Yum Brands announced Tuesday the divestiture of its Pizza Hut chain for a combined $2.7 billion across two separate transactions, a dual-structure sale that reflects fundamentally different business trajectories in China versus the rest of the world. The deal marks the first full exit of a heritage brand from the Yum portfolio since the $4.4 billion KFC Korea sale in 2021 and confirms what allocators have quietly priced in since Q3 2025: Pizza Hut no longer fits the corporate strategy at a company now generating 73% of operating profit from Taco Bell and KFC International.
The structure is telling. Longrange Capital acquired the ex-China Pizza Hut business for $1.8 billion in a leveraged buyout that values the domestic U.S. and European operations at roughly 6.2x trailing EBITDA, a discount to the 8.1x multiple paid for Wendy's franchisee NPC International's assets in 2020. A separate consortium led by Baring Private Equity Asia purchased the China Pizza Hut operations for $900 million, a valuation that reflects 12% same-store sales decline over the trailing twelve months and the brand's struggle to compete against local fast-casual chains like Manner Coffee and Luckin-backed meal formats. The China deal includes 1,200 company-owned stores and 480 franchise locations, while the Longrange transaction covers approximately 6,800 franchised units in the U.S. and 2,100 international stores outside China.
The divestiture solves three problems simultaneously. First, it removes $340 million in annual CapEx requirements tied to Pizza Hut's aging store base, capital Yum can redirect toward Taco Bell expansion in India and Southeast Asia, where unit economics currently run 34% above Pizza Hut's mature markets. Second, it eliminates the drag on corporate ROIC from a brand posting negative 2.8% same-store sales growth in the U.S. over the last eight quarters, a metric that has weighed on Yum's valuation multiple relative to Restaurant Brands International, which trades at 19.4x forward earnings versus Yum's 16.7x. Third, the proceeds create $2.7 billion in dry powder for either debt reduction or M&A at a time when quick-service restaurant assets in high-growth markets are trading at 11-14x EBITDA, suggesting Yum sees better return opportunities elsewhere.
The China split is the more revealing component. Baring's $900 million price implies the buyers see restructuring value that Yum's corporate team either cannot or will not pursue, likely involving aggressive store closures in tier-two cities and a shift toward ghost kitchens and delivery-only formats. That playbook worked for Yum's 2016 China spinoff, which became Yum China Holdings and now trades at a 15% premium to the parent company on a price-to-sales basis. The ex-China deal gives Longrange a scaled franchised platform with limited corporate overhead, a structure that pencils at 18-22% IRR if the new owner can arrest same-store sales declines and rationalize the 340 underperforming U.S. locations flagged in Yum's most recent 10-K.
Allocators should track three follow-on events. First, Yum's Q3 earnings call in mid-October, where management will outline capital allocation priorities for the $2.7 billion in proceeds and update guidance on corporate G&A savings, expected to run $85-$110 million annually once the separation is complete in Q1 2027. Second, any announced closures or format conversions by Longrange Capital in the 90-120 days post-closing, which will signal whether the new owners pursue aggressive turnaround or steady-state optimization. Third, watch for Yum M&A activity in Q4 2026 or Q1 2027, particularly in India or Mexico, where the company has previously indicated interest in acquiring regional QSR platforms with unit counts above 200 locations.
The exit confirms what the unit economics already showed: Pizza Hut stopped being a compounder in 2019, and Yum's management finally acted on it. The $2.7 billion price is secondary to the velocity unlocked by removing the drag.