
It’s a new era for Subway, the iconic sandwich chain, as private equity firm Roark Capital is buying the company for $9.55 billion, which comes after more than five decades of family ownership.
Subway famously sought $10 billion, a price too high for many potentail suitors like restaurant conglomerates. That left only private equity firms to dominate the auction proceedings.
Roark’s final bid came out to roughly $9.6 billion, and the firm is set to become one of the largest restaurant operators in the world once the deal is closed. The company will reportedly keep Subway as a separate entity within its portfolio.
Many have seen the sale as a move in the right direction for the declining sandwich chain, which has been hit hard over the past decade due to its $5 footlong sandwich deal and aggressive expansion.
The chain attempted to turn its business around under CEO John Chidsey, who joined the company in 2019 and has since revamped its menu, recruited new franchisees and invested in technology. In the first of half of the year, Subway’s same-store sales rose a whopping 9.3%, a sign that the turnaround efforts may be taking hold.
“Roark brings more to the table than other investors would have,” explains Neil Saunders, retail analyst and managing director of GlobalData analytics. “Its experience of helping restaurant brands grow will be helpful, especially in the U.S. market where it remains well below the peak it hit a few years ago.”
Founded in 1965 by Fred DeLuca and Peter Buck, Subway grew from a single sandwich shop in Connecticut to a global restaurant giant. But since 2015, the chain has seen a dramatic decrease in sales. That same year, Subway was hurt by the high-profile trial of former spokesman Jared Fogle and the death of CEO DeLuca. By the end of 2022, Subway had 20,600 units open in the U.S., a far cry from its peak of 27,100 back in 2015.
With Roark at the helm, many are hopeful that Subway will make a comeback. While the chain is still closing franchised locations, the pace has slowed down considerably. The chain shuttered 571 units last year, a stark difference from the more than 1,600 restaurants it closed in 2020.
What the sale means for Subway’s future remains to be seen, but what’s certain is that the sandwich chain is on the cusp of significant change. Roark’s acquisition of Subway marks the onset of a new era for the iconic chain. We’ll just have to wait and see.
Source: CNBC
Featured News
Dollar Tree to Sell Family Dollar for $1 Billion, Ending Struggling Merger
Mar 26, 2025 by
CPI
Meta Platforms Defends Use of Authors’ Works in AI Training in US Court
Mar 26, 2025 by
CPI
EU Pressed Meta to Address Antitrust Concerns Over Facebook Marketplace
Mar 26, 2025 by
CPI
UBS, Nomura, and UniCredit Fail to Overturn EU Antitrust Fines in Bond Trading Cartel Case
Mar 26, 2025 by
CPI
Coca-Cola Among Firms Targeted in EU Antitrust Raids
Mar 26, 2025 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Mobile Ecosystems
Mar 24, 2025 by
CPI
Mobile Ecosystems: An Intellectual Entelechy but A Necessary Model
Mar 24, 2025 by
Alba Ribera Martinez
Creating Contestability and Fairness in Mobile Ecosystems: The Contribution of the DMA
Mar 24, 2025 by
Damien Geradin & Daniel Mandrescu
Digital Ecosystems and the Not (Yet) As Efficient Competitor Principle
Mar 24, 2025 by
Thomas Hoppner & Philipp Westerhoff
Assessing the Competition Law Scrutiny of Smart Wearables and Mobile AR/VR Devices
Mar 24, 2025 by
Kayvan Hazemi-Jebelli