“Bud Light” Moment Hits Cracker Barrel: Stock Crushed, Traffic Slides, Guidance Slashed
Cracker Barrel shares are lower in premarket trading after posting softer-than-expected quarterly sales and cutting full-year revenue and profit guidance. Customer traffic dropped more than anticipated, driven in part by backlash after the casual dining chain effectively “Bud Lighted” itself with a disastrous woke rebranding.
The rebranding …
… which was eventually reversed and the marketing ‘expert’ resigned, appears to have a lasting impact on sales.
First-quarter results swung to an adjusted loss of 74 cents per share versus a profit a year ago, slightly better than the Bloomberg Consensus estimate. Revenue dipped 6% and missed forecasts, with comparable sales for both restaurants and retail declining more than expected.
Wall Street analysts were spooked by the 7.3% decline in customer traffic for the quarter.
Snapshot: First quarter results (courtsey of Bloomberg):
-
Adjusted loss per share 74c vs. EPS 45c y/y, estimate loss/shr 79c
-
Revenue $797.2 million, -5.7% y/y, estimate $801.1 million
-
Restaurant comp sales -4.7% vs. +2.9% y/y, estimate -4.02%
-
Retail comparable sales -8.5% vs. -1.6% y/y, estimate -6.5%
Ongoing traffic deterioration sharply reduced annual sales and profit guidance (courtsey of Bloomberg):
-
Sees revenue $3.2 billion to $3.3 billion, saw $3.35 billion to $3.45 billion, estimate $3.38 billion (Bloomberg Consensus)
-
Sees capital expenditure $110 million to $125 million, saw $135 million to $150 million
-
Sees adjusted Ebitda $70 million to $110 million, saw $150 million to $190 million
In premarket trading, Cracker Barrel shares are down about 5.5%. As of Tuesday’s close, the stock has been cut in half since the August rebranding debut.
Here’s what Wall Street analysts are saying (courtsey of Bloomberg);
Piper Sandler (neutral, PT to $27 from $49), Brian Mullan
-
“Unfortunately, the struggles that kicked off in August have continued at CBRL, with traffic in the quarter down 7.3% (better in the beginning of August, and then worse after that),” Mullan writes
-
Traffic for the fiscal 2Q-to-date period is running down 11%, and management “materially” reduced its annual guidance
-
Cracker Barrel is sticking with many of the turn-around efforts designed to help over the long-term, but the main takeaway from the 3Q report/conference is that “things remain pretty tough at the business in the here and now”
Citi (sell PT to $20 vs. $24), Jon Tower
-
“The traffic slump spurred by the ill-fated logo change resonated through F1Q results, and, along with a softer restaurant backdrop, prompted a weaker start to F2Q and a FY26 guidance cut,” Tower writes
-
In the near-term, the company is “mixing in tactical sales drivers,” like buy-one-get-one and holiday promos, that may “prove costly” to the P&L, and weaving in longer-term initiatives to “sustainably drive the top line and preserve profits.”
-
Believes the stock will remain under pressure until traffic/sales show “sustained improvement, as out-year numbers remain a question mark”
Truist (buy, PT to $45 from $50), Jake Bartlett
-
“Sales trends have not begun to recover from the 8/19 re- branding fiasco, or any recovery has been offset by macro pressures,” Bartlett writes
-
Says Cracker Barrel is “taking the right steps” to boost traffic, with its focus on improved service and food quality
-
This has been reflected in improving guest satisfaction scores and will eventually, he believes, be reflected in a traffic recovery
-
Business investments, including adding value to the menu and retaining labor hours, are headwinds to FY26 margins, but should drive operating leverage in FY27
Cracker Barrel is a case study for every other casual dining chain: go woke, get crushed.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 12/10/2025 – 13:25
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/VuBx1Kb Tyler Durden

