Papa John's International Inc. (PZZA) shares took another hit Wednesday as investors processed the fallout from what appears to be an elaborate market manipulation scheme. The pizza chain's stock slid after investigators exposed Monday's buyout rumor as completely fabricated, part of what one outlet is calling a sophisticated "market disinformation" operation.
The Anatomy of a Hoax
Here's where things get interesting. On Wednesday, investigative outlet Hunterbrook Media published findings alleging the fake takeover news was anything but accidental. According to their report, the rumor claiming TriArtisan Capital Advisors was leading a $65-per-share buyout was manufactured by a network of "pay-to-play" websites reportedly run from Dubai by U.K. nationals.
The outlet didn't mince words, calling it a coordinated market manipulation scheme. The timing was suspiciously convenient: well-positioned call options could have generated substantial profits from the volatility spike the fake news created. Someone, somewhere, likely made a killing on Monday's brief surge before reality set in.
Hunterbrook's investigation, dubbed "PZZA Gate," identified digital marketer Sam Allcock and associate Danielle Trigg as central figures in the alleged network. Through forensic analysis, investigators connected the two via their joint venture CryptoNexa and social media activity placing them both in Dubai.
The fake story apparently originated on a site called BusinessMole before getting amplified by ABC Money, an outlet that Hunterbrook claims deliberately uses branding similar to ABC News to trick readers into thinking they're getting legitimate journalism. Classic misdirection.
Real Problems Beyond the Fake News
Strip away the intrigue of the hoax, and Papa John's still has genuine problems to worry about. Last week's third-quarter earnings were disappointing across the board. Revenue came in at $508.15 million while adjusted earnings hit just 32 cents per share, both missing Wall Street's expectations.
Analysts weren't exactly forgiving. BMO Capital slashed their price target to $54, while Stephens went even lower at $49. Those downgrades reflect real concerns about the company's trajectory, independent of any fabricated buyout stories.
The fundamentals tell a challenging story. MarketDash Edge rankings currently show the stock's weakness clearly, with a Growth score of merely 12.91 and a Value score of 21.06. These aren't the numbers of a thriving business poised for a premium buyout.
Market Action
Papa John's International shares dropped 3.53% during Wednesday's regular session, closing at $40.79 before ticking up 0.10% in after-hours trading, according to market data. That's a far cry from Monday's excitement when traders briefly believed a $65 buyout was on the table.
The whole episode serves as a reminder that not everything you read online is true, even when it looks legitimate and shows up on sites with official-sounding names. For Papa John's investors, the reality is less dramatic but more important: weak earnings, lowered price targets, and a stock searching for a catalyst that actually exists.