Prev Close | 5.04 |
Day Low/High | 4.92 / 5.19 |
52 Wk Low/High | 1.50 / 6.00 |
Prev Close | 5.04 |
Day Low/High | 4.92 / 5.19 |
52 Wk Low/High | 1.50 / 6.00 |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 27.95B |
Market Cap | 140.87M |
P/E Ratio | N/A |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
The deals that has been taking place in the industry in the last few years are likely to continue.
One noted newcomer was Kura Sushi USA, and this is likely not the last we've heard of publicly traded sushi restaurants.
A basket of 38 restaurant stocks I track (large and small) is up about 20% for the year.
Bigger is better as the major restaurants dominate the sector.
Six formerly hot stocks that crashed and burned -- and three still too hot to touch.
Small-cap restaurant chains in particular are down for the year to date despite some recent upticks.
Some of the big names are doing well, but it has been a struggle for many others, include Ruby Tuesday.
It is not just tech names that attract insane traders during post-IPO action.
It is not just tech names that attract insane traders during post-IPO action.
Eatery's shares have shed some 15% this week, but could fall more.
They are a diverse group that could work well as a basket.
A look at the high-priced and weak among the most expensive sectors.
Bojangles is the latest restaurant to come public, and it did not play a game of chicken when it came to its first day of trading on the Nasdaq.
Is there more good news out there?
And I am taking advantage.
My philosophy is to avoid the hot restaurant IPOs.
Three names causing investors to reach for the Tums.
Water availability, food stocks, restaurant stocks, housing and more.
Economic worries both at home and overseas have U.S. stocks stumbling straight out of the gate this morning.
Potbelly may make a tasty sandwich, but the company has done almost nothing but give investors indigestion since its IPO in 2013.
The short-term outlook is not compelling for restaurant companies or their shares.
Denver-based sandwich shop Quiznos is running out of time to reach an agreement on its debt and could file for bankruptcy as soon as Friday.
Founder and CEO Peter Cancro believes the chain could one day grow to as many as 10,000 locations in the U.S. and internationally. But going public isn't part of the plan.
Panera Bread and Potbelly both reported lower-than-expected quarterly revenue after the bell Tuesday, blaming wintry weather for weak same-store sales.
This morning, shares of Panera Bread are looking lower, after the company topped EPS and revenue estimates -- but failed to live up to Wall Street's guidance expectations.
Zebra Technologies, SunEdison and Lumber Liquidators are on the radar.
Jim Cramer has got his eye on a stock he's betting will make a bigger buyback after a big exit earlier this year. Jon Marino reports from the Nasdaq Marketsite.
This year is likely to be another busy year for consumer-related companies heading to the public markets to seek capital, says Bob McCooey, Nasdaq OMX's Head of Listings.