The post Wendy’s Gains 6% Amid “Save Wendy’s” Meme Campaign: Low P/E and Huge Yield Could Make WEN Worth Saving appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Wendy’s (NASDAQ:WEN) stock is up 6% to $7.74 in Friday midday trading, extending a remarkable rebound for the burger chain. The move puts the stock on track for what would be a third straight weekly gain after shares touched a roughly 12-year low on Monday.
The catalyst remains the viral “Save Wendy’s” campaign that swept r/WallStreetBets earlier this week, where posts like “Fixing Her: A Wendys (WEN) DD” drew hundreds of upvotes and lit up retail trader feeds. Reddit sentiment on Wendy’s peaked at a bullish score of 72 on June 25 before cooling.
Despite the rally, the stock remains down 34% over the past year. That collapse is exactly what created the unusual value and yield profile now drawing fundamental buyers alongside the meme crowd.
The meme army’s pitch is a classic short squeeze. Wendy’s stock short interest sits near 23% per S3 Partners and a record 26% per Yahoo/Koyfin data, giving forced buying real fuel. Reddit activity on r/WallStreetBets carried WEN stock higher all week.
Yet, the cooling has already started. By Friday, sentiment had dropped to neutral readings of 56 to 58, and a skeptical post titled “Wendy’s Meme Rally distracts from the bigger picture” began gaining traction. Mechanical short-covering can reverse swiftly once forced buyers are tapped out.
Per Yahoo Finance, Wendy’s stock trades at a trailing P/E ratio of 10.1x with a forward dividend yield of 7.65%. Unlike pure meme names, Wendy’s generates free cash flow and has a long history of paying dividends, with the most recent $0.14 quarterly payout distributed on June 15.
Insider conviction backs the value thesis. Wendy’s director and 10% owner Peter May bought 4,166 shares on April 3 at $7.14, with director Bradley Peltz purchasing 3,448 shares the same day at the same price. Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management remains involved, and speculation continues about whether leadership changes could lead to a broader transaction.
Settled leadership adds to the turnaround narrative. Bob Wright is now Wendy’s permanent CEO and Steve Cirulis is the new CFO, both formerly at Potbelly, driving the “Project Fresh” turnaround plan.
The high yield is partly a math artifact of a collapsing share price. Wendy’s stock is down 66% over five years, the textbook profile of a potential value or dividend trap if the turnaround stalls. Dividend sustainability becomes a fair question, not a forecast.
The fundamentals justify the skepticism. Wendy’s Q1 2026 U.S. same-restaurant sales fell 8%, a sharp deterioration, and net income dropped 42%. A low trailing P/E ratio on declining earnings can flatter the picture because forward earnings may look quite different.
Wall Street remains cautious on Wendy’s stock. The analyst consensus skews to hold, with 16 hold ratings against just 1 strong buy and 3 buys, and an average target of $7.79 roughly in line with current trading.
The next real test for Wendy’s stock arrives with Q2 2026 earnings on August 14. Same-restaurant sales trends and early strategy commentary from Cirulis can shape whether the bounce holds.
For now, Wendy’s stock looks like more than a pure meme name, as the company has real cash flow and real insider buying activity. However, the depressed valuation reflects genuine traffic problems that have not yet turned. Investors interested in the turnaround thesis should consider keeping their WEN position sizes modest until Q2 results confirm whether Project Fresh is starting to bite.
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The post Wendy’s Gains 6% Amid “Save Wendy’s” Meme Campaign: Low P/E and Huge Yield Could Make WEN Worth Saving appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


