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Fat Brands, Inc (FAT)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 revenue of $146.8M declined 3.4% YoY; slight beat vs S&P Global consensus ($146.6M) while EPS missed (Primary EPS actual -$2.88 vs -$2.18 consensus). Adjusted EBITDA held flat YoY at $15.7M; reported EBITDA negative due to higher interest and one-time share-based comp *.
- Management advanced liquidity initiatives: bondholder agreement to convert amortizing bonds to interest-only ($30–$40M annual cash flow savings) and continued dividend pause preserving $36–$40M annually; refinancing work underway ahead of July 2026 maturities .
- Legal overhang reduced: DOJ dropped all charges against the Chairman; proposed settlement of Delaware derivative cases announced, pending court approval—potentially lowering litigation expense run-rate and improving investor perception .
- Operating cadence steady: 18 new openings in Q2; robust pipeline ~1,000 signed deals; digital/loyalty traction strong in snacks segment (cookies/ice cream) and Round Table Pizza—near-term catalysts include manufacturing partnerships (30–60 day rollout) .
- Near-term stock narrative catalyst: de-risking from legal resolution plus demonstrable cash cost savings; watch execution on securitization refinancings and Twin Hospitality equity raise pacing .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Pipeline and development: 18 openings; tracking to >100 openings in 2025; Florida development agreement for 40 Fatburger units grows state presence to ~50 .
- Digital/loyalty momentum: Great American Cookies digital mix at 25% of sales; loyalty spend +40%; Round Table Pizza loyalty-driven sales +21% and engagement +18% .
- Manufacturing economics: Georgia facility delivered $10.3M sales and $3.8M adjusted EBITDA (37% margin) at ~45% utilization; capacity expansion possible with modest capex .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line softness: System-wide sales -3.7%, SSS -3.9%; QSR brands (e.g., Fazoli’s) cited as challenged; international lagged domestic (though Canada Fatburger improving) .
- Profitability pressure: Net loss widened to $54.2M (vs $39.4M YoY); reported EBITDA negative (-$6.0M) driven by higher interest and one-time share-based comp tied to Twin Hospitality listing .
- Elevated G&A: +50% YoY to $44.4M largely from $12.6M non-cash share-based comp; management characterized as one-time tied to spin-off .
Financial Results
Q2 2025 Results vs Consensus (S&P Global)
Values with an asterisk are retrieved from S&P Global.
Quarterly Trend (S&P Global fundamentals; oldest → newest)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Q2 2025 vs Q2 2024 (reported)
Segment Revenue Breakdown (Q2 2025 vs Q2 2024)
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Backed by a robust pipeline of roughly 1,000 signed deals, we opened 18 new locations during the second quarter…well positioned to meet our goal of more than 100 restaurant openings this year.” — Andy Wiederhorn
- “We…secured a bondholder agreement to convert amortizing bonds to interest-only, which will generate an additional $30 to $40 million in annual cash flow savings…position us to achieve cash flow positive status in the coming quarters.” — Ken Kuick
- “Our diversified portfolio strategy is paying dividends, led by a strong performance in our snacks segment…digital sales now account for 25%…Round Table Pizza is experiencing 21% loyalty-driven sales growth and 18% higher customer engagement.” — Andy Wiederhorn
- “We are actively pursuing strategic partnerships that broaden our brand reach and strengthen our manufacturing capabilities.” — Taylor Wiederhorn
- “Our Georgia production facility…$10.3 million in second quarter sales and $3.8 million in adjusted EBITDA, resulting in an attractive 37% margin.” — Andy Wiederhorn
- “The U.S. Department of Justice has dropped all charges…” — Company press release
Q&A Highlights
- G&A spike clarified: ~$12.6M non-cash share-based comp tied to Twin Hospitality listing; characterized as one-time; expected to decline .
- Manufacturing rollout timing: new third-party/virtual partnerships “in production now,” full rollout expected in 30–60 days; multi-operator paths to accelerate factory volumes .
- Traffic trends: snack brands (cookies/ice cream/pretzels) doing “significantly better”; QSR challenged; polished casual improving; optimism into fall sports .
- Liquidity: $130–$150M of retained notes for potential sale/financing; ATM available though underused given perceived undervaluation .
- Smokey Bones conversions: accelerate identification and conversion/closure processes under new leadership to avoid dragging on Twin Peaks performance .
Estimates Context
- Coverage remains limited (2 estimates for revenue and EPS). Q2 2025 printed a modest revenue beat and a significant EPS/EBITDA miss relative to consensus (Primary EPS -$2.88 vs -$2.18; EBITDA -$7.2M vs $14.2M). Adjusted EBITDA was flat YoY at $15.7M, highlighting the importance of non-GAAP adjustments in this name .
- Post-quarter estimate resets likely skew toward lower EPS/EBITDA given negative reported EBITDA and higher interest expense; watch for revisions tied to legal cost reductions, bond conversion savings, and manufacturing ramp.
Values with an asterisk are retrieved from S&P Global.
Q2 2025 S&P Global Consensus vs Actual
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Execution focus: Watch 30–60 day manufacturing partnership rollout and magnitude of factory utilization lift; high incremental margin with potential strategic optionality longer-term .
- Deleveraging pathway: Bond conversion ($30–$40M savings) plus dividend pause ($36–$40M) create meaningful cash flow runway; securitization refinancings ahead of July 2026 are critical milestones .
- Legal de-risking: DOJ dismissal and proposed derivative settlement reduce overhang; monitor impact on G&A/litigation expense run-rate and insurance recoveries .
- Segment mix: Snacks/digital and Round Table loyalty are relative strengths; QSR exposure remains a headwind—position for mix resiliency while conversions address underperformers .
- Twin Hospitality equity raise timing: Market-dependent; any slippage extends deleveraging timeline—track quarterly updates and any structure modifications .
- Non-GAAP vs GAAP: Adjusted EBITDA stability contrasts with negative reported EBITDA; expect investor focus on cash metrics as cost-saving measures accrue .
- Development catalyst: >100 openings in 2025 sustains royalty base; Florida Fatburger expansion and international deals (e.g., Canada, France) broaden geographic diversity .
Notes:
- Non-GAAP measures include EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA, and Adjusted Net Loss; reconciliations provided in the company’s materials .
- Values marked with an asterisk are retrieved from S&P Global.