Dan Primack

The latest on private equity, M&A, deals and movements — from Wall Street to Silicon Valley

Has Hooters found its wingman?

November 23, 2010: 5:16 PM ET

Private equity firm Wellspring Capital Management is in talks to buy Hooters of America Inc., franchiser of more than 400 beer, boobs and wings establishments throughout the world.

Fortune has learned that the process began nearly a year ago, with North Point Advisors representing the Atlanta-based company. No info yet on financial terms, although the company is believed to generate around $1 billion in annual revenue.

"It's a very tricky deal," says a private equity investor whose firm took at least an initial look. "I'm not saying it can't be done, just that it isn't cut-and-dry."

One of the complications is that Hooters of America doesn't actually oversee all current Hooter's locations. A small handful of stores -- including one in Manhattan -- are owned by a Clearwater, Fla.-based company called Hooters Inc. Same goes for the eponymous hotel and casino in Las Vegas.

Another is that the selling party would be a disputed estate, rather than an individual or other financial sponsor. Hooters of America was formed in 1984 when a man named Robert Brooks bought franchising rights from the Clearwater, Fla.-based founders, and quickly expanded it into a global casual dining empire. As he told Fortune back in 2003, "Good food, cold beer and pretty girls never go out of style."

But Brooks died in 2006, soon after which began a battle over his estate.

On one side was Brooks' wife Tami, who wanted one-third of the estate and argued that she has been denied information and monthly payments. On the other was Brooks' son from a previous marriage, Coby, who serves as both estate administrator and Hooters CEO (you might have seen him earlier this year on Undercover Boss). As part of their settlement earlier this year, the two sides agreed to solicit bids for Hooters of America.

It is unclear if Wellspring would keep Brooks in charge, or bring in its own management (my guess is the former, but it's only a guess).

Wellspring declined comment, while Hooters did not return our calls.

Here's how Hooters got its start:

Join the Conversation
About This Author
Dan Primack
Dan Primack
Senior Editor, Fortune

Dan Primack joined Fortune.com in September 2010 to cover deals and dealmakers, from Wall Street to Sand Hill Road. Previously, Dan was an editor-at-large with Thomson Reuters, where he launched both peHUB.com and the peHUB Wire email service. In a past journalistic life, Dan ran a community paper in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He currently lives just outside of Boston.

Email a Tip | @danprimack | RSS
Featured Newsletters

Every morning, discover the companies, deals and trends in tech that are moving markets and making headlines.

Receive Fortune's newsletter on all the deals that matter, from Wall Street to Sand Hill Road. SUBSCRIBE

Covering the digital giants of Silicon Valley and beyond, an in-depth look at enterprise companies, and the startups disrupting them. Emailed twice weekly.

Anne Fisher answers career-related questions and offers helpful advice for business professionals.

Company Price Change % Change
JPMorgan Chase and C... 36.24 0.45 1.26%
Microsoft Corp 30.21 -0.27 -0.89%
General Electric Co 18.40 -0.20 -1.08%
Ford Motor Co 10.15 -0.17 -1.65%
Sprint Nextel Corp 2.47 -0.03 -1.20%
Data as of May 15
Index Last Change % Change
Dow 12,632.00 -63.35 -0.50%
Nasdaq 2,893.76 -8.82 -0.30%
S&P 500 1,330.66 -7.69 -0.57%
Treasuries 1.78 -0.01 -0.62%
Data as of 7:31am ET
Most Popular
Harvard and MIT launch edX to offer free online classes
 
Businesses are recovering, but Washington didn't help
 
GM to stop advertising on Facebook
 
Keystone isn't the only pipeline
 
Stocks slide on Greek woes
 
Powered by WordPress.com VIP.