The Bottom Line

Jonathan Maze The Bottom Line

Restaurant Business Executive Editor-in-Chief Jonathan Maze is a longtime industry journalist who writes about restaurant finance, mergers and acquisitions and the economy, with a particular focus on quick-service restaurants. He writes daily about the factors influencing the operating environment, including labor and food costs and various industry trends such as technology and delivery.

Jonathan has been widely quoted in media publications such as the New York Times and the Washington Post and has appeared on CNBC, Yahoo Finance and NPR. He writes a weekly finance-focused newsletter for Restaurant Business, The Bottom Line, and is the host of the weekly podcast “A Deeper Dive.”

Financing

The economy is headed for a recession, or maybe it isn't

The Bottom Line: Some restaurant executives believe a recession is coming and economic data appear to be pointing in that direction. But sales have started out strongly, and not everyone agrees.

Financing

Chipotle regains its status as a Wall Street darling

The Bottom Line: The fast-casual Mexican chain’s stock is over $2,000 per share as investors put money back into restaurants in 2023.

The Bottom Line: The fast-food burger giant appears to be hitting on all cylinders. But it warned about the operating environment and remains convinced that a recession is in the offing.

The Bottom Line: Sonic, pizza delivery chains and bone-in chicken concepts—outside of Wingstop, that is—saw sales slow down last year. Here’s what happened.

The Bottom Line: CEO John Chidsey admitted that company founder Fred DeLuca “whiffed” on a succession plan before his death in 2015, which led to years of stagnation.

The Bottom Line: After a year of brutal inflation, operators worry that consumers will change their spending. But data at the moment remains inconclusive.

The Bottom Line: The CEO of Papa Murphy’s and Wetzel’s Pretzels owner MTY Group cited the sandwich giant’s reportedly lowered asking price, and suggested it could further cool the market for restaurant acquisitions.

The Bottom Line: The pizza delivery chain saw a dramatic shift toward carryout last year, which it blamed on the impact inflation is having on consumers. So why aren’t we aren’t DoorDash and Uber Eats saying the same thing?

The Bottom Line: The fast-casual chicken fingers chain believes it can become one of the country’s biggest restaurant concepts in a short period. It took some key steps this week to get there.

The Bottom Line: Fog Cutter Capital, owned by Andy Wiederhorn and his family, ousted its directors and appointed a new slate that includes several of his family members. The owner of Johnny Rockets and Twin Peaks also relabeled itself a “controlled company.”

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