically important for that reason to maintain everyday price accessibility, and all of our brands are working on improving on that score.

Andrew Madsen

Yes, and I would just add that the promotion you referenced at Red Lobster was designed specifically to address the heightened need for affordability among a more modest income group. But everybody loves a $15 four-course seafood feast.

Stefan Karlsson – UBS Investment Bank

Yes that’s a lot of food for not a lot of money. The follow up was about LongHorn. We’re seeing obviously strong trends across steakhouses. Can you maybe just talk a little bit about if you had to say what piece of that is just cyclical, lapping, multi-year easier comparison versus maybe what you’re doing for that brand.

Andrew Madsen

Well, we think it reflects very sustainable business momentum and improvement in the way people think about the brand and the experience they get in the restaurant. So LongHorn had a good year last year also, so they’re continuing to improve. As we’ve talked in the past, LongHorn has always had a very strong foundation of operations excellence and deliver very well a consistently good experience inside the 4 walls of their restaurant. And over the last couple of years, what we’ve been able to do is broaden appeal by improving the advertising, improving promotions, refining the menu. And we’ve been able to increase reach by strengthening our advertising, and all those things working together are making the brand more visible and more relevant to more people. When they come in, they love the experience, and they’re coming back more frequently. I forgot to mention remodel. That’s also been a big part of it.

Clarence Otis

And LongHorn is really got some other things working in its favor. I mean, LongHorn built itself and its legacy to a region. The Southeast is one of the regions where — the spend for customer is actually lower than it is in most of the country. So LongHorn, as it expands, expands out into an environment where people spend more. And that’s a big positive for average unit volumes as you move away from comps and look at just AUVs, which are important to business model health.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Bryan Elliott with Raymond James.

Bryan Elliott – Raymond James Associates, Inc.

I’ll be quick. Drew, you mentioned last quarter and again here the sort of 2-pronged Olive Garden marketing approach, equity versus more tactical calls to actions. My question is some of the a bit more, call it, sophisticated food promotions over the last couple of quarters that didn’t result in the kind of traffic and sales you were hoping for, would you characterize those as brand-equity type advertising? Or were those promotions designed to be the call to action and a short-term traffic driver? So in other words, sort of thinking about moving the brand to a more differentiated place through its food, does that remain a kind of a long-term equity building focus?

Andrew Madsen

So the — take the food and — I’ll talk about the food and the advertising. The food, say, soffatelli, which is the puff pastry dish that we advertised in March, that was not designed to reposition the brand. That was designed to broaden the appeal of the brand. We’ve got a very, very broadly appealing brand today, a very strong brand. But culinary distinctiveness is one of the things our research says is an opportunity to attract some guests who don’t come as frequently as they might if we had some additional culinary forward food on the menu. So it was really an attempt to continue to broaden the appeal of Olive Garden. And in advertising, we want to make sure that we communicate the crave of the dish, but we also want to make sure we’re continuing to emphasize this emotional benefit of Italian generosity and sense of family and connection. And what we’ve found is on the product side, soffatelli went a little too far on culinary distinctiveness. And in the current environment, our advertising needs to rebalance more on the short-term product message, a little bit less on the emotional benefit sense of family that’s a longer-term advantage for Olive Garden. So we’ve adjusted both things. More broadly appealing product and more time in the commercial spent on the consumer benefits of that as a call to action in the short term.

Bryan Elliott – Raymond James Associates, Inc.

Should we expect to continue to see periodically, I’ll call it, more sophisticated or the term you used was more culinary forward food? Should we continue to see that from time to time?

Andrew Madsen

Occasionally because we’ve still got to have exciting news, but not 2 or 3 promotions in a row like we did at the end of fiscal 2011. So not as often.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Steve Anderson with Miller Tabak.

Stephen Anderson – Miller Tabak + Co., LLC

I just wanted to get a clarification on the cost savings numbers you have. You said — I remember at the Analyst Day, you mentioned the $35 million to $40 million — $35 million to $40 million annualized, and you just mentioned $65 million to $70 million. Is that an increase from — of your cost expectations? Just wanted to take a look at that.

Andrew Madsen

Yes, that is about roughly a $10 million increase. As I mentioned a little bit earlier, we are seeing some good progress there, and so we’re just trying to reflect that progress.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Bart Glenn with D.A. Davidson.

Bart Glenn – D.A. Davidson Co.

Yes, I was just curious, could you talk a little bit about what your appetite is for taking up debt levels modestly in order to facilitate incremental share repurchase, and if you could also quantify kind of what you expectations are for stock buyback for this year.

Andrew Madsen

Well, on the debt side, first, I’d like to say we always price the having an investment grade credit portfolio, so that’s clearly in our plans. As you look at our specific debt metrics, where we are, we see just a very slight moderation up from where we are because we’re at the low end of the ranges, particularly the adjusted-debt-to-capital and adjusted-debt-to-EBITDAR. And so the share repurchase that we’ve guided to this year, about $350 million to $400 million, it’s really based on our strong operating cash flows that we have and not leveraging up the balance sheet at all.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Howard Penney with Hedgeye Risk Management.

Howard Penney – Prudential Equity Group

I can confirm the success of Red Lobster having waited 40 minutes on a Tuesday night for my $15 meal, which was fantastic. But can you comment on if there’s a — if the promotion is too successful, meaning the customer preference is too high and that it may be at roads with historical performance because there’s too many customers in there or the margins suffer because they’re trading down to that product as opposed to…

Andrew Madsen

So there are — there’s 2 potential opportunities there. One is if the restaurant is so busy that the guest satisfaction isn’t what it needs to be or if the menu preference is well beyond — on the promoted item is well beyond what we expected and the financial performance isn’t what we expected. And that’s why we tested this promotion in restaurant for over 3 months to make sure that the range of entrées we had in the lineup and the operational procedures we had to make sure we could deliver effectively were fine-tuned to the point that we were set up for success and our restaurants were set up for success. So the guest satisfaction that we’ve been measuring since this program started, still very strong, although we have noticed an increase in the value ratings for the brand, which is great. And the preference for — on this promotion’s a little higher than we expected, but traffic is higher than we expected. So it’s good.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Mitch Speiser with Buckingham Research.

Mitchell Speiser – Buckingham Research Group, Inc.

All of my questions were answered, so I’ll just focus on the first quarter where you told us comps are running about 5% to 6%. The comparison was a little bit easier in the June period. I guess my question is with EPS growth expectations expected to be in the low single-digit range, with comps running at these levels, do you expect then the comps to slow down throughout the quarter? And maybe put another way, can you give us a sense of what your first quarter costs will be year-over-year? And then maybe what you’re expecting for the back half of the year? Are you embedding costs to be down year-over-year in the back half?

Clarence Otis

Well, I’ll talk about the first quarter, and I would say it would be wonderful if June and July — July and August looked like June, but we are not planning that. And so the answer to that question is yes, we do expect them to be a little bit lower. This promotion has started off, it’s much more a blockbuster than we had planned, but we are not planning to see that continue. If it does, earnings will be better than we expect.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Peter Saleh with Telsey Advisory Group.

Peter Saleh – Telsey Advisory Group

You guys talk about raising menu prices in the — closer to the 2% range. You also talked about the expectation of commodities possibly coming down in the back half of the year. If commodities don’t come down and they’re actually up a little bit more than you’re expecting, are you prepared to take pricing closer to the 3% or even higher to offset it?

Andrew Madsen

I think Clarence touched on service maybe part of the natural hedge that would occur there. So if commodity price is running higher, that probably speaks to — supported by stronger economic growth. So I would suspect that we could do a little bit better on the same-restaurant sales side, which would be actually a slight positive to us. Or if they were to be a little bit less, probably driven more by the economy and so we would be expecting a little bit lower same-restaurant sales guest counts, but we’re going to have lower cost. So the earnings piece we feel more comfortable with because of the natural hedge that’s there.

Clarence Otis

And I would just add, and Brad can correct me if I’m wrong, but we haven’t built our plans on commodity prices cost coming down. We’ve built them on them flattening out in the second half. To the extent they come down, that would be a plus up.

C. Richmond

Correct.

Operator

And our last question comes from the line of Karen Lamark with Federated Investors.

Karen Lamark – Federated Investors

I know it’s early but do you have any insight into the profile of the 4 for $15 buyer? I mean, is it a new user, a lapsed user? And also is the attachment rate for beverages higher or lower than average?

C. Richmond

No, I think to get a sense of the demographic profile of the guest coming in Red Lobster and how that is potentially different from the past, we’d want to get more than 4 weeks. So it’s going to take a little longer for us to be able to get that. So we don’t yet have a sense of whether it’s attracting the people we were looking to attract differentially.

Andrew Madsen

Karen, I’m sorry. We missed the second half of your question.

Karen Lamark – Federated Investors

Sorry. Is the attachment rate for beverages with that 4 for $15 promotion, is it higher or lower than average?

Andrew Madsen

I’m not sure, I’m afraid.

Operator

And I believe that…

Clarence Otis

To answer your question on beverage, really on a year-over-year basis, virtually no change.

Matthew Stroud

Great. We’d like to thank everybody for joining us on the call today. Of course, we’re here in Orlando if you have additional questions. We wish everybody a safe and happy Fourth of July holiday, and we look forward to talking to you all next quarter. Thank you.

Operator

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