Investors’ favorite burrito joint, Chipotle (NYSE:CMG), will serve its first quarter earnings Tuesday after the closing bell. Chipotle has been the winner of the restaurant wars in recent years, but its seemingly untouchable dominance may be on the decline. With earnings and revenue growth expected to slow this quarter, can Chiptole maintain its spot as top dog among fast casual restaurants?
Chipotle’s identity as a quick and relatively inexpensive restaurant with a focus on sustainably raised non-GMO ingredients has boosted its appeal to customers and investors alike. Earlier this year several Chipotle locations pulled carnitas from their menus after Chipotle suspended a supplier for violating its pork raising standards. When Chipotle shuts down its carnitas operation you hear far more praise in the media than dissatisfaction from hungry diners.
Chipotle’s quick throughput times and overwhelmingly positive public image have resulted in a series of stunning financial performances through a period where fastfood incumbents such as McDonald`s (NYSE:MCD)and Yum! Brands Inc (NYSE:YUM) have struggled. Chipotle’s average single year stock return from 2010 to 2014 was a staggering 59%. During that period the Mexican restaurant chain’s fundamentals went into overdrive with annual revenue increasing from $1.84 billion to $4.11 billion. Yearly earnings per share more than doubled from $5.64 to $14.13.
Tuesday analysts on Estimize expect Chipotle’s explosive growth to show signs of fading. Contributors are forecasting a 23% improvement in revenues. That’s slightly less than Chipotle’s FQ1 of 2014, the slowest quarter of revenue growth last year which saw a 24% addition. The consensus from Estimize is that Chipotle will report $1.11 billion in sales. Wall Street’s estimate is only marginally lower (0.01%) at $1.10 billion.
On the bottom line Estimize contributors are looking for $3.66 in EPS while Wall Street is 5 cents (1.4%) behind at $3.61. Estimize contributors expect Chipotle to report a 39% year over year profit gain in the first quarter. Most companies doing over $1 billion in sales each quarter would be thrilled with 39% profit growth, but for Chipotle that rate of growth is less than its been in the past 2 quarters (56% and 52% sequentially).
Estimize contributors expect a small beat against this Wall Street consensus and overall this should be another solid quarter for Chipotle. But in all likelihood progress will not live up to the stellar performance standard set in recent periods.