National Post

Red Lobster considers bankruptcy filing

Firm struggles with leases, labour costs

- RESHMI BASU

Seafood restaurant chain Red Lobster is mulling a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing as it looks to restructur­e its debt, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Red Lobster has been getting advice from law firm King & Spalding, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing a private matter. The dining chain is considerin­g a possible Chapter 11 filing to shed some long-term contracts and renegotiat­e a swath of leases, the people said.

Red Lobster’s cash flows have been weighed down by onerous leases and labour costs, among other issues. Restructur­ing discussion­s are ongoing and a final decision hasn’t been made, they said. Filing for bankruptcy would allow the company to keep operating while it works on a debt-cutting plan.

Messages left with Red Lobster and King & Spalding were not returned.

Red Lobster traces its roots to a single restaurant in Lakeland, Fla. in 1968, according to its website. The company introduced its popular cheese-flavoured biscuits in 1992, and Red Lobster now boasts hundreds of locations across the U.S. and Canada, along with other internatio­nal franchises.

The restaurant chain has gone through multiple owners and management changes in recent years. Thai Union Group PLC, which took control of the company in 2021, this year wrote down its stake in Red Lobster and said the company’s “ongoing financial requiremen­ts no longer align with Thai Union’s capital allocation priorities.”

Fortress Investment Group is a key lender to Red Lobster and is among those involved in current debt negotiatio­ns, the people said.

A representa­tive with Fortress declined to comment.

Golden Gate Capital took over Orlando, Fla.-based Red Lobster from Darden Restaurant­s through a leveraged buyout in 2014. Thai Union owned 25 per cent of the chain before buying Golden Gate’s stake in 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada