Posts for Ticker ‘DRI’

Starbucks (SBUX) Begins To Thrash McDonald’s (MCD) In Coffee Wars

bucksMcDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) was supposed to crush Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) in the premium coffee business when the world’s largest restaurant chain introduced a line of premium java more than a year ago.

It turns out that McDonald’s impressive start as competition to Starbucks, Dunkin’ Donuts, and other specialty coffee retailers has begun to flag.

New research shows the momentum in terms of store traffic patterns has turned in Starbucks’ direction and it is likely that the trend will continue. Read More »

Top Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades (CCE, DRI, JASO, MOS, NOK, PALM, PAAS, POT, SOL, TLAB)

These are the top 10 pre-market analyst upgrades, downgrades, and initiations we have seen early this Thursday morning from Wall Street:

Coca-Cola Enterprises (CCE) Raised to Buy at UBS.
DR Horton (DRI) Cut to Sell at Citigroup.
JA Solar (JASO) Cut to Equal Weight at Barclays.
Mosaic (MOS) Started as Overweight at Thomas Weisel.
Nokia (NOK) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
Palm (PALM) Cut to Sell at Morgan Joseph.
Pan-American Silver (PAAS) Raised to Buy at UBS.
Potash Corp. (POT) Started as Overweight at Thomas Weisel.
ReneSola (SOL) Raised to Outperform at Credit Suisse; but cut to Underweight at Piper Jaffray.
Tellabs (TLAB) Raised to Outperform at Morgan Keegan.

JON C. OGG
AUGUST 13, 2009

Top 10 Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades (CME, DRI, ICE, MYGN, NVS, ALXN, MDRX, NNI, NOK)

There were many analyst calls this morning, but the problem is that most were on smaller companies or were by second and third tier boutiques.  These were the top call from Wall Street this Friday morning.

CME Group (CME) Started as Outperform at JMP Securities.
Darden Restaurants (DRI) Started as Buy at Jefferies.
IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) Started as Outperform at JMP.
Myriad Genetics (MYGN) Started as Buy at Soleil.
Novartis (NVS) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
Alexion (ALXN) Started as Sell at Think Equity.
Allscripts (MDRX) Cut to Hold at Auriga.
NelNet (NNI) Cut to Market Perform at KBW.
Nokia (NOK) Cut to Neutral at UBS.

JON C. OGG

JULY 17, 2009

Average Purchase At Darden (DRI) Unit Falls

bear

Over the past week, the 24/7 Wall St.–The Channel Checkers poll surveyed various Red Lobster locations, part of Darden Restaurants (DRI), to gauge trends in the casual dining business.  We asked the following questions:

1. Is this location new? (One year or less)

2. How often is lobster being ordered compared to last year?

3. What are the most popular items on the menu right now?

4. What is the average bill size for a family of two? Read More »

Tuesday’s Top Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades (BJ, GLW, DRI, DTSI, ITW, RBS, VIA, BHP, COF, FITB, MAT, STO)

These are some of Tuesday morning’s top pre-market upgrades and downgrades we have seen from Wall Street analysts with more than two hours until the open:

  • BJ’s Wholesale (NYSE: BJ) Raised to Buy at UBS.
  • Corning (NYSE: GLW) Started as Outperform at Oppenheimer.
  • Darden restaurants (NYSE: DRI) Started as Outperform at Baird.
  • Digital Theater Systems (NASDAQ: DTSI) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
  • Illinois Toolworks (NYSE: ITW) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
  • Royal Bank of Scotland (NYSE: RBS) Raised to Overweight at HSBC.
  • Viacom (NYSE: VIA) Raised to Overweight at Barclays.
  • BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP) Cut to Hold at ABN AMRO.
  • Capital One (NYSE: COF) Target cut by more than half to $18 at Goldman Sachs.
  • Fifth Third (NASDAQ: FITB) Target cut 75% down to $2.00 at Goldman Sachs.
  • Mattel (NYSE: MAT) Cut to Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • StatoilHydro (NYSE: STO) Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley.

Jon C. Ogg
February 3, 2009

Top Pre-Market analyst Upgrades (AUTH, CBRL, CAKE, DRI, KR, LGF, PNRA, PMC, VLTR)

These are some of the top upgrades and positive calls we are seeing this Tuesday morning on Wall Street:

  • AuthenTec (AUTH) Started At Buy at Stanford Group.
  • CBRL Group (CBRL) Raised to Outperform at Raymond James.
  • Cheesecake Factory (CAKE) Raised to Outperform at Raymond James.
  • Darden Restaurants (DRI) Raised to Outperform at Raymond James.
  • Kroger (KR) Raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • Lions Gate (LGF) Raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • Panera Bread (PNRA) Raised to Outperform at Raymond James.
  • PharMerica (PMC) Started as Outperform at Oppenheimer.
  • Volterra Semiconductor (VLTR) Raised to Buy at Piper Jaffray.

Jon C. Ogg
October 21, 2008

Top Pre-Market Analyst Upgrades (AEP, CREE, DRI, GPS, KEY, MFE, ORCL, SONC, YUM)

These are some of the upgrades and positive calls from analysts we have seen affecting shares this Friday morning:

  • American Electric Power (AEP) Raised to Buy at Piper Jaffray.
  • Cree (CREE) Raised to Outperform at Oppenheimer.
  • Darden (DRI) Started as Overweight at Thomas Weisel.
  • Gap Inc. (GPS) Raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
  • KeyCorp (KEY) Raised to Sector Perform at RBC.
  • McAfee (MFE) Raised to Market Perform at FBR.
  • Oracle (ORCL) Raised to Buy at Piper Jaffray.
  • Sonic (SONC) Started as Overweight at Thomas Weisel.
  • YUM Brands (YUM) Started as Overweight at Thomas Weisel.

Jon C. Ogg
September 19, 2008

Top Pre-Market Analyst Upgrades (ADBE, APC, APSG, CENX, CRDN, CVS, DRI, GOOG, QCOM, STLD, SPWR, YUM)

There seemed to be more upgrades this morning than there were downgrades from Wall Street analysts.  Here is a snapshot of some of our key analyst calls we saw:

  • Adobe Systems (NASDAQ: ADBE) Started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE: APC) Raised to Outperform from Perform at Wachovia.
  • Applied Signal Tech (NASDAQ: APSG) Raised to Outperform at FBR.
  • Century Aluminum (NASDAQ: CENX) Raised to Outperform at FBR.
  • Ceradyne (NASDAQ: CRDN) Raised to Outperform at FBR.
  • CVS Caremark (NYSE: CVS) Started as Buy at Jefferies.
  • Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI) Started as Buy at Banc of America.
  • Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • Microsoft (N ASDAQ: MSFT) Started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM) Added to Goldman Sachs Conviction Buy List.
  • Steel Dynamics (NASDAQ: STLD) Raised to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup.
  • Sunpower Corp. (NASDAQ: SPWR) Raised To Neutral from Underperform at Merrill Lynch.
  • Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) Started as Buy at Banc of America.

Jon C. Ogg
July 11, 2008

Stocks Which Could Double In Recession: An Industry Overview

It is not uncommon during a serious recession for the shares of many public companies to drop. 24/7 Wall St. has assumed, for the purpose of finding stocks which could rise sharply, that the current downturn will last from the second quarter of this year until the second quarter of 2009. We have gone though the stock market by industry looking for either sectors which have been damaged by present circumstance but could come out of a slump as a recession ends. We have also evaluated areas of the business world which tend to do well whether the economy is doing poorly or not.

Home Builders.. Among the most unlikely candidates for a big rebound are housing stocks, but, one of the hallmarks of a recession moving toward a recovery is first stability and then a rebound in home prices.

Wall St. could make the case that home-building stocks have nowhere to go but up, at least for those which remain independent businesses. The three strongest stocks in the sector are probably Pulte (PHM), KB Home (KBH), and Lennar (LEN). KBH and PHM are off over 45% during the last year and Lennar is off over 55%.

Home prices will drop between 15% and 20% from their peak in 2006, depending on which analysis investors use. The advantage that these three companies have is that they build homes expensive enough that they are not likely to be victims of subprime mortgage problems or the foreclosures which tend to be highest in low income areas.

KBH is a good example of what has happened across the industry. In the last quarter, the company lost $268 million. Sales fell 43% to $794 million. As a reaction to these numbers, KBH has sharply cut costs. The company still has over $1.3 billion in cash. Home-builders have, in many cases, been able to restructure debt payments and sell off some assets. The larger companies in the industry have relatively sound balance sheets.

The most likely set of circumstances for driving up the value of these three stocks short-term is aggressive intervention by the US government through more liberal practices for lending at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, new FHA practices, or Congressional action to put a moratorium on foreclosures for middle class as well as lower end homes.

Pulte traded at its current levels in mid-2003, before the three year run-up in housing. Can it move from $15 to $30 before the end of the recession? A reasonable housing market can make it a double.

Beaten-Down Financials.. While some financial stocks like JP Morgan (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC) have weathered the current market crisis fairly well, three of the big names in the industry have been driven down between 45% and 55%. Citigroup (C), Lehman (LEH), and Merrill Lynch (MER) had the largest exposure to mortgage-related paper and there have been legitimate concerns about whether they would survive. The case for these stocks moving up is based on the notion that most of the big write-offs in the sector will be over by the end of Q2 08 and that these companies will start to show positive earnings in the third quarter. If the firms have been aggressive in their write-downs and have raised adequate capital, they have a very strong chance of rebounding. Citigroup’s recent earning report did not indicate that the bank was in any danger and the shares traded up.

Another key to the future of the banks and brokerages is their ability to lay-off large numbers of people in hard times. Citi is talking about cutting 25,000 or more jobs. Merrill and Lehman have already cut a great many. Over the last few weeks the CEOs of Morgan Stanley (MS), Lehman, UBS (UBS), and Merrill Lynch have all said, in one way or another, that the worst part of the global crisis is over.

These three companies have good leverage if they cut costs far enough. The head of Citi recently told the Financial Times that he can take 20% of the cost base out of the conglomerate. If he is right, a fairly modest improvement in revenue should give the bank reasonable if not remarkable earnings in the second half of the year. Citi and Merrill have brought in new CEOs. They have a chance to engineer unprecedented turnarounds which gives them mandates to completely reorganize their companies.

E*Trade  (ETFC) is the online discount brokerage firm that lost its way by offering  mortgage products, getting too far into banking operations.  Even though it sold off much of its problems to Citadel, the company still is disclosing that it still has financial asbestos and it will potentially be paying for this for several years.  Its losses were wide and its revenues were shy, but the long and short of this company is that its "survival" is no longer in question.  How the company was able to continue opening new accounts and how it didn’t lose its total customer accounts is a testament to a business model success, and its catchy TV advertising campaign seems to have helped.  This one was truly deemed as being "at-risk of implosion" a few months ago.  ETFC also reported fairly positive firm quarter numbers

Healthy Living. One sector that goes out the door when times get tough is the "healthy living" sector.  When smoking stays high and drinking goes up, what else would you expect?  But people can only live off of cheap food, beer, and tobacco for so long. The second that things start looking better economically these stocks should have already started recovering.

NutriSystem Inc. (NASDAQ: NTRI) is an extremely well-known brand.  The company’s stock started seeing trouble before the economy fell off the cliff.  Its television commercials may irritate many watchers and its ad budgets have gone up to avoid a worse drop off.  This stock has been battered and the major growth period appears to be behind the company.  But its forward P/E ratios are actually under 9 for both 2008 and 2009. There is one other aspect to this company that many people actually do not take into consideration: you can actually live off of their food for cheaper than fast food.  An intro package for the first 28 days of NutriSystem for first time buyers currently runs $293.72 for women and $319.95 for men.  There is no free lunch out there, but to get that much food for that little may appeal to those on a strict budget even more.  At $20.01, this stock could double and then actually almost double again before going over its 52-week high.

Unitedhealth Group, Inc. (NYSE: UNH) has not enjoyed 2008.  As a health insurance provider, there are many risks to the model.  The sector has been pounded with earnings warnings; there is an election year with the threat of a potential trend toward some sort of universal health care mandates, and rising medical costs when insurers are under pressure to keep renewal rates low.  But there is a silver lining at Unitedhealth.  If the government does go in the direction of universal coverage it will almost certainly have to be via the private sector; Unitedhealth already is in that door.  Businesses have also cut back on certain premium plans, but that won’t last forever as the economy recover and employers once again have to offer better benefits.  With 70 million Americans served in some form or fashion, with its Medicare Plan D, and with its AARP contract it seems that some Americans already government health care.  Earnings come out late April with prior guidance for 2008 at $3.95 to $4.00, and analysts calling for $3.85 in 2008 and $4.35 in 2009.  At $37.25, that is a forward P/E of well under 10 and in a sector that many investors have paid much higher multiples for.  52-week trading range is $33.57 to $59.64.

Casual Dining Out. What is one of the first things that the consumer cuts back on when they bring their spending down?  Casual dining.  The good news is that this trend never lasts forever, and in cities like New York, Chicago, Houston, and other urban areas, the average adult eats out more than they eat in.  Why is Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI) not on this list? It has already recovered some 70% from lows.  As private equity firms went on a casual dining chain buyout spree, these have been shown to be steady earning companies through time.

One huge player that has felt the pinch is Brinker International, Inc. (NYSE: EAT).  This compnay owns major food chains such as Chili’s, Romano’s Macaroni Grill, On The Border Mexican Grill, and Maggiano’s.  As of December, 2007, it owned or franchised some 1,800 units in the U.S. and abroad, with some 100,000 employees and $4 Billion in sales.  The company has simultaneously been hurt by rising food costs at the same time that many consumers have been paring down their dining budgets. But with household brands that Joe Public likes to go to with regularity, this $1.9 Billion market cap might be a cheap franchise to acquire if private equity ever wants to go back into billion-dollar food deals.  Its below-market and below-peer forward P/E ratios of 13.2 for 2008 and 11.2 for 2009 also make this attractive for a steady food growth stock when consumers have fully recovered and gone back to normal habits.

Retail Apparel. The current economic environment is bad for most retail names, but it particularly hits mid-level and upper-middle level retail giants that have to still maintain inventory while many of their customers go discount shopping at clearance stores or at smaller chains.  While clothing expenses can be pared down for some time, it’s highly unlikely that eighteen months out we’ll be in an economy of loin cloths and flip-flops.

Macy’s, Inc. (NYSE: M) has had its share of hard times lately.  As its department stores are massive and as inventory level requirements are more than demanding, the company is simultaneously closing several stores, retooling its management ranks, and slowing its new store openings.  Its brands are also in the middle to upper-middle sector of retail, but aren’t in the lowest end, making it one of the more economically torpedoed stocks in mall-based retail and apparel.  Wall Street will likely give the company a pass now, like it did last quarter, as any great earnings for 2008 will be hard to imagine.  JPMorgan just downgraded this one this week to an Underweight rating and even called it a value trap, but the analyst’s under-street targets for earnings are still an under-market forward P/E of under 13 for 2008 and 12 for 2009.  A double from current levels would not even take the stock to new 52-week highs.  After the retail giants form a bottom, they just about always come back with a vengeance.

The other retailer that has seen its share of punishment in the mid-level apparel retail giant store formats is J.C.Penney Co., Inc. (NYSE: JCP).  Shares have been butchered more than 50% as consumers have dialed down spending.  The company has even launched its brand-new Ralph Lauren centers in the stores just in time to catch its customers when they were maxed-out and going to discounters.  But the company is still thought of as well-run with an entrenched team. Analysts have slashed and burned earnings projections.  Since estimates have been taken down so much, it trades at forward 2008 P/E ratios of 11.6 and a tad under 10 for 2009.  The other potential saving grace is that if there is one company in the group that was rumored to have private equity interest, it was J.C.Penney.  At one point, it was even thought that management and its employee pension plan would seek to take it private.  This one won’t turn around overnight, but with it in the lower part of its $33.27 to $83.64 trading range it looks like much of the bad news has been taken out of the stock.  A double from today’s levels would not even have shares at 52-week highs.

Douglas A. McIntyre and Jon Ogg

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (AU, APOL, CLF, DRI, ETR, EXC, EXPD, F, MELI, OSIP, STX, WDC)

These are not all of the analyst calls out there affecting shares, but these are the top 10 analyst we are focusing on this Monday morning:

  • Anglogold (NYSE: AU) Raised to Buy at UBS.
  • Apollo Group (NASDAQ: APOL) cut to Sell at Banc of America.
  • Cleveland-Cliffs (NYSE: CLF) started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI) raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
  • Entergy (NYSE: ETR) & Excelon (NYSE: EXC) raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • Expeditors International (NASDAQ: EXPD) Raised to Buy at UBS.
  • Ford Motors (NYSE: F) cut to Sell at Citigroup.
  • MercadoLibre (NASDAQ: MELI) raised to Outperform at RBC Capital.
  • OSI Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: OSIP) raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
  • Seagate Tech (NYSE: STX) raised to Overweight at JP Morgan; Western Digital (NYSE: WDC) downgraded to Underweight at JP Morgan.

Jon C. Ogg
March 3, 2008

Darden Apparently No Victim of Casual Dining Woes (DRI)

Darden Restaurants, Inc. (NYSE: DRI) is seeing shares surge Monday in early trading activity after the company gave an updated guidance to its quarter.  While Darden expects its EPS growth to be adversely affected by its acquisition of RARE Hospitality International, Inc, it offered dilued EPS guidance after the purchase of $0.78 to $0.80, compared to $0.83 to $0.85 without the acquisition.  Earnings estimates for the quarter are $0.77 EPS.

The company expects combined U.S. same-restaurant sales growth for fiscal May-2008 to be 2% to 3%. Without the acquisition, growth would be over 7%, demonstrating that “guests continue to show their loyalty to Darden brands,” according to Chairman and CEO Clarence Otis.

The company is still maintaining a 2% to 4% EPS growth for fiscal May-2008, which is consistent with guidance given in December 2007.  Darden owns and operates roughly 1,700 casual dining restaurants including Red Lobster, Olive Garden, and LongHorn Steakhouse.  This is substantial when you consider all of the concerns about casual dining and tightening consumer spending.  Maybe everyone determined how bad of a job they do cooking their own food new after a few short weeks.

Darden’s third quarter earnings will be released Tuesday, March 10, after market close.  Shares are up more than 8% to $29.19 in early trading.  Its 52-week trading range is $20.89 to $47.60, so it hasn’t even recovered half of its share losses from highs over the last year.

Jon C. Ogg
February 11, 2008

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (AXP, BT, DRI, FMER, GSK, IBCP, LVLT, MSFT, NAPS, SNDK)

These are not the only analyst calls affecting stocks this morning, but these are the top calls that 247WallSt.com is focusing on:

  • American Express (NYSE: AXP) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at KBW.
  • BT Group (NYSE: BT) downgraded to Underperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI) initiated as Outperform at RBC.
  • First Merit (NASDAQ: FMER) downgraded to Underperform at Oppenheimer.
  • GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK) raised to Buy from Neutral at UBS.
  • Independent Bank (NASDAQ: IBCP) downgraded to Underperform at Oppenheimer.
  • Level 3 Communications (NASDAQ: LVLT) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC.
  • Napster (NASDAQ: NAPS) raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
  • SanDisk (NASDAQ: SNDK) initiated as Sell at Caris.

Jon C. Ogg
February 11, 2008

Jim Cramer’s Stimulus Package & Turnaround Stocks

On tonight’s MAD MONEY on CNBC, Jim Cramer noted that selling stocks today isn’t a good idea and that this will be good for retail stocks and others too.  You have to keep in mind the same-store-sales as the key metric, but here are his retail names he went through:

  • In retail, Cramer likes Guess? (NYSE: GES), J.Crew (NYSE: JCG), Lowe’s (NYSE: LOW), Liz Claiborne (NYSE: LIZ), Jones Apparel (NYSE: JNY), Costco Wholesale (NASDAQ: COST), TJX Corp. (NYS: TJX), Urban Outfitters (NASDAQ: URBN)… and he likes Darden (NYSE: DRI) in restaurants. 

Cramer actually talked positive about one homebuilder and a mortgage player:

  • Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL) will actually be a winner on the higher GSE increase in the conforming loan price cap.  In mortgages the increase in the cap will help Thornburg Mortgages (NYSE: TMA). 

He thinks that takeovers are coming, and he is under the impression that Bear Stearns (NYSE: BSC) may actually get taken over after a huge drop.  He thinks it is just too valuable to others.  Just FYI, Cramer did discuss this Bear Stearns takeover possibility on TheStreet.com earlier this morning or this afternoon.  In short, he thinks that this might merit a reason to stop being so cynical.  He wants to buy something in retail and something in banking. 

Last week Cramer went value fishing for technology companies that he thought were either overlooked during the meltdown or that had been oversold.  Here were his picks in technology:

Jon C. Ogg
January 24, 2008

The 52-Week Low Club

Darden Restaurants (DRI) Bad earnings, downgrades. Falls to $28.30 from 52-week high of $47.60.

SLM (SLM) Buy-out dead. New CEO. Margins for product poor. A mess. Down to $22.35 from 52-week high of $58.

Mens Wearhouse (MW) Nothing special. General retail malaise. Trades down to $28.43 from 52-week high of $56.64.

Exar Corporation (EXAR) Cuts revenue estimates. Falls to $7.60 from 52-week high of $15.24.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Mergers Closing For Vote (FLEX, SLR, PYX, ENR, NWRE, HPQ, AGE, WB, AV, RARE, DRI)

This week we have many mergers coming up for approval from shareholders, and many of these will no longer be trading after this week.  Here is a partial list of the more active stocks up for shareholder approval this Thursday and Friday:

Flextronics (NASDAQ:FLEX) and Solectron (NYSE:SLR)… Election Deadline 5:00 P.M. EST on Thursday, September 27, 2007.  Playtex Products Inc. (NYSE:PYX) shareholders will vote Thursday on the firm’s $2 billion acquisition by Energizer Holdings Inc. (NYSE:ENR) during a special meeting.  The acquisition of Neoware (NASDAQ:NWRE) by H-P (NYSE:HP) should be approved handily and gladly by holders on Thursday.

Friday is perhaps the last day we’ll ever see A.G.Edwards (NYSE:AGE) trade independently as Wachovia (NYSE:WB) is taking this over; shareholders expected to approve and no regulations in the way.  Avaya (NYSE:AV) special meeting is September 28 over its sale to Sierra, formed by Silver lake Partners and TPG Capital.  Rare Hospitality (NASDAQ:RARE) should also cease trading after this Friday as well as it becomes part of Darden Restaurants (NYSE:DRI).

If these have changed, it has been very recently.  There is always a chance that these will have been temporarily delayed.  We have been covering many of these for our BAIT SHOP list of merger candidates in our "Special Situation Investing Newsletter" that is available on trial.

Jon C. Ogg
September 26, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he produces the Special Situation Investing Newsletter and he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (August 20, 2007)

AGP raised to Buy at Jefferies.
CCO raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
DELL started as Buy at WRHambrecht.
DLTR raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
DRI raised to Outperform at CIBC.
EQT started as BUy at Deutsche Bank.
FLS raised to Outperform at RBC.
FSLR raised to BUy at Deutsche Bank.
JBHT raised to Outperform at wachovia.
LAMR raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
MHP cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
MPEL raised to Buy at Citigroup.
OATS cut to Peer PErform at Bear Stearns.
RIMM target raised to $295 at Goldman Sachs.
TSM raised to Buy at UBS.
WST started as Neutral at UBS.

Jon C. Ogg
August 20, 2007

How Cheesecake Factory Can Fix Its Downgrade Problems (CAKE)

Cheesecake Factory (CAKE-NASDAQ) is trading down more than 7% to $24.80 on almost triple its normal volume after multiple analyst downgrades based upon comments from a growth conference.  Yesterday, at a William Blair Growth Conference, Cheesecake Factory said second-quarter revenue would increase by 14.5% to 15.5%, implying sales of $369.4 million to $372.6 million.  The problem is that analysts’ consensus forecast is $378.9 million, according to First Call.

This morning Bear Stearns downgraded shares from ‘Outperform’ to ‘Peer Perform’ because higher dairy costs won’t be fully offset by higher menu prices.  Raymond James also downgraded shares from a ‘Strong Buy’ to an ‘Outperform’ rating.  CIBC World Markets also cuts its ‘Sector Outperform’ rating to a lower ‘Sector Perform’ rating, and Robert W. Baird maintained a ‘Neutral’ rating but trimmed earnings estimates.  Back on June 8, shares fell after FBR removed the company from its ‘Top Pick list’ of stocks.  On June 1, shares were trading at $28.39.

Part of the problem is that the food chain is not really in the middle of the road dining establishments and it isn’t really considered ultra-fine or upscale dining.  It’s above the Darden (DRI-NYSE) and Brinker (EAT-NYSE) restaurant chains, and below the high-end steakhouses like Ruth’s Chris (RUTH-NASDAQ).  So what can the company do to offset higher dairy costs and higher food costs?  The company operates ‘The Cheesecake Factory’ and ‘Grand Lux Cafe’ restaurants and if you have been to either of these you will know what I mean when I say "Beltbuster servings" and "To-Go Leftovers."  The portions here are gi-normous where most appetizers can be entrees and entrees can be split.  Higher prices were already indicated as an offset to higher dairy prices, but the company can easily cut down the portions by as little as 5%.  Food cost cuts in a restaurant add right to the bottom line if they aren’t noticed, and the company doesn’t even have to announce they are trimming the sizes if it is by this little.  Most consumers will say this is foodie-sacrilege, but at this operator it will never be missed.

As a reminder, this is a stock that Jim Cramer also said in April could be a target of private equity or a management-endorsed buyout.

Jon C. Ogg
June 21, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in any of the companies he covers.