ckr posts
FeedPosted Jun 27th 2009 9:40AM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Walgreen Co (WAG), Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY), Kroger Co (KR), ConAgra Foods (CAG), Darden Restaurants (DRI), NIKE, Inc'B' (NKE), KB HOME (KBH), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Oracle Corp (ORCL), Red Hat Inc (RHT), CKE Restaurants (CKR), Rite Aid Corp (RAD), Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan (POT)
Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Nike, Oracle, Kroger, Walgreen, Monsanto, KB Home ...
Posted Dec 13th 2008 2:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Nokia Corp. (NOK), Krispy Kreme Doughnuts (KKD), H and R Block (HRB), Kroger Co (KR), Costco Wholesale (COST), FedEx Corp (FDX), Procter and Gamble (PG), Eastman Kodak (EK), Electronic Arts (ERTS), Dow Chemical (DOW), Texas Instruments (TXN), CKE Restaurants (CKR)
Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Costco, Kroger, Krispy Kreme, Lululemon, FedEx, P&G and others
Posted Dec 11th 2008 11:11AM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, McDonald's (MCD), Yum Brands (YUM), Burger King Hldgs (BKC), CKE Restaurants (CKR)
CKE Restaurants (NYSE: CKR), owner of the Carl's Jr. and Hardee's brands, reported earnings for the third quarter on Wednesday. The top line fell a little over 4%, coming in at $336.6 million. On a diluted basis, the bottom line cooked up $0.10 per share. That was a penny less than what was earned last year, but the company did manage to meet Wall Street's expectations.
Moving away from total sales and net income, let's look at the all-important same-store sales results. For the third quarter, comps for both CKE brands on a blended basis rose 0.9% according to the earnings release. An earlier press release focusing on same-store sales in November, had comps increasing by 0.3% on a blended basis. Year-to-date, blended comps moved 1.9% higher. When you compare these changes to their respective year-ago periods, you'll see that CKE isn't really doing gangbuster business.
I find neither the earnings numbers nor the sales figures particularly compelling. Management seems to think that the dreadful economic crisis we're facing is mostly responsible. Hey, it certainly isn't helping, and I sympathize with CKE's challenges during the credit crisis. Yet, I'd have to respectfully suggest that management get out there and get some hardcore marketing efforts going. When sales are down, you need to up the ante when it comes to branding and convincing patrons to come through your door. These comps are pretty weak and unattractive. They can be pushed higher with some innovative, creative campaigns.
Continue reading CKE Restaurants' Q3 and comps not as juicy as the burgers
Posted Sep 14th 2008 12:30PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, FedEx Corp (FDX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Morgan Stanley (MS), Economic data
Last week's preview raised the question of whether consumers were turning to comfort foods in these uncertain times, specifically in terms of second quarter earnings of Campbell Soup (NYSE: CPB) and Krispy Kreme (NYSE: KKD). Campbell's strong earnings growth topped expectations, while Krispy Kreme narrowed its loss, though it fell short of estimates.
This coming week should bring reports from more food-related companies, from cereal maker General Mills and food packager CongAgra to grocery chain Kroger, to the parent companies of restaurants Cracker Barrel, Olive Garden, Red Lobster, Carl's Jr., and Hardees. Also look for reports from tech-related companies such as Oracle, Adobe, and Palm, as well as from financials Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, and from economic bellwether FedEx.
Here's what analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial are expecting from some of the companies reporting earnings this week, as compared to their results from the same period of last year:
Continue reading The week in preview: Eyes on Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, FedEx
Posted Jun 28th 2008 9:40AM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Google (GOOG), Walgreen Co (WAG), Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY), Kroger Co (KR), Darden Restaurants (DRI), Research in Motion (RIMM), General Mills (GIS), NIKE, Inc'B' (NKE), KB HOME (KBH), Oracle Corp (ORCL), Red Hat Inc (RHT), United Parcel'B' (UPS), Palm Inc (PALM), CKE Restaurants (CKR), Rite Aid Corp (RAD)
Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
Continue reading Earnings highlights: RIM, Oracle, KB Home, Nike, Kroger, Walgreen and others
Posted Jun 25th 2008 6:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY), General Mills (GIS), NIKE, Inc'B' (NKE), Red Hat Inc (RHT), CKE Restaurants (CKR)
Here's a quick recap of some additional earnings reports on Wednesday.
Beaverton, Ore.-based Nike Inc. (NYSE: NKE) said strong growth overseas helped boost its fourth-quarter profit by 12% to $490.5 million, or 98 cents per share. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected the company to earn 96 cents per share for the quarter. Shares fell more than 5% in after-hours trading to $62.15.
CKE Restaurants Inc. (NYSE: CKR) said its first-quarter profit climbed 8% to $16.6 million, or 31 cents per share, helped by a small increase in same-store sales at Carl's Jr. restaurants. Revenue fell 3% to $466.2 million. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expected profit of 27 cents per share on revenue of $465.5 million. Shares fell 5 cents to $12.25 in after-hours trading.
Red Hat Inc. (NYSE: RHT) said its fiscal first-quarter profit rose 6.6% to $17.3 million, or 8 cents per share. Adjusted earnings were 18 cents per share. Revenue rose 32% to $156.6 million. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial on average predicted a profit of 18 cents per share on revenue of $153 million. Shares fell 19 cents in after-hours trading to $22.11.
General Mills Inc. (NYSE: GIS) said its fourth-quarter profit dropped 17% to $185.2 million, or 53 cents per share. Adjusted earnings were 73 cents per share, which met Wall Street expectations. Sales increased 13% to $3.47 billion beating expectations. The company reaffirmed its guidance for the full year. Shares fell almost 2% to $61.19.
Continue reading More Wednesday earnings: Nike, CKE, Red Hat, General Mills, Bed Bath & Beyond
Posted Jun 19th 2008 2:35PM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Industry
CKE Restaurants Inc. (NYSE:
CKR), owner of the Carls, Jr. and Hardee's fast food brands, is getting the call from an investor to slash costs and cut spending in order to put forth more free cash flow. The investor, Ramius LLC, has good reason to be asking for the cuts, too. It alleges that CKE continues blaming its performance on a downtrodden U.S. economy, when, in fact, it has not made the changes to ensure its cash flow has the means to grow.
CKE's annual shareholder's meeting is today, and there will probably be several calls to figure out what the company's board is doing to ensure the best return for its constituents. Ramius said, "It is unacceptable for management and the board to stay the course and continue to blame the company's poor operating performance on economic issues out of its control." With
CKE's shares down 48% from its 52-week high, and with the most recent quarter having seen a 38% net income drop, the pressure is on.
Ramius went on to suggest that CKE
consolidate its three headquarters buildings and figure out why the company's absolute G&A figure hasn't really changed since 2001. "In light of the current economic outlook, the company's $145 million capital-spending plan for fiscal 2009 is too aggressive and unwarranted," said Ramius. The investor plans to vote its shares against CEO Andrew Puzder and three other board members today at the annual shareholder's meeting.
I like examples of astute investors doing homework to make a case against an investment, and this qualifies. CKE responded by saying it welcomes a "more thorough dialogue" with Ramius. Of course it does, but today will see some fire from the audience ahead of CKE's next quarterly report on June 25.
Posted Mar 29th 2008 3:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Walgreen Co (WAG), Penney (J.C.) (JCP), Adobe Systems (ADBE), Tiffany and Co (TIF), ConAgra Foods (CAG), Darden Restaurants (DRI), KB HOME (KBH), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Oracle Corp (ORCL), CKE Restaurants (CKR)
Posted Mar 27th 2008 1:15PM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, McDonald's (MCD), Yum Brands (YUM), Wendy's Intl (WEN), Burger King Hldgs (BKC), CKE Restaurants (CKR)
CKE Restaurants (NYSE: CKR) reported earnings for the fourth quarter yesterday after the bell. Total revenue decreased 3% for the quarter, and net income from continuing operations was $0.00 per diluted share, which wasn't too good in comparison to last year's number, which was $0.17 per diluted share. Total revenue was flat for the year, and net income from continuing operations was $0.57 per diluted share versus $0.77 per diluted share in the previous fiscal year.
CKE Restaurants, which operates the Carl's Jr. and Hardee's brands, did not impress analysts, as earnings expectations for the quarter were missed by two pennies. I myself wasn't too impressed with the entire report. Same-store sales increased 0.9% at Carl's Jr. and 2% at Hardee's for 2007 -- I'm not going to jump up and down over that bit of news. In addition, costs are up because of inflationary pressures, and revenues have obviously been challenged. There's not a lot that I like about this story.
CKE's stock is certainly on the lower end of its 52-week range, but I can't say it is necessarily cheap; it closed yesterday at $12.45 -- the high for the year on the stock is $23.24. This is a situation that calls for an old standby: "There are better opportunities out there in this space." For me personally, if I'm looking at the burger business, I'm way more likely to consider a McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), a Burger King (NYSE: BKC), or a Wendy's (NYSE: WEN) before I entertain CKE as an investment idea. Although they don't do burgers (so far as I know), I'd even look at a Yum! Brands (NYSE: YUM) before CKE. These companies have better brand equities in my estimation. CKE may turn itself around, but I just wasn't impressed by my look at its data.
Disclosure: I own none of the companies mentioned here; positions can change at any time.
Posted Jul 23rd 2007 10:39AM by Kevin Shult (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, IAC/InterActiveCorp (IACI), Analyst initiations, CKE Restaurants (CKR)
MOST NOTEWORTHY: CKE Restaurants (CKR), Capella Education (CPLA), IAC/InterActiveCorp (IACI), Liberty Media (LINTA) and BWAY Holding (BWY) were today's noteworthy initiations:
- JP Morgan started CKE Restaurants (NYSE: CKR) with a Neutral rating, citing near-term margin concerns.
- Barrington believes Capella Education (NASDAQ: CPLA) is one of the fastest growing companies within its group in every aspect including enrollment, earnings and revenue.
- Stifel started IAC/InterActiveCorp (NASDAQ: IACI) with a Buy rating, believing there is a 60% chance of a material event occurring within the next 6 months. Stifel believes QVC is the best interactive retailing operator given its 22% EBITDA margins and 16% operating margins.
- Banc of America initiated BWAY Holding (NYSE: BWY) with a Neutral rating, citing a balanced risk/reward. JP Morgan started shares of BWY with an Overweight rating on valuation...
OTHER INITIATIONS:
- JMP Securities started BFC Financial (AMEX: BFF) with a Market Outperform rating.
Analyst summaries provided by TheFlyOnTheWall.com (subscription required).Posted May 28th 2007 1:26PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Law, Internet, Marketing and advertising, CKE Restaurants (CKR)
CKE Restaurants (NYSE: CKR), parent company of Hardee's and Carl Jr.'s is suing Jack in the Box (NYSE: JBX) for a television commercial which allegedly suggests that the company's famous angus burgers are made from cow anus (see YouTube video above).
This is one of the more entertaining legal cases I've seen in awhile. According to the Associated Press, "CKE claims the ads create the misleading impression that Jack In The Box's new 100 percent sirloin burgers use a better quality of meat than the Angus beef used by Carl's Jr. and Hardee's. CKE claims the spots confuse consumers by comparing sirloin, a cut of meat found on all cattle, with Angus, which is a breed of cattle."
According to CKE CEO Andrew F. Puzder "They're not being funny. They need to stop misleading people about what Angus beef is."
Here's the problem: They actually are being funny. And I certainly don't claim to be a legal expert, but I think that part of Jack in the Box's defense is going to be "Lighten up and learn to take a joke."
Puzder said that CKE had asked Jack in the Box to pull the ad, but the company refused, pointing to a Carl Jr.'s ad which suggested that its milkshakes were better than the competition. Here's the best part: Puzder said the comparison was not valid because they had not claimed that competitors made their milk from cow anuses.
This whole "scandal" seems like a tempest in a tea pot to me. Jack in the Box's commercial was a clever pun on the word "angus" and certainly not misleading. Did anyone watching it really come away thinking that angus burgers were made from anuses?
Continue reading Jack in the Box sued for suggesting angus burger is really anus burger
Posted May 18th 2007 2:02PM by Kevin Shult (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Press releases, Industry, Consumer experience, Competitive strategy, Starbucks (SBUX), Marketing and advertising, McDonald's (MCD), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Procter and Gamble (PG), Wendy's Intl (WEN), Burger King Hldgs (BKC), CKE Restaurants (CKR),
In addition to Wendy's (NYSE: WEN) management's recent hiring of JP Morgan (NYSE: JPM) and Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH) to help review strategic options for the company, the fast-food restaurant has decided to throw its hat into the breakfast ring by signing an exclusive deal with Proctor & Gamble (NYSE: PG). The deal allows Wendy's to be the only major fast-food restaurant chain to offer a proprietary blend of Folgers Gourmet Selections coffee and will become part of Wendy's new breakfast menu.
What's that you say, "
Breakfast menu?"
Yes folks, Wendy's just isn't for lunch or dinner anymore (or dessert – mmmm Frosty's). You can now eat Wendy's for every meal of the day. By the end 2007, Wendy's expects to have 20-30% of its North American restaurants serve breakfast along with premium Folgers coffee.
Wendy's is definitely throwing its hat into a very crowded ring. The fast-food breakfast market is growing at almost
three times the rate of the overall market, with
Burger King (NYSE:
BKC),
McDonald's (NYSE:
MCD), Arby's, a unit of
Triarc Co. (NYSE:
TRY), Carl's Jr and Hardee's, both owned by
CKE Restaurants (NYSE:
CKR) and even
Starbucks (NASDAQ:
SBUX) offering similar on-the-go breakfasts to consumers.
Papa John's (NASDAQ:
PZZA), Dunkin Donuts and Chick-fil-A are planning new breakfast products as well. What's going to be so different to make me go to Wendy's?
When looking at the coffee aspect, one has to recall last year's
Canadian Business magazine taste test between McDonald's "Café Roast" and Starbucks coffees. I'm sure all the companies I mentioned above serve some brand of coffee. Wendy's is really walking into a competitively caffeinated situation. We also can't forget about
Seattle
's "
Sexpresso" baristas, but that's competition on a different level.
Where do you go to get your morning cup o' joe? And would the chance to have Folgers Gourmet change your mind?
Posted May 15th 2007 3:05PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Products and services, Competitive strategy, McDonald's (MCD), Burger King Hldgs (BKC), CKE Restaurants (CKR)
Encouraged by sales of its Angus beef burgers in southern California, McDonald's Corp. (NYSE: MCD) is planning to expand its test marketing of the premium burgers to New England.
McDonald's comes late to the Angus burger trend. Rivals Burger King Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: BKC), Hardees and Carl's Jr. -- the latter two part of CKE Restaurants, Inc. (NYSE: CKR) -- have been selling the premium burgers for years. In fact, Hardees has just announced a new addition to its menu, a patty melt style Thickburger, also made with Angus beef.
The new burgers are part of McDonald's ongoing efforts at revitalization. Those efforts have included the introduction of new beverage choices, such as iced coffee, which is also expected to spread throughout the U.S. soon. Another part of that effort is a new advertising campaign, emphasizing career opportunities at McDonald's -- no doubt to try to change its image as a source of low-paying, dead-end jobs.
The revitalization appears to be working. Back in April, McDonald's reported a strong quarter, especially internationally. The share price has risen since then, and reached a 52-week high this morning.
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