When it Comes to Growth, Cara Operations Ltd. Is No Chicken

Here’s why Cara Operation Ltd. (TSX:CARA) is too cheap to ignore.

| More on:
chicken dinner

Cara Operations Ltd. (TSX:CARA) is a Canadian casual dine-in restaurant with a mere $1.52 billion market cap. The company owns many brands that you may be familiar with, including Swiss Chalet, Milestones, and East Side Mario’s.

There are many other restaurant brands that you’ve probably never heard of, like St-Hubert, which Cara acquired about a year ago. St-Hubert is a casual dining restaurant with most of its locations in Quebec. Like Swiss Chalet, St-Hubert is known for its rotisserie chicken, so it’s safe to say that Cara isn’t chickening out when it comes to dominating the Canadian casual dine-in chicken market.

Cara bought St-Hubert’s 120 chicken outlets as well as two food distribution centres for $537 million in a deal closed last September. The deal may not seem meaningful at first, especially if you’re unfamiliar with the brand, but I believe that St-Hubert further strengthens Cara’s vast portfolio of Canadian restaurant brands.

Let me tell you why.

St-Hubert is a huge deal in Quebec. Quebecers can’t get enough of St-Hubert’s chicken, and, according to industry analyst Robert Carter, St-Hubert has the highest customer loyalty out of any restaurant in Canada with the exception of Tim Hortons, of course. Mr. Carter stated, “Canadians are just not going out more often to restaurants. They’re maintaining their usage of restaurants [and] in that environment, the only way to grow is to steal shares.”

Quebec is a very difficult market to expand into. There’s a barrier to entry if you will, and expanding Swiss Chalet locations into the province would have been an incredibly expensive and potentially risky proposition. That’s why the St-Hubert deal made a huge amount of sense. St-Hubert has a wide moat and fits perfectly with Swiss Chalet, especially since there’s barely any overlap between the two chains.

The incredible St-Hubert brand goes beyond casual dine-in restaurants. There are resto-bars, and St-Hubert Express chains which cater to those who prefer the fast-food model. Even if you don’t live in Quebec, if you ever find yourself wandering around the frozen food section at your local grocery store, you may also come across St-Hubert branded frozen food products like chicken, tourtiere, gravy, or desserts. That’s how powerful the brand is, and I think there’s ample room to grow it across Quebec.

Takeaway

The St-Hubert acquisition is just scratching the surface. Cara owns many Canadian dine-in restaurant brands which will continue to thrive for many years to come. Most of Cara’s restaurants are located in Ontario, so that leaves ample room for growth in the rest of Canada. If the Ontario economy continues to strengthen, we can expect consumers to eat out more, and that means Cara is set to soar.

The stock has been beaten up of late and currently trades at a 15.33 price-to-earnings multiple, which I believe is quite cheap considering the power of the Canadian brands the company owns. If you’re bullish on the casual dine-in restaurants, and you think consumer spending will increase, then you should consider picking up shares of Cara while they’re cheap, because I don’t think they’ll be this cheap forever.

Stay smart. Stay hungry. Stay Foolish.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Investing

rail train
Stocks for Beginners

CP Stock: 1 Key Catalyst Investors Should Watch

After a positive surprise in the last quarter, CP stock (TSX:CP) recently made a change that should have investors excited…

Read more »

Payday ringed on a calendar
Dividend Stocks

Cash Kings: 3 TSX Stocks That Pay Monthly

These stocks are rewarding shareholders with regular monthly dividends and high yields, making them compelling investments for monthly cash.

Read more »

grow dividends
Tech Stocks

Celestica Stock Is up 62% in 2024 Alone, and an Earnings Pop Could Bring Even More

Celestica (TSX:CLS) stock is up an incredible 280% in the last year. But more could be coming when the stock…

Read more »

Airport and plane
Stocks for Beginners

Is Air Canada Stock a Good Buy in April 2024?

Despite rallying by over 20% in the last six months, Air Canada stock could be a great buy for the…

Read more »

Businessman holding AI cloud
Tech Stocks

Stealth AI: 1 Unexpected Stock to Win With Artificial Intelligence

Thomson Reuters (TSX:TRI) stock isn't widely-known for its generative AI prowess, but don't count it out quite yet.

Read more »

Shopping and e-commerce
Tech Stocks

Missed Out on Nvidia? My Best AI Stock to Buy and Hold

Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock isn't the only wonderful growth stock to hold for the next 10 years and beyond.

Read more »

Human Hand Placing A Coin On Increasing Coin Stacks In Front Of House
Dividend Stocks

Up 13%, Killam REIT Looks Like It Has More Room to Run

Killam REIT (TSX:KMP.UN) has seen shares climb 13% since market bottom, but come down recently after 2023 earnings.

Read more »

crypto, chart, stocks
Energy Stocks

If You Had Invested $10,000 in Enbridge Stock in 2018, This Is How Much You Would Have Today

Enbridge's big dividend yield isn't free money. Here's why.

Read more »