1 Top Restaurant Stock to Buy Now

Restaurant stocks can be appealing investments for a number of reasons. It's a timeless industry that has proven more resistant to e-commerce disruption than retail, and restaurants offer a level of accessibility to investors that most industries don't. If you're curious about a restaurant stock, you can visit one of its locations, sample the food, see how big the crowd is, and maybe even get a view into the kitchen or ask a front-line employee how business is going.

Such a visit won't replace the knowledge gained from examining a company's financial statements, but you can learn things that you won't see in the numbers.

The restaurant industry today

Following a boom among fast-casual restaurants in the post-recession years, restaurant growth has slowed down more recently, and the industry appears to be getting oversaturated. According to the Census Bureau, sales at restaurants and bars in the U.S. last year grew just 2.8%, the slowest pace of growth since 2009 and lagging behind the 4.4% increase in retail sales last year.

Some have deemed this slowdown a "restaurant recession" as same-store sales, a key industry metric that strips out the effect of new store openings, have declined for much of the last two years. According to data analysis firm TDn2K, same-store sales rose 0.4% in the fourth quarter, breaking a two-year streak of declines. However, traffic, or the number of customers making orders, still fell 1.9%.

Restaurant chains have responded by scaling back on new store openings. Chipotle Mexican Grill (NYSE: CMG) said it would open just 130-150 locations this year after adding 240 locations in 2016. BJ's Restaurants said it would open just four to six restaurants this year after opening as many as 17 locations in previous years, and Applebee's and IHOP parent DineEquity said it would close as many as 160 restaurants.

A restaurant table set with plates.
A restaurant table set with plates.

Image source: Getty Images.

A range of options

Still, some companies have managed to thrive in spite of headwinds. The chart below shows a range of restaurant stocks and how they've performed over the last year and the last five years.

Company

Market Cap

Trailing P/E Ratio

1-Year Stock Growth/(Loss)

5-Year Growth

Chipotle Mexican Grill

$9.3 billion

64.1

(18.9%)

11.9%

McDonald's (NYSE: MCD)

$141.1 billion

25.6

44.9%

90.5%

Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI)

$12.1 billion

25.1

33.2%

138.1%

Domino's Pizza (NYSE: DPZ)

$9.6 billion

42

32%

370.8%

GrubHub (NYSE: GRUB)

$6.2 billion

104.9

80.8%

109.4%*

Data source: Yahoo! Finance and YCharts. *Since Grubhub's IPO on April 4, 2014.