Houston Chronicle

Landry’s looking to purchase Houlihan’s out of bankruptcy

- By Jeremy Hill

Houlihan’s Restaurant­s Inc. may become the latest chain of eateries scooped up out of bankruptcy by billionair­e Tilman Fertitta.

The casual dining company filed for Chapter 11 protection in Delaware along with more than 30 affiliates. But Landry’s, the Houston-based restaurant group that operates Joe’s Crab Shack,

Rainforest Cafe and Morton’s steakhouse­s, has already offered to pay $40 million for the business and to assume certain liabilitie­s, court documents show. Houlihan’s listed about $80 million in assets and $77 million in liabilitie­s.

A Chapter 11 filing lets Houlihan’s keep its doors open and its staff of 3,450 employed while it works out a recovery plan or sale. Landry’s offer is a so-called stalking-horse bid, which sets a floor for any other offers that emerge in a bankruptcy sale process.

Landry’s intends to offer employment to “many” of its current employees, court documents show. Lenders including CIT Bank agreed to provide $5 million to help finance the bankruptcy, according to court documents.

“We expect the process to be seamless for our guests, team members and vendors,” Houli

han’s CEO Mike Archer said in a statement. Houlihan’s expects the sale to be completed by the end of this year.

Establishe­d in 1992, Houlihan’s is based in Leawood, Kan., and operates 47 restaurant­s in 14 states under names that include J. Gilbert’s, Bristol Seafood Grill and and Devon Seafood Grill, along with 23 franchises that weren’t included in the filing.

Houlihan’s is owned by affiliates of York Capital Management, which bought the company about three years ago with the help of a secured credit line totaling more than $50 million, according to a statement at the time.

But the chain ran short on cash in the face of changing consumer preference­s, senior management changes, unfavorabl­e leases and the rapid growth of costly third-party delivery services, Chief Restructur­ing Officer Matthew Manning said in a court declaratio­n. An ill-timed buyout of its largest franchisee in May 2018 added more pressure, he said.

“Houlihan’s is caught up in the casual dining slump not unlike Chili’s and Fridays and Applebee’s,” said Darren Tristano, CEO at Foodservic­e Results, a restaurant consulting company. “For over 10 years, these concepts have really not differenti­ated themselves. Their menus appear to be very similar.”

The company hasn’t paid any interest to holders of its loans since December of last year, and it closed 12 money-losing locations in the run-up to Chapter 11 after failing to get concession­s from landlords, Manning said. A representa­tive for York Capital didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Traditiona­l sit-in restaurant­s have come under pressure as consumers increasing­ly opt for fast-casual options. Rising minimum wage thresholds don’t help either, with Restaurant­s Unlimited Inc. partly blaming such hikes for its July bankruptcy. Landry’s bought that West Coast chain out bankruptcy, too, along with Joe’s Crab Shack and a Westernthe­med chain called Claim Jumper after they sought court protection.

“They’re looking for value,” Tristano said. “They’re looking for restaurant­s that are in dire need of capital. They’re looking to sort of stop the bleeding and maintain the restaurant­s. The economies of scale can support reducing costs.”

Houlihans’s reported $202 million in revenue for fiscal year 2019 and generated about $9 million of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on, Manning said. Piper Jaffray & Co. was hired in June to handle the sale process.

 ?? Staff file photo ?? Establishe­d in 1992, Houlihan’s is based in Leawood, Kan., and operates 47 restaurant­s in 14 states under names that include J. Gilbert’s, Bristol Seafood Grill and and Devon Seafood Grill.
Staff file photo Establishe­d in 1992, Houlihan’s is based in Leawood, Kan., and operates 47 restaurant­s in 14 states under names that include J. Gilbert’s, Bristol Seafood Grill and and Devon Seafood Grill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States