Key Takeaways
- WING shares have declined 30% since the beginning of 2026 through Monday’s trading session
- Citi elevated its rating on WING to Buy from Neutral while adjusting the price target to $230 from $286
- Analysts highlighted the company’s franchise expansion model and operational strengths as upgrade rationale
- The upcoming FIFA World Cup represents a potential tailwind for sales momentum
- First-quarter financial results arrive April 29; analysts project $1.05 per share and $190.4 million in revenue
Wingstop has experienced significant headwinds during the opening months of 2026. Shares have retreated 30% year-to-date, hovering near levels last observed in September 2023, while market participants have anticipated challenging quarterly results.
Wingstop Inc., WING
Citi believes the market reaction has created an attractive entry point.
Analysts at Citi raised their stance on Wingstop to Buy from Neutral on Tuesday, while simultaneously reducing the price target from $286 down to $230. The revised target represents approximately 39.5% potential appreciation from recent trading levels.
The brokerage acknowledged current challenges directly. “Shares have been in a tailspin,” Citi stated in its research note. The pressure stems from disappointing same-store sales figures, potential guidance reductions on comparable metrics, and uncertainty surrounding future unit development plans.
Despite these headwinds, Citi expressed confidence that Wingstop’s fundamental franchise model and store expansion trajectory continue performing well relative to competing global franchise systems.
World Cup Tournament May Provide Sales Momentum
Citi analysts anticipate opportunities for comparable sales improvement during the upcoming quarters. The firm specifically highlighted the FIFA World Cup as a potential driver of increased customer traffic and wing consumption.
The analysis carries merit — major sporting events historically correlate with stronger wing sales, and Wingstop has previously capitalized on this relationship.
WING shares climbed approximately 8% on Monday following the upgrade announcement before retreating 0.2% on Tuesday to settle at $164.50. The 52-week trading range spans from $142.24 to $388.14, illustrating the magnitude of the decline from recent peaks.
Citi represents one of several firms expressing renewed confidence. Piper Sandler raised WING to Overweight on April 2, though it reduced its price objective from $283 to $190. Raymond James shifted to Strong Buy the same day, lowering its target from $325 to $240. Overall analyst sentiment stands at Moderate Buy, comprising 3 Strong Buy, 27 Buy, 4 Hold, and 1 Sell rating. The average price target across analysts reaches $315.55.
First Quarter Results Scheduled for April 29
Wingstop releases first-quarter earnings on April 29. Analyst estimates call for earnings per share of $1.05, compared with $0.99 in the prior-year period, alongside revenue projections of $190.4 million — representing 11% year-over-year growth.
During the previous quarter, disclosed February 18, Wingstop delivered EPS of $1.00, surpassing the $0.84 analyst consensus. Revenue totaled $175.69 million, marginally below the $177.74 million projection, while still advancing 8.6% year-over-year.
Institutional investors have been accumulating positions. T. Rowe Price expanded its holdings by 2.8% during Q4, while Massachusetts Financial Services boosted its stake by 48.1% in the same timeframe. Lone Pine Capital established a new position valued at $375 million in Q3.
Regarding insider transactions, two board members divested shares in late February — Director Kilandigalu Madati reduced holdings by 51% for approximately $704,000, while Director Wesley S. McDonald sold $141,500 worth at $250 per share.
Wingstop maintains a market capitalization of $4.50 billion, trades at a PE ratio of 26.67, and shows a beta of 2.03.

