Chipotle Says Its Payments System Was Hacked

Primalzer

TCG Elite Member
Sep 14, 2006
25,259
61
Chipotle Mexican Grill cannot catch a break. Just as the fast-casual chain reported that sales have rebounded after a prolonged slog in the wake of a food safety outbreak, executives told Wall Street analysts that the company's payment processing system was hacked.

"We want to make our customers and investors aware we recently detected unauthorized activity on a network that supports payment processing for purchases made in our restaurants," chief financial officer Jack Hartung told analysts during an investor presentation. He said that Chipotle (cmg, +1.40%) had implemented additional security measures, actions it believes stopped the unauthorized activity, which the restaurant chain estimates occurred between March 24 through April 18.

Chipotle says it is also working with a cyber security firm, law enforcement, and the payment processor to address the matter.

"We will refrain from providing additional commentary now or in the Q&A," said Hartung. "We anticipate notifying any affected customers as we get further clarity about the time frames and the restaurant locations that might have been affected."

The hacking news dulled the enthusiasm around the other big news that Chipotle reported on Wednesday: the strongest quarterly financial results from the restaurant chain since the fall of 2015, when sales started to get dented from a prolonged food safety crisis. The food safety story generated headlines throughout much of 2016 as the company struggled to contain the proper messaging after an E. Coli outbreak hit several states called into question Chipotle's promise of serving fresher and healthier foods than rivals like McDonald's (mcd, -0.36%). Sales in the wake of that outbreak sputtered for all of 2016, with same-restaurant sales—a key metric that excludes sales from new establishments—falling for five straight quarters.

But Chipotle finally broke that trend, reporting comparable restaurant sales surged a better-than-expected 17.8% while total revenue jumped 28% to $1.07 billion.

"In December of last year I returned to the role of sole CEO with a commitment to restoring the simplicity that made Chipotle so successful," CEO Steve Ells told analysts during a presentation. "Since December, we've implemented sweeping changes throughout the organization, nearly all of which are aimed at dramatically improving the guest experience."

Ells and the rest of the management team at Chipotle have been busy aiming to change the narrative around the chain away from food safety and back toward just food. In the past year, it has launched a rewards program, a recent major TV ad campaign, and continued to advance the company's "clean" food promise as ways to bolster the brand. The company has also begun testing some price increases—it last enacted a national increase in the middle of 2014 and since then, has had to absorb higher labor and food inflation costs. The E. coli outbreak dissuaded management from trying to increase prices any further as it focused on a recovery.

Before Hartung told Wall Street about the hacking news, the company's stock jumped by over 6% in after-hours trading. It is currently up a more modest 3.4%. Still, through Wednesday's close, Chipotle's shares have increased 25% in 2017.

:fu:
 

FESTER665

TCG Elite Member
TCG Premium
Apr 13, 2008
40,101
66,441
Streamwood
As long as its a credit card and not a debit card it isn't your problem. Liability falls on the credit card issuer.

Same with debit in my experiences.... If your bank that issues the debit card hold you liable for fraud or theft you may want to find a new bank.

It's a hassle to need to use cash for a few days while they issue you a new card, but everything is covered everywhere. Ive had my debit card hacked three times over the past 10 years or so...

I'm not going to stop using the thing, and you just sign a sheet saying that "X" charges weren't yours, they put the money back into your account and send out a new card.
 

Lord Tin Foilhat

TCG Conspiracy Lead Investigator
TCG Premium
Jul 8, 2007
60,714
56,856
Privy Chamber
Meh. These breaches typically result in jack dick. I have yet to have to change my card when one of these places experiences a "hack". If they want to steal what little money I have, go for it :rofl:
It's because these "hacks" are usually just the company trying to save face if it was ever brought to light.

I guarantee at the worst, they got encrypted credit card numbers with expirations if Chipotle has just standard security setup. I highly highly doubt the data was in plain text. (which may not even be possible with credit card processing now)

And even if it was...They still need the 3 digits on the back and all the credit card holders Information to even begin to use it. If they cloned cards from this, even a gas station asks for a zip code as a "2nd factor" authentication.

It's more of a Chipotle problem then a consumer problem. If they had access to what is supposed to be one of the most secure areas of a companies network then they may have bigger issues that they haven't found yet and need to determine how they got in.
 

Primalzer

TCG Elite Member
Sep 14, 2006
25,259
61
Seriously...I never have once gotten sick from Chipotle...and definitely ate a ton through their "incidents". If you never ate a restaurant because they had some sort of foodborne illness scare, You'd be hard pressed to find ANY restaurant to eat at or any grocery store to shop at.
 

radioguy6

TCG Elite Member
TCG Premium
May 23, 2008
11,953
24,396
Schaumburg
Real Name
Greg
Chipotle is even better now that everyone banned it over the ecoli scare. My local one used to have a line out the door everyday for lunch. Now hardly a line at all, its great :rofl:.

You have more chances of being ran over by a 16 year old texting in the parking lot than contracting food poisoning there.
 

Lord Tin Foilhat

TCG Conspiracy Lead Investigator
TCG Premium
Jul 8, 2007
60,714
56,856
Privy Chamber
Well, I no longer eat at Chipotle due to the high risk of contracting food poisoning and having explosive diarrhea for a week.

Add this hack to the list of why not to go there.

Too bad since they had some tasty food.
There was never a "high risk". Just the media blowing shit out of proportion like usual because they can't produce any real news anymore so they have to create drama to get views.
 
Old Thread: Hello . There have been no replies in this thread for 90 days.
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant. Consider starting a new thread to get fresh replies.

Thread Info