Financing

Burger King franchisee sees sales soar

Burger King’s largest franchisee posted a same-store sales jump for its 798 units of 7.5%, nearly doubling the gain for the chain as a whole.

The franchise operator, Carrols Corp., said sales at its oldest stores, or what it calls legacy restaurants, nearly matched the comp increase for more recently acquired units, 7.5% to 7.7%. Some analysts noted that the increases were the highest posted to date for the third quarter by a publicly owned quick-service operation.

Integrating newly purchased restaurants into the fold is an ongoing effort for the company, which has been in an aggressive acquisition mode since 2015. The operator has added 171 stores since then, 60 of them during the first nine months of 2017. It noted that the purchase of four more is expected to close this month.

Carrols’ sales gains compare with the 4% comp gain that franchisor Restaurant Brands International pegged for the chain as a whole in the third quarter.

Carrols is now a single-brand operator, having spun off Taco Cabana and Pollo Tropical into a free-standing public company, Fiesta Restaurant Group. Those brands posted same-store sales declines of 12.6% and 10.9%, respectively.

The company attributed the strong performance of its Burger King restaurants to the chain’s so-called barbell strategy, or offering bargain-priced menu items for everyday visitors and premium selections for occasional customers or regulars who want to trade up.

It cited such particularly strong-selling examples as the 2 Whoppers for $6 deal and the new premium-priced Crispy Chicken Sandwich.

Sales from the restaurants rose 19.4% year over year, to a total of $285.2 million, but net income slipped to $2.8 million from $4.5 million in the year-ago quarter. Profits were hurt by acquisition and lease-impairment charges.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

How Popeyes changed the chicken business

How did a once-struggling, regional bone-in chicken chain overtake KFC, the formerly dominant player in the U.S. market? With a fixation on sandwiches and many more new restaurants.

Financing

Get ready for a summertime value war

The Bottom Line: With more customers opting to eat at home, rather than at restaurants, more fast-food chains will start pushing value this summer.

Food

Inside Chili's quest to craft a value-priced burger that could take on McDonald's

Behind the Menu: How the casual-dining chain smashes expectations with a winning combination of familiarity and price with its new Big Smasher burger.

Trending

More from our partners