LaCroix maker shares tank after bizarre CEO comments. Guggenheim cuts to ‘sell’

FAN Editor

The fallout continued Friday for LaCroix maker National Beverage following the CEO’s bizarre explanation for the company’s dismal earnings. Investment firm Guggenheim also issued a rare “sell” rating on the stock.

Its shares plummeted by as much as 24 percent shortly after the markets opened Friday. The company released its fiscal third-quarter results late Thursday, showing a 39.6 percent drop in profit to $24.8 million during the three months ended Jan. 26.

CEO Nick Caporella blamed the weak performance on “injustice!” in a statement issued with the earnings report.

“Managing a brand is not so different from caring for someone who becomes handicapped,” he said. “Brands do not see or hear, so they are at the mercy of their owners or care providers who must preserve the dignity and special character that the brand exemplifies.”

Without addressing Caporella’s unusual comments, Guggenheim recommended investors sell their shares and lowered its price target from $72 a share to $45, according to a research note published Friday when the stock was trading at around $54. Analysts led by Laurent Grandet cited rising competition in the flavored carbonated water industry and a drop in social media buzz about LaCroix for their decision to cut the rating.

“We continue to see a challenging competitive environment for LaCroix, especially as Topo Chico gains traction and PepsiCo intends to invest heavily behind Bubly again this year. In our view, this is the bigger issue going forward that will likely prevent LaCroix from regaining its lost market share,” Guggenheim said.

A lawsuit filed in October accused the popular sparkling water company of mislabeling its products as all-natural, sending National Beverage Shares lower that day. The suit claimed that LaCroix included non-natural and synthetic compounds in its seltzer.

In January, National Beverage said an independent, accredited lab found that LaCroix did not contain traces of artificial or synthetic additives. At the time, Caporella said in a statement that the “professional liars” used social media to attack the brand’s integrity. Still, National Beverage’s sales dropped 2.9 percent during the quarter to $220.9 million, compared to $227.5 million last year.

“As retail growth has remained persistently weak, the bigger issue now, in our view, is the increased level of competition in the category that will make it very difficult for LaCroix to regain its lost share,” Guggenheim said.

Caporella also said the 2017 tax reform legislation led to skewed comparisons to the prior year.

National Beverage did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CNBC.

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