Chipotle shares jump as CEO apologizes over illnesses, vows change – Reuters

Posted by on Dec 10th, 2015 and filed under Medical News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Chipotle shares jump as CEO apologizes over illnesses, vows change – Reuters

WASHINGTON Shares of Chipotle jumped more than 5 percent on Thursday after its founder apologized to patrons who fell ill after eating at the company’s restaurants and pledged that strict new food-safety practices would prevent future outbreaks.

“This was a very unfortunate incident and I’m deeply sorry that this happened, but the procedures we’re putting in place today are so above industry norms that we are going to be the safest place to eat,” founder and co-Chief Executive Officer Steve Ells said in an interview on NBC.

His comments come a day after local health officials reported that 80 people had been sickened by norovirus linked to a Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc restaurant in Boston, in the latest wave of patrons who have fallen ill on the heels of another outbreak in the Northwestern United States.

That finding appears separate from a spate of E. coli infections in recent months that has sickened 52 people in nine states and forced the company to temporarily close some locations.

Shares of Chipotle were up 5.4 percent at $ 577.72 in midday trading on Thursday.

Asked on NBC’s “Today” program whether Chipotle could recover financially, Ells said “certainly,” a sentiment some analysts shared.

“We see value in shares from current levels for investors that can look through the potential near-term choppiness,” William Blair analysts wrote in a research note.

The burrito restaurant chain has been under scrutiny since November, when health officials first linked it to the E. coli outbreak, the company’s third food safety incident since August.

The illnesses have raised concerns about potential damage to Chipotle’s reputation despite the loyalty it has built over its use of fresh produce, meat raised without antibiotics and ingredients free of genetically modified organisms, or GMOs.

Some critics have said the food safety concerns raise questions about the fast-growing brand, and shares of the company have fallen from a year-high in August, when the incidents began. The stock is down about 20 percent this year.

Earlier this week, Chipotle’s other co-CEO, Monty Moran, in a conference call with investors, blamed the media for over-reporting the illnesses.

Still, on Thursday, Ells took a more apologetic tone in emphasizing its safety changes.

Ells said the affected Boston restaurant would reopen after being completely sanitized and having all of its employees tested for norovirus, which is highly contagious and spreads easily through contaminated food and surfaces. More than 120 people in the northeastern U.S. city reported symptoms.

Regarding the E. coli outbreak, Ells said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has still not found an exact source for the bacteria, which can cause severe diarrhea and vomiting.

He said Chipotle’s new food safety procedures will put it 10 to 15 years ahead of industry standards.

“We’re doing a lot to rectify this and to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

(Additional reporting by Subrat Patnaik in Bangalore and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Bernadette Baum)

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