El Pollo Loco Faces Unsolicited Takeover
Sardar Biglari wants all the chicken. Nation's Restaurant News reports that the Texas mogul made an unsolicited offer to acquire Costa Mesa-based El Pollo Loco through his hedge fund Biglari Capital. The activist investor, who already owns 15% of the chicken chain, previously acquired all or part of Jack in the Box, Cracker Barrel, Friendly's, and Western Sizzlin. Biglari also has money in insurance and oil companies and Maxim magazine, as well as stakes in Ferrari and Coca-Cola. The Roanoke Times described the Iranian-born Biglari as a 'corporate raider' when he acquired the Steak 'n Shake restaurant chain.
El Pollo Loco was first introduced to the United States with a small store in L.A.'s MacArthur Park by Juan Francisco Ochoa. The high-school dropout from Sinaloa went to work at 14 selling shoes before recruiting family members to help open a small roasted chicken restaurant in Guasave, Mexico that's still going strong today. Workers at El Pollo Loco dressed ranchero style with overalls, cowboy shirts and cowboy hats while citrus-marinating and grilling the chicken over an open flame.Ochoa was at the original store in Sinaloa recently doling out hugs, autographs and chicken to admirers when a plaque was unveiled honoring his history, honoring a 'culinary legacy that transcended borders.' When Ochoa sold El Pollo Loco to Denny's in 1983, he kept the Mexican operations for himself. Ochoa went on to create Taco Palenque and Palenque Grill restaurants.'I never dreamed it would get this big,' Ochoa told the Los Angeles Times soon after opening his first L.A. location. 'If I had it to do all over again, I would build a bigger restaurant.' That small store on Alvarado is still bustling, as are the other earliest locales in Carson, Santa Ana and South Gate.
Taco Bell and Del Taco were founded in Southern California in the 1960s and vastly expanded the market for low-priced Mexican food. Rubio's, Baja Fresh and La Salsa followed, showing off L.A.'s unending appetite for south of the border fare. After Denny's sold El Pollo Loco to focus on their Coco's and Carrows restaurants, the company cycled through a series of private equity and investment firms before an initial public offering in 2014. Today, El Pollo Loco has nearly 500 locations in the Southwest and is celebrating their 50th anniversary with $19.75 family meal deals. Executives told NRN that they are 'in the process of carefully evaluating the proposal' from Biglari, though the paper also notes the 'poison pill' provision that Biglari might use to acquire the 85% of the chain he does not yet own. Forbes once called Biglari a 'Warren Buffett-wannabee' who 'tend(s) toward the dramatic,' so it's anybody's guess how this will play out.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Billionaire Blavatnik courted to take Daily Telegraph stake
The billionaire who has bankrolled DAZN, the sports-streaming service, is being courted to take a stake in The Daily Telegraph alongside the newspaper's new American majority-owners. Sky News has learnt that Sir Len Blavatnik, whose holding company Access Entertainment owns assets in Britain, including the Theatre Royal Haymarket, has been approached by RedBird Capital Partners about becoming a minority investor in the Telegraph titles. Two sources close to the situation said on Thursday that Sir Len was being sounded out about a deal, although they cautioned that no agreement had been struck and it remained unclear whether one would be. Sir Len, who was knighted by the late Queen Elizabeth II for services to philanthropy in 2017, is a prolific investor in the arts, media and entertainment industries. Access Entertainment is run by Danny Cohen, the former BBC director of television. Announcing its agreement to acquire Telegraph Media Group last month for an enterprise valuation of £500m, RedBird Capital said it was "in discussions with select UK-based minority investors with print media expertise and strong commitment to upholding the editorial values of the Telegraph". This was principally a reference to Lord Rothermere, the Daily Mail proprietor, who remains in talks to pay more than £30m for a stake in the Mail's rival right-leaning newspaper group. Goldman Sachs is advising DMGT on the investment, with a deal the subject of ongoing discussions, according to insiders. Read more: The Abu Dhabi state-backed vehicle IMI is still expected to acquire the maximum 15% stake in the Telegraph permitted under proposed new media ownership rules. The government's decision to set the ownership threshold at 15% follows an intensive lobbying campaign by newspaper industry executives concerned that a permanent outright ban could cut off a vital source of funding to an already-embattled industry. However, the deal faces continued opposition from parliamentarians, with The Guardian reporting on Thursday that a cross-party group had written to Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, warning of "potential Chinese state influence" because of links between RedBird Capital chair John Thornton and China's sovereign wealth fund. This suggestion has been dismissed by RedBird Capital insiders. Ukraine-born Sir Len's portfolio of investments includes DAZN, which is now also backed by a Saudi sports group, mobile games studio Tripledot and Scenario Two, a theatre production company. Dovid Efune, the owner of The New York Sun, is meanwhile continuing to assemble a rival bid for the Telegraph, having secured backing from Jeremy Hosking, the prominent City investor. His prospects, however, look to have diminished after the former chancellor, Nadhim Zahawi, was reported to have withdrawn from his so-called 'British bid'. The Telegraph titles' parent company was forced into insolvency proceedings two years ago by Lloyds Banking Group, which ran out of patience with the Barclay family, their long-standing owner. RedBird IMI, a joint venture between the two firms, paid £600m several months later to acquire a call option that was intended to convert into ownership of the Telegraph newspapers and The Spectator magazine. That objective was thwarted by a change in media ownership laws, which banned any form of foreign state ownership. Some parliamentarians are continuing to argue that a 15% threshold would be too high, and that the proposed rules are ambiguous because they potentially allow for more than one state investor to aggregate their holdings in British newspapers. The Spectator was sold last year for £100m to Sir Paul Marshall, the hedge fund billionaire, who has installed Lord Gove, the former cabinet minister, as its editor. RedBird Capital has been contacted for comment, while a call to Access Industries' London office went unanswered on Thursday lunchtime.
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nvidia (NVDA) to Host Virtual Annual Shareholder Meeting on June 25
Nvidia (NVDA, Financials) said Wednesday it will conduct its annual shareholder meeting virtually on June 25, with voting and live Q&A available via a secure online portal for registered stockholders. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 4 Warning Signs with NVDA. The Santa Clara-based semiconductor company, which has surged to a $3.49 trillion market valuation, said the proxy materials for the meeting were filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on May 13. A recording of the session will remain accessible through June 2026. The meeting comes as Nvidia continues to expand its role in AI infrastructure globally. This month, the company unveiled plans to build an industrial AI cloud platform in Germany and named Micron Technology the first supplier for its new memory solution, SOCAMM, designed for AI server workloads. Nvidia also recently partnered with Novo Nordisk to use AI in drug discovery and showcased video compression tools for autonomous vehicles at its GTC conference in Paris. The company's Gefion supercomputer and GPU stack are being leveraged for breakthroughs across biotech, robotics, and high-performance computing. Nvidia stock closed down 0.75% on the day of the announcement. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
German economy to grow by 1.5% in 2026, leading institute projects
Germany's struggling economy is set to grow by 1.5% in 2026, according to a leading economic think tank, which almost doubled its previous forecast in a sign of possible relief following a three-year crisis. Researchers at the Munich-based ifo Institute for Economic Research had previously expected gross domestic product (GDP) to increase by 0.8% in 2026, almost doubling their estimates in their latest forecast published Thursday. The institute also slightly revised its growth forecast for 2025 from 0.2% to 0.3%. "The crisis in the German economy reached its lowest point in the winter half-year," senior ifo economist Timo Wollmershäuser, citing planned government measures to boost the economy as a reason for the improved projections. Germany's new Cabinet passed a package of tax relief measures to boost business investment last week, with companies to be given extended options to write off machinery and electric vehicles for the next three years. From 2028, corporation tax will be gradually reduced from 15% to 10% by 2032. The government has also pushed through major constitutional changes to enable massive debt-financed spending on defence, infrastructure and climate protection. According to the ifo experts, the economic effect of the planned expenditure, tax cuts and investments will amount to €10 billion ($11.5 billion) this year and €57 billion in 2026. However, the improved forecast is partially based on the premise that the European Union is able to resolve the trade conflict with US President Donald Trump, who has threatened to impose 50% tariffs on imports from the bloc from July 9 if no agreement is reached. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data