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Investing.com -- Investor sentiment toward U.S. restaurant stocks has turned more negative after a wave of earnings reports that triggered sharp sell-offs, even when results were solid, according to UBS analysts.
“Restaurant stocks look broken right now,” a team led by Dennis Geiger, wrote, noting that both softer and in some cases good results saw pressured share price reactions while sector valuations “appear challenged.”
The second-quarter season showed mixed performance, with several companies citing ongoing macroeconomic pressures, particularly among lower-income consumers, where industry visits fell by double digits.
Middle-income visits improved but remain below 2019 levels. Many operators emphasized value offerings, new product launches and heavier marketing to drive traffic, while beef costs continued to weigh on margins.
Industry data from Black Box showed modest improvement in July, with same-store sales up 2.3% from 2% in June.
Quick-service restaurants (QSR) saw sequential gains on better traffic, while casual dining remained the strongest segment, posting 5.3% growth.
“Improving QSR, fast casual and casual dining traffic and sales trends are encouraging, although easier July comparisons indicate underlying 2-yr momentum slowed from June,” the analysts said.
UBS said its discussions with investors last week pointed to “particularly challenging” trading conditions, with outsized and often overly negative earnings reactions, alongside weaker commentary from select companies.
There is also less support from generalist investors, with capital appearing to flow toward AI and technology sectors.
The report flagged continued pressure on lower-income consumers, as well as potential risks from tariffs.
“While valuation pullbacks have created potentially more compelling long opportunities, our sense is investors remain cautious currently, focusing on market dynamics, near-term sales & traffic trends, and looking ahead to possible One Big Beautiful Bill Act benefits in ’26,” it added.
Looking ahead, investors await the upcoming results from CAVA Group (NYSE:CAVA) on Aug. 12 and Brinker International (NYSE:EAT) on Aug. 13.
UBS noted investor expectations for Cava include a possible miss on same-store sales and trimmed 2025 guidance, while Brinker is expected to beat quarterly earnings but could face debate over sustaining growth into next year.