Chipotle stock drops again: CMG slides on insider filings and fresh U.S. demand questions
11 February 2026
1 min read

Chipotle stock drops again: CMG slides on insider filings and fresh U.S. demand questions

New York, February 11, 2026, 13:48 (EST) — Regular session

  • Chipotle shares dropped roughly 3.5% by midday, deepening the stock’s recent slide.
  • Insider Form 4 filings revealed new stock awards, plus some shares withheld for taxes. One senior exec disclosed selling shares following an equity exercise.
  • Friday’s U.S. CPI report is on deck, with investors eyeing it for signs on rate direction and consumer spending strength.

Chipotle Mexican Grill stock slipped roughly 3.5% to $37.10 around midday Wednesday, off session lows of $36.93.

Consumer discretionary shares slipped, dragging down restaurant stocks linked to non-essential spending, even as the broader market barely budged.

Late Tuesday brought a flurry of insider trading alerts, as several Form 4 filings surfaced on Chipotle’s investor relations page. Insiders use the Form 4 with the U.S. SEC to detail share transactions. 1

CEO Scott Boatwright had 8,048 shares withheld at $39.39 on Feb. 9, according to one filing. The transaction was marked as shares the company kept to handle tax obligations from vesting. 2

President and Chief Strategy & Technology Officer Curtis Garner unloaded 61,077 shares on Feb. 6, selling at a weighted average of roughly $40.01 after exercising stock-only stock appreciation rights, according to another filing. Some of those shares were withheld to meet obligations. 3

Macro indicators aren’t doing much to lift sentiment. U.S. retail sales stalled out in December, defying forecasts, while spending dropped 0.1% at food services and drinking places — a key area for the restaurant industry, according to Reuters. 4

After a brief delay, the January U.S. jobs data landed Wednesday, revealing payrolls up by 130,000 and the unemployment rate edging down to 4.3%. Still, benchmark revisions flagged a much lower pace of job creation over the past year than earlier figures suggested. 5

Chipotle’s guidance has weighed on the stock since last week’s numbers. The chain plans a 1% to 2% menu price hike this year, projects essentially flat same-store sales for fiscal 2026, and signaled ongoing margin headwinds as it eats higher costs instead of passing them on. Finance chief Adam Rymer flagged that margins “will be under pressure.” Morningstar’s Ari Felhandler noted the move might help Chipotle’s value perception but could “crimp near-term margins.” 6

MarketWatch notes that Boatwright has resisted the idea of introducing a dollar-style value menu, insisting Chipotle’s food is “worth every penny.” That’s despite competitors ramping up their own promotional efforts. 7

CMG’s jump stood out. McDonald’s dropped roughly 0.3%. Starbucks picked up 1.1%, and Yum Brands added close to 0.9% by midday.

The tape shifts quickly. Several insider moves reported this week stemmed from equity grants and related tax payments—standard stuff in investors’ eyes. Still, consumer-facing shares are at risk if inflation persists or if diners continue balking at steeper menu prices.

Now, Chipotle shareholders are eyeing Friday’s U.S. consumer price index, set for an 8:30 a.m. Eastern release, as the next clear read on rates—and the demand trends shaping restaurant foot traffic. 8

AT&T stock price jumps as telecom peers rally after T-Mobile outlook
Previous Story

AT&T stock price jumps as telecom peers rally after T-Mobile outlook

Go toTop