JAB snaps up Panera Bread for more than $7 billion - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

JAB snaps up Panera Bread for more than $7 billion

The deal still needs the approval of Panera shareholders. (Sign up for our free video newsletter here http://bit.ly/2n6VKPR)

Share via

Panera is being acquired by Europe’s JAB Holding Co. for more than $7 billion.

JAB is better known for the growing stable of brands it owns or has a big stake in, including Peet’s Coffee & Tea, Caribou Coffee Co., Stumptown Coffee and Keurig Green Mountain and Krispy Kreme Doughnuts.

For days there have been rumors of a deal for Panera, with one of the companies reportedly interested being Starbucks Corp.

On Wednesday, the St. Louis sandwich and soup chain revealed that it was actually JAB, an investment fund based in Luxembourg that has quietly become a Starbucks rival.

Advertisement

“Our success for shareholders is the byproduct of our commitment to long-term decision making and operating in the interest of all stakeholders, including guests, associates and franchisees,” said Panera founder and Chief Executive Ron Shaich. “We believe this transaction with JAB offers the best way to continue to operate with this approach. We are pleased to join with JAB, a private investor with an equally long-term perspective, as well as a deep commitment to our strategic plan.”

Shaich opened a Boston cookie store in the early 1980s and expanded to more than 2,000 bakery-cafes with annual revenue of $5 billion in sales.

JAB will pay $315 per Panera Bread Co. share. That’s a 14.5% premium to the company’s Tuesday closing price of $274.

Advertisement

The transaction, which includes approximately $340 million of debt, is expected to close in the third quarter. It still needs the approval of Panera shareholders. Once the deal is complete, Panera will become a privately held company.

Shares of Panera jumped more than 12% before the opening bell Wednesday.

ALSO

U.S. companies continue strong hiring, adding 263,000 jobs, ADP says

Advertisement

Payless ShoeSource files for bankruptcy protection

Stocks are mostly flat; energy companies rise and banks fall

Advertisement