The Oklahoman

As breakfast competitio­n keeps heating up, Dunkin’ Donuts investment may get stale

-

In the fall of 2012, I bought 175 shares of Dunkin’ Donuts’ parent company at $28 because you recommende­d it. By the summer of last year, it was selling at about $56, but then it started to go down. I looked it up, and the sales and earnings look good. Also, my stockbroke­r said the company will raise the dividend because it will have more sales and earnings this year than last year. If this is true, why is the stock going down instead of up in price? And should I sell this in case it starts to go lower than $46?

Yes, last year, Dunkin’ Brands Group (DNKN-$46) was blithely trading in the mid-$50s, selling fair doughnuts, decent bagels, good coffee,

Malcolm Berko

TAKING STOCK excellent morning sandwiches, acceptable baked goods, ice cream, yogurts, tasty shakes and OK muffins. And you’re as right as a rock; DNKN’s revenues have been increasing. But they’re going up at a slower pace, and gains in same-store sales are slipping.

Even some of the geniuses on Wall Street believe the fast pace of DNKN’s revenues and earnings is decelerati­ng.

DNKN’s $56 share price was too optimistic as the competitio­n for America’s morning fix was getting fierce. Last year, investors were enamored with DNKN’s potential growth and the promise of numerous new units. Last year, DNKN earned $1.93 a share and traded at an excitable price-earnings ratio of 29-to-1.

Though 2016 earnings are expected to be $2.19 a share, investors are not so sanguine today, and DNKN trades at a P/E of 21-to-1. And the CEO’s pay package was cut by 50 percent.

I’m a doughnut aficionado and a profession­ally self-accredited doughnut expert. As one might trust a sommelier to select a fine wine, un connoisseu­r en beignet’s opinion should be sought in seeking the most exquisite doughnut. I can tell you, with a high degree of accuracy, that the fresh doughnuts offered by DNKN are ranked 3.2 holes out of 5. But that’s only between 4 a.m. and 10 a.m., when they’re fresh and DNKN’s 8,500 units generate 67 percent of their doughnut revenues.

Between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., DNKN’s doughnuts become stale, and the internatio­nal rules suggest a rating between 2.1 holes and 2.4. After 2 p.m., DNKN’s doughnuts become hard and dry, and I’m required to rank them between minus 1 hole and minus 3 holes. Most DNKN units won’t make doughnuts later in the afternoon (unsold inventory is costly), so aficionado­s buy their doughnuts at Krispy Kreme when the “hot now” light is on. Few things are more disappoint­ing than stale, dry doughnuts, certainly a reason for DNKN’s slower afternoon and evening traffic.

And there’s McDonald’s. In mid-September, McDonald’s announced its all-day breakfast, and almost the same day, DNKN’s shares fell 17 percent.

Then add Starbucks’ 13,000 locations, with their innovative and cleverly marketed mobile/ digital/loyalty offerings, tickling the appeal to the younger, freer-spending and more hip consumer. Starbucks’ Mobile Order & Pay initiative is a boon for young upwardly mobile intellectu­als, or YUMIs, to whom long lines are a turnoff. As a result, Starbucks’ average ticket size is 29 percent larger than DNKN’s.

Constructi­on workers, truckers and the mobile home crowd enjoy their coffee and morning feed at DNKN. Millennial­s, YUMIs, recent mothers,

EAGLE

With oil prices still not at profitable levels for most companies, millions of barrels of crude are being stored. That flood of oil is banked on hopes of higher prices in the coming days, weeks or months (please, not years).

Our eagle specialize­s in storage. Tulsa’s Rose Rock Midstream LLP can store 7.6 million barrels of crude, and leases most of that capacity to customers. The company, spun off from Tulsa’s SemGroup in 2011, also controls miles and miles of pipelines and operates a fleet of 270 transport trucks and trailers.

The midstream business is focused Cushing, the designated point of delivery specified in NYMEX crude oil futures contracts and is the largest commercial crude oil marketing hub in the nation.

Last week, RRMS units jumped 12.9 percent to close Friday at $12.37.

Low oil prices actually help boost demand for the product, which benefits Rose Rock. Which is not to say that the collapse of prices has helped the company. RRMS units traded for more than $60 a share in mid-2014.

But last week was a nice bounce for this oil warehouse and delivery soccer kids and studying students pollinate Starbucks, though some YUMIs and wannabes are beginning to hang at McDonald’s. At McDonald’s, the coffee and morning sandwiches are quite good, but the slow service really stinks. Too often what you order at McDonald’s is in someone else’s bag.

Still, McDonald’s and Starbucks are eating DNKN’s breakfast. DNKN’s management should hire some hip marketing consultant­s to attract the YUMIs and the urban consumer who can afford a larger check.

Sell 115 shares and get your investment back. But keep 60 shares in case Tim Cook needs a new job!

OKLAHOMA STOCKS

EAGLE & BEAGLE

firm.

BEAGLE

This week’s beagle is a stock that hasn’t produced a great amount of volatility.

Even as last week’s worst performer among state-based public companies, Tulsa-based AAON Inc. didn’t have terrible week.

AAON shares slipped 5.1 percent over the past five trading days, closing Friday at $26.76. Even with that decline, AAON shares remain less than $2 from their 52-week high.

The fortunes of the company, which sells air-conditioni­ng and heating equipment for big buildings, are tied to the constructi­on industry, which builds those big buildings that AAON heats and cools.

The firm has grown its sales and profits for at least four straight years.

Investors likely aren’t losing their cool over a one-week hiccup in the stock price.

 ??  ?? Don Mecoy
Don Mecoy
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States