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Analysts say fast-food prices feel particularly painful because they're rising faster than grocery prices. Fast-food prices have been shooting upRestaurant prices are determined by "two major categories" — food costs and labor costs, Citi analyst Jon Tower told BI. Related storiesFast-food chains put up their menu prices to reflect the higher food costs and payrolls. AdvertisementGrocery inflation is coolingFast food seems particularly expensive right now because grocery inflation is cooling much more rapidly, analysts BI spoke to said. AdvertisementBut the inverse is also true — grocery stores benefit much more than restaurants when food inflation cools.
Persons: , Jim Sanderson, Jon Tower, Sharon Zackfia, William Blair, Price, Danilo Gargiulo, Bernstein, Gargiulo, they've, Garguilo, Sara Senatore, Chad Frye Organizations: Analysts, Service, Northcoast Research, Citi, US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bank of America Locations: Russia, Ukraine, California
Morgan Stanley raised its price target on Ford after the company reassessed its electric vehicle strategy. That "paints path to ~$230-$290 stock price as we argue AMZN could warrant an even higher multiple in this scenario," he added. — Michelle Fox 7:38 a.m.: Evercore hikes Disney price target, points out near-term catalysts Walt Disney has a bright near-term outlook, according to Evercore ISI. In addition to cutting his price target, Harned also pulled down his outlook for free cash flow and deliveries. — Alex Harring 5:48 a.m.: KeyBanc raises Nvidia price target There's no slowing down Nvidia , according to KeyBanc.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, KeyBanc, Brian Nowak, Jon Tower, — Michelle Fox, Walt Disney, Vijay Jayant's, Jayant, Bob Iger, — Lisa Kailai Han, David Palmer, Palmer, Uber, — Alex Harring, Bernstein, Douglas Harned, Harned, Dave Calhoun, Alex Harring, Anthony Chukumba, Chukumba, selloff, Ross Seymore, Seymore, TD Cowen, Doug Anmuth, Anmuth, there's, John Blackledge, Blackledge, Jason Bazinet, Bazinet, There's, Goldman, Goldman Sachs, Kate McShane, McShane, BJ, Mark Strouse, Strouse, Adam Jonas, Jonas, Ford, John Vinh, Vinh, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Monday's, Ford, Nvidia, Amazon, Citi Citi, Grill, ISI, Disney, India's Reliance Industries, Reliance Industries, Netflix, Hulu, Boeing, Dow Jones, Capital, Loop Capital, Deutsche Bank, Broadcom, VMWare, JPMorgan, Citi, BJ's Wholesale, GE, GE Vernova Locations: Michigan, Alaska, F1Q, California, The Massachusetts, Friday's, China
Fast-food giants are rapidly deploying more order kiosks in the US. AdvertisementMajor US fast-food chains plan to aggressively add more digital order kiosks to their restaurants – and bring in bigger checks in the process. They make up "well over" half of its in-restaurant orders at these locations, CFO Katie Fogertey told investors in November. As well as labor savings, kiosk orders "tend to skew to dine-in" and thus use less packaging than other digital orders, she said. In the US, digital orders currently make up just 15% of Burger King's sales.
Persons: Patrick Doyle, , Burger, Josh Kobza, Shack, Katie Fogertey, Chris Turner, Turner, Sharon Zackfia, William Blair, Fogertey, Grace Dean, Randy Garutti, cashiers, Fogerty, Andy Barish, Jon Tower, Kobza, Zackfia, Barish, Popeyes, Tim Hortons Organizations: Service, Restaurant Brands, Brands, Taco Bell, KFC, Business, Jefferies, Citi, Burger, Firehouse, North Star Locations: Taco, China, London, millennials
AdvertisementBurgers, tacos, and pizzas will get more expensiveDiners should expect to pay more as fast-food restaurants put menu prices up to offset higher wages. But restaurants already paying workers higher wages will feel less of an impact from the new legislation. Jon Tower, an analyst at Citi, said the higher prices could be hard for some diners to accept. However, higher wages at McDonald's, Subway, and Burger King will likely prompt other employers to offer higher pay so they can compete for labor. AdvertisementPeople will have more money to dine outAs fast-food workers' wages increase, they'll actually have more disposable income to spend dining out.
Persons: , Gavin Newsom, It's, Jack, Sharon Zackfia, William Blair, Andy Barish, Sara Senatore, Chris Kempczinski, they're, Jon Tower, Barish, Zackfia, Burger, Danilo Gargiulo, Bernstein, Matt Clark Organizations: Service, Golden State, Gov, Jefferies, Bank of America, Citi, Bureau of Labor Statistics Locations: California, McDonald's
But International Wing Factory in New York City doesn't describe them as boneless wings, preferring to simply call them boneless chicken. "I always wrote 'boneless' on my menu because being a chef, I know there is nothing called boneless wings," owner Deepak Ballaney told Business Insider. Sweet-potato fries, boneless wings, and bone-in wings from Wingstop. So-called boneless wings can also be easier to process because you don't have to deconstruct the bird as much, Tower said. AdvertisementOne Wingstop restaurant in Rochester Hills, Michigan charges $12.49 for 10 classic wings and $10.29 for the same number of boneless wings.
Persons: , Deepak Ballaney, Ballaney, Grace Dean, Jon Tower, you've, Nick White, White, it's Organizations: Service, Factory, Business, Citi, Orange, Orange Buffalo, Buffalo Wild Wings Locations: New York City, Wingstop, Rochester Hills , Michigan, Orange Buffalo, London
Some diners could be put off eating out when fast-food prices in California go up in the spring. The state is raising the minimum wage for fast-food workers to $20 an hour, prompting restaurants to hike menu prices. California is putting up the minimum wage for fast-food workers to $20 an hour on April 1 — and it could make restaurant prices so unpalatable that people buy more groceries to cook at home instead. The state's current general minimum wage is $16 an hour, compared to the federal minimum wage of $7.25 . But the new statewide legislation, AB 1228, will only create a $20 minimum wage for fast-food workers.
Persons: Jon Tower, Jack, Darin Harris, Jonathan Knowles, , Harris, Matt Clark, Clark Organizations: Citi, Bureau of Labor Statistics Locations: California
A slate of companies with a track record of beating Wall Street's expectations is teed up to report next week. Investors are anticipating results from a host of companies across different sectors next week, including media, chipmakers, pharmaceuticals and consumer products. Against this backdrop, CNBC Pro analyzed data from Bespoke Investment Group to find stocks with a history of beating their earnings expectations at least 75% of the time and subsequently rising an average of 1.5% or more after earnings were released. The company has historically beaten earnings expectations 76% of the time and has risen 1.66% afterward. The Baltimore-based company also is expected to report fiscal third-quarter earnings results before the market opens next Thursday.
Persons: Wall, AllianceBernstein, Danilo Gargiulo, Jon Tower, CyberArk, Morgan Stanley, Hamza Fodderwala, Fodderwala, Armour, , Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC Pro, Investment Group, Citi, Software Locations: Baltimore
Kess raised his price target to $47 from $36, suggesting 11% upside from Tuesday's close. His price target, cut to $276 from $311, implies roughly 10% downside from Tuesday's close. "We upgrade SUN to Buy and lift our [target price] to $65 following several cash flow accretive transactions," Dounis wrote. "The January 11th transactions drive ~25% of the target price increase; the NS Acquisition drives the remaining ~75% increase." NKLA mountain 2020-07-01 NKLA since 2020 Still, the analyst's $2 price target implies the stock could surge more than 200% from here.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Daiwa, Jonathan Kees, Kess, — Michelle Fox, Jon Tower, Chipotle, Sarah Min, Gordon Haskett downgrades Uber, Gordon Haskett, Robert Mollins, Uber, Mollins, — Jesse Pound, Colin Bristow, Bristow, Michael Tyndall, Stellantis, Tyndall, — Sarah Min, Pierre Ferragu, Lisa Su, Ferragu, Sunoco, Spiro Dounis, Dounis, Baird, Nikola, Ben Kallo, NKLA, Kallo, it's, Jessica Reif Ehrlich, Morgan Stanley's Benjamin Swinburne, Swinburne, Goldman Sachs, Eric Sheridan, Erik Woodring, Woodring, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Big Tech, Wall Street, NewStreet Research, Verizon, Daiwa, Verizon Communications, VZ, Citi, Mexican, UBS downgrades, UBS, HSBC, AMD, Research, NuStar Energy, Zenith Energy, Energy, Netflix, Bank of America, Apple Apple, Edge, Apple Locations: Seattle, Biogen, Skyclarys, Stellantis, Europe, China
NEW YORK, April 18 (Reuters) - Burger King is banking on its viral "Whopper Whopper" jingle to lift sales as part of the flagging fast-food chain's turnaround plan, as broader economic uncertainty pushed two big franchisees into bankruptcy. "I'm optimistic about the trajectory of sales in 2023," said U.S. and Canada Burger King president Tom Curtis in an interview, adding that the jingle's fervent success was "unanticipated." Unlike other fast-food chains like Subway that are consolidating restaurant ownership among fewer franchisees, Burger King is expanding the number of owners in its system. This year, two large U.S. Burger King franchisees that run more than 200 locations across at least 10 states have filed for bankruptcy, citing poor sales atop surging costs for labor and goods. "We don't want to diminish the importance of this crisis, but we also will leverage it to bring in new operators," Curtis said.
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCiti's Jon Tower is bullish on restaurant stocks head of earnings seasonJon Tower, Citi, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss Citi's bullish call on the restaurant industry.
Chipotle Mexican Grill is launching a new spinoff, called Farmesa Fresh Eatery, in a California ghost kitchen. And, "when the time is right," Lawton said, Chipotle will use its loyalty program database to attract potential Farmesa customers. When opened, the Santa Monica location will be Kitchen United's 24th ghost kitchen. For Chipotle, Kitchen United's model allows the restaurant chain to test out the new brand with reduced risk. For now, Chipotle's chief purpose with the location is simply to learn, but that doesn't mean Farmesa won't grow.
It's hard to see more near-term upside for McDonald's
  + stars: | 2022-09-27 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailIt's hard to see more near-term upside for McDonald'sCiti's Jon Tower joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss Citi opening it's 90-day negative watch on McDonald’s.
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