East Bay Times

Ruby Tuesday, burdened by 2017 buyout, COVID-19, seeks bankruptcy

- By Antonio Vanuzzo and Jeremy Hill

Ruby Tuesday, the struggling casual restaurant chain, filed for bankruptcy Wednesday, just three years after a private-equity buyout.

The Chapter 11 filing in Delaware follows a tentative deal signed last month to hand the business to certain secured lenders, according to a court declaratio­n. The document listed units of TCW Group and Goldman Sachs Group in that category.

The chain has been negotiatin­g with landlords to curtail or delay millions of dollars in rent payments as it copes with sliding sales, worsened by the pandemic. Chapter 11 allows a company to stay in business while it works out a turnaround plan.

NRD Capital Management bought Ruby Tuesday in 2017 for about $335 million, when the alreadystr­uggling chain operated more than 500 restaurant­s. But shifting consumer tastes — like booming fastcasual spots and declining mall traffic — kept hurting Ruby Tuesday, which began tripping loan covenants a year after the buyout, according to court papers.

Ruby Tuesday closed weak locations, sold and leased-back 189 restaurant­s and slashed corporate overhead by nearly half, court papers show. The company is now operating 236 dining rooms and doesn’t intend to reopen 185 locations that closed during the pandemic.

The remaining restaurant­s will operate as usual while the firm attempts to recover “from the unpreceden­ted impact of Covid-19,” Chief Executive Officer Shawn Lederman said in a statement. Liabilitie­s are estimated between $100 million and $500 million, according to the court filing.

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