Is Carrols Restaurant Group a Buy After Its Earnings Disappointment?

In This Article:

Carrols Restaurant Group (NASDAQ: TAST) released disappointing first-quarter 2019 results and underwhelming forward guidance last week. With the stock down 20% since then, it's obvious the market wasn't pleased.

But that raises the question: Would opportunistic investors be wise to pick up shares of the country's biggest Burger King franchiser after its plunge? To find out, let's take a closer look at what drove Carrols' results last quarter and what investors can expect going forward.

Close up of a Whopper burger from Burger King.
Close up of a Whopper burger from Burger King.

IMAGE SOURCE: CARROLS RESTAURANT GROUP.

Carrols Restaurant Group results: The raw numbers

Metric

Q1 2019

Q1 2018

Year-Over-Year Change

Restaurant sales

$290.8 million

$271.6 million

7.1%

GAAP net income (loss)

($11.5 million)

($3.1 million)

N/A

GAAP earnings (loss) per share

($0.32)

($0.09)

N/A

DATA SOURCE: CARROLS RESTAURANT GROUP. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles.

What happened with Carrols Restaurant Group this quarter?

  • On an adjusted (non-GAAP) basis, which excludes items like stock-based compensation and acquisition expenses, Carrols incurred a net loss of $10.4 million, or $0.29 per share, larger than a loss of $0.08 per share in the same year-ago period.

  • These results were well below analysts' consensus estimates for an adjusted loss of $0.16 per share on revenue closer to $292 million.

  • That said, comparable restaurant sales climbed 2.4% -- above the 1.6% most on Wall Street were modeling -- lapping a 6.2% increase in last year's first quarter.

  • Adjusted EBITDA fell 30.7% year over year, to $13.1 million.

  • Restaurant-level EBITDA margin was 9.8% of total restaurant sales, down 244 basis points year over year. The decline was driven by a combination of higher wages and, to a greater extent, the same heightened promotions we've seen the company use to drive top-line growth and sustain market share the past two quarters.

  • As of March 31, 2019, Carrols owned and operated 845 Burger King restaurants.

  • On April 30, 2019 Carrols closed on its previously announced merger with Cambridge Franchise Holdings, adding 165 additional Burger King and 55 Popeyes restaurants across 10 Southeastern states. That brings Carrols' total to 1,010 Burger King and 55 Popeyes restaurants in 23 states.

    • As part of the deal, Carrols also entered into an Area Development and Remodeling agreement with Burger King Corporation expanding its first right of refusal for the acquisition of as many as 500 additional restaurants.

What management had to say

CEO Daniel Accordino noted the company's admirable comparable-restaurant sales growth despite lapping its most difficult year-over-year comparison to date. But he also elaborated: