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Frisch’s Big Boy — not to be confused with the other Big Boy restaurant chain headquartered out of Michigan — says NRD Partners I will buy all outstanding shares for $34 each.
CEO Craig Maier said in a statement that the company is pleased to have reached an agreement that “maximizes value” for shareholders while ensuring that the chain can “continue to provide a full-service family dining experience to our guests,” said Craig Maier, Frisch’s Chief Executive Officer.
“This is the culmination of over two years of strategic planning and this is the right transaction for the Company,” Maier said. “Frisch’s has been a family operated business since my grandfather opened our first drive-in in 1939. On behalf of my entire family, I’d like to thank our loyal customers for allowing us to serve them ever since.”
Both Maier and the marketing vice president will retire, though they’ll continue on as franchisees. The deal is slated to close by the end of September.
The regional chain owns about 95 family restaurants in Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee, and has another 26 locations operated by licensees.
Marking the first time since Frisch’s Big Boy started its first drive-thru in 1939 that the chain won’t be under family ownership, the Cincinnati-based restaurant company says it’s being sold to a private egquity fund for about $175 million.
пятница, 22 мая 2015 г.
Family-Owned Frisch’s Big Boy Restaurants Sold To Private Equity Fundbo
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by Mary Beth Quirk
via Consumerist
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