Cava stock jumps in market debut

In This Article:

Cava shares opened at $42 on Thursday after pricing at $22 on Wednesday. Cava CEO Brett Schulman spoke with Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma at the New York Stock Exchange after shares started trading.

Video Transcript

RACHELLE AKUFFO: Taking a look at Cava shares now. Currently, trading at about $43 as it started its IPO today. Open trading at $42. That's 91% above its IPO price. That's after making its public debut this morning as we mentioned that originally pricing at $22 a share.

Let's get to "Yahoo Finance's" Brooke DiPalma on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange for more on this. Hey Brooke.

BROOKE DIPALMA: Good morning, Rachelle. I'm here with Brett Schulman, Cava co-founder and CEO. Such an exciting day for you. Congratulations on the IPO. First, break down what this day means for you personally. And has it surpassed your expectations, so far?

BRETT SCHULMAN: Thanks, Brooke. Thanks for having me. It's been an amazing day. It's an incredible validation of all the hard work our team has put into the business the last 12 years to help get us to this point. And that this is the next beginning of the next chapter in our journey.

BROOKE DIPALMA: And right now, we're trading at $43 a share. Are you concerned that the valuation here is a bit too high and that expectations are now way too high for the company?

BRETT SCHULMAN: Well, I told the team last night, we're not going to focus on the daily stock price. Markets go up. Markets go down. We're focused on the same thing we've been since we started, which is our long-term vision of defining the Mediterranean category and bringing the Mediterranean way to communities across the country.

BROOKE DIPALMA: Now, let's talk about the way that you started. Back in 2011, you opened up that first fast casual concept. I think one of your co-founders called it a chef casual concept. What was one of the biggest challenges that you face to get to this point you are right now?

BRETT SCHULMAN: I like to say scaling restaurants is hard. It's not like scaling SaaS software. It takes a lot of great people and great talent. And so really developing our restaurant team leaders and building our team out to scale this business, we focused on our culture and our mission to bring heart, health, and humanity to food. And when we do that, we get great people on board that deliver that great food and great hospitality. And help us get to where we are today.

BROOKE DIPALMA: Now, Brett, I read through your S-1. When do you think that Cava will turn profitable?

BRETT SCHULMAN: So we're focused on our long-term growth. We've got a tremendous unit economic profit engine. We saw in Q1 alone, we generated $50 million at the restaurant level. That's compared to $91 million all of last year. So very healthy margins at the restaurant level. And that's the lifeblood, the oxygen of our business. And we've invested in significant infrastructure over the years, whether that's our manufacturing infrastructure or digital infrastructure, or all the new restaurants we've opened over the last few years. And all of that is now flowing into the business and really creating great tailwinds on that path.