Restaurants ‘fairly well positioned’ due to strong consumer, analyst says

In This Article:

Citi Restaurant Analyst Jon Tower joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss restaurant earnings and how inflation could affect consumer spending on dining and food.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: Investors are keeping a close eye on the fast food space this week as Chipotle, McDonald's, and Domino's are all set to report earnings this week. Joining us now to break down what to expect is Citi restaurant analyst Jon Tower. Jon, always great to see you here.

I've been looking at some restaurant traffic data. And I've been surprised, just given all the inflation we are seeing in the consumer goods space, fast food appears to be holding up well. Do you think consumers are trading down from eating at home to eating at fast food?

JON TOWER: Well, hey, Brian. Thanks for having me today first. And good to see you.

In terms of the space and demand specifically, we actually think the consumer is in pretty good shape. And some of the work that we did when we launched on April 11, we dug into that key debate. How is inflation impacting consumer consumption and specifically their wallets and discretionary income?

And what we think is often lost in the discussion is the backdrop around jobs and wages. And when we dug into the different income cohorts, specifically four to five different cohorts, sub-30,000 at the low end and then greater than 200,000 at the high end. And when you take a look at inflation's impact against their spend over time, it's certainly a drag but.

When they then add in some of the wage growth as well as some of the job growth as well, that's a nice netting positive effect for the consumer. So generally speaking, they're in good shape even though inflation numbers have picked up pretty nicely, and there are some pressures on the consumer that hadn't been there say, six to nine months ago.

But yeah, in terms of thinking about how this is going to impact demand over time, we think that restaurants are fairly well-positioned. They offer convenience that, say, the grocery channel can't provide with respect to speed and availability. And we think that given the consumer being in a relatively strong spot with low unemployment and jobs plentiful and wage rates moving higher, restaurant demand should be pretty strong into the future.

JULIE HYMAN: Hey, Jon, it's Julie here. The stocks are not trading as though the demand is going to be strong going into the future, right? If you look at most of these stocks, they are down pretty sharply year to date. I mean, you're looking at a drop of 34% for Starbucks. Domino's is down about the same amount.