Sponsored By

Tilman Fertitta bids $55M for Ignite Restaurant GroupTilman Fertitta bids $55M for Ignite Restaurant Group

Landry’s CEO wants Joe’s Crab Shack back

Jonathan Maze, Senior Financial Editor

June 16, 2017

2 Min Read
joes crab shack exterior
Joe's Crab Shack

Tilman Fertitta wants Joe’s Crab Shack.

Fertitta’s company, Landry’s, has emerged as a bidder for Joe’s Crab Shack owner Ignite Restaurant Group Inc., with a $55 million bid that Landry’s said should be given the inside track in the company’s sale process.

Ignite filed for federal bankruptcy protection earlier this month, with a stalking horse bid of $50 million from the private-equity firm Kelly Investment Group, owner of the Fox & Hound and Champps chains.

Yet Landry’s, long believed to be interested in acquiring Ignite, quickly stepped in and submitted a $55 million bid that it said should be selected as the stalking horse, according to bankruptcy court filings.

A stalking horse bid is an initial bid in a bankruptcy process, prior to an auction for the company being sold. Other potential buyers could make higher bids in an auction, but the stalking horse bidder gets the rights to breakup fees, meaning competing bidders have to pay that much more. In this case, Kelly’s breakup fee is $1.5 million.

As such, it is advantageous for a potential buyer to be the stalking horse bidder.

Landry’s said its bid is better, and the company has agreed to put a $10 million “good faith deposit” on its purchase — higher than the $2 million deposit from Kelly.

Landry’s knows Joe’s Crab Shack as much as anybody else. The company sold Joe’s to the private-equity group J.H. Whitney Capital Partners in 2006, for $192 million. J.H. Whitney took Joe’s Crab Shack public in 2012, under the Ignite Restaurant Group name.

Ignite began having problems almost from the get-go, but began losing money in 2013, after its ill-fated acquisition of Romano’s Macaroni Grill. Ignite ultimately filed for bankruptcy with $133.3 million in secured debt — and no buyers willing to acquire the company outside of the bankruptcy process.

But there are now multiple buyers who want to acquire Joe’s Crab Shack and Brick House Tavern Tap out of bankruptcy, which would reduce debt and enable the closing of certain restaurants with costly leases.

The emergence of Landry’s promises that Ignite’s lenders would take less of a loss on that debt. Another company rumored to be interested in buying the chain out of bankruptcy was American Blue Ribbon Holdings.

To be sure, Fertitta is no stranger to acquiring companies in a bankruptcy process. In 2010, his company acquired the Oceanaire and the Claim Jumper chains in bankruptcy sales.

Contact Jonathan Maze at [email protected]

Follow him on Twitter: @jonathanmaze

About the Author

Jonathan Maze

Senior Financial Editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Jonathan Maze covers finance for Nations Restaurant News, as well as restaurant chains based in the Midwest.

Jonathan came to NRN in 2014 after seven years covering restaurants for Franchise Times Magazine and the Restaurant Finance Monitor. There, he created an award-winning blog that reported on and analyzed the restaurant industry. He is routinely quoted in various mainstream press articles, including the Associated Press, Washington Post, Orlando Sentinel, Denver Post and Yahoo! Finance. He lives in a suburb of Minneapolis with his wife, two children and their cat.

Reach Jonathan at [email protected], or by phone at 651 633-6526.

Subscribe Nation's Restaurant News Newsletters
Get the latest breaking news in the industry, analysis, research, recipes, consumer trends, the latest products and more.