The “Good”, the Bad and the Ugly

Is the government forcing you to close your business? Try suing them. That’s what 30+ Texas bar owners did after the Governor of Texas gave them a shutdown order (again) amidst a surge in COVID cases.
Data by review and reservation apps showed various doomsday scenarios:
In order to prevent “the ugly”, states have began lifting lockdown restrictions and mandating a seating capacity in restaurants. However, late invoices, delayed rent payments and additional sanitization costs could overwhelm struggling restaurants.
On June 18, the Restaurant Act, a $120 billion relief package intended for independent restaurants was introduced. Similar to the infrastructure bill we discussed last week, there is no guarantee as to when or if the bill will even be passed. That being said, a successful bill would provide much-needed aid.
Dine-in only restaurants: Cheesecake Factory, Dine Equity, and Red Robin remains at a fraction of their pre-COVID stock prices. These stocks may look cheap but dine-in restaurants have a long way to go and betting on a recovery can be risky. A resurgence in cases and the second round of shutdown orders in Texas, Florida, and California sent dine-in restaurants stocks down again after an initial rebound.
Unless a vaccine is developed or the virus is controlled, dine-in restaurant stocks are unlikely to see a full recovery. Chains with drive-thru and delivery options such as McDonald’s and Domino’s have done much better and have already recovered much of their COVID losses.