All the market-moving Wall Street chatter from Friday
(This is CNBC Pro’s live coverage of Friday’s analyst calls and Wall Street chatter. Please refresh every 20-30 minutes to view the latest posts.) An outdoor container maker and a salad chain were among the stocks being talked about by analysts on Friday. Bank of America upgraded Yeti Holdings to a buy. Meanwhile, Wall Street analysts reacted to Sweetgreen’s latest quarterly figures, with Goldman Sachs calling for more than 50% upside. Check out the latest calls and chatter below. All times ET. 5:44 a.m.: Wall Street analysts react to Sweetgreen earnings Sweetgreen shares soared more than 23% in Friday premarket trading after beating expectations for revenue. The salad chain posted $185 million in second-quarter revenue, above the consensus estimate of $181 million from analysts polled by LSEG. Sweetgreen also said to expect between $670 million and $680 million in the full-year on the line, a range that includes the analyst forecast of $674 million. But Sweetgreen lost 13 cents per share, 3 cents wider than analysts anticipated. For some on Wall Street, Friday’s premarket pop is reflective of the big upside they see ahead for the stock. Here’s what some analysts had to say following the report: Goldman Sachs’ Christine Cho (buy, $40 price target, 52.4% upside): “We view solid 2Q [same-store sales growth] as a testament to the company’s successful TAM expansion through entry into new markets and product innovation (i.e., protein plates and recently launched caramelized garlic steak) which we expect to support MSD SSSG, 15-20% unit growth, and a 30% restaurant-level profit CAGR over the next three years.” JPMorgan’s Rahul Krotthapalli (overweight, $38 price target, 44.8% upside) : “Sweetgreen 2Q24 results continue to inspire confidence in the momentum the brand has been building since late last year as the company repeated its beat & raise performance with stellar top-line (9% SSS vs 5.5% JPMe) performance, which translated into equally robust store margin (22.5% vs 21.4% JPMe) and Ebitda ($12.4m vs $8.9m JPMe) performance. This reaffirms the standing as the company steadily rebuilds credibility after a tough post-covid/post-IPO period.” UBS’ Dennis Geiger (buy, $37 price target, 41% upside): “2Q results highlighted strong sss & traffic, solid margin expansion, and encouraging progress on Infinite Kitchen (IK) plans which support a compelling long-term growth outlook. We’re particularly encouraged by positive traffic as initiatives across menu innovation and marketing accelerated trends through 2Q despite industry pressures. … We believe leading store development and plans across kitchen automation, menu innovation and loyalty should support sss & EBITDA growth over the coming yrs and drive further share upside.” — Alex Harring 5:44 a.m.: Bank of America upgrades Yeti to buy After a strong earnings report, investors should consider gaining adding Yeti to their portfolios, according to Bank of America. Analyst Alexander Perry upgraded the outdoor products and container maker to buy from neutral. His price target of $55, up from $46, implies upside of 27.5%. The rating change comes a day after Yeti reported second-quarter results that beat analyst expectations. Shares rallied more than 16% on Thursday. “We raise our C24 EPS to $2.65 (from $2.60) and see drivers of potential 2H upside including: (1) new licensing deal with the NFL for drinkware and hard coolers; (2) support from AMZN prime day in 3Q; & (3) strong new product contribution including the Roadie 15 which is more price accessible vs. other YETI hard coolers and with the expansion into cookware with YETI skillets launching this month,” Perry wrote. Year to date, shares are down j16%. YETI YTD mountain YETI in 2024 — Fred Imbert
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