National Post

Tim Hortons’ reputation­al hit could hurt sales, says Bank of Montreal

- Hollie Shaw

TORONTO • Declining consumer perception­s about Tim Hortons’ brand have prompted Bank of Montreal to downgrade the stock of parent company Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal Inc., suggesting the public disfavour could hurt sales at Canada’s biggest quickservi­ce restaurant chain.

Following a recent Leger survey that saw Tim Hortons plunge to the 50th-most admired company in Canada from fourth a year ago, BMO Capital Markets conducted its own online survey to probe consumer perception­s about Tim Hortons.

“Overall, while brand perception of Tim Hortons remains overwhelmi­ngly positive with respondent­s (75 per cent view it positively and only 11 per cent view it negatively), there was a significan­t shift in participan­ts’ perception of Tim Hortons over the last 12 months,” analyst Peter Sklar of BMO wrote in a report Monday.

In an online BMO survey of 700 Canadians, 16 per cent of respondent­s said that their perception of Tim Hortons had become more positive in the last year and 28 per cent said that their perception had become more negative. Over the same period of time, their perception of Starbucks remained neutral and their impression of McDonald’s McCafé had improved, Sklar noted.

“Of those respondent­s who stated that their perception (of Tim Hortons) had become more negative, over 50 per cent stated that it was due to seeing negative press on Tim Hortons in the news and 71 per cent said that the negative attention would cause them to consider going to Tim Hortons less frequently; 27 per cent stated they would prefer to go to another coffee retailer more.”

Owner Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal Inc., set to report first-quarter results on Tuesday, has seen its share value decline 23 per cent in the last six months.

The BMO survey also found other Tim Hortons innovation­s, including espresso drinks and the mobile app, “do not appear to be gaining traction,” with consumers at a time that rival McDonald’s held a $1 coffee promotion generated significan­t consumer awareness.

Sklar revised his first quarter same-store sales estimate for Tim Hortons Canada to zero per cent from a prior estimate of 0.8 per cent.

“While the same-store sales at Tim Hortons Canada has a minimal impact on the short-term earnings of Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal, we find that the stock tends to trade on same-store sales results.”

BMO downgraded the stock to market perform from outperform and slashed the target price to US$58 from US$70.

The news follows a protracted period of turmoil at the Tim Hortons segment of Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal, which has faced an ongoing revolt and lawsuits from a group of franchisee­s protesting a slew of head office practices that began after the beloved Canadian brand was scooped up and merged with Burger King by Brazilian hedge fund 3G Capital in 2014.

 ?? EDUARDO LIMA / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A recent Leger survey saw Tim Hortons plunge to the 50th-most admired company in Canada from fourth in 2017.
EDUARDO LIMA / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A recent Leger survey saw Tim Hortons plunge to the 50th-most admired company in Canada from fourth in 2017.

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