NEW YORK – Burger King Holdings Inc.
shares jumped nearly 25 percent Thursday, rallying as the fast-food
giant said it will be gobbled up by investment firm 3G Capital for $24
a share in a deal valued at $4 billion.
The buyout represents a 46 percent
premium to the shares’ price before media reports Wednesday that a deal
was in the works, the Miami-based company noted. The transaction is
expected to close in the fourth quarter.
TPG Capital LP, Goldman Sachs Capital
Partners and Bain Capital Investors own about 31 percent of Burger King
between them, and all have agreed to tender their shares.
“We look forward to partnering with 3G
Capital, whose proven track record as an investor, together with its
financial and consumer brands experience, will serve to further
strengthen the company, our restaurants and franchisees worldwide,”
said John Chidsey, the chief executive, in a news release.
Burger King, founded in 1953, isn’t new
to private-equity takeovers. In 2002, beverages giant Diageo sold the
No. 2 U.S. fast-food company to TPG, Goldman Sachs and Bain.
Grand Metropolitan PLC, Diageo’s
predecessor company, acquired it when it bought Pillsbury, now part of
General Mills, which had owned the chain since 1967.
It went public in 2006.
The company has been struggling a bit in the face of high unemployment and the general economic malaise.
Last week, it reported a fourth-quarter
profit that fell to $49 million, or 36 cents a share, from $58.9
million, or 43 cents a share, in the final three months of fiscal 2009.
Total revenue declined to $623 million from $629.9 million, while
same-store sales – those at outlets open at least a year – were off 0.7
percent.
“We would view this as an excellent
opportunity for investors who have been in the shares to cut their
losses (or take some modest gains, depending on when shares were
bought),” wrote Mark Kalinowski of Janney Capital, following the first
rumors of a sale. “Burger King may actually be better off as a
privately held entity at this point in its history.”
The company “faces some large,
longstanding challenges that may be better solved out of the public
eye,” he added. “One big challenge is the parent company’s strained
relations with its franchisees. Another challenge facing Burger King
is: How does it best position itself so that it doesn’t come off to
fast-food fans as simply another McDonald’s?”
The news also helped boost shares of
Wendy’s/Arby’s Group, which has been the subject of occasional buyout
rumors, by about 7 percent.
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