The Oklahoman

Bread winner

- BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Panera is being acquired by Europe’s JAB Holding Co. for more than $7 billion, the second largest restaurant deal ever made in North America.

Panera is being acquired by Europe’s JAB Holding Co. for more than $7 billion, the second largest restaurant deal ever made in North America.

Americans are likely more familiar with JAB than they know. The Luxembourg investment fund has controllin­g interests in Peet’s Coffee & Tea, Caribou Coffee Co., Stumptown Coffee and Krispy Kreme Doughnuts. The deal for Panera, however, underscore­s its sway over what people eat when away from home in the morning.

For days there had been speculatio­n about a takeover at Panera, with Starbucks Corp. being suggested as the potential buyer. Starbucks appeared to shoot down those rumors this week by talking about how excited it was about the launch of a new food menu in Chicago later this month.

On Wednesday, Panera revealed the buyer was JAB, which has quietly become a rival of the giant Seattle coffee brewer.

Panera founder and CEO Ron Shaich said a deal with JAB will allow the company to focus on growth rather than placating shareholde­rs. If and when the deal closes, Panera will be a privately-held company not required to file quarterly financial reports for investors.

Not that Shaich has left investors wanting. Shares are up 50 percent this year and on Wednesday, the company said that sales rose 5.3 percent at establishe­d company-owned locations in the first quarter, outperform­ing the broader restaurant industry.

“Many of these deals happen when people feel weak,” said Shaich. “We’re doing this from a position of strength.”

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

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

The only North American restaurant deal bigger than the sale of Panera was, according to FactSet, the buyout of Tim Hortons in 2014 by the parent company of Burger King, run by 3G Capital.

The Panera deal, which includes about $340 million of debt, is expected to close in the third quarter. It still needs the approval of Panera shareholde­rs.

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 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? An employee passes an order to a customer at a Panera Bread store in Brookline, Massachuse­tts. Panera is being acquired by Europe’s JAB Holding Co. for more than $7 billion.
[AP FILE PHOTO] An employee passes an order to a customer at a Panera Bread store in Brookline, Massachuse­tts. Panera is being acquired by Europe’s JAB Holding Co. for more than $7 billion.

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