Oprah loses 40 pounds, gains big $ with Weight Watchers

Oprah's weight is down, Weight Watchers shares are up
Oprah's weight is down, Weight Watchers shares are up

Oprah Winfrey has lost more than 40 pounds using Weight Watchers even though she still is eating bread -- and she's also gained a different kind of dough in the process.

Shares of Weight Watchers surged 17% Thursday morning after the company unveiled a new ad campaign with Winfrey -- who I will now simply refer to as Oprah for the rest of this story. The news was first reported on People magazine's web site.

"Weight Watchers is easier than any other program I've ever been on. It's a lifestyle, a way of eating and a way of living that's so freeing. You never feel like you are on a diet and it works," Oprah said in a release about the new ad campaign.

Oprah is the third largest shareholder in Weight Watchers. She owns nearly 6.4 million shares of the company -- a stake worth about $77 million. That's an increase of $10 million from Wednesday. She is also on the board of Weight Watchers.

And the value of Oprah's stock in Weight Watchers has increased by nearly $35 million since she first disclosed her investment in October 2015.

But the stock has been on a wild yo-yo ride over the past year.

Related: Weight watching? Here's how Oprah can help

While Oprah may be making big bucks on Weight Watchers, that's not the case for investors who only bought after finding out that she was involved.

Shares of Weight Watchers have plummeted nearly 50% this year and are down about 60% from the highest post-Oprah investment price they hit in November 2015.

The stock has bounced around a lot -- often due to stories about Oprah and her weight.

Related: Weight Watchers investors obsessed with Oprah

Shares surged in late January thanks to a tweet and video from Oprah in which she declared "Eat bread. Lose weight. Whaaatttt?" and said that she had already lost 26 pounds.

But investors got a rude awakening a month later when Weight Watchers reported a surprise quarterly loss as well as a decline in sales, subscribers and attendance at the company's meetings.

The stock popped again in August after there was another story about Oprah's weight loss on People's website that then got more play thanks to the New York Post's Page Six celebrity gossip feature.

Oprah told People at a premiere for the OWN Network show "Queen Sugar" that she's lost so much weight using the diet service that longtime boyfriend Stedman Graham "can pick me up and carry me to the pool. I can straddle him without breaking his back."

Page Six naturally chose "Oprah can now straddle Stedman 'without breaking his back'" as the headline for its blurb.

But Oprah's endorsement of the company hasn't changed its fortunes. The company faces tough competition from other diet services. Shares of Nutrisystem (NTRI) have surged nearly 70% this year, for example.

Related: Weight Watchers CEO calling it quits after tumultuous year

Many weight watchers also have decided that they don't need to pay a monthly subscription to Weight Watchers for diet tips, recipes and exercise and fitness advice either. There are tons of free weight loss apps for smartphones.

Weight Watchers still faces many challenges. In fact, the company announced in September that its CEO James Chambers was stepping down after he failed to turn the company around.

The company did report earnings in November that topped Wall Street's forecasts. So there are some signs of a turnaround taking hold. But analysts expect sales to rise less than 1% this year and only increase by about 5% next year.

So even though it's great news for Oprah that she's been able to lose so much weight, investors that still own Weight Watchers stock might want to make dumping shares their New Year's resolution.

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