TLDR
- JPMorgan upgraded CMG from Neutral to Overweight after meeting with CEO Scott Boatwright and CFO Adam Rymer
- CMG closed at $28.18 on June 4, down ~43% since May 2025; JPMorgan sets $35 price target, ~24% upside
- Management acknowledged strategic mistakes made in 2025 and outlined plans around marketing, operations, and international expansion
- Restaurant margins expected to settle below 25%; focus shifts from margin expansion to traffic growth via labor and marketing investment
- International expansion planned across Mexico, South Korea, Singapore, UK, France, Germany, and the Middle East
JPMorgan has upgraded Chipotle Mexican Grill to Overweight from Neutral, saying the stock’s steep decline has created a buying opportunity even as growth expectations moderate.
CMG closed at $28.18 on June 4, down roughly 43% since May 2025. The stock moved up around 5% on the news.
Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc., CMG
JPMorgan set a new December 2026 price target of $35, implying about 24% upside from current levels.
The upgrade followed direct meetings between JPMorgan analysts and Chipotle CEO Scott Boatwright and CFO Adam Rymer.
Management openly acknowledged strategic errors made in 2025. They laid out plans to get growth back on track through marketing, better operations, and expansion into new international markets.
JPMorgan sees Chipotle shifting from a hyper-growth company to a more mature business, with annual revenue growth expected in the 8–9% range going forward.
Margins Get a Rethink
Previous targets pointing to restaurant margins of 25–30% are off the table. Executives said sustainable margins will likely land below 25%.
Instead of chasing margin expansion, Chipotle plans to put money into labor, service quality, and restaurant operations to improve the customer experience and drive foot traffic.
More than 40% of consumers surveyed say they cut back on eating out when gas prices rise. That’s a real headwind, especially for younger and lower-income diners.
That said, around 60% of Chipotle’s customer base comes from households earning over $100,000 a year. JPMorgan sees that as a buffer against the worst of the consumer spending pressure.
International Expansion in Focus
Chipotle has a small footprint outside North America right now. The company plans to change that through partnerships in markets including Mexico, South Korea, Singapore, the UK, France, Germany, and the Middle East.
JPMorgan analysts pointed out that this international growth isn’t currently priced into the stock. If execution improves, it could add meaningful upside.
Most near-term growth will still come from North America, where Chipotle continues to open new locations.
The bank’s overall take is that the risk-reward on CMG has improved. The stock now reflects the slower growth story, without giving credit for what international expansion could eventually deliver.
Chipotle’s year-to-date price performance stands at -23.84%, with a current market cap of around $36.87 billion.
The post Chipotle (CMG) Stock Catches a Break as JPMorgan Calls It a Buy – Here’s Why appeared first on CoinCentral.
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