Burger King Beckons Investors Once Again With Planned Listing
05 April 2012 - 4:09AM
Dow Jones News
Burger King Holdings Inc. is putting the "fast" in the fast-food
business.
Less than 18 months since the struggling hamburger chain was
taken private by Brazilian-backed private-equity investors, Burger
King has devised a complex deal with an investment vehicle tied to
hedge-fund manager Bill Ackman that would make it once again a
publicly traded company.
The parties involved hope a host of changes that owner 3G
Capital Management implemented in that short time--replacing top
management, slashing costs and jobs, overhauling its menu and
having celebrities, instead of its King mascot, hawking products in
U.S. commercials --will lend enough faith to investors that the
nearly 60-year-old chain has turned a corner.
"It's been around a long time, [but] it's not been particularly
well-managed during the time," Ackman said Wednesday on a
conference call. "That's the opportunity."
Burger King's recent history suggests caution. The company, a
perennial No. 2 to top global rival McDonald's Corp. (MCD) and
which now also looks up at Wendy's Co. (WEN) in the U.S., shuffled
through 13 chief executives over the last quarter century. In that
time it has gone from being a corporate orphan to a private equity
firm's portfolio company to a publicly-traded company, with the
strategy shifting along the way.
Burger King sales had also been slumping prior to 3G's 2010
buyout, particularly in the U.S., where the chain resorted to
discounts that hurt profits and failed to spike interest from
customers. Relations with franchisees that operate the stores were
quickly deteriorating.
Ackman hopes the latest management team brought in by 3G will
succeed in shepherding its strategy of creating a leaner corporate
structure that focuses on managing the Burger King brand. Burger
King plans to sell nearly all of the nearly 1,300 store is still
owns to franchisees by the end of the year, insulating the
corporation from commodity cost swings and other fixed costs that
come with running restaurants.
Doing most of the talking during the conference call, Ackman
laid out a strategy showing Burger King's average store sales,
currently around $1.2 million, closing the gap it has with Wendy's,
close to $1.5 million, and even approaching the $2.4 million
generated by the average McDonald's.
An overhauled menu includes more smoothies, salads and snack
wraps designed to attract a broader customer base after Burger
King's previous efforts to target young men. Franchisees, Ackman
said, are better suited to run stores as they know the local market
better. Burger King also hopes to see 40% of its U.S. stores
renovated in the next three years, with the new look attracting
customers.
Burger King also wants to push further globally, targeting
having 17,000 stores by 2016, up from 12,500 currently, by signing
joint ventures with overseas partners.
"Really, in every place there is a McDonald's, there can be a
Burger King," Ackman said. McDonald's has about 33,000 locations
world-wide.
The plan is ambitious, suggesting that Burger King can, with a
much leaner operating structure, rapidly increase sales while
having franchisees and other partners invest the capital to do so.
"If it does work, it redefines how we think about an industry,
about what is possible, about what is under-earning and
over-earning," UBS restaurant analyst David Palmer said on the
call.
As part of the deal, Burger King will sell a 29% stake to
Justice Holdings Ltd. (JUSH.LN), a U.K. listed shell company
founded by Ackman and other investors including billionaire
investor Nicolas Berggruen and Jarden Inc. (JAH) founder Martin
Franklin. 3G will receive $1.4 billion in cash, essentially making
back all the equity it put into its $4.3 billion leveraged buyout,
and retain a 71% stake.
Burger King is changing its name to Burger King Worldwide
Holdings Inc., and plans to be listed on the New York Stock
Exchange in 60 to 90 days, while Justice Holdings will cease to
exist as an independent company.
-By Paul Ziobro, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2194;
paul.ziobro@dowjones.com
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