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Shake Shack Stock Slides 10% After Guidance Cut: Why SHAK Is Under Pressure Now
2 June 2026
2 mins read

Shake Shack Stock Slides 10% After Guidance Cut: Why SHAK Is Under Pressure Now

NEW YORK, June 2, 2026, 12:07 (EDT)

  • Shake Shack shares fell 10.3% to $55.82 in late-morning trading after the company cut its second-quarter sales and margin outlook.
  • The burger chain now expects second-quarter revenue of $415 million to $420 million, down from $424 million to $428 million.
  • Management cited “macroeconomic uncertainty” and competition before investor meetings this week. Business Wire

Shake Shack Inc. shares dropped more than 10% on Tuesday after the burger chain cut its second-quarter and full-year guidance, a fresh hit to a stock already under pressure from weaker restaurant demand and high beef costs.

The move matters now because the update came with more than two-thirds of the quarter already complete, giving investors a clearer read on sales and margins than a long-range forecast. Regular trading was under way in New York; NYSE core trading hours run from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eastern time, and June 2 is not listed among the exchange’s 2026 holidays.

Shake Shack traded at $55.82, down $6.40, or 10.3%, with volume above 3.5 million shares. The stock opened at $56.30 and touched an intraday low of $53.53.

The company said it now expects second-quarter revenue of $415 million to $420 million, compared with its prior view of $424 million to $428 million. Same-shack sales — sales at established company-operated restaurants — are expected to rise 2.5% to 3.0%, down from an earlier range of 3.0% to 5.0%.

Restaurant-level profit margin, the share of restaurant sales left after store operating costs, was cut to 22.0% to 23.0% from 24.0% to 24.5%. For 2026, Shake Shack lowered adjusted EBITDA, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization adjusted for certain items, to $225 million to $235 million from $230 million to $245 million.

Chief Executive Rob Lynch said the new forecast reflected “macroeconomic uncertainty” and the “competitive landscape,” while saying the company’s “fundamental business drivers remain strong.” The company said the update was issued ahead of June investor conferences. Business Wire

Lynch and new Chief Financial Officer Michelle Hook were scheduled to appear at the TD Cowen Consumer Conference in New York at 10:15 a.m. Eastern time on Tuesday, followed by William Blair’s growth conference in Chicago on Thursday and an Oppenheimer virtual consumer conference on June 8.

The competitive backdrop is not helping. McDonald’s was little changed at $276.15 in late-morning trading, while Chipotle fell 4.4% to $29.20; SPY, a fund that tracks the S&P 500, rose 0.2%.

The selloff follows a difficult first quarter. Reuters reported last month that Shake Shack swung to a quarterly loss, hurt by higher beef costs and weak consumer spending, while peers including McDonald’s and Chipotle had also flagged pressure in the restaurant sector. Michael Gunther, senior vice president at Consumer Edge, said then that there were “broader signs of consumer strain across restaurants” and that elevated beef costs remained a key issue to watch. Reuters

Shake Shack reported first-quarter revenue of $366.7 million, up 14.3% from a year earlier, but still below analysts’ estimate of $371.9 million, according to LSEG data cited by Reuters. The company also reported a net loss of $0.3 million for the quarter.

The risk for investors is that the guidance cut is not just a one-quarter reset. If diners keep trading down, promotions fail to lift traffic, or beef and labor costs stay high, Shake Shack may have less room to protect margins while opening new restaurants.

There is a narrower upside case. Licensing revenue guidance was left unchanged for the quarter, and the company still expects about eight licensed openings. But Tuesday’s stock move showed the market wants proof in sales, not just new units.

Roman Perkowski is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Cracow University of Economics, he previously worked in investment research and corporate finance. His coverage helps readers understand the key forces driving global financial markets and emerging industries.

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