FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of various restaurant brands. Its share price reflects its aggressive acquisition-led growth strategy. The chart tells the story of both portfolio expansion and the risks associated with its high debt load.
FAT Brands is a global holding company that owns and operates a portfolio of more than 15 restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. We've classified it as a "Foodservice" company. The chart below shows how investors value diversified restaurant chains.
FAT Brands is a global franchise holding company that owns a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands, including Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. As part of the GURU.Markets index, it represents the foodservice sector. The chart below represents the entire market. See how this company's stock compares to the overall trend.
For FAT Brands Inc., a restaurant holding company, daily volatility reflects sensitivity to consumer spending and the success of its franchise model. This metric is an indicator of the health of the fast-food industry.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company of restaurant chains. This chart illustrates the high volatility of the food service sector. Comparison with FAT's performance, with its franchise model, helps assess its sensitivity to consumer spending.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands. Its shares represent a broad bet on the foodservice industry. Their movements reflect consumer spending and industry trends, influencing overall volatility.
For FAT Brands Inc., the year-over-year performance is a story of aggressive acquisitions. The 12-month change in this franchise holding's market capitalization reflects its success in integrating acquired restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets) and its ability to manage the massive debt it took on to finance this growth.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company that acquires and franchises restaurant chains. Its aggressive M&A strategy and high leverage make it unique. The chart shows how its ability to successfully integrate brands and the state of the restaurant industry influence its volatile performance.
FAT Brands, as a holding company of restaurant brands, is a cyclical company. Its revenue depends on consumer spending on food and beverages. The company's stock performance is a barometer for the food service industry, reflecting people's willingness to spend, which is closely tied to the overall economic situation.
FAT Brands is a holding company managing a portfolio of multiple restaurant franchises. Its monthly performance reflects consumer spending on foodservice, comparable sales across its chains, and the pace of new store openings. Acquisition strategy also plays a key role.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns numerous restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). Its business model is based on franchising. The dynamics of this sector depend on consumer spending on dining out. The chart below shows general trends in the restaurant industry and how investors have evaluated acquisition-based growth strategies.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of restaurant franchises. Its success depends on the health of the fast-food industry and its ability to effectively manage its diverse brands. Its stock performance reflects consumer spending on dining out and competition in the sector.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns and franchises numerous fast-food restaurant chains. Weekly stock performance reflects consumer spending on dining out, food prices, and the company's ability to successfully integrate its growing portfolio of newly acquired brands.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns and franchises numerous fast-food restaurant chains. Weekly stock performance reflects consumer spending on dining out, food prices, and the company's ability to successfully integrate its growing portfolio of new brands.
As a restaurant company, FAT Brands is dependent on consumer spending. Comparing its weekly performance with the broader market reveals its cyclical nature. The chart shows how the company's shares outperform the market during periods of rising consumer confidence and lag when consumers begin to economize.
The FAT Brands market capitalization chart is a story of building a restaurant empire through aggressive acquisitions and franchising. Its volatile chart reflects both the rapid growth of the brand portfolio and investor concerns about the company's massive debt load. It's a visualization of a "growth at any cost" strategy.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company with a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and others). Its share of its segment's market capitalization reflects its aggressive acquisition-led growth strategy. The chart below shows how investors assess its ability to manage this diverse portfolio.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of over a dozen restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. The chart below shows the total market capitalization of the foodservice sector. It illustrates the company's growth strategy through the acquisition and management of diverse restaurant concepts.
Shown here is a "fast food conglomerate." FAT Brands owns dozens of restaurant chains, from Fatburger to Johnny Rockets. Its market cap reflects its acquisition-led growth strategy and the company's ability to manage this diverse portfolio of brands in a highly competitive industry.
FAT Brands' foundation is its extensive portfolio of quick-service restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, etc.). Its book value is primarily comprised of intangible assets (brands). The chart shows how this franchise-based holding manages its capital, which is built on the recognition and popularity of its restaurant concepts.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands. Its model is primarily franchising, so its physical assets may be small. The chart shows how its shareholding compares to the vast physical presence of its franchisees.
The restaurant business, especially the franchise format, is capital-intensive, as the BCap_Ges chart shows. FAT Brands owns a portfolio of brands, but not the majority of the restaurants. This makes its model "lighter" than that of traditional chains, as it benefits from the capital-intensive assets of others.
FAT Brands' assets include not only its own restaurants but also the rights to a dozen well-known fast food brands. Its book value reflects both its physical footprint (real estate) and the intangible capital that powers its vast franchise network of thousands of brick-and-mortar locations.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns numerous fast-food chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). Its value lies in its brand portfolio, not its restaurants (most of which are franchises). The MvsBCap chart shows how the market views its aggressive acquisition strategy and its ability to manage this diverse portfolio of brands.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company that owns a portfolio of restaurant brands (such as Fatburger). Its value lies in the strength of these brands and its franchising model. The chart shows how the market views its strategy of acquiring and developing restaurant chains.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and others). Its business model is based on franchising, making it asset-light. The market values the strength of its brands and its ability to generate royalties. The chart shows the valuation of this multi-brand franchise platform.
FAT Brands, a holding company that owns numerous restaurant brands, uses significant debt to acquire new chains. Its growth strategy is built on M&A. This chart vividly illustrates how the company uses leverage to rapidly consolidate the fragmented restaurant market by acquiring and integrating new brands into its portfolio.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company that manages a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands through a franchise model. Its growth strategy is based on acquisitions. This chart clearly demonstrates how aggressively the company uses debt financing to acquire more and more fast-food chains.
FAT Brands, the owner of a chain of fast-food restaurants (including Fatburger and Johnny Rockets), grows through franchising and acquisitions. This chart shows how aggressively the company uses debt to expand. This strategy can quickly increase business scale, but it also creates vulnerability to a decline in restaurant traffic.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of various restaurant brands. This chart shows the overall debt burden in the foodservice sector. It helps assess how aggressively the company uses debt capital to support its growth strategy through acquisitions of new restaurant chains.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company managing a portfolio of renowned restaurant brands. The overall debt burden in the economy, shown in the graph, directly impacts the restaurant business. Consumer spending on dining out is highly sensitive to the economic situation, making this metric crucial for assessing a chain's prospects.
This chart from FAT Brands, a holding company that owns multiple restaurant brands, shows the market's assessment of its franchising model. The dynamics reflect investors' expectations for the restaurant chain's growth and the company's ability to successfully manage and develop its diverse and ever-growing portfolio of establishments.
This chart shows the average P/E ratio for the restaurant industry, where FAT Brands is a holding company. The industry's valuation reflects consumer sentiment. This metric helps understand how the market views FAT Brands' franchising model and acquisition strategy compared to other restaurant chains.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of multiple quick-service restaurant brands. Its business model is based on collecting royalties from franchisees. This chart reflects consumer spending. It helps understand how diversification across different food concepts protects the company from changing tastes and how its valuation responds to the overall health of the restaurant industry.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns and franchises numerous quick-service restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its growth depends on the opening of new locations and the popularity of its brands. This chart reflects analysts' forecasts for the state of the restaurant industry and the success of the company's acquisition strategy.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company with a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands, including Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. This chart shows how its future profit expectations compare to the industry average. Does the valuation reflect its acquisition-driven growth model and the effectiveness of its franchise management?
FAT Brands manages a portfolio of restaurant franchises. Its success depends on consumer spending on dining out. This graph, measuring overall economic expectations, is an indicator of consumer confidence. When investors and businesses are optimistic, people visit restaurants more often, which directly increases royalties and revenue for FAT Brands.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company that owns a portfolio of fast-food chains such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its revenue comes from royalties and fees from franchisees worldwide. This chart illustrates the success of its strategy of acquiring and developing various restaurant brands under one roof.
FAT Brands is a global franchise holding company, owning a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands, including Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. The business model is based on royalties from franchisees. This chart shows overall profitability in the foodservice sector, where the franchising model allows for rapid scalability with minimal capital investment.
FAT Brands owns numerous fast-food restaurant chains. Demand in this sector depends on consumer habits and income. This graph, reflecting the state of the economy, influences the frequency of restaurant visits. In good times, people eat out more often; in bad times, they save by cooking at home.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of more than a dozen restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its revenue comes from royalties from franchisees. This chart reflects analyst expectations for the growth of its restaurant chains and the ability to generate stable royalty streams.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global restaurant holding company that acquires and develops quick-service restaurant chains such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its business model is based on franchising. This chart shows profitability forecasts for the foodservice sector, providing a backdrop for assessing the effectiveness of FAT Brands' strategy for managing its restaurant brand portfolio.
FAT Brands Inc. manages a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands. Restaurant traffic and average checks are directly related to income and consumer sentiment. The total revenue forecast shown in this chart serves as an indicator of economic health, which determines whether people will eat out more often or choose to save money.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company that owns a portfolio of restaurant brands. This chart shows how the market values its franchising model. The price-to-revenue ratio reflects the strength of its brands and its ability to expand its restaurant network globally.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company that acquires and develops fast-casual restaurant chains. This chart shows the average revenue estimate in the foodservice sector. It helps understand how investors view FAT Brands' acquisition-based growth strategy and its ability to generate income from royalties and franchise fees.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns and franchises a portfolio of over a dozen restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Their business model is based on collecting royalties from franchisees. This chart helps understand how the market values the franchise aggregator model in the competitive restaurant industry.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its estimated future sales, illustrated by this chart, depend on the performance of its entire network of restaurants, which are primarily franchised. Success is determined by the company's ability to grow through the acquisition of new brands.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company that acquires and develops quick-service restaurant chains such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its revenue comes primarily from royalties from franchisees. This chart shows how investors view its acquisition-led growth model in the foodservice sector.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns numerous fast-food restaurant chains (such as Fatburger). Its success depends on people's willingness to eat out. This graph, reflecting overall consumer confidence, is a key indicator for FAT Brands. When people feel economically secure, they visit restaurants more often, which directly increases sales for all of the holding's brands.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company with a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands, including Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and Round Table Pizza. This chart shows revenue, which consists of royalties from franchisees and revenue from company-owned restaurants. The growth here reflects the chain's expansion and the popularity of its diverse restaurant concepts.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company that acquires and develops fast-casual restaurant chains (e.g., Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). The company's business is segmented by the individual brands in its portfolio. This chart shows the royalties and revenue generated by one of these restaurant brands.
FAT Brands Inc. manages a portfolio of various restaurant brands, primarily operating through a franchise model. Its performance depends on the health of the fast-food industry and its ability to attract and maintain franchisees. Sales trends across its chains reflect consumer preferences and people's willingness to spend money on dining out.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company with a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands, including Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its revenue forecast is based on royalties from its franchisees and the opening of new locations. This forecast is an indicator of the health of the restaurant industry and the company's ability to manage its diverse portfolio.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company with a portfolio of over a dozen restaurant brands. This chart reflects expectations for the entire foodservice sector. It helps assess trends in consumer spending on dining out and the growth analysts predict for the quick-service segment.
FAT Brands, a restaurant holding company that owns numerous fast-food chains, directly impacts consumer spending on dining out. This overall sales forecast chart is a barometer of consumer confidence, which determines how often people can afford to eat out.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands (e.g., Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). The company makes money not from burger sales, but from royalties and fees from its franchisees. This chart shows how this "lightweight" business model converts franchise revenue into net profit.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns and franchises numerous restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). Their effectiveness lies in their ability to manage a portfolio of brands and support their franchisee networks, earning royalties. The chart shows how profitable their asset-light model is compared to chains that own their own restaurants.
FAT Brands Inc. is a holding company that owns a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands, such as Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Its business model is based on franchising. This chart shows overall profitability, but for FAT, success depends on the health of its franchisees, the strength of its brands, and the ability to integrate new acquisitions into its system.
FAT Brands owns a portfolio of numerous restaurant chains, operating under a franchise model. This chart shows the relatively small corporate team that manages the brands and supports franchisees. It's a prime example of how a large chain can be managed with a compact central staff.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns numerous fast-food restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and others). While the restaurants themselves are franchised, the corporate office manages the brands and marketing. This chart shows the combined impact of its brands on employment in the food service sector.
FAT Brands is a global franchise holding company with a portfolio of multiple restaurant brands. This chart illustrates employment in the foodservice sector. The growing number of workers in this industry indicates consumer activity and demand for a variety of food service formats, creating opportunities for FAT's brand networks to expand.
FAT Brands manages a portfolio of restaurant franchises. The restaurant business is highly sensitive to consumer spending. This chart is an important indicator for FAT Brands: when people are confident in their jobs, they visit restaurants more often, which directly impacts revenue and the opening of new locations.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company that owns fast-food restaurant chains. The company itself has a small staff, but its franchised locations employ thousands. This graph, showing FAT Brands' own cost per employee, is very high, demonstrating the effectiveness of the franchise model.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of restaurant brands. For this business model, this metric reflects the effectiveness of brand and franchise network management. How successfully can a small corporate team generate value from a large network of restaurants?
FAT Brands Inc. is not a restaurant operator, but a holding company that owns and franchises numerous restaurant brands (e.g., Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). Their business is brand management, not food preparation. The chart shows how the market values this "asset-light" franchising model.
FAT Brands Inc. is a global franchising company. They don't operate restaurants themselves, but rather own a portfolio of brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Round Table Pizza) and earn money through royalties and fees from franchisees. This chart shows how effective their "asset-light" model is. A small corporate team can generate significant profits by managing brands and collecting royalties.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and others). Its business isn't restaurant management, but rather selling franchises and supporting franchisees. This metric demonstrates how effectively their small corporate team generates royalty revenue, which is the benchmark for their business model.
FAT Brands (FAT) is a holding company that owns a portfolio of restaurant franchises (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). Their business isn't restaurant management, but rather selling franchises and collecting royalties. Profit per employee (corporate) should be high, as a small team manages a large portfolio of brands, earning a percentage of others' sales.
FAT Brands is a global franchise holding company that owns numerous fast-food restaurant brands. This chart demonstrates the effectiveness of its model. Its high revenue per employee is achieved by receiving royalties from thousands of franchisees rather than directly managing the restaurants.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of restaurant franchises (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Round Table Pizza). They don't operate the restaurants; they sell franchises. This chart compares FAT's revenue per employee to the industry average. This demonstrates how productive their asset-light franchising model is.
FAT Brands (FAT) isn't a restaurant operator, but an asset-light holding company. They own brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets) and earn revenue from franchise fees (royalties) without managing the locations themselves. It's a scalable model. This chart shows how much royalty income their very small corporate staff generates.
FAT Brands (FAT) is a holding company that owns numerous fast-food restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). The company grew through debt by acquiring brands. Now it needs to service this debt. This chart shows the number of investors who believe this debt-based model is unsustainable and that the company will be unable to operate its restaurants.
FAT Brands is a holding company that manages a portfolio of dozens of restaurant chains, including Fatburger and Johnny Rockets. Their business model is based on franchising. This chart shows the bet against the entire restaurant sector. If investors expect inflation and austerity to cause people to eat out less, they're shorting the entire industry.
FAT Brands owns numerous fast-food chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets). This business is heavily dependent on franchisees and consumer spending. This chart illustrates the overall market fears. Investors fear that consumers will eat out less during a recession, and FAT Brands' high debt load will become unsustainable.
FAT Brands is a holding company that owns a portfolio of fast-food restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and others). Their strategy is growth through acquisitions. This indicator shows how investors perceive their ability to absorb new brands, reflecting "overbought" (above 70) on deal news or "oversold" (below 30).
FAT Brands isn't a single restaurant, but a franchise holding company that owns a portfolio of multiple restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Round Table Pizza). Its business model is based on royalty payments. This chart measures the collective momentum of the foodservice sector. It helps us understand whether FAT's momentum reflects its M&A strategy or the general overheating of the restaurant sector.
FAT Brands (FAT), the owner of restaurant chains, sees consumer sentiment in this chart. Going out to eat is an "affordable luxury." During periods of market euphoria, people feel confident and willing to spend. During periods of panic and fear of a recession, consumers reduce their restaurant visits, preferring to save money and eat at home.
FAT Brands is a global franchise holding company that owns a portfolio of fast-food restaurant chains (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Round Table Pizza). This chart shows the average analyst forecast. Their targets are based on growth in franchisee royalties and the company's ability to manage its high debt load.
FAT Brands is a "super-franchise." The holding company owns dozens of restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets) and earns its income through royalties. This chart illustrates the analyst community's opinion on the company's future. It measures the distance between the stock price and the target, reflecting their view of this "easy" business model and high debt load.
FAT Brands is a "fast food conglomerate." The company owns a portfolio of niche restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Round Table Pizza). This chart shows analysts' overall expectations for the entire food service sector. It reflects whether experts believe in the franchise M&A model in the restaurant industry.
FAT Brands is not a manufacturer, but a franchisor. The company owns a portfolio of numerous restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Twin Peaks). This chart shows the overall market sentiment. For FAT, whose revenue (royalties) depends on restaurant sales, the overall optimism of analysts is important, as it signals consumer confidence and people's willingness to spend on dining out.
FAT Brands is a restaurant roll-up (aggregator). They own, rather than manage, a portfolio of 15+ fast-food franchises (Fatburger, Round Table Pizza, Johnny Rockets). Their business is collecting royalties. This chart is a summary indicator of their M&A model. It reflects their ability to generate cash flow from these royalties and their (massive) debt load.
FAT Brands (FAT) is a global franchising company. They own a portfolio of over 15 restaurant brands, including Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, and Twin Peaks. The chart shows the segment average index, helping investors evaluate how successful this multi-brand franchise model is compared to the sector average.
FAT Brands is a global franchising company that owns a portfolio of restaurant brands (Fatburger, Johnny Rockets, Twin Peaks). This chart, which reflects the market average, provides a macro backdrop. It helps assess how FAT, which is growing aggressively through acquisitions and debt, compares to the overall macroeconomic environment.