Consumers have already indicated that they intend to eat out less.
Multiple home barbecue companies are going public after a successful year and a half amid the COVID-19 crisis, an apparent reflection of increasing consumer orientation toward home cooking after many months during which dining out was sharply curtailed.
Traeger — a manufacturer of automated wood-pellet smokers — this week announced an initial public offering of 23,529,411 shares of common stock at as much as $18 per share. The company was expecting to realize around $400 million in the IPO.
The company in its IPO prospectus said it “more than doubled revenue from $262.1 million in 2017 to $545.8 million in 2020,” with huge surges in social media followings last year
Weber — the longtime manufacturer of a diverse line of grills, including the classic black kettle grill that has been a mainstay of charcoal barbecues in the U.S. for decades — is also planning a public offering, claiming in its own prospectus that it recorded year-over-year growth in 2021 that in some cases soared through triple digits.
Hell yeah, fresh chix (where who you know to get it), crabs, clams and mussels in the assawoman bay and the right Delaware butcher – WINNING!!!
Hastings in Delmar, and we bought a smoker before the pandemic –
There is nothing like it – heck yah!