TFSA Investors: This Food Service Company Is a Perfect Long-Term Investment

Recipe Unlimited Corp (TSX:RECP) has posted impressive growth, but its stock hasn’t been rewarded.

| More on:
Female friends enjoying their dessert together at a mall

Image source: Getty Images

The Canadian food service industry is huge, in 2018 sales were estimated at around $87 billion. Moreover, that number is expected to grow another 16% by 2022. Canadians love their food, and they want the household brand names they have come to know and love.

The impact of online ordering and companies like SkipTheDishes has continued to drive growth in the food service industry. In addition, people are living busier lives, making it more convenient to order out or go to a restaurant.

One company that has been expanding its operations in the food service industry and growing through acquisitions is Recipe Unlimited (TSX:RECP). Formally known as Cara Operations, it operates a portfolio of restaurants from fine dining or casual dinners to quick-service restaurants.

The company has 1,382 total restaurants, 55% of which are located in Ontario. Of the massive Canadian food service market, Recipe has approximately 4% market share, with total system sales of $3.5 billion in 2018.

Recipe is the owner of iconic Canadian dining brands such as Swiss Chalet, Montana’s, East Side Mario’s, Harvey’s and more. One of the most recent acquisitions the company did involving The Keg has continued to increase its diversity, giving the company exposure to the more expensive end of the dining scale.

Looking at the past performance of the company, the growth it’s achieved has been impressive. Since 2013, system sales grew at compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of of 21%. During that time, margins increased substantially as operating EBITDA had a CAGR of 36%.

During the 2015 IPO, management set 2022 targets of total system sales between $2.5 and $3 billion. It also set a target to get its operating EBITDA margin of sales up to between 7% and 8%. To date, Recipe has exceeded and revised the system sales goal higher to $2.9-3.7 billion. It has also increased its EBITDA margin by 290 basis points from 3.5% pre-IPO to 6.4%, on pace to reach at least 7% by 2022.

Going forward, management will continue to focus on improving the same-restaurant sales metric, which has seen minimal growth the last five years.

The company has been prudent in trimming the slack from operations. Unsuccessful stores are being closed to strengthen the entire network of stores. Additionally, new locations are being opened each year; in 2018, new additions minus the restaurants it closed totalled 61 new restaurants for the network.

Since 85% of the restaurants in its portfolio are operated by franchisees or through a joint venture, the company has a low capital operating model. Management is guiding toward $60-65 million of capex in 2019, mostly accounting for new restaurant openings under the Keg brand.

Free cash flow in 2018 was roughly $80 million. With a market cap of $1.6 billion, this implies Recipe has a price to free cash flow of 20 times — not a bargain but not overvalued, either. From a debt standpoint, the company looks well stabilized. Net debt/operating EBITDA is just 1.6 times, which is manageable moving forward.

The business is a well-run organization with a strong return on equity above 15%. Lately, the company has also been buying back shares to increase shareholder value. In addition to the buybacks, the company pays a dividend that currently yields 1.6%. At just a 37% payout ratio, the dividend is sustainable.

The stock has gone sideways in the last few years, reflecting potential headwinds investors see going forward. Firstly, Recipe’s exposure to Alberta is quite high at 13%, or 173 total restaurants. This has put a dampening effect on same-restaurant sales numbers. Additionally, as dining out is discretionary, the company is at risk that consumers ratchet back their spending as we reach the end of the economic cycle.

For the long term, Recipe Unlimited is a great company. Impressive growth and high returns on equity make it an ideal investment. The acquisitions it has done are attractive, and given a pullback in the stock, it could be worth entering as a long-term investment.

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 Daniel Da Costa has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

More on Dividend Stocks

grow dividends
Dividend Stocks

BCE Stock Needs to Cut Its Dividend – Now

BCE stock (TSX:BCE) has seen shares fall drastically with more debt rising, so why on earth did it increase its…

Read more »

consider the options
Dividend Stocks

Is Now the Right Time to Buy goeasy Stock? Here’s My Take

Is now the time to buy goeasy stock?

Read more »

grow money, wealth build
Dividend Stocks

5 “Forever” Dividend Stocks to Build Your Wealth

If you're looking for dividend stocks you can happily hold forever, consider these five. Some with more growth in returns…

Read more »

The sun sets behind a power source
Dividend Stocks

3 Reasons Why Canadian Utilities Is an Ideal Canadian Dividend Stock

Canadian Utilities (TSX:CU) stock is well known as a dividend star, but why? Let's get into three reasons why it's…

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 »

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 »

Volatile market, stock volatility
Dividend Stocks

Alimentation Couche-Tard Stock: Why I’d Buy the Dip

Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc (TSX:ATD) stock has experienced some turbulence, but has a good M&A strategy.

Read more »

financial freedom sign
Dividend Stocks

The Dividend Dream: 23% Returns to Fuel Your Income Dreams

If you want growth and dividend income, consider this dividend stock that continues to rise higher after October lows.

Read more »