Title: | Market Investing |
Moderator: | 2155::michaud |
Created: | Thu Jan 23 1992 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1060 |
Total number of notes: | 10477 |
Article: 53797 From: [email protected] (George Robbins) Newsgroups: misc.invest Subject: Re: IPO..Boston Chicken Date: 10 Oct 93 03:29:08 GMT Sender: [email protected] Organization: Commodore Business Machines In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (Joseph Edwards) writes: > Having aquired an addiction for the local Boston Chicken, which sprung > up virtually next to a KFC and seems to be wiping them out, I can > attest for the quality of the food (your two choices from a dozen > "homestyle" side dishes are included with your meal) and the service. > All I remember after eating there for my second time was thinking about > how I could invest in it. I wonder if this new chain sparked the new > KFC campaign? In either case, knowing little about IPO's and such, I > would be very interested in knowing the whens, hows and how much's for > this company. The IPO was filed 9/22 and there is currently about a 2 month delay in the pipeline, so you can expect the offering to come out towards the end of November, give or take a couple weeks. From the summary table in Investors Business Daily: Filing Date: 9/22 Company Name: Boston Chicken Inc. Headquarters: Naperville, IL Shares: 1.6 Million Est Price: $15-$17 Est Mkt Value: $287 Million Underwriters: Merrill Lynch Alex Brown & Sons. As far as how, if you have an account with Merrill Lynch or Alex Brown, you can request an allocation and (very) perhaps get in at the offering price. Otherwise, you can place a "when offered" order with your broker. In this case, you will probably get in somewhere near the first day high, since on hot stocks, the opening price usually accounts for a large amount of the "percent change from offering price". You may or may not wish to do this, the safer course is to wait until some kind of trading history is established - if the company is really going to perform, the longer term gains greatly outweigh the risk of the "discount" you might get by going in at the IPO. For more details, contact either of the underwriters and ask for a copy of the red-herring prospectus or as your broker to do so for you. -- George Robbins - now working for, work: to be avoided at all costs... but no way officially representing: uucp: ...!rutgers!cbmvax!grr Commodore, Engineering Department domain: [email protected]
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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589.1 | DSSDEV::PIEKOS | Zoo TV | Wed Oct 13 1993 15:04 | 6 | |
I was standing in a long line for the Westford Boston Chicken, Sunday night at 7:15, thinking the same thing: "How can I invest in this company?". They have over 200 stores, I think, judging from the menu that I picked up. Great food. John Piekos | |||||
589.2 | Chicken | RUSAVD::RAJ | Rajesh Viswanathan dtn 297-7390 | Wed Oct 13 1993 15:15 | 13 |
I called up Alex Brown and Sons. They told me that they don't have a prospectus. Merrill Lynch seems to be closed today? I would like to get in on this IPO but I'm not sure if I can or not. both the brokerage firms are full bokerage firms. Are there expensive? Since I'm new to IPO's, is there a minumum amount of shares you have to buy. Raj | |||||
589.3 | Good luck! | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Leadership DECAF? Yuck!" | Wed Oct 13 1993 15:41 | 14 |
If this IPO is expected to be hot, do not even bother calling up the underwriters, as most of their offering may have already been spoken for (for their larger clients, which I doubt any of us are here). If you are desperate to buy into this stock, you may want to place a market order first thing in the morning when they open. If the general IPO trend is of any indication, a hot IPO stock will rise a lot within the first few minutes of trading, stay at that value for a few days and then climb down. If the stock makes fundamental or technical sense at that point, buy into it. FWIW. | |||||
589.4 | Kenny Rodgers | CPDW::ROSCH | Wed Oct 13 1993 16:11 | 7 | |
You have two other options in the Roasted Chicken market. KFC has recently come out with it's own Rotisserie [sp?] chicken. And, perhaps little known in the great Northeast, is KENNY ROGERS CHICKEN! Yes, the great Kenny Rogers [Rodgers] of CW fame. He was interviewed in Vegas last week when he was in to film a movie and he said he was really most interested 'these days' in his restaurants which sell Roasted Chicken. Side story went on to state that Roasted Chicken in the next FF fad. | |||||
589.5 | The next Snapple? | MROA::BONVALLAT | Wed Oct 13 1993 18:52 | 9 | |
re: .2 The prospectus is not available yet. Merrill Lynch estimates another week. The offering, as I think was already mentioned, should be in early-mid November. As .3 mentioned, this offering will be HOT - no doubt in my mind. So, your only shot at this one is to buy it through any broker in the aftermarket as soon as it opens for trading. | |||||
589.6 | Raise the price? | KELVIN::MCKINLEY | Mon Oct 18 1993 14:05 | 6 | |
If this IPO is going to be so hot with all the initial shares bought up and bid up on the first day, why doesn't Boston Chicken raise the initial price of the shares to get a bigger chunk of the pie for themselves? ---Phil | |||||
589.7 | Sunday NYT Article on Boston Chicken | CPDW::ROSCH | Wed Oct 20 1993 10:19 | 2 | |
There was a great article on Boston Chicken and the roasted chicken FF industry in general in last Sunday's NYT in the business section. | |||||
589.8 | Another chicken IPO | MILKWY::ROBINSON | The Captain | Wed Oct 20 1993 10:41 | 4 |
There was another IPO yesterday for another FF grilled chicken firm (Pollo something or other). It was offered at 13 and change and closed at 19 and change. It seems to fit the speculation that roasted/grilled chicken is the fast food of the future. | |||||
589.9 | Don't short a runaway stock | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed Oct 20 1993 13:12 | 8 |
This looks like the next Snapple. I can stop in the local Shaw's supermarket and buy a roasted chicken, if fact I do just that once every couple weeks. And the checkout line (express) is never very long. Why would I want to pay more and wait in line longer? John | |||||
589.10 | Fundamental vs. technical reasons :-) | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Leadership DECAF? Yuck!" | Wed Oct 20 1993 13:28 | 15 |
Re. .9 John, > Why would I want to pay more and wait in line longer? For the same reasons as to why people wait long while getting bitten by mosquitos to buy Kimball's(**) ice cream when they could buy cheaper ice cream at the local supermarkets. But you should know that, John. ** For those not in the GMA area, Kimball's is an ice cream store in Westford MA. It's open only about 6 months a year from April to October. On a hot summer night, you can expect to wait about an hour to get your turn. Their ice creams are legendary. | |||||
589.11 | Don't Peck at It Until You've Tried It | I18N::GLANTZ | Wed Oct 20 1993 15:32 | 12 | |
Re .9: In my view, there are two reasons why people flock to Boston Chicken: 1) The same reason they go to MacDonald's instead of buying their burgers at the local Shaw's 2) The side dishes are yummy (KFC's sides are all starch -- no imagination now that the original Colonel has fled the nest) But my broker tells me he'll have to scramble to find any shares for me. | |||||
589.12 | Rotisseries Fire Up Fast_Food Business | MILKWY::ROBINSON | The Captain | Wed Oct 20 1993 16:56 | 95 |
Reprinted w/o permission from the WSJ. October 18, 1993. What goes around has finally come around - or so they are saying in the fast food chicken industry these days. Chicken cooked on a spit -- a staple of delicatessens, convenience stores and some supermarkets -- is becoming the hot new fare for U.S. restaurant entrepreneurs. Chains featuring marinated birds roasting over an open fire or rotating on electric grills behind glass are proliferating the way pizza parlors once did. Even fried-chicken king KFC Corp. is promoting a rotisserie product with what the company says is its costliest advertising campaign ever. Introductory ads feature a "secret" Col. Sanders recipe for skewered chicken suddenly turning up -- just in time to capitalize on consumer desires for a more healthful drumstick, or at least one that tastes different. "Our goal is ultimately to build as big a nonfried business as we have a fried one today," a KFC spokesman says. The company, a PepsiCo Inc. unit, projects $700 million in sales this year from the product it calls Rotisserie Gold. The chain is already selling about $2 million of the product each day, or 30% of average daily sales, a spokesman says, adding: "We haven't seen sales like this in 10 years." True, there are problems with slow-cooked "fast" food. In a Des Moines, Iowa, KFC recently, a noontime customer angrily left when told the restaurant was out of dark rotisserie chicken and more wouldn't be ready for another 30 minutes. Spokesmen for several chains acknowledge that accurately predicting usage isn't easy but note they are developing "reuse" recipes that put rotisserie lefovers in sandwiches, soups and pot pies. But plenty of business people believe the potential of rotisserie chicken outweighs any problems. For example, John Y. Brown, who founded Kentucky Fried Chicken 30 years ago, now touts roasted chicken as the fowl of the future. The onetime Kentucky governor has teamed up with Kenny Rogers, the country and western singer, to form Roasters Corp., based in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The company opened its 100th Kenny Rogers Roasters outlet earlier this month. The largest U.S. chain dedicated solely to rotisserie poultry is Boston Chicken Inc., with 166 stores in 16 states and about to test investor tastes for its menu with an initial public offering. Both Boston Chicken and Roasters intend to add several hundred outlets each in the next few years. "Jump from the frying pan into the fire," a Roasters videoutape urges would-be franchisees. Rotisserie chicken promoters seem as eager to entice new investors as patrons. Although it operates only a handful of restaurants so far, Clucker's Wood Roaster Chicken Inc., Miami, already has sold licensing rights to its version of rotisserie chicken for Mexico and Central America. Roasters recently comleted a joint venture with a Malaysian group. "This isn't a passing fad," contends Ronald Paul, president of Technomic Inc., a Chicago concern that tracks the country's eating-out habits. Rotisserie chicken "is a better-tasting product than any other perceived chicken alternative has been." But, he adds, "that doesn't mean that we might not open too many restaurants." An eventual shakeout does seem likely; still, the potential appeal of a leaner chicken with a new taste is the talk of the restaurant industry. Americans already eat more chicken than beef. But as fat and cholesterol concerns linger, chefs are being pushed to find novel ways to prepare poultry. The National Restaurant Association estimates that while total chicken orders in restaurants rose 5% last year, those for fried chicken fell 3%. Rotisserie chains marinate their chicken -- spiced citrus juice is currently popular -- then grill them for 90 minutes or so. This process allows the fat to drip out, leaves meat moist, and gives the skin a Thanksgiving turkey sheen. KFC's Rotisserie Gold contains 42% fewer calories and 42% less fat than its Extra Tasty Crispy, a fried product. Roasted pieces also have 24% fewer calories and 21% less fat than the colonel's Original Recipe. While the chains seek to differentiate themselves with their ambience -- Kenny Roger's stores show country-and-western music videos -- or the type of wood on the fire, their menus seem interchangeable. "Homestyle" or "made-from- scratch" side dishes are a feature at Boston Chicken, Kenny Rogers Roasters, Cluckers and KFC. Buttered corn on the cob, dilled new potatoes, creamed spinach and cornbread muffins, along with a macaroni or rice dish and some sort of apple dessert, are typical fare. Unlike many fried chicken outlets, the rotisserie concerns typically don't sell poultry by the piece. Whole, half or quarter chickens are the norm, with a half generally going for between $4.49 and $5.99 and a whole bird for around $7.49. Complete meals -- a whole chicken plus two side dishes -- can cost up t to $12.99. But not everone in the chicken business is smitten with grilling. "We have roasted chicken in a limited-store test at Popeyes, but I don't think you'll see a big push," says Dennis Campbell, vice president of product research and development at America's Favorite Chicken Co., which owns the Church's and Popeyes fried-chicken chains. "We're not convinced that the investment it would take is justifiable long-term," he says. Indeed, last year, only about 18% of chicken consumed outside homes was non-fried, according to NPD Crest, a Chicago-area research concern. But entrepreneurs like Mr. Brown are undeterred. Searching for an encore in the chicken busines, he began fiddling with rotisserie chicken in 1985, installing a French spit in a Louisville, Ky., store he called Le Chicken Grill. The place "broke even" he says. Next, Mr. Brown hooked up with Mr. Rogers, "an old friend" for whom the former governor had big plans. "PR really launched our company," Mr. Brown says of Kentucky Fried Chicken, noting that every time Col. Sanders went on television, sales soared. We're on our way to building another KFC," Mr. Brown says, noting per store annual sales of "over $1 million." About half that business was takeout he says. Back at the nation's dominant chicken chain, KFC franchisees say the addition of nonfried chicken already is bringing in customers who previously shunned the standard fried fare. John R. Neal, a KFC franchisee in Columbia, Tenn., puts it this way: "What the colonel did by taking the woman out of the kitchen, we hope this will take the man off the barbecue grill." | |||||
589.13 | Symbol? | DATABS::HUSSAIN | Thu Oct 21 1993 10:34 | 3 | |
Where are Boston Chicken's stocks being traded, in NASDAQ or NYSE? Anyone know the symbol? | |||||
589.14 | BOST | MROA::BONVALLAT | Thu Oct 21 1993 10:44 | 1 | |
When it begins trading sometime in November, its NASDAQ symbol will be BOST. | |||||
589.15 | Price Raised | I18N::GLANTZ | Fri Nov 05 1993 16:11 | 9 | |
Re .6: Merrill Lynch and Alex Brown, the lead underwriters, just decided to raise the offering price from $15-$17 to $19-$20. It should be out the week of November 15th. This issue is so hot, I doubt us ordinary folks will get a bite of it. After looking at the picture in the prospectus, my broker said he got so hungry he hurried over to the local outlet and grabbed a meal. | |||||
589.16 | Hits the market today... | GWEN::LEMIRE | A marvelous night for a moondance... | Tue Nov 09 1993 10:18 | 6 |
I just heard from a broker at Merrill Lynch. The IPO is set to go today. He sais that there are market orders for about 700,000 shares with the expected price range of $38-40. The stock was priced overnight at $20; anyone able to get in on the ground floor doubled their money in a heartbeat, I guess. Tom | |||||
589.17 | open 45 - now 48 1/2 | USCTR1::BJORGENSEN | Tue Nov 09 1993 11:17 | 1 | |
589.18 | 2435::SHAH | Amitabh "Leadership DECAF? Yuck!" | Tue Nov 09 1993 11:34 | 1 | |
What are March 25 puts priced at? :-) :-) | |||||
589.19 | As of noon, 11/9 | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Nov 09 1993 12:04 | 2 |
49� on 4.3 Megashares, MANY 100-1000 share lots, the ticker is smoking it's got so much to report. | |||||
589.20 | WSJ Article | SWLAVC::HOSSEINI | Wed Nov 10 1993 13:28 | 18 | |
There is an article in todays' WSJ (Heard on the Street Column) Page C1 regarding the IPO and Chicken Mania. Based on this article, most institutions who bought the stock pre-IPO were the sellers yesterday. It also indicatede that the officers have the right to sell close to 900,000 prefferd shares which they bought at $20 in about 120 days (the law for insiders to sell). Very negative article on the public buying frenzy of this stock. The financial data on the company were given as follows: 1991 Rev. $5.2 Mil Net (-$2.6) 1992 Rev. $8.3 Mil Net (-$5.9) 1993-date $28.2 Mil Net $0.3 I guess we have to wait and see where this stock is when the 6 months grace period goes by. |