Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Burger King Operator Zamp Faces Controversial Privatization At 15% Below Peak Value


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Zamp SA's shares closed at R$3.35 on May 26, 2025, down 6.69% after Mubadala Capital proposed buying out minority investors at R$3.30–3.50 per share to privatize the Brazilian fast-food operator.

The Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund's offer values Zamp at R$1.45 billion ($254 million), 8% below its pre-announcement market cap, despite controlling 71.5% since a 2024 governance overhaul.

Mubadala bypassed Brazil's Novo Mercado rules by delisting Zamp in January 2024, avoiding mandatory takeover bids after acquiring control through open-market purchases.

This allowed swift restructuring, including June 2024's R$120 million ($21 million) purchase of Starbucks Brazil from bankrupt SouthRock and September 2024's Subway rescue, pending antitrust approval.

These deals expanded Zamp's network to 1,080 stores but contributed to a R$874 million ($153 million) 2024 net loss on R$4.69 billion ($823 million) revenue, with debt rising to R$1.2 billion ($211 million) by Q1 2025.



The fund's“fair value” claim lacks third-party validation, alarming minority holders of 28.5% shares. Trading volume surged to R$17 million ($3 million) on the announcement day, far above the R$2.5 million ($438,596) monthly average.

Investors weighed the bid against Zamp's R$2.47 billion ($433 million) enterprise value. Analysts note the offer ignores potential from Starbucks' planned expansion to 1,000 Brazilian stores by 2030, a key growth driver in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.
Mubadala's Zamp Bid Faces Debt Pressures
Debt servicing costs now consume 23% of Zamp 's operating cash flow, complicating Mubadala's integration plans. Brazil's antitrust agency CADE has yet to rule on the Subway acquisition, launched nine months prior, adding regulatory risk.

The bid also leaves unanswered questions about labor impacts for Zamp's 18,000 employees, though union negotiations remain undisclosed. Zamp's trajectory mirrors Mubadala's $5 billion Brazilian bet on distressed franchises, leveraging low asset prices during economic turbulence.

The move highlights a broader shift in Brazil 's R$250 billion ($43.9 billion) foodservice sector, where foreign brands increasingly rely on deep-pocketed operators to navigate inflation and credit constraints.

With 37% of Burger King Brazil outlets still underperforming pre-2023 sales levels, critics argue Mubadala's bid prioritizes control over turnaround accountability. Market regulators now face scrutiny for allowing Novo Mercado exits to circumvent shareholder protections.

Minority investors await mandatory documentation by June 10, 2025, which must detail offer terms and debt assumptions. The outcome could set precedents for foreign takeovers in Brazil's consumer markets, where seven major franchises have changed hands since 2023.

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The Rio Times

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