Inspire Brands filed confidentially with the SEC for an initial public offering that would return Dunkin' Donuts and Buffalo Wild Wings to public markets four years after Roark Capital orchestrated their $20 billion consolidation into the second-largest restaurant company in the United States. The filing, disclosed without pricing or timing details, marks the first major QSR de-SPAC since the 2021 bubble and arrives as franchise valuations reset 18-22% below pandemic peaks.
Roark assembled Inspire through seven acquisitions between 2018 and 2023, layering Dunkin', Baskin-Robbins, Buffalo Wild Wings, Sonic Drive-In, Arby's, Jimmy John's, and Rusty Taco into a 32,000-location portfolio generating $35 billion in system-wide sales. The confidential filing structure suggests underwriters are targeting a post-Labor Day roadshow, positioning Inspire to price before the September FOMC meeting when the Fed's terminal rate guidance will either validate or destroy the 14-16x EBITDA multiples private restaurant platforms commanded in 2021. Dunkin' alone operates 12,900 locations across 40 countries, with franchise cash-on-cash returns compressed to 12-14% from the 18-22% operators saw in 2019.
The filing exposes two pressure points operators and allocators should watch. First, Roark's $11.3 billion acquisition debt matures between 2027 and 2029, and current refinancing markets price leverage above 6x EBITDA at 525-575 basis points over SOFR, nearly double the spreads Roark locked in 2020. An IPO offering 25-30% of equity at a $18-22 billion enterprise value would generate $3.5-4.2 billion in primary proceeds, enough to retire the 2027 tranche and reset the capital structure before covenant tests tighten. Second, the move signals Roark's read on franchise employment costs: labor as a percentage of sales rose 340 basis points across QSR since 2021, and the National Labor Relations Board's August joint-employer ruling exposes franchisors to union organizing risk that wasn't priced into Roark's original underwriting.
Allocators should watch three follow-on events over the next 90-120 days. The S-1 will disclose same-store sales trends and unit-level economics that haven't been public since Dunkin's 2020 de-listing, giving the first clean read on whether franchise operators are renewing agreements at rates above 75%, the threshold where system growth turns accretive. Underwriter selection will signal whether Morgan Stanley or Goldman Sachs wins the mandate, and that choice will determine whether Inspire prices for growth or yield. Finally, the roadshow will reveal whether Roark retains majority control or distributes enough float to satisfy index inclusion requirements, which would trigger $800 million-$1.2 billion in passive inflows if Inspire enters the Russell 1000.
This is the first time a $30 billion+ franchise platform has attempted a public exit in a rising-rate environment without a SPAC structure, and the pricing will set the comp for the $47 billion in PE-backed restaurant assets currently warehoused off-market.