Yum Brands to Sell Struggling Pizza Hut Chain for $2.7 Billion as Demand Slumps
Yum Brands said on Tuesday it would sell its Pizza Hut chain for $2.7 billion, as the fast-food business struggles with stiff competition and cautious consumer spending.
Pizza Hut in Mainland China will be acquired by Yum China Holdings for $1.2 billion, while the rest of the business will go to private equity firm LongRange Capital for $1.5 billion.
Rising inflation and higher commodity costs have weighed on U.S. pizza chains already facing weak demand, as growing use of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs nudges consumers toward healthier options.
“LongRange Capital is effectively buying a globally recognized brand in need of sharper focus, while Yum China’s move gives local operators more control over a key market,” said Sam North, market analyst at eToro.
“The price is not spectacular for such a famous name, but it removes a persistent drag and gives Pizza Hut a chance to be run as a turnaround story,” North added.
Last year, Yum said it was exploring strategic options after several quarters of declining sales at Pizza Hut. Yum entered exclusive talks with LongRange in May.
“These transactions enable Yum! to be a more focused company,” Yum Brands CEO Chris Turner said.
Pizza Hut was acquired by PepsiCo in 1977 and spun off in 1997 alongside KFC and Taco Bell to form the company that became Yum Brands in 2002.
Yum, which will be left with Taco Bell and KFC, expects the sale to close in the third quarter of 2026, pending regulatory approvals.
Local Operators Take Charge
The sale of the China business mirrors a broader trend of U.S. firms handing control to local operators to navigate tougher competition and shifting demand.
Earlier this month, General Mills agreed to sell its Haagen-Dazs shops in mainland China to a group led by tea chain Ningji, while Starbucks sold a majority stake in its China operations to Boyu Capital last year.
Yum China, a Shanghai-based spin-off of Yum Brands, owns and franchises over 18,000 stores and aims to expand Pizza Hut to more than 6,000 outlets by 2028.
Yum Brands and Yum China also agreed to financial incentives tied to KFC China’s growth and will collaborate on expanding Taco Bell in Mainland China.
U.S.-listed shares of Yum China were flat after earlier losses, while shares of Yum Brands, which also announced an additional $4 billion share buyback, rose about 2%.
(Reporting by Neil J Kanatt and Koyena Das in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath)
The post Yum Brands to Sell Struggling Pizza Hut Chain for $2.7 Billion as Demand Slumps appeared first on GV Wire.
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