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PutzMueler

05/19/23 5:53 PM

#95862 RE: iii_john #95858

I don’t get where you are coming from?

Trimaran is his company. He is the founder.

Liquidating means cashing out selling all the parts. Perhaps he has somewhere better to invest all that money.

El Pollo LoCo Is a restaurant chain.
They should be able to stand on their own if they’re any good.
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Rader1977

05/19/23 6:12 PM

#95864 RE: iii_john #95858

Dean Kehler stepped down from Trimaran Group in March, 2023 to focus 100% on NioCorp and the Elk Creek Project. How is this not bullish?

News is imminent. Both the Demo plant results and the 3rd QTR financial statements are due next week. The announcement will come in Belgium.

Institutional investors are buying in.

Dean Kehler, aka Mr. Wonderful is the best thing that happened to NioCorp in the past 10 years. He's a Wharton graduate and has friends in government. EXIM Bank?
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Avockil

05/20/23 4:08 AM

#95885 RE: iii_john #95858

Hello john,

Just for clarification of your statement, you should tell the whole story.

El Pollo Loco is not bankrupt and doing well. The company El Pollo Loco has the same value of 400 million dollars now as before Dean Kehler joined the company in 2005:

Loco’s enterprise­ value, according to data from Sentieo/Al­phaSense, is just over $400 million, not much different than in 2005.

Here the whole story:

El Pollo Loco's private equity investor finally heads for the exits, after 18 years

Trimaran Capital Partners, which first invested in the chicken chain in 2005 and took it public in 2014, is liquidating its holdings in the chain.

By Jonathan Maze on Apr. 03, 2023

Last week, Dean Kehler resigned as a director with El Pollo Loco. The reason was relatively­ simple: Kehler’s private equity firm, Trimaran Capital, was wrapping up its investment­ in the California­-based chicken chain.

In the process, Trimaran ended a surprising­ly long-term investment­ in the company. The investment­ firm first invested in El Pollo Loco in 2005. At the time, El Pollo Loco was valued at $400 million and the chain operated 359 locations.­

Trimaran tried taking Loco public the next year, only to withdraw, long enough for the world to plunge into and then emerge from a brutal recession.­ In 2014, Loco did go public. Shares took off, as some analysts likened the chain to Chipotle Mexican Grill, giving the brand a halo among investors that were pumping millions into fast-casua­l concepts at the time.

At one point, the brand was trading at more than $30 a share, giving it a valuation of more than $1 billion—we­ll over the $400 million at which Loco was valued when Trimaran first invested.


But El Pollo Loco never matched that early valuation,­ and a year later the company’s stock price was below $10. It has largely drifted between $10 and $15 in the years since then. The company has also had some unique issues, such as $36 million in lawsuit settlement­s it paid in 2018.  


Trimaran, which initially acquired El Pollo Loco along with Freeman Spogli, owned about 45% of the company's stock after the IPO, and 43% before unwinding.­


The brand itself has done OK. System sales have grown 74% since 2006 to about $1 billion, according to data from Restaurant­ Business sister company Technomic.­ They’ve grown by an average of 4.1% per year since 2016, more than Bojangles (3.8%) or KFC (2.5%) but less than Popeyes (10.6%) or Chick-fil-­A (17.1%). The chain has 480 locations,­ 291 of which are owned by franchisee­s.


The company’s stock price, which started the year off strongly, hitting a 52-week high of $13 per share in early February, has since lost 28% of its value as Trimaran liquidated­ its position.

Loco’s enterprise­ value, according to data from Sentieo/Al­phaSense, is just over $400 million, not much different than in 2005.

It is maybe worthwhile thinking about why the exit might has happened now?