Key Takeaways
- Wingstop shares have tumbled 30% in 2026 through Monday’s trading session
- Citi raised WING rating from Neutral to Buy while adjusting price target to $230 from $286
- Analysts highlighted the company’s store expansion strategy and value creation model as key strengths
- The upcoming FIFA World Cup could serve as a tailwind for sales growth
- First quarter earnings scheduled for April 29; consensus estimates call for $1.05 EPS and $190.4 million in revenue
The chicken wing franchise operator has experienced a turbulent beginning to 2026. Shares have plummeted 30% since January, hovering near their September 2023 lows, while market participants have been preparing for potentially disappointing quarterly results.
Yet Citi analysts believe the market has overreacted.
In a Tuesday research note, Citi elevated Wingstop’s rating from Neutral to Buy, while simultaneously reducing its price objective from $286 down to $230. Despite the lower target, this still represents approximately 39.5% potential upside from present trading levels.
The investment firm acknowledged current challenges head-on. “Shares have been in a tailspin,” analysts noted in their report. The downward pressure stems from disappointing comparable store sales figures, speculation about potential guidance reductions, and anxiety surrounding longer-term unit development objectives.
Nonetheless, Citi maintains confidence that Wingstop’s fundamental “value-creating engine” and new location expansion strategy remain robust and superior to competing global franchise operations.
FIFA World Cup Could Provide Sales Momentum
Citi analysts anticipate opportunities for comparable sales momentum to rebound over the coming months. A potential catalyst highlighted by the firm is the FIFA World Cup tournament, which may generate heightened customer traffic and wing consumption.
This represents a logical investment thesis — major sporting events historically correlate with increased wing sales, and Wingstop has previously capitalized on these occasions.
WING shares jumped approximately 8% Monday following the upgrade announcement, before retreating 0.2% Tuesday to settle at $164.50. The stock’s 52-week trading band extends from $142.24 to $388.14, illustrating the dramatic decline from recent peaks.
Citi represents just one voice among several bullish analysts. Piper Sandler raised WING to Overweight on April 2, while adjusting its target from $283 to $190. Raymond James upgraded to Strong Buy that same date, reducing its objective from $325 to $240. Overall Street consensus stands at Moderate Buy, comprising 3 Strong Buy, 27 Buy, 4 Hold, and 1 Sell ratings. The average price target across analysts is $315.55.
First Quarter Results Arriving April 29
Wingstop will unveil first-quarter financial performance on April 29. Street expectations project EPS of $1.05, representing growth from $0.99 in the prior-year period, alongside revenue forecasts of $190.4 million — marking an 11% year-over-year expansion.
During its previous quarterly report released February 18, Wingstop delivered EPS of $1.00, surpassing the $0.84 consensus projection. Revenue totaled $175.69 million, marginally missing the $177.74 million estimate, though still reflecting 8.6% year-over-year growth.
Institutional investors have been methodically building positions. T. Rowe Price expanded its holdings by 2.8% during Q4, while Massachusetts Financial Services increased its stake by 48.1% in that same quarter. Lone Pine Capital initiated a fresh position valued at $375 million in Q3.
Regarding insider activity, two directors divested shares in late February — Director Kilandigalu Madati reduced holdings by 51% for approximately $704,000, while Director Wesley S. McDonald sold $141,500 worth at $250 per share.
Wingstop maintains a market capitalization of $4.50 billion, trades at a PE ratio of 26.67, and exhibits a beta of 2.03.
