By Brad Dorfman - Analysis
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Restaurant companies are offering smaller items, squeezing through price increases and trying to get customers to order online in hopes of preserving profits, while keeping cash-strapped customers ringing their registers.
These methods were touted by restaurant executives at the Reuters Food Summit this week, as they fight to keep profits and margins above water in an environment of soaring gasoline, wheat, cheese and other ingredient costs.
The increases have been accompanied by a sharp downturn in the U.S. economy that economists and even restaurant executives think has reached recession level.
Restaurant companies typically get hit early in an economic downturn because dining out is more of a discretionary expenditure. That has proven to be the case this time around, with casual dining chains being the hardest hit.
Customers "are going in with a budget in mind, and they are ordering around that budget," said Richard Federico, chief executive of P.F. Chang's China Bistri Inc (PFCB.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz).
In order to try to get customers to come in more often, the Asian restaurant chain operator has added a single-serving lunch bowl to its menu. The item costs less for P.F. Chang's to prepare than other menu items, is less expensive for customers and gives the company a "reasonable" profit, Federico said.
Restaurant shares have been hit since late last year. The Dow Jones U.S. Restaurants and Bars index .DJUSRU is down more than 12 percent since the end of October, though the Standard & Poor's 500 index .SPX is off more than 15 percent during the same period.
PASSING ON APPETIZERS Continued...
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