I have the same question every time I see one of these articles. I think I've even posted the question in previous HN threads on private equity shenanigans. The question is:
Why is this profitable?
If the land is worth $1.5 billion, it should have cost PE more than $1.5 billion to buy the company. Then there would be no way to make a profit by selling the land, paying yourself, and letting the company go belly-up.
Why does PE keep doing this? Presumably because it works? But why does it work? Are the sellers less sophisticated at asset valuation than the buyers, and frequently lowball themselves? Or maybe owners/stockholders are sometimes just tired of holding this asset, want cash to reinvest somewhere else, and are willing to cash out at a discount?
I'm not sure those vet deals are profitable yet. A lot of the deals in the last 10 years will be looking for their exit soon and I'm not sure there are buyers.
Because the money isn't good right now. Before PE, vets were making $60k out of school and maybe $100-120k after 10 years. Now, PE has caused a huge run up in salary because people aren't excited to work for them. New grads are starting at $100k and experienced vets are asking for $150-200k. While there's a glut of PE money they're financing all this and hoping to make it back somehow down the line. But a doctor-owned clinic would have a start up cost of probably $750k to $1M (or more) and that would be financed at 8-10% over 10-15 years now. They'd have to rent and build out a space or buy it on 25 year amortization. Loans have a personal guarantee.
You generally can't solicit your old clients so they'd have to choose to find you and you'd have to build the rest of your practice. Lots of risk.
You could expect to pull the new grad salary and use the rest of the cash flow to cover your loan. If things go well, you could be making a good salary and sitting pretty after 10 years. Or you might underperform and find yourself struggling to pay your staff while taking a minimal salary until you can get out from the loan.
If PE clinics underperform, they just shut them down and write it off.
I’m an ophthalmologist. The answer is that junior partners are brought on at a below-market-rate salary with the promise of future equity (usually under false pretenses) in the practice and a super restrictive non-compete agreement. The senior partners then take their golden parachute and sell-out the field and the junior partners to the PE finance bros. One then has to choose between selling their house, uprooting their family and taking the financial risk that comes with starting a practice in a new location (due to the non-compete) or continuing to work for the PE firm as they devolve to more and more unethical business practices. Eventually your choices are either go into solo practice or work for PE
I thought the PE model was to buy one of these companies, leverage them with many multiples of debt while paying themselves out massive fees and bonuses, then letting the huge interest and debt load take its toll on the husk of the company.
It often is, but this isn't some kind of free money tree that only rich people can access. Loading up a company with debt requires a creditor. Selling underlying assets requires a buyer. If these counterparties don't offer enough money to offset what PE spent to buy the company, PE loses. And this often happens, including, apparently, in this case!
“ us what happened with Toys “R” Us—how it went from a successful and iconic retail chain into bankruptcy [and] left employees with a $60 severance, while the private equity-anointed CEO cashed out with a $2.8 million exit package.
It’s a really fascinating story. And I think it illustrates a lot of what works and doesn’t work in private equity. [In] 2005 a coalition of three firms, KKR, Bain, and Vornado, bought up Toys “R” Us for several billion dollars. Now, here’s the trick about private equity: They invested a little bit of their own money and investor money, but most of the acquisition was paid for with debt. And it was [not debt] that the private equity firms would hold—it was debt that Toys “R” Us would be responsible for paying. And that [debt] turned out to be enormous, and enormously burdensome.
In fact, the common story around Toys “R” Us is that it was defeated by Amazon, that the wave of e-commerce made their business obsolete. That wasn’t actually true. In fact, Toys “R” Us was profitable the year before it filed for bankruptcy. The challenge that it had was [that] it was spending as much on servicing the debt as it was on actually making income. So part of the problem with the private equity acquisition was the reliance on debt.
The other [problem] was the disinvestment in the business itself. Reportedly, the private equity firms slashed investment in basic things like store upkeep to such an extent that people were complaining that so much dust gathered in the rafters that it was...falling down onto customers like snowflakes. Beyond just disinvestment, they executed various tactics that brought money from Toys “R” Us to the private equity firm—things like extracting an estimated $180 million in fees.“
So the sucker here is the bank? Can't say that I care that much about that. It's just business and the banks apparently suck at it. They can foreclose on the business and sell it off to someone who relaunches it.
Don't the banks just print the money when they lend out anyway? Before the loan the money didn't exist. I suppose the bank is still holding the bag for the unpaid debt.
But why would anyone lend to a company which has been bought out by a PE firm then? Wouldn't banks turn around and say "hold on, I know this old trick, you're going to take loads of my money and then give it to yourself and default, and I get nothing"?
Because the asset is worth the net present value of its future cashflows. Unless you take over the the thing and liquidate it, the value of the property is far in the future... so arguably the takeover and liquidation increases its value.
PE here acts like a fungus unlocking the energy stored in dead trees that have fallen to the forest floor. :P If this is good nor not depend on if you're one of the creatures that has made their home in the log, if you're the fungus, or if you're the newly growing shoots that appreciate clearing out the obstructions.
I debate if PE unlocks or unsustainably accelerates. I think it comes down to should a small minority get very rich quickly, or should a going concern support a much broader ecosystem. I have seen PE "wreck" a few companies first-hand, so my selfish preference is the former.
I have less of an opinion on specific cases or even the overall effect-- but I do think it's important to realize that there can be non-incidental public benefits or even when there isn't a benefit specifically that the outcome was sometimes inevitable and in which case if you're to attribute fault to the PE it ought only be for the acceleration.
because the people who have spend years of their life trying to build something, whether that's a brand, an experience, a product, whatever, have an emotional attachment to it and don't want to see it destroyed. so when they're struggling, the look for a lifeline. PE provides that lifeline as a cash infusion in exchange for ownership.
PE "vulture capitalism" is profitable because it takes advantage of vulnerable people who want to see their dream continue. and yes, the execs at $1.5bn companies can still be vulnerable people who want to accomplish something in the world.
the argument that PE firms are skilled managers only holds water if they actually turn the companies around and make them succeed. but more often than not they don't, they're burning things down to milk as much profit as they can before the end.
This may be true but it doesn't have to be so cynical.
Most people don't have experience on how to squeeze the last drop of value from a struggling company. And many don't know how to quantify the value either. So if the average corporate executive tried doing this, they might not recoup the full value than if they just sold to the "experts".
No, this isn't true. First they no longer own it; we don't know what the sale terms were. Second (and more importantly) PE is a term-based play; if you do it right you get both the returns over the life of your fund by directing more revneues to payouts, aggresively cutting costs and eroding long-term investment (like commercial real estate) AND you sell at the right time to generate a multiple return (before all those unfavourable leases start to impact financials). Red Lobster 18-24 months ago could have sold at a premium to the $2.1B purchase price.
Are you accusing the PE fund of defrauding the buyer? If not then it's just a bad investment on their part and lucky for the PE fund, but if you are then you damn well better provide some actual evidence.
Good point. I think this changes the story a bit. It's not exactly that PE is predatory. If PE were unlocking the value of assets held by an underperforming company, the transaction could be explained as the creative destruction of capitalism making room for something better to hold those assets.
In this case, it's more like private equity wasn't as smart as Red Lobster's owners, so now Red Lobster's owners have extra capital to allocate in the economy. Which is also arguably good.
If you liked the restaurant, of course, none of this is much comfort. But if nobody with a ton of money thinks Red Lobster is a good use of capital, from either a financial or sentimental perspective, it may go the way of the dodo.
Correct. Everything is working fine. If those individual Red Lobster locations are making money, they will continue to exist because the lenders will get paid back more by cutting a deal and continuing to operate than by closing the restaurants. If the individual restaurants are not making money then they will close, as they should. The overall demand for restaurants is unchanged in either scenario, so if they close, their place will be taken by other restaurants.
And I suppose the individual owners were paying rent in some form to Red Lobster Inc, since it owned the land? It might be that all that changes for them is who they write the check out to. And possibly the amount, if Red Lobster Inc was in the habit of subsidizing its locations.
1. buy asset-heavy companies with good cashflow and add to you portfolio.
2. aggressively cut costs on long-term investments like R&D, major capital projects, and squeeze OPEX
3. at the same time focus solely on S&M. If possible get everyone on multi-year contracts that last until year 6 (often with heavy discounting on the back end)
4. shed impressive dividends over the term
5. years 3-4 make signalling investments that hint towards hockey-stick growth: (real life) examples: 1. replatform your database from on-prem to AWS, 2. move OFF aws to fixed-provisioned (I'm not making this up)
6. shop for a new PE fund to sell. Look for a 3x or higher multiplier on initial investment
7. sell, repeat, parchute in your bench of executives.
Eventually you've got a bunch of companies that look like subprime-backed CDOs
it's a bust-out, you identify a patsy and you stick it to them.
sometimes the company is worth more dead than alive, the parts are worth more the whole, especially when you can leave someone holding the bag, and the PE company gets paid to make them dead.
in any event the company is worth more to an extremely unscrupulous buyer than as a going concern in public markets.
I've seen many people saying, on this site and others, that they "believe in markets", as if it was their profession of faith.
When markets are allowed to work "normally", this is what always happens: regulations are lobbied to the ground, resources get depleted, profitable companies get destroyed to make a quick buck and everyone is worse off in the long term.
Having a strong economy is sadly harder than letting the markets "work their magic".
Strong companies usually aren't killed in this way. They are making everyone money and their share price is too high to allow activists to get a controlling interest.
"Regulations are lobbied to the ground" is not what is described in the article. The regulation was to conserve fish, and it was so onerous to comply with that only large companies could do it efficiently. Assuming this description is accurate, regulation (i.e. non-free markets) is causing this side-effect of consolidation.
Now, is the regulation worth the side effect? If the consequence is overfishing, yeah, I'll take a little hit to market efficiency to avoid tragedy of the commons. Avoiding tragedy of the commons is a great thing for the government to regulate. The flip side is that the government should have enforced anti-trust better to prevent the consolidation.
There should be a law that allows companies to self split once they become monopolies. As in a person can collect evidence of a monopolie and then can walk out of the busters office with the standalone part of the company thats the monopoly as a compamy of its own. Make those that conspire and lobby for the r monopolies those who would profit the most on busting.
I like the fundamental idea, but I don't like that structure. My own proposal would be progressive corporate taxation that gets increasingly punitive at extreme scale, intentionally pushing companies to split. We could set the "heel" of the curve higher than existing companies and inflate our way into it to give them plenty of time to prepare. We would need limitations on ownership to prevent "notionally separate but actually owned by the same people" cheating, but that's doable.
It will never happen, of course. The purpose of capitalism is not to serve customers by fostering competition, the purpose of capitalism is to give rich people an excuse to pay themselves for being rich. To establish, reinforce, and perpetuate a class hierarchy where the people on the bottom must constantly pay to exist while the people on top get paid to exist through their stocks, bonds, and real estate holdings. From this cynical perspective monopolies are a feature, not a bug. But if they were a bug, progressive taxation is how you would fix it.
I'm absolutely okay with the market destroying companies. It's literally one of the points of having a market to begin with. That sometimes also includes profitable companies.
I think the parent post is a fundamental misunderstanding of what markets are intended to do. If you want a static world that doesn't and can't change, then of course something like a command economy is preferable
I have no problem with unprofitable, severly mismanaged companies going out of business. I do have a problem when a company is liquidated to give an exit to shareholders when it is still profitable, as described in the article.
If a company provides some utility while still making a profit, wouldn't it be morally better to let it be?
Killing the company immediately hurts its employees, its customers and reduces the income available to the collectivity through taxation. It even also hurts its stakeholders in the long term, who could have earned a steady dividend for many years to come.
I don't care much about Red Lobster and other chain restaurants, as I'm not even american. I simply believe we should coerce markets into optimizing for utility instead of short-term profit, which is their natural behavior.
When a company is liquidated, its value and assets go elsewhere and are put to more productive use. This value difference is how liquidation is profitable.
This means more taxes for the government. Owners get paid out when PE buys a company, usually with a premium so they are happy.
PE liquidation IS utility optimization. The only way it makes profit is if the money made is invested into something with higher returns than the company had.
Killing a company is bad for employees that have to find new jobs, but permanent jobs are extremely toxic economically. If we avoided corporate churn for the sake of employee transitions, we would all be wearing textiles woven by luddites, and riding around in horse carts.
Oh OK, I think I understand where you come from now.
I see what you mean, but it is not what I have observed, at least in my country. There has been a steady transfer of wealth upward over the last decades. Unemployment has gone up and wages have stagnated.
When a company is liquidated, I doubt enough of its assets are reinvested to make of the event an overall positive for the economy.
Its mostly stuff in the west anyhow. Eastern half of the US is a lot like europe where if there was any ground fit to drag a plow it was plowed. States like Iowa are totally plowed. The idea of the federal government sitting on empty land for recreation is a new thing, really started with yellowstone after the US expanded west of the mississippi. Even yellowstone was almost dammed like the hetch hetchy.
Yes, if I were European I'd be prioritizing the hell out of protecting the remaining Old Growth forest in Europe in the south east, even if it means having the EU fund nature preserves / paying those host governments big bucks to have a ton of rangers there to stop logging.
How is that relevant? Yes, planned economies do no better on that front, what's your point?
And what do you mean about Native Americans having a market economy? Are you honestly comparing their economic system with ours? Or are you making a bad faith argument in favor of laissez-faire capitalism?
> When markets are allowed to work "normally", this is what always happens: regulations are lobbied to the ground, resources get depleted, profitable companies get destroyed to make a quick buck and everyone is worse off in the long term.
Yes, there was a time during industrial revolution when laissez faire was experimented with in a region of England. It ended up in a total hellhole apparently. Also it looks like it was tried in Norway to a lesser degree and it ended up in another hell:
To me this is not even slightly surprising. Red Lobster used to be at the top of our list of restaurants. Then in recent years the quality of both the food and service deteriorated. One visit the food was so bad I couldn't even eat it. That was compounded by not having a server to talk to. Took our order and never returned - even had someone else bring out the order.
The thing about a restaurant is that you'll always have business if the food and service are good. You can talk about how the market changed or whatever, but no restaurant can survive at that price point while offering so little.
We had a chain BBQ restaurant in town that had a booming business for more than a decade. Then the quality of the food went downhill and they shut down, citing lack of a market. They had a market for years but there's no market for crap. Red Lobster's situation is no different.
Increasingly I think the financialization of everything makes us less capable of understanding the world.
"Red Lobster failed because of X corporate restructuring," "Red Lobster succeeded due to Y ad campaign." People go to restaurants for reasons completely unrelated to things like that. Those things are important, but just constitute the small slice of reality that can easily be measured.
I saw a Twitter thread arguing how the video game Stardew Valley succeeded due to the way it was marketed. Marketing is important, but maybe the game succeeded because it was cute and had a soul and is fun to play. You can't measure that.
The problem is that executives will ask "what makes Stardew Valley successful?" and never make it to this answer:
A developer who genuinely cares about the quality of the game, interacts positively with the community around it, and makes decisions that demonstrate his caring for the game and the community. Specifically, decisions that often leave revenue on the table, particularly in the short term but arguably in the long term as well.
That sort of caring is largely impossible for private equity, and it's really hard to successfully fake.
I think there's an even more-overlooked factor that most people never get to: Good-old random chance in timing and markets and events.
We humans are hardwired to hate that idea, we always want an understandable story with distinct causes and effects... So much so that we will often invent one, even for things we "know" are random, like: "Okay, now the next one will almost certainly be heads, because..."
It's a failure of our internal simulatory abilities. People are usually much more confident in their counterfactual beliefs than they have any right to be. Self reinforced internal narratives ("if only this had happened then this would have happened") seem necessary in order for us to maintain confidence in our predictive abilities. I wonder if we were truly aware of the surrounding cloud of possible alternative outcomes, if it'd be paralyzing for otherwise mundane activities. How many times do we escape death by the thinnest margins everyday, without ever being the wiser.
We live in a time where almost everything is getting worse. Products are getting smaller, service is getting worse, businesses are closing, quality is going down. I don't think I've ever experienced such an obvious decline in commercial society in my entire life.
Is it the financialization of everything? Is that we reached peak growth and profit increases are only possibly through extreme optimization? Is it financial inequality?
I was just wondering if it's just me feeling like everything is on a highway to terrible.
- Prices in my city, just this year, have felt like they've jumped 10 or 15 percent.
- I've been working in tech for a decade now and for the first time a new company simply refused to negotiate salary.
- I feel financially worse off than 5 years ago making a third of what I make now.
- Housing prices have exploded. I worry I will never own a home.
- Denmark has started deleting public holidays to save our social welfare state.
- Health care is the worst it's ever been. You can not get basic health diagnostics for most things in Denmark without screaming.
- Europe has a literal war at our doorstep.
- Public transit prices have jumped in the last year.
- Good quality grocery stores have closed and been replaced with discount chains. The quality of the produce is terrible.
- Democracy feels increasingly shittier and hijacked by two extremist poles of very-online meme-thought.
- Gen Z is looking like the most garbage generation of the last two centuries with more mental illness than any generation in history.
- Everything has become a political lightning rod.
I feel exploited by invisible forces I can't see or touch or name. I feel as if I have no mastery over my own life. I no longer know why I continue to contribute to a society that does not give anything back to me for my labor and exploits the best years of my life for taxes that do not improve my lot in life.
Can someone tell me everything is going to get better?
I see this all around me here in the US, and feel the same way that you do. Ironically, some Americans see this as a US-centric problem, and look at places like Denmark as an example of a country that still has its shit together, but your own comment seems to confirm that we're in the midst of a global cultural malaise that could probably give the 1970s a run for their money.
We have a total lack of competent leadership across all institutions -- political, commercial and social -- increasing extremism and authoritarianism from every political faction, and cynical short-term thinking from every economic institution. Everything is drowning in mediocrity and pessimism, and society is increasingly dysfunctional in every aspect. Extremists keep proposing authoritarian political solutions, but I see their proposals only as even worse iterations of the problem. What can we do about it, apart from admitting defeat and going off-grid in the mountains?
Boomer checking in. I totally blame my generation. We spent our whole lives sucking the long term value out of everything we could, for our short term gain. Leaving your generations with massive debt and nothing to show for it. You’re welcome.
Yea, I hate generation wars, but it seems to be increasingly true that most of the economic value created in the last, say, 50 years, was currently either 1. captured by a few extremely wealthy individuals, or 2. locked up in the retirement accounts and real estate of people over 60 years old.
I feel like we (the younger generations) are all sitting here holding our breath in this stasis, waiting for that generation to die, and hoping those portfolios somehow get magically spread across the population. I don't know what mechanism is available to do that spread, but if it doesn't happen, where will all that locked up wealth go?
You are in Denmark? WOW!! From here in the US, my impression of Denmark is a small country of really smart people with gorgeous women having really good lives!!! Your post questions that impression ....
Here in the US, there are what seem to be related issues. Opinions about what is wrong and why differ. It can seem that we don't address the issues or what is wrong, for example, it can appear that the media believes that making clear the issues and faults are too deep for the audience of the media. For example, so far I've yet to see good engineering style graphs of even the basic measures from the economy, health, education, happiness, etc. In simple terms, the birth rate is so low we are going extinct -- some graphs over time might provide some insight. To avoid going extinct should be worth some graphs of related data?
Here is one guess: Some people want more government involvement, activity, services, ..., at the national level. Involved are money and power, money collected from taxes and/or borrowed and then spent and the people spending the money getting power. Then for the money the guess is that the spending is too inefficient, that is, too often wasted. For the power, it can stop what might be solutions. So, with the waste, we are throwing away our efforts, and with the power we are blocked from better approaches.
For this view, the US has some old images, from history, the movies, some parts of education, and even from some of recent history: So, the old images are from, say, the movie The Big Sky from the 1830s of 20 or so men and one Native Indian woman leaving Saint Louis on the Mississippi River (major US river from the north east going south and dumping into the Gulf of Mexico) and the Missouri River (from the northwest of the US close to the Pacific Ocean and flowing ~2000 miles to the Mississippi) to trade with the Blackfoot tribe to give them woven blankets, guns, tools and get beaver pelts.
The whole effort was lawless, that is, no government, laws, police, political power, regulations. So there was fighting, killing. No medical care, so there was suffering. There were lots of injuries from struggles with the river. It was all highly risky with lots of struggles and losses but in the end successful.
There were more such movies about the US, people on their own, risking everything, fighting, struggling, having failures, in the end being successful. There was Henry Ford, the Wright Brothers (had a bicycle shop), etc.
To the present, there were two guys at Stanford University in a project for indexing the contents of libraries. They thought of indexing the Web sites on the Internet and were offered ~$1 million for their work and Web site. They turned down the $1 million, started a company, and had success. It was all risky. It's now worth ~$1 trillion, called Google. Other successes, risky, one or a few founders, include Microsoft, Walmart, FedEx, Facebook, Amazon, Burger King, McDonald's. One guy, sole, solo founder, used some old Dell computers, an early version of Microsoft's Windows and Web software ASP.NET, built a romantic matchmaking service, grew it, ..., and sold out for ~$550 million.
Mostly these successes are examples of significant increases in economic productivity, that is, how much utility get from each hour of work. Personal computers? Killed off the typewriters with just astounding increases in productivity; same for email; Zoom, .... In cars, using digital electronics to get fuel mixture and spark timing a lot better resulted in the engines lasting much longer -- if looked carefully into what was going on with the old carburetors and breaker point ignitions and the huge ways they were wrong (unburned gasoline diluted the engine oil and, thus, wore out the main engine parts) can understand. Tires -- progress in the synthetic rubber chemistry made the tires last much longer, maybe 5 times as long.
The theme is, as in the movie, leave individuals with a minimum of taxes and government power and let them try and take the risks. The victories can generate massive increases in productivity, wealth, and a better life.
Heck, I like music, A. Vivaldi, J. Bach, ..., S. Barber. Used to be, had to go to live performances. Then we got audio tapes, vinyl records, CDs, DVDs, and the Internet. So, now just from a few keystrokes I can get terrific performances of Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, Bach's Chaconne, ... Barber's Adagio for Strings.
Those are some of the ideas that have floated around. Money and power: The idea that just these two are the main causes of all of society's problems is tough to accept. But, for the problems in Denmark, maybe these two should get some attention.
I think the big successes that you describe are the exception rather than the rule. I think you'll find the majority of economic success comes from simple rent seeking -- whether literally as landlord, or as financial service, or otherwise being in middle.
With all the significant increases in economic productivity that has not benefited the average American. We can see historically that as productivity has increased, the wealth of individuals has decreased. We like to think of utopia where increased productivity means we would all get to work less and have more but that isn't how capitalism works. We have made everything significantly more efficient and continue to do so but who is benefiting? For most people things are getting worse because that is actually more efficient.
> leave individuals with a minimum of taxes and government power and let them try and take the risks.
Living in a country with a good social safety net is pretty helpful for risk taking. It's a lot easier to quit your job and start a business when you don't have to worry about losing health care and potentially dying or going bankrupt.
> I think the big successes that you
describe are the exception rather than the
rule. I think you'll find the majority of
economic success comes from simple rent
seeking -- whether literally as landlord,
or as financial service, or otherwise
being in middle.
So, $1 trillion companies versus some guy
with $400K a year from 15 well run
convenience stores, .... We have a lot of
both.
> With all the significant increases in
economic productivity that has not
benefited the average American.
Maybe not in comparative terms, i.e.,
maybe the distribution curve for wealth
has not changed much.
But in absolute terms, some of what I
listed are huge benefits for "the average
American":
Nearly no one in the US would want a 1950
Ford, forced to use a typewriter instead
of a word processor on a computer, news
papers on paper instead of the Internet,
no mobile phone or Zoom, 1950s health
care, lath and plaster instead of drywall,
oak flooring instead of vinyl (cheaper and
more durable), microwave ovens, synthetic
yarn in cloth and clothing, in general, as
in the famous movie, no "plastics",
railroads and busses instead of airplanes,
no summer air conditioning, no gasoline
powered lawn mowers, no calculator aps or
pocket calculators instead of adding
machines, no computers instead of punched
cards, car tires that wear out in 20,000
miles instead of 100,000 miles, elevator
operators instead of electrically
controlled elevators, etc. ....
If you gave Americans the option of those old things but also a single income could house, feed, a clothe a family of 5 I think it might be closer than you think. It's not fair to describe what we've gained without describing what we've lost.
My parents owned different homes their entire lives. I make significantly more than they ever did and don't and could never afford my own childhood home. My children are even worse off than that.
Maybe some news source would publish a graph over time of the ratio of house prices to, say, prices of gasoline, ground beef, carrots, a wool blanket, a car, a refrigerator, etc.
We are very short on news that has credible information, gets to causes, presents like STEM field information, etc.
Also the appliances in my childhood home weren't energy inefficient but they were solid. My current fridge is full of cheap (and broken) plastic. My new stove lasted just past a year before a part that cost 1/5 the price of the entire thing broke. You can get appliances with a touchscreen but you can't get one that will last 20 years anymore.
If it wasn't for government safety regulations that 1950's Ford might actually be safer than what would be produced now without them.
Sometimes it's monopoly. Not this time, though; Red Lobster was a minor player.
Red Lobster was a leveraged buyout. (Most "private equity" is leveraged buyouts. The buyer seldom puts up full cash.) Plus the equity to debt conversion.
I've been thinking about this a lot too. It just feels like all ends of the spectrum, for a consumer, are crashing down. Everything is harvesting and selling data, stock at stores is low and usually favors the generic (and sometimes lesser) option over the higher quality names... Apps like facebook, twitter, IG, tiktok, reddit, and youtube are making life worse for their users. Overall, it is kind of a depressing time to observe.
In case it helps you, I find the following products / services have improved their quality and offering in the past decade:
TVs: I get a much nicer TV now for the same amount what I paid for a crappier one in 2012
Smartphones: very powerful and do a lot of things better (eg. camera, connectivity)
Entertainment: Netflix, HBO, Hulu, Prime, ... you can pick 1-2 of those, binge all you want and then rotate. Costs < 30$/mo
Travel options: Ok, even in 2014, there were very good travel options. But I see a lot more options these days (direct flights from SF, more obscure locations on the travel map etc)
Cars: I bought a new car in 2021 (previous one was 2010). New one is cheaper and has some nicer features (rear view & other cameras, various warning signals)
Sorry, I don't think that helps at all. If anything, it comes across with a "You should skip the avocado toast" energy.
The vast majority of these things are not all that important to most people, not like prices of groceries, household goods, clothing, energy, childcare costs, transport costs..etc.
I don't care that cars have nicer features now, if buying a new car is most of my annual wages pre-tax. I don't care that I can fly to more interesting destinations from SF when I can't afford to go to urgent care without having to switch to rice and beans for a week. I do on the other hand care when my grocery bills double unless I spent multiple hours a week collecting coupons and driving around to find sales. I care when I have to wake up in the morning shivering because I can't afford to keep the heat at even close to a comfortable temperature.
> The vast majority of these things are not all that important to most people
Hmm I don't think you and I share the same definitions of "most people" then, or "important" for that matter. Just to give 2 examples:
>85% of US adult population uses smartphone. The way smartphone revolution has occurred and the big role they play in our lives (entertainment, communication, public services, finances) in just 15-16 years since its invention is truly astonishing.
>90% US households have a car. ~40K Americans die every year in car road accidents. Improving car safety is literally a matter of life and death and numbers prove[1] that we are doing better over time.
It’s what inverting the age pyramid feels like as the average age of society keeps increasing and risk mitigation becomes the meaning of life, espoused in phrases like ‘stay safe!’
We are slowly in the midst of going through a black plague of sorts when it comes to the % change in population that is occurring, except we will be left with an elderly population instead of a dynamic healthy and young population.
Corporate consolidation, some would say. IIRC, at some point in the last some decades, the US got the bright idea that antitrust isn't really worth enforcing if potentially anticompetitive business practices and mergers can also result in lower prices.
That kinda works— Until a small handful of corporations gain enough power that there is not really any meaningful competition anymore, and they can effectively engage in price-gouging with monopoly power. Which has now happened, apparently, in most industries. …Hence everything getting worse.
…I think there was an article I read some time back that explained it really well. But I can't seem to find it, so these links will have to do. The Guardian/Youtube ones might seem clickbaity, but that man was also Clinton's Secretary of Labor:
Ticketmaster, Facebook, grocery prices, even the Boeing 737 mess— I suppose a lot of these problems do basically come down to a company or an oligopoly getting so powerful that nobody can hold it accountable anymore.
Most people used to believe in Jesus Christ with values built on the Bible. That was true from lay people to Ivy League colleges to even folks in prison. His blessings with His accountability both made many good things happen and limited lots of damage we’d cause. America was prosperous as the Bible said it would be.
Over the decades, people turned away from God and those values to chase new ones: money first, pleasure first, self/ego first, atheism, subjectivism, Marxism. These by themselves, if increasing enough, guarantee massive amounts of suffering for people. Whereas, the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians only does good for people when you increase it. Society made their choice.
As in Romans 1, God handed us over to our depraved minds and sins to let us feel the full consequences of selfish, godless, subjective societies. Everything has gotten worse. The solution is to repent and turn back to what God gave that worked before. Then, gradually improve ourselves in any weak areas. Wr must bake righteous values back into our families, businesses, and government. Inward change creates positive, outward results.
On an individual level. God promises them national prosperity for obedience in Leviticus and Deuteronomy. There’s curses for disobedience, esp turning away from God, that are very specific. Then, we see those patterns happening in the following books for Israel and the other countries. We’ve seen both happen in the U.S.
I'm a little bit concerned about Jesus crashing the fishing industry by dumping product onto the market at prices that are too low for anybody else to compete with. It would be especially bad if it triggers some kind of broader trade war. It would be better if there was some way to quantify the risk involved.
As an American Millennial, all my life I've seen Christians who talk about love and charity on Sunday, and then work the rest of the week to lower taxes on the rich, shame women, and get as many guns into as many American hands as possible. Ultimately, they found their political apotheosis in Donald Trump, who seems to be the physical manifestation of the deadly sins. If he was created in a lab by Atheists to prove that Christians are hypocrites above all else, they could not have done a better job.
I'd suggest that if they want more Americans to live the values preached by Jesus, they should try starting with themselves. I don't know how many people they have turned into Atheists with this behavior, but I can say for sure they did for me, and I suspect they have alienated many others as well.
Somewhat ironical, but I'd be a bit more charitable and simply chalk that up to edge cases; additionally it's no different than typical ideological signaling. I find it less interesting to care about the extent people can bastardize a given idea, also because that's an entirely different, sociological issue.
Tho really any belief system that becomes so institutionalized will inevitably attract flies and become debased over time. However one could cheekily remark that by virtue of its message and who it spoke to, early Christianity was inherently debased, and certaintly ignoble.
There are certainly many people who claim to believe in Christ while committing many sins. There’s also tons of atheists and liberals with similar sins. It would certainly help if people acted in line with their values. Also, if they stop causing others harm individually or politically. I’m with you there.
As I look at the Word, we see Jesus Christ promised that anyone who repents and believes in Him would receive eternal life by how good He was, not our own works. It’s a gift of grace. From there, John 15 shows real believers who are in the vine bear the fruit. We’re all steadily changed over time (sanctification) to be more like Him. So, we’ll all have faults.
Even in God’s Word, we see all kinds of sin in the churches. They have fake leaders, people about money, sexual immorality, ego, and James says they starve the poor. Yet, apostles call them “saints” because Jesus bought their future. Instead of discarding them, the apostles keep exhorting them to improve to become who they need to be. Anyone that confessed and made an effort would make it.
Whereas, we can’t let any excuse… ourselves or others… separate us from Christ. Apostasy leads to a worse fate than non-belief if one never returns. John says Christ will never let anyone snatch His real sheep out of His hand. He’ll forgive anyone that returns. I encourage you to return to your first love and find a Biblical church (eg GiveThemLife.com has help).
Yea, I dislike that frequent atheist rejoinder cuz it totally misses the point; religion is concomitant and merely used as a pretense. Which I equally dislike, I wish there were more transparency about one's innate will to dominate rather than masquerading behind fictitious ideological claims.
In another article, America was rated as the most Christian with the most missionaries. Yet, it’s had hardly any wars motivated by religion. They’re usually about the selfish motivations of non-Christian worldviews.
Whereas, Communists have killed tens of millions of people, cultural Marxism is spreading in universities, and that should worry people. You might want to cite liberal beliefs and atheism as top killers in future comments.
When and where did that really ever work? Evidence please. The bible says nothing about America. I assume that abolishing slavery was where we turned away from biblical principles.
You don’t even really need it. You can go right to the roots.
Let’s compare two sets of things on a basic level.
1. You know God will judge what good or evil you did at the end of your life. You factor that into your decisions.
2. You think we’re an accident, nothing matters, people are just over animals, actually just chemical reactions, universe itself disappears in enough time, nothing matters in the long term unless you say so, and no accountability for any horrible thing you did.
Which is more likely to lead to righteous behavior? Which is more likely to lead to destructive behavior?
Next set are Christ’s basic commandments vs the world’s:
1. Love and obey God first. That means truth, justice, avoiding self-destructive behavior, family, and good work ethic. From there, love others as you would yourself in all your interactions with them.
2. Do whatever you want to whoever you want. It might be limited by whatever is popular at the time which will change. The Devil has most media focusing on individualism over family, squeezing max profit out of everything, and chasing pleasures with reckless abandon.
Which of these logically creates more good? Which leads to more damage?
I think we could stop there. The consequences of just those differences in believes are tremendous. Those in set 2 are currently doing the most damage in all areas of life. They include people who identify as Christian but don’t live like it. Lip service.
Whereas, my first-hand experience with hundreds of people following Christ and Biblical teaching is that it’s working. Their problems often come from sin, not obedience.
I haven't observed any correlation between belief in God and righteous or destructive behavior. Seems like most theists and most atheists try to live the virtues you've described as best they can.
I'm an atheist, and I do my best to live those virtues because it's just the right thing to do, and because it feels better than the alternatives. I don't think I'm exceptional in not needing a final judgement to make me want to be kind, honest, work for justice, live with integrity, etc.
Much respect to my theist brothers and sisters, and please consider that your atheist brothers and sisters are worthy of respect as well.
Yea, Spinoza effectively argues that the Commandments were necessitated by practical utility to control the unruly and uneducated masses and have since become even more bastardized by sectarian religions that wield these appeals to control people and actually prevent them to fully getting to know "God", which he finds entirely possible through reason alone.
And humorously, the latter of each of GP's respective points map pretty well to the destructive effects of what Nietzsche most feared of what he sensed was impending nihilism. Tho the difference, among many, is that "belief in the Christian God has become unbelievable".
We do evil for selfish reasons. God’s Word says the Father draws us to Him, faith itself is a gift He enables, and those who repent receive eternal life and close fellowship with God Himself. Then, His presence in our lives in many ways from changing character to answered prayers. Committing to rebellion in this life gains us nothing in the long term in comparison.
A sovereign ruler who is just necessarily has to enforce the law. That sinning against a perfect, loving, and good being would be punished severely shouldn’t shock you. It would happen in human, legal systems and likely your own house.
The beauty is God’s mercy outweighs His wrath. The wages of sin are death but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus. He took the punishment for us so we can just turn away from sin and back to God. Then, He never lets us go. You do have to put your God first, though.
The parent that I originally responded to asked a broader question about why we’re seeing declines, esp moral and quality, across many areas of life. They were wondering if this example was one of a general trend happening. I showed it was.
There were also predictions about what would happen if we followed Christ and His model vs other models centered on selfish gain. The other side denied the Biblical truth saying we’d have a better America with godlessness, capitalism, and/or communism. We’ve had time to see where those philosophies would take us. What happened?
God’s Word came true quite literally in many ways while the godless’ predictions were wrong with damaging results. So, the rational choice between multiple worldviews is to think the one that works and has correct predictions is true (or better). And then commit to Christ and repent.
Now, let’s tie that directly into Red Lobster:
1. Christ-like business over worldly greed would have the new owners not sell the real estate the business depended on.
2. Jethro and Paul said to pick leaders of great character and wisdom who aren’t sellouts. They’d have managed it better.
3. Humility in the service sector means constantly listening to customers to adapt to their needs since we put others first. Red Lobster would’ve changed with the times in some way which might have worked out (or not).
4. Proverbs focused on equitable or profitable arrangements. Jesus said to count the cost before you commit to a plan. The Bible often says to seek counsel. These would preclude all you can eat shrimp every day.
In short, Biblical morals would’ve prevented every aspect of this situation. Whereas, godless, unloving capitalism… all those together… naturally leads to things like this. If you will benefit from, but never be held accountable for, destroying the chain… why not make a fortune destroying it?
Good morals are basic math: create the world you want to live in. Golden rule and all that.
It turns out that Allah and Vishnu are both quite popular. And none of it supported by actual evidence. We can do better. God's plan is never to reveal that God makes any sense, just random whims. The immoral false prophets get rich and influence millions. So, gotta wait until you die to find out? Maybe. But the Abrahamic bible is so full of misinterpreted BS as to be unusable.
lol. congrats on working a sermon into a post about red lobster but... this is exceedingly poor argumentation if your goal is to actually convince anybody.
it's spot-on if you just want to feel good about yourself though. you start off with a whopper of a false dichotomy and strawman, and don't improve from there.
> Over the decades, people turned away from God and those values to chase new ones:
Most people leaving the church today do so because of how hateful and toxic the modern US church has become over the recent decades. If you don't like Christians leaving the church for Marxism, you shouldn't have let Marxism be the only ideology loving thy neighbors while the church was too busy chasing the delusions of white supremacy and Christian Nationalism.
This is the reason I've always been a detractor of purely relying on "data driven decision making". Being data driven is great... if paired with intuition and common sense.
But what ends up often happening is data-driven myopia. You see some statistic that doesn't seem optimal and you end up optimizing for that instead of figuring out how it fits into the big picture.
Restaurants, at the end of the day boil down to food. You serve food. People either like the food or they don't. How many customers you get is a function of how much people like the food, how competitive the pricing on the food is, and the market you're in.
Red lobster at the end of the day suffered from people not wanting to pay what they were charging for low quality, uninspiring seafood dishes.
People nowadays are struggling more (spare me the CPI data, hedonics and other basket adjustments mean the situation for most people is quite a bit worse than it was a few years ago) and there needs to be a value prop for dining out.
> Restaurants, at the end of the day boil down to food. You serve food.
To expand on this a little, restaurants serve food in a building brought to your table by people. If the building/table/environment is dirty or just uncomfortable people don't want to be in it. If the people preparing and serving the food are doing a bad job people won't want them doing it. If a restaurant drops the quality of the food, environment, or personnel they are going to lose business.
As you say it's the value proposition. I go to a restaurant because I want to just pick a food, eat it, and leave. The "hard" parts of cooking and cleaning are someone else's job. All restaurant patrons are willing to pay some premium over the cost of the raw ingredients to save their time and effort. But as the experience gets worse that value proposition starts to erode.
For me and I imagine many people the experience doesn't need to be mind blowing. It just needs to be not shitty.
What I don't understand is the value people place on waitstaff being enthusiastic to serve you. I don't care, as long as you they take my order and check on my drinks.
That value proposition is typically that the experience be enjoyable. What makes it that varies, hence a variety of restaurants to choose from. If I am inconvenienced and have to chase down wait staff then that nudges the experience to the 'non-enjoyable'. If I run out of something to drink while I am eating, that nudges the experience. If we are sitting and having after dinner drinks/coffee and talking, and are surrounded by dirty plates, that nudges. If we just boated to a restaurant after a day on the water enthusiastic comes to play (we want a happy fun experience). If it's a business dinner, enthusiastic could be a detriment.
You're the person who has encouraged this bizarre behavior where waitstaff come to pull away my plate the second they think I'm done. No! Leave it unless it's completely empty, I've asked you to take it, or the next course is about to arrive.
The catch-22 is that being data-driven means being driven by what data you can measure. And that is an absolutely gobsmackingly fatal flaw.
For a 1000+ page exposition on why this is such a fatal flaw see James C. Scott's 1990s tome "Seeing Like a State" which addresses precisely this issue with receipts brought from fields ranging from agriculture, urban planning, politics, family naming systems, and more across at least 4 or 5 continents and a century.
It's an essential non-partisan read that manages to piss everyone off by being a peon to left anarchism in many ways while saying "actually yes Hayek was right about sensitivity to local conditions" and "actually the NHS and NWS are good and sometimes centralized planning isn't the worst solution".
I've not seen any direct link between them but I feel like you can draw a very firm line between it and Piketty's Capital and Ideology. You might think "wait isn't Piketty the guy who's completely data driven and publishes stupidly large amounts of xlsx files as appendices" and you'd be right except in his second book he's leaning far more heavily on sociology and just using financial data (much imputed from tax records) as support for sociological arguments that align very closely in many respects.
Data-driven X is a semantic trick to absolve people from owning their X and being accountable for it; decisions just happen to be the most damaging usage. Let data _inform_ you.
> because it was cute and had a soul and is fun to play.
I'm a full on stardew addict. I was waiting for a game to rekindle the feeling I had playing the original harvest moon on snes. natsume just made a ton of crap sequals focused on making it all 3d.
concernedape, distilled the snes version down to what made it fun and built it up fron there. it scratched the itch better than any of natsume's sequals ever could.
Which doesn't mean they aren't necessary conditions. It just means they aren't sufficient conditions. A game needs other things too, one of which may be luck, and others of which may be incompatible with the private equity model.
Luck. Word of mouth. Anyway, things you can't control (and can barely influence) as a developer/publisher. So, we face the notion that, perhaps, if we want people to take the risk of creating and sustaining a business for reasons other than simple profit (say, to provide a needed or pleasant service), the proposition might need to be better than, "Succeed or die (sometimes literally)." Because none of it's a sure thing, and it can't be, but sane people generally aren't going to bet their life or livelihood on a risky venture (assuming that irrational passion is a form of insanity).
I understand why you think that, because when I started out making video games I thought the same thing. The reason why is that if I had heard of a video game in a review or recommendation it sold really well, but if I tried a game at random it was usually terrible. That is because there are thousands of games and most that aren't that good.
The other thing that happens is you point out a really good game and then someone will say, yeah but that's not a good game because of the art style or it's too similar to something else etc. Everyone can always come up with a quality reason why a game didn't sell. Someone has a reason not to like every game ever made. The problem with that is you can come up with the same complaints for well reviewed games. Often the review will say something like : this has been done before, or that style is a little annoying, but.. it's a great game.
Final nail in the coffin of this theory for me is having talked to many game review editors and having worked with a few, they will often tell you that they don't always expect to shape opinion as much as parrot it back. As one person used to tell me, most people read our reviews to validate their purchase or get our take on what they are playing.
And then to your challenge. Good games that didn't succeed. How about Midnight Suns, Lock's Quest, Space Marine, Company of Heroes II, Maquette.. that's just off the top of my head. If I thought about it I could make a really long list of game you've never hear of. This is probably the same for everything: music, novels, etc.
They make extremely niche RPGs that routinely rate >90% in positive reviews on Steam and they've never had an actual hit. Pretty much the definition of cult classics.
I don't think you're thinking of this in the right way. Crafting media and creative products of all kinds is like playing poker. You can go all in or you can make little bets where you think you can win.
You're making the assumption that the way to win is to GO ALL IN.
When in reality whether you're making AAA games or a small indie digital artist like Darius Kazemi...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_F9jxsfGCw
(Went to high school with him. Amazing guy. His senior project in the electronics lab was a teddy bear that could detect seizures.)
I think Stardew filled a niche that wasn't being catered to. There were no Farm Sims that weren't a cash grab released since Farmville. Stardew caught all the people who remembered Harvest Moon fondly.
The thing is, there's no VP of Timing. There's also no VP of Luck. These factors are ignored because there's no one to champion them. Yet they are very real.
Unsuccessful Product !== Bad Product or Bad Marketing
This is what people mean when they use the term soulless capitalism. The increasing financialization of everyone leads us to optimize for the things we can measure assuming those are the things that matter, and in the end the optimizations erase everything good.
> The founder of Costco told a CEO who wanted to raise the prices on Costco's hot dogs: "If you raise the effing hot dog, I will kill you. Figure it out."
> I saw a Twitter thread arguing how the video game Stardew Valley succeeded due to the way it was marketed. Marketing is important, but maybe the game succeeded because it was cute and had a soul and is fun to play. You can't measure that.
Thought leaders seem to know everything except when to keep their mouth shut for once. But I digress...
If firms are being punished for poor quality, then the system is working, even with enshittification becoming more commonplace. All of the Very Important Business People can sit around and scratch their heads about why the market seems to change on them when they screw up their offering, and they can consult overpriced business fortune tellers to reassure them that it was that pesky market's fault, but that doesn't change the outcome.
I'll miss Red Lobster's cheesy biscuits, but if they've dropped the ball on quality they had this coming to them.
I think this is naive. When (for example) a private equity fund buys a casual dining chain, they will go through how the business is run in painstaking detail and try to understand exactly what makes the experience 'work' and what changes are possible or advisable.
If the olives in the salad don't taste as good or there are fewer breadsticks or the lighting makes it feel more relaxed or the greeters have more time or the menu gets shorter or the desserts arrive quicker or the pasta is less salty, that's because someone involved in that decision decided it was worth paying more for or not worth paying what they were currently paying, taking into account what factors will make people change their mind about eating there. There isn't just a random dude who sits in a room somewhere and says "let's make the food worse" based on his own whim.
If the food gets worse and it just doesn't have that same vibe anymore and you don't want to go there next time, it's because an expert in marketing or restaurant management or food design made an error in their judgement about what they could cut, what they should improve, and what they needed to keep the same. That, or the change which turned you off attracted more customers or more desirable customers who have different preferences to you.
Your restaurant changed because its corporate policy changed. But the capital structure is totally relevant in understanding why that changed.
> There isn't just a random dude who sits in a room somewhere and says "let's make the food worse" based on his own whim.
Not directly, but only 1 step removed. The dude is saying "let's charge the same or more for cheaper, lower-quality food, to make a higher margin so our PE firm makes more money".
> that's because someone involved in that decision decided it was worth paying more for or not worth paying what they were currently paying, taking into account what factors will make people change their mind about eating there.
Evidently not really taking the factors into account.
Would the limited partners eat there? More than once?
I don't see the relevance of this. No one eats at Red Lobster thinking "this is the exact dinner experience that billionaires would design for themselves".
Walmart is a family owned business. Do you think that the Walton family buy groceries and home furnishings there? McDonald's is a public company. Do you think that its CEO and the fund managers who hold the biggest stakes in it regularly eat there?
What makes you think that PE equity owners have any different incentives to any other chain restaurant owners to cut costs and improve margins??
Why would you think that private equity owners would ever make things worse to improve margins without giving careful consideration to whether or not the changes will make people less likely to spend money at their restaurants??
Because PE equity owners DO have different incentives. It's reasonable to think things that are true.
PE is incentivised to squeeze the business and extract the value built up over time, to get large, quick returns, even if it destroys the business (they can sell the corpse after). A restaurant which delivers regular, single-digit restaurant margins indefinitely would be considered a PE investment failure.
So, the answer your 2nd question is also "because it's true". I'm happy to be convinced otherwise on either count, if you think differently.
You've just repeated and rephrased the claim that I challenged without providing any evidence or argument at all. Your actual answer to both questions is "because I believe this".
Can you explain how the math works that PE owners make money from discouraging people from going to a restaurant, and other owners don't have the same incentives?
I explained the difference in incentives: Restaurant margins are a PE failure [0], that alone would explain it. Your framing of the scenario as "discouraging people from going to a restaurant" is... less than charitable. A better description would be "extracting the value of customer goodwill from the business and moving it into their pockets". They're PE, they prioritize big, fast returns over long-term customer value and small, slow returns.
Add to that, the leveraged buyout mechanism that Red Lobster went through is famous for siphoning value off the target in the form of fees and other schemes, and then leaving the empty husk to die under crippling debt[1]. A clue here is that the 2nd paragraph of the article we're discussing is, "In mid-April, Bloomberg reported the debt-laden seafood chain...", and it sounded like they had trouble paying it in part because of the rent payments that started when the PE firm sold their real estate to pay for the buyout.
Can you explain why you think anything I've said so far is untrue? After all, we can't assume a PE LBO executor and a small business owner have the same incentives unless we have sufficiently convincing evidence to support that assumption.
You've replied with the same trivial urban myths that are endlessly repeated about private equity.
You've compared the incentives of private equity and a small business owner. Do you think that Red Lobster was previously a small business?
Why can't you answer the question on the different incentives that apply to different owners of large businesses? If a private equity fund can make a profit by buying a successful business, discouraging all its customers and then "selling the corpse", why can't other owners do the same thing?
Why does the company having a large amount of debt change the decision a restaurant chain's management makes between selling cheap and good food, or cheap and bad food, or expensive and bad food, or expensive and good food?
Literally everything that you've said about this has been handwaving and rumours. Explain the decisions based on where the money comes from and where it has to go to, if you can (you clearly can't).
You citing Nabisco as the best example of what you believe is comical since it's from 40 years ago (and famously fraudulent).
Other end goals than making people happy by serving good quality shrimps for a reasonable price? Obviously they do.
Other end goals than making money? Of course they don't. But neither did Ray Kroc, who was extremely upfront about how McDonald's is a business whose strategy is to acquire real estate, funded by burger sales. Neither do the Waltons, who aggressively cut margins on all their products and compete to drive other retailers out of business. (Neither does General Mills, who used to own Red Lobster, nor Darden Restaurants, the public spin-off that owned Olive Garden and Red Lobster, nor Starboard Value, the activist investor that pushed for Red Lobster to be sold.) None of these companies exists because of a high-minded commitment to customer service, or fair play, or delicious food.
If turning a viable restaurant chain into a chain that no one wants to go to and then selling it is an attractive business proposition for private equity, than it should be for McDonald's and Walmart too. Unless you can point to some specific causal connection between the ownership structure and the decision about whether or not a restaurant should serve stuff that people actually want to eat?
The example of McDonald's acquiring value through real estate, funded by the business, is pretty poingnant, considering the PE firm here did the exact opposite: sold all the valuable real estate and rented it back from the buyer under crippling rent payments, funded by the business.
Why did the PE firm do that when McDonald's didn't?
Because the PE firm had partners who bought the underlying real estate for themselves.
I'm sure that there are PE firms that really do try to make businesses successful and profitable, but the vast majority are in it to sell off anything of value and dump all the ensuing debt into a company that will shortly go bankrupt.
If you own a company, and a PE firm buys one of your clients, that should be a hint to require prepayment for everything they ask for after that. They will leave you holding the bag as a creditor.
Your first point: this would obviously be serious fraud. I'm not sure if you have any evidence of this in this particular case or is you are alleging this is standard practice by PE funds?
Your second point: why would someone lend money to a company which was going to go bankrupt? If PE firms always made the companies they controlled bankrupt, no one would lend to them.
Your third point: if someone buys a company from you, how does it make you a creditor of the bought company?
It’s not fraud if the sales are advertised and fair… even if they’re not widely publicized. But that was just spitballing.
For 2), people loan to the PE firm because they extract all the value for themselves. Their creditors get paid. People who loan to PE-controlled firms don’t seem terribly wise to me, but maybe they can model them like junk bonds.
For 3), if the firm buys one of your clients, be cautious.
Quality control and management ... seem to be the secret sauce to restaurants and are amusingly unrelated to the actual food / recipes and etc.
I too have a few local places that despite being busy and great food for ages, suddenly couldn't keep good people working there. They were doing great then just fell on their face.
I suspect that they just couldn't adapt to it being more difficult to retain / keep good people and everything else suffered.
Dominoes Pizza (US national pizza chain), seems to be the alternate story, long time bargain pizza chain with poor quality.... got better quality pizza and reportedly took off again.
For my poor friends the whole 'emergency pizza' thing was amazing marketing. Every other company is actively screwing them, increasing rates to unaffordable, shrinking sizes. Domino's not only stayed affordable, but said, hey, times are though, if you get in a crunch, here's an emergency pizza to fill the gap. Friggen' overdraft protection on food for their kids. The amount of good will that corporate marketing campaign brought in that group I can't even tell you. I'm talking about the single dad's working two jobs, moved back home with their parents segment. They now feel like Dominoes is the only company that hasn't f'd them. They actively talk about Dominoes randomly (we guys don't have much to talk about but still it doesn't normally fall to discount pizza discussion).
This happened to a local sports-bar chain around us. It was always decent and our first choice for family nights out, but after Covid it went downhill, locations closed, and the last location close by just started falling flat... empty even at busy periods, no wait staff, declining quality, etc. It just up and closed shortly after.
Lately for pizza I've only been ordering from Dominoes, mostly because it's sort of cheap but also consistent.
Not fantastic, not bad, but always pretty good.
I hope they keep up with it, whenever I go in they always appear fully staffed and in good spirits.
I used to really like Red Lobster, for the money they were quite good. Their cheese rolls are still great. That being said, I haven't been in years. Just the other day I went to a Chili's, I remember going to Chili's all the time in high school and college. Hadn't been in a while. The food quality was just so off from what it used to be. I was really disappointed. I honestly am not sure what these restaurants are thinking. Menu restructuring to cut back portions and also quality control is a significant problem. The only "fast casual" restaurant I can think of at the moment that has maintained its relative quality is Outback.
I stopped going after a waitress mentioned my mozzarella sticks were still in the microwave. As I sat there, thinking about the Sam’s Club cardboard box they might have come from, I realized that many restaurants probably do the same. However, I had hoped Red Lobster would at least use an oven.
I assume Red Lobster preemptively lowered the food grade and the service labour costs to avoid raising the prices in their menu drastically. We've had a wave of very strong inflation pretty much worldwide - or at least wherever there have been covid lock-downs and huge government payment schemes - and for many businesses, especially those that already operated at the margin of profitability, this has been their death knell.
I'm not so sure that Red Lobster would have survived if instead of lowering the quality of the product they'd have just raised the prices by say 80% overnight. I mention 80% because that's how much many hospitality businesses have raised prices in my area in London since the pandemic.
I've seen businesses go bust here that have tried both things:
- lowering quality and raising the prices by less than the average
- maintaining roughly the same quality and service but raising prices drastically
Plenty of examples in my area of businesses just collapsing with either strategy. People simply would not accept the new prices in many cases.
A business that is sort-of a luxury business like those specialised in oysters, shellfish in general, high-end cuisine etc only a very select few have survived. Those that are large chains have suffered the most, because they are not seen as so much of a special expenditure and people would just stop going.
Red Lobster perhaps would have fared better by not reacting and simply raising prices. Who knows, it's easy to make the counterfactual scenario in the abstract.
Yep, it's the food. There are many famous 'food destinations' around the world. Usually the line goes around the block. You always have to wait, either in line, for a reservation, etc. People wait because it's worth it. The food is good.
Well, it's could also have become a meme or whatever the right term is. There's a lobster roll place in a Maine coastal town that always has lines around the block with maybe hour waits. There's a place right across the street that IMO is just as good--as are a bunch of other Maine coastal places you've never heard of.
I think the author has a hard time trying to put a "why should we care?" spin on this at the end: Middle class families need a nice night out, and red lobster is the best way to do that!
Totally agree that this is vicious jackal like behavior by the PE funds. But as others have said, this is the lifecycle of a dying company. If red lobster's share prices were high because they were extremely profitable and everyone loved the restaurants:
A) it'd be too expensive for PE to buy up a controlling share
B) The smart move wouldn't be to strip the company for parts, the smart move would be to keep running the business well and soaking up the cashflows
This stuff happens to a limping company and the PEs are the wild dogs picking off the old weak corporations.
I think articles like this are pulling a switcheroo where it gets you to engage your moral indignation emotions and aim them in defense of a corporation. Those emotions are appropriate if we're talking about a human being, but aren't when we talking about a company. Imagine a PE fund doing some equivalent to an elderly person, that would actually be outrage worthy! This is just corporate finance, don't let it get to you.
I wish authors like this would explore the alternative they want.
Do they want Red Lobster to be socialized and run by the government for the public good? Should it be deemed a historic or essential business, with laws to ensure it lasts until the end of time? Do they really think owners shouldn't be able to sell companies they own, or "bust them out" (aka, simply selling off assets for profit).
If a company makes $X in reveune and has $X - Y (Y<X) in costs that doesn't seem to me like a dieing company. Of course if you use PE to purchase that company and add in $2X in costs then it sounds like a dieing company. However, it was perfectly fine until you came along and strangled it.
The price of RL share prices is pretty irrelevant to whether PE can kill it or not. Honestly the higher the price the better it is. If you can spend $100M to buy a company and gut it for $300M that sounds a lot more attractive then buying 100 $1M companies to gut for $3M a peice.
The company wasn't dying, but it was undervalued on the market. It also sounds like the component parts of the company were more valuable separate than together.
>Honestly the higher the price the better it is.
IF you have to buy at $300M, and can only sell for $100, then higher prices are not better.
A dying company is one that fails to produce enough earnings to justify the assets it consumes or holds.
As an absurdism, if Walmart only made $1 a year in profit we would probably wonder why the hell it takes them millions or billions in inventory and real estate to produce less profit than a child’s lemonade stand.
Red Lobster is like that. It’s not that they’re unprofitable, it’s that their profits don’t justify occupying that much real estate.
A clear cut example would be if locations were making less in profit than other companies were willing to pay in rent. Ie RL would make more money by not being RL anymore.
> The price of RL share prices is pretty irrelevant to whether PE can kill it or not.
The share price isn’t directly relevant, it’s the share price relative to assets. Companies with expensive stocks are usually worth several to many times more than the assets they hold, so buying them out to sell the physical assets is just lighting money on fire.
PE looks for companies where the market either disbelieves in the company so much their stock is worth less than their assets, or companies where the market has undervalued those assets.
B is not true. It's more profitable to extract lots of value in the short term and kill the company and then move on to the next victim, continually showing great profit spikes and cashing out yourself, than to slowly extract value over the years.
You’re forgetting that we operate in a world of limited resources, and the opportunity cost of poorly allocating those limited resources.
PE are like autotrophs, or literal vultures if you prefer. They recycle poorly allocated resources and return them to the market so that someone else with a better use (read: more profit) can buy them. It’s a niche in the market, like autotrophs.
This probably is the better move for long term profit. Not for the PE company specifically, but for the market as a whole. All those newly freed assets can now be consumed by new companies making more profit.
In theory, this is supposed to benefit everyone (though it doesn’t, for structural reasons). A new company with more profits means more taxes for governments, more profits that can be paid out as wages to workers, and the profits indicate consumers want whatever the new company makes more than RL’s food.
It’s also worth noting that PE is a reflection of market opinion. Companies that the market believes in are worth several to many times the value of their assets. There’s no way to acquire them, gut them for assets and make a profit.
Why is this perverse? It seems desirable. IF there are other opportunities that generate more value, you would want to cash out of the lower ones and invest in the better ones.
IF there are no options that generate better value, the company wont be liquidated.
They sold their real estate for 1.5 billion and then red lobster paid 200 million a year in rent.
That’s insane.
In 7.5 years they would pay back the purchase price.
That just seems like a massively bad deal for red lobster, I wonder was there another way the private equity firm made out on that deal ?
What’s most weird to me is that the PE firm owns Red Lobster. So if a deal is bad for Red Lobster, the deal is also bad for the PE firm.
I guess the reason that isn’t true is differing time horizons. If the consequences of the deal only become apparent years later, then the PE firm can sell the business before the chickens come home to roost.
But how do they sell Red Lobster without the buyer realizing what is going to happen? Who would be dumb enough to buy from a company that has a history of crippling companies it owns then selling them to suckers?
The hit from above-market leases vs. owning the land might be clearly visible in hindsight, but that's not necessarily true looking into the future. A buyer could have focused on the economies of scale from being in the seafood business and actually thought "we're not a real estate companye, and rentals are preferable in this inflated market". The got all that current debt off the books in exchange for future liabilities; that could also have looked good.
>> PE firm can sell the business before the chickens come home to roost.
It's really no different from pump and dump. Founders love it because it unlocks a huge pay-out without the hassle, costs and reporting obligations from going public, but if you've worked at a company before and then after a major PE investment it's universally worse IME.
These private equity deals are the convergence of a couple of phenomena.
The most obvious is low interest rates, which is fortunately dying off. The ability to borrow lots of money is something that smaller, well-run companies, are reluctant to do. Why bring in a bunch of cash to expand and take on debt when you are operating at a reasonable profit?
The secondary is the undervaluing of customer goodwill -- what PE firms can do is directly monetize that goodwill by squeezing those customers. The income stream from a reliable customer can be translated into present value, and prices and quality can be adjusted to the point where you can drive a customer's goodwill down to zero while extracting something that approximates the present value of the lifetime income stream from that customer.
Inflation plays a role -- businesses are reluctant to raise prices because they don't want to sacrifice goodwill, but the supply chain costs keep going up. They have to somehow maintain margins, but they do so by raising prices slowly. PE has no such scruples.
I'd add that it's also a function of revaluing the assets, and then determining if the return on asset value is appropriate.
Take a small restaurant. Grandad bought the building 50 years ago. That's long since paid off.
The restaurant makes say 10k a month. Good honest business. But the building/land is worth say a million.
The owners don't care, it's paid off. The business makes a good living.
So I come along and offer 500k for the business. That's basically 4 years profit up front. They want to retire soon, so that's good deal. But I turn around and sell the land for a mil. I've made a big profit, and since rent is now 10k, in only a few months the restaurant goes under.
The root problem is that the business is delivering a really poor return on asset value. Which opens the door to someone buying the assets, not the business.
That's what it looks like to me too. All of the Red Lobsters I know of in California are in some very high volume locations, often in large multi-block shopping malls where everyone in a several mile radius goes to shop. They did a good job front running the state's population growth and locking in some great locations before they became really expensive.
It's pretty much a license to print money as long as the restaurant can maintain competitiveness in quality and cost. All of the restaurants in the strip mall that holds my nearest Red Lobster have been around for over a decade and half of them for over twenty years. The turnover is really low because everyone rakes it in as long as they don't mess it up. Looks like Red Lobster messed it up.
Sometimes it is. The more cynical version of this, though, is to engage in a protracted liquidation of the business, and get as much return on the assets as possible in the short term, with no intention of the business surviving into the long term.
Optimistically, you could see this as a way of freeing operating assets from underperforming businesses and putting them back into circulation, clearing the way for superior competition. But that only works if there is superior competition to fill the gap, and the whole economy isn't saddled with dysfuction, perverse incentives, and bad leadership. Unfortunately, it seems like we're getting closer and closer to that latter situation every day.
A good portion of this is cartels that could be squashed. Notably, real estate (commercial and otherwise, driving up the single biggest cost of business/living). But, then, you'd have to deal with the people who rely on cartel-ized pricing power for their income, investment collateral, etc. (But someone is going to get thrown under the bus, so might as well be them.)
Private equity is mostly driven by state pension funds that are basically unfunded entitlements. They have to pay out more now as the boomers retire, but they have no money so seek ever-increasing rates of return, even above market rate. They can't find anything on the 'public' market, so they turn to these alternatives. Meanwhile, those on the supply side see that there is money that needs to be invested in these sorts of vehicles to have any shot of paying out, and they oblige.
People will say it's all about greed, or whatever. But it's not 'the rich' buying these PE investments. It's public pension funds (i.e., government workers, teachers, mailmen). It also has nothing to do with the interest rate (although that certainly enables it, it doesn't explain the demand for the investment vehicle itself or the source of funds).
According to a study from UNC Chapel Hill [1], public pensions comprise 31% of investors at PE funds and 67% of capital.
That means that, while it's true that perhaps the other 69% of investors are the supposedly greedy rich, if it were just them investing, PE would be 3x smaller than it is today.
We have to face the truth which is that these sorts of deleterious economic effects that occur as a result of PE takeovers are due to unfunded public pension liablities.
Have you actually read the article ? It tells a different story:
They wanted Darden to liquidate all of Olive Garden's real-estate holdings and declare a one-off dividend that would net investors a billion dollars, while literally yanking the floor out from beneath Olive Garden, converting it from owner to tenant, subject to rent-shocks and other nasty surprises.
They wanted to asset-strip the company, in other words ("asset strip" is what they call it in hedge-fund land; the mafia calls it a "bust-out," famous to anyone who watched the twenty-third episode of The Sopranos)
The giant slide-deck making fun of Olive Garden's food was just a PR campaign to help it sell the bust-out by creating a narrative that they were being activists* to save this badly managed disaster of a restaurant chain
Sale-leasebacks are common and perfectly reasonable business strategies.
Generally speaking lease liabilities have a lower cost of capital than other types of debt, so making such a deal can help the company.
None of the decisions described in the post are either unusual or unreasonable from a management team trying to save a troubled company. They were just unsuccessful.
For who? Was that the best option for the employees who relied on the income? Or the customers who enjoyed the food? There are plenty of actions that are rational from an economics standpoint as long as you don't care about any of the externalities such as human dignity.
I think that is the point. That is considered mismanagement. If I'm using a gold as the foundation of a hotdog stand, someone will come along and say that the gold is mismanaged, and worth more as jewelry.
The article tells a fairly clear story of business consolidation and monopoly. The chains had buying power, so suppliers consolidated and removed that power. Then the suppliers became so strong (with the help of PE) that they bought and looted the remaining value from the chain. Ultimately the loser at the end of this story will be the consumer, who has no market power, and any new small restaurants that develop to replace RL.
This is the same story that explains why health care is ridiculously expensive in the US, why we’re unable to supply our military at prices comparable to other nations, why we’ve seen so many price increases across the economy in recent years, etc. Consolidation and unchecked market power abuses. It probably ends with a new Depression that triggers reform, if we’re extremely lucky.
I dont think it is as one dimensional as that. You are also watching the breakup of a vertically integrated megacorp that owned many restaurants, and underlying real-estate.
It doesn't have to be one-dimensional, but some dimensions should concern us more than others. Businesses fail all the time for loads of reasons and we shouldn't necessarily try to prevent that. But the structural reasons behind this one are driven by market power and consolidation, and the result of the takeover will be an increase in those measures: these are the effects that generalize beyond "Red Lobster is a complex one-off."
It's funny because I just got out of a professional training session where the instructor told us sale-leaseback agreements are a common business practice and helped a few companies he worked for secure long term growth.
Let's use a metaphor HN might understand: sale-leasebacks are a bit like migrating to the public cloud from an on-prem setting, and in some cases the government pays you for migrating to the cloud. It helps you balance capital expenditure among other things.
> I'm continually amazed by how much outrage normal and perfectly reasonable business strategies generate in the general public.
The general public doesn't give a rat's ass about business strategies and nor should they.
If you really enjoyed patronizing a particular business and then they go out of business or change in such a way as to remove what you enjoyed, you're going to be a bit upset about that regardless of how sound the business decision was.
You're completely correct. Everything described in the article was completely legal.
The things that are illegal, like overfishing protected waters, the company doesn't do. Instead, they lobby to make it legal, then do it.
See, all above board. It's all legal. Why would anyone get upset about a company that isn't breaking the law? If it were wrong it would be illegal, right?
While maybe not illegal (yet), there is a lot of deception of retail investors throughout the process:
* astroturf campaign against the company
* fake boost in profits from massive asset liquidation
Once the stock is run up, equity cashed out leaving morons who only had access to financials and not “the plan” holding the bag. It smells like a combination of fraud and insider trading, but perhaps the SEC can name it something more appropriate.
I'm just following the logic in the original comment. To wit:
All of that is (barely, probably) not illegal, and because it is not illegal, it therefore is normal, perfectly reasonable, and not in any way wrong. The law wasn't broken, therefore nothing untoward happened.
If they managed to touch their toe over the line of illegal, then it was fraud and bad and they're criminals who should be prosecuted. But since what they did might be barely not quite fraud, it's perfectly normal and acceptable, right?
Did you read the article? The mismanagement was the supplier buying the purchaser with the most negotiating power and bankrupt them (by extracting as much equity as possible). This leaves purchasers with less negotiating power and the ability to raise prices. It was intentional.
While I can’t vouch for the accuracy of the strategy, the comparison with there health industry jives with my own experiences. Insurance companies buying up hospital chains to compete against pharma and gutting them in the process. When it’s hospitals shutting down instead of Red Lobster maybe people will understand.
No, I think Doctorow is explicitly arguing the opposite? He is saying that it wasn't Thai Union that killed the chain, but the previous (PE) owners. Even the title says that.
When I jokingly talk about MBA Disease being the same as Dutch Elm Disease, this is what I mean: parasitic behavior that kills the host.
On one side this is a study in destroying a chain restaurant, but what'll be taught in business school will be the other side: was this transaction profitable for one party and if so how do we repeat it? It won't be taught as a cautionary tale unless the hedge fund lost out.
I had the dubious luck to work for a company that got acquired by private equity. The company was resold for double the price it was valued when the private equity injected capital after 3 years. But during those 3 years, they lowered the quality, increased the quantity of product sold and now, no customers are excited by their product anymore.
Chipotle took on McDonalds as an early investor, used McDonald's investment to quickly expand from 16 to 500 stores. Chipotle had a tremendously successful IPO, which they used to fund further growth. McDonalds, who was always a minority investor, divested themselves from Chiptole earning $1.5 billion on a $450 million investment. It trades on the NYSE as CMG and has a market cap of 88 billion.
Based on how Chipotle has been the last couple years though, I foresee them going down the route of Red Lobster within the next 10 years. That kind of valuation goes against how bad the food has gotten.
CA was where innovation went to die far before Broadcom. It's main business process was buying popular products, "enterprising" but mostly selling them, and then selling them off as they went out of fashion.
So GG Capital paid $2.1B for Red Lobster, and sold the land for $1.5B. They still owe $600M on their purchase! Did they sell the remnants to Thai Union for > $600M? Only then this whole thing makes sense.
Yes. Thai union bought a 25% partial stake from GG capital in 2016 for 575 million. Thai union must have been happy, because they bought 24% more to become the primary owner in 2020 for an undisclosed amount.
Even without private equity's meddling, Red Lobster would have been in a rough spot. Family dining as a segment (lower end restaurants, but with table service) is being squeezed aggressively. Compared to Gen X and before, Millennials on average are valuing food quality over service experience, ballooning the fast casual (order at the counter, but nicer than fast food) segment. This is squeezing family dining from below, meanwhile their branding as ubiquitous and affordable prevents them from raising prices too much without bumping up against the fine dining segment (and who wants to bring a date to Olive Garden?).
And speaking of food quality, restaurants like Olive Garden and Red Lobster are just terrible. I'd rather get a fast-food fish sandwich, or fish and chips at the local brewpub, than eat anything at Red Lobster.
And it's not a secret. Fettucine Alfredo? They open the plastic packet from Sysco, microwave for the appropriate amount of time, same with the sauce, put it on a plate... $18.
You're spot on. I haven't been to any sort of Red Lobster owned property in years. The last time I went to Olive garden it was completely transparent how the microwaved Sysco food is the norm now. I sat there thinking how AI could have just bought the same thing from the frozen aisle at half the price and not had to deal with sitting in a dirty Olive garden.
It’s not limited to these big chains at all — the vast, vast majority of restaurants in the States are at the mercy of Sysco. The restaurant industry is absolutely brutal right now. They are barely profitable and the best restaurants survive from underpaid family labor or under-the-table undocumented immigrants. Rent costs are insanely high, labor isn’t there and is bottom of the barrel, and non Sysco food costs too much. The average person still expects a $8 burger and fries when the cost to make it is $10 minimum.
The whole industry is on the verge of collapse, and we’ve had a ton of restaurant closures over in my neck of the woods since Covid. These aren’t Red Lobsters closing but beloved local places.
Anyone that has worked food in the last couple years knows how bad it really is.
To be fair, Sysco can provide a lot of different levels of food. Yes, they're most associated in the public eye with the microwaved and boiled examples. But they can also deliver many fresh ingredients or just staples like rice or flour.
US Foods (already mentioned) and Shamrock are probably the two biggest alternatives to Sysco. Maybe Roma, too. And those specialty distributors that were mentioned, if I were to guess, probably take a nice double-digit percentage of purchases that restaurants make.
Less well known is what happens in much of the baking world: pre-made mixes. Most commonly, this means a 50-pound bag of all a product's dry ingredients and only wet ingredients are necessary. These products reduce labor, simplify employee training, are more consistent, and bigger buyers can get customization.
All big bakery retailers are using these: Panera, Whole Foods, Costco, HEB supermarkets, etc. Smaller establishments and franchises also. Less obvious uses are industries with constraints that benefit from what these products offer, cruise lines maybe being the best example. While this sounds like just more ultra-processed food, many of the products are legitimately good quality. Yes, a donut is a donut, but products like breads can be fantastic quality and respectably healthful.
US Foods is probably their most direct competitor but for a lot of restaurants there are specialty distributors who have more specialized products for the type of food from seafood to steak, or Italian cheeses and cured meats, or tuna from Japan.
I believe it. It seems to be a natural consequence of the wealth imbalance in the US. There is an obscene amount of money looking to be placed at the top, but nowhere great to put it. At the bottom all of the industries that relied on disposable income are struggling. The bottom will continue to fall out piece by piece until we reach a new equilibrium.
There are frozen bags of heat-in-a-pan Italian dishes in the grocery store that cost half what Olive Garden does (so, the slightly-fancy frozen meals—there are even cheaper ones) and also taste quite a bit better (though still not great).
They used to at least be better than high-side-of-mid-tier frozen grocery store meals. Not anymore. Their continued existence confuses me.
Heh, yeah, pretty much. Been better than Olive Garden for a decade or more, and cheaper.
I guess people just like the breadsticks that much (it is, admittedly, a lot more work to replicate those at home than the dump-frozen-bag-in-a-frying-pan process for beating most of their main dishes at home)
The one thing Olive Garden has that Red Lobster lacks IMO is great service. Maybe I'm lucky, but I've never once had anything less than awesome service there. I don't go often, and yes it's not fine dining but it's a place to go to enjoy mediocre to good tasting food and be frustration free. I'll take that every single time over a place with better food but unreliable or frustrating service.
Red Lobster well... I've only been twice. Two different locations. The first time service was really, really slow. The second time it was non-existent. After about 15 mins of waiting, we grabbed another waitress who dismissively told us that our waitress just quit and hurried off like it was our problem to figure out. I don't remember the food at all, but even if it was stellar I'd not go back.
There's a local italian restaurant that I frequent which is 30% cheaper than Olive Garden and way, way tastier. There are dozens of other local restaurants that are also cheaper, and tastier, than Olive Garden.
I don't understand why these huge restaurant companies have such a hard time with the "make good food" part of their business model. It clearly can't be that hard if so many small businesses are able to do do it better.
The entire schtick of chain restaurants is consistency. For nationwide chains, that means that the same ingredients end up being used in relatively remote places without cheap access to fresh produce as in, say, California, where fresh produce is far more affordable.
The big chains also tend to aim for excessive variety on their menus, which again leads to food needing to be designed to be less perishable.
And then there's the chunk of profits that are going to run the national presence, ad spend, and line the pockets of shareholders.
All of this just doesn't seem like it flies with consumers in 2024.
I think people value quality over consistency when it comes to their leisure spending, especially when small restaurants can still be consistently good. Why do I care that the pancakes at an IHOP in Tampa taste the same as the IHOP in my neighborhood when the local diner across the street makes better pancakes than either of them?
Having lots of options doesn't mean a whole lot if all of them suck.
The national presence I think works to their detriment. Being able to buy ad spots during the superbowl makes a restaurant categorically un-cool. The number of times "I don't want to eat at a chain restaurant" comes up when discussing places to eat with my friends has practically turned the sentiment into a meme.
I imagine social media has played a huge role in this shift. People posting actual pictures of the food they got somewhere does a lot to undercut deceptive advertising and elevates meals that actually get people excited.
I believe there is some market for consistency when your market is explicitly travelers.
This is probably why so many motels have chain restaurants in the parking lot: if you've just spent 7 hours in the car getting there, or are primarily staying there on the way to get somewhere else, convenient and predictable trumps good.
I could see that in the '80s and '90s, but today it takes 30 seconds of looking at my phone to figure out where all the good food is hiding any time I visit a new area.
> I don't understand why these huge restaurant companies have such a hard time with the "make good food" part of their business model. It clearly can't be that hard if so many small businesses are able to do do it better.
They would need to have people in the restaurant, tasting the food, observing the business, etc, and empowered to make decisions based upon the evidence. These companies are the opposite of that, and take away that power from the people actually conducting the operation. Even if they could get great cooks, waiters, hosts, managers, etc, to work at these restaurants, the value that they bring would be stifled.
I imagine the logistics of sourcing enough ingredients to supply a nationwide chain are much more complicated than a single local establishment, which pushes the nationwide chains towards more-consistent but lower-quality solutions like just buying from Sysco.
At that point you would think they would pivot to using their economies of scale to compete on price. But they're still more expensive than better local alternatives.
My best guess is that the price is inflated by the huge amount of money they spend on national ad campaigns, which I'm convinced at this point do not even work. Any restaurant big enough to buy ad spots during the superbowl is by definition "not cool" to the under-40 crowd. None of the most popular restaurants among my peer-group where I live even run local TV ads, and they don't need to.
I don't even really think it's food quality alone that is the issue. It's the total package doesn't match preferences.
I think many millennials would be fine with Red Lobster quality food, if it were quick enough for lunch. But the format is slow, sit-down service. And the atmosphere in these restaurants is not what millennials are looking for to relax or entertain.
That's actually sort of been a sort of a revolution with things like fast casual burgers and a lot of food in airports (at least those that serve upscale cities). A lot of people don't really want at least somewhat extended sitdown. They want fairly decent food that's served quickly.
Individual preferences vary obviously but I'll basically never eat at McDonalds but some of the burger places like Shake Shack and In-and-Out hit the spot now and then.
There's multiple reasons why people visit a restaurant and with different needs.
I think the rise of fast casual is coincident with the rise in people visiting a restaurant when it isn't a treat. When someone is looking to just grab a quick bowl, they don't care as much about atmosphere or service, their priority is something quick, easy, and good value.
But then when these same people go out to dinner when it is a special occasion, they're looking for something measurably better quality and better experience than the fast casual they had three times for lunch that week.
It's the mediocre sit-down places that are caught in the middle. In the 90s these types of places were good enough to be considered a friday night treat. Because people weren't eating out during the middle of the week as much.
And for many, especially perhaps people out of their twenties, they want something at a level above the traditional fast food chains.
But I basically agree. If I have to I'll go to a standard dinner chain either because there aren't other options where I am or I'm dragged there by friends. But I'd never do it around home and would try to do my best to find other options when traveling--although, on the road, some brand recognition of this isn't awful may be a trigger.
It's not even about quality. Honestly, much of it is just that megachains aren't cool. I'm not above eating at Red Lobster but if I have to pick where I'm going to spend my money it's hardly going to be the first choice.
Millennials don't have families and can barely afford the transportation to get to these places, let alone the cost of a decent meal there. The ones that can aren't satisfied with a cookie-cutter franchise experience.
But, that's assuming that the more well-off generations aren't going. I dunno if that's the case; things other than revenue can be squeezing RL.
Sorry. What I meant to imply was, "Millennials don't have families [at a rate relative to preceding generations.]" Millennial families are less numerous and smaller.
PE sold red lobster in 2016, so you are 8 years too late.
The current owner (for the last 8 years) is the multinational seafood company Thai Union. They conducted a 150million stock buyback the same quarter they declared bankruptcy for Red Lobster, and are doing fine.
Can someone help explain restaurant industry economics?
when the business starts out, it's high risk and low margin. Tons of capital investment. Labor intensive and hard to staff. If you are lucky you are pulling 15% margins
Besides some exceptions, if you are lucky you may get some growth for 5-10 years. Then your brand falls out of favor (trends) and you spiral into bankruptcy.
Option a, you stay small, don't chase trends, and you bring in decent profits year after year. Eventually maybe you close but not after paying back the investments plus more.
Option b, you grow super fast, you have a lot locations, each one barely profitable, but you make it up on scale. You scale quickly enough that you make a lot of money before trends change. They key is that you accept that you're chasing a trend and move as quickly as possible to extract as much as you can.
Option c, you come up with the core concept, and you create a franchise program. You make your money off franchise fees & shadier stuff like making the franchisers use suppliers that you own. The franchises die when trends change but some made a profit, and your capital outlays were never very high, so you make a lot of profit.
Speculators hoping to catch the next Chipotle. Tons of activity in this space right now. I got burned trying to short one of them. These are, many times, low-float or institutionally owned and prone to heavy manipulation as well.
$CAVA, $WING, $SG, $SHAK, $TXRH... lots of names that will either be the next $CMG or crash back to earth when the next trendy restaurant catches the attention of social media.
I think a lot of young people are abandoning older brands like McDonalds in favor of these trendier options, so there's a lot of business there if a new brand can capture it. But like you say, nothing lasts long in that industry.
i hear that. but how about the actual economics of the businesses. e.g. return on capital .
Obviously a handfull of stocks have spiked with speculation. but every town has hundreds to thousands of restaurants. And regions have dozens of growth chains all receiving investment.
I get why mom & pop's invest, even if it's high risk low reward. But everything in the middle that takes on millions in capital makes no sense
Maybe not fast food / fast casual, but at least in a trendy area (NYC, SF, LA, etc.) if a restaurant catches on, they're making way more than 15% margins because they can charge whatever they want and people will go because it's cool...
this would include coffee shops and other relatively low cost establishments
More than half close within a year and it's closer to 80% after five years, but the ones that make it past that point are a lot more likely to thrive. Kinda like turtles going out to sea.
> Tons of capital investment
I mean it's not that much capital, compared to most businesses. You need way more money to start a software shop than a restaurant.
Chick fil A is privately held and their franchise operator model doesn’t require a large infusion of cash from the franchisee. Only 10k cash, so it’s more like a manager job with profit sharing and I don’t see how it could be a MLM.
"MLM" is a sanitized name for "Pyramid Scheme" where the only way for a member to make profit is to bring in new people who pay up into the organization. Franchises aren't pyramid schemes.
I don't know why you'd be skeptical, franchising has been very successful for the last century (McDonalds, 7-Eleven, Ace Hardware, etc) and gives steady returns to investors. And the reason why the food business always has opportunity is because people always need to eat, and are willing to spend disposable income on food. When consumer spending goes up so does the restaurant biz, and that's not going to change. And franchises are just one efficient way to create an international restaurant business. It was actually pretty surprising when Starbucks came along and didn't franchise.
But just because the model is efficient doesn't mean you can't screw it up, like Quiznos. That's just short term thinking run amok.
also, stock prices aren't economics. In aggregate they can be useful indicators, but they are not a measure of a business' results (due to derivative factors)
I look at private equity as sort of like a bacterial infection. The infection may be the thing that kills its host by sucking of all of its energy, but the reason the host was infected in the first place was because of some other problem that led to a weakened immune system.
Private equity firms prey on companies that are already struggling. Yes, they take a struggling company and hasten its demise. But healthy companies don't end up getting bought by private equity in the first place.
In this case, I think dining culture has just changed in a way that's incompatible with Red Lobster's brand. It used to be considered higher-class fare, but drifted down market like almost every large restaurant chain does (see also: Friday's, Applebee's, etc.). For a while, it survived on the unusual combination of being a nice-seeming sit-down seafood restaurant, but not actually that expensive or close to the sea.
But, of course, the way they were able to do that was by cutting every possible corner (for example, calling langostino "lobster"). Diners today care more about their health and where their food is coming from. The post-WWII culture of "we can trust big companies because they're successful business" has been replaced by "we can't trust big companies because they must have grown by doing shady shit".
Frankly, a cheap restaurant in the midwest that lets you eat unlimited lobster no longer seems a delightful treat and a hell of a lot more like a suspicious food poisoning trap.
> look at private equity as sort of like a bacterial infection
This is honestly fair given bacteria’s ecological role as digesters/recyclers. There are probably better things to do with Red Lobster’s locations and people than serving terrible seafood.
And what's more likely, that they do that or that they leave a bunch more dead real estate for at least several years while they hold out for more money?
If Red Lobster can't pay their rents then the market is saying they should be dead. Presumably the owners of the properties wouldn't ask for those rents if that wasn't what the market would bear. Of course some properties sit idle for a while; there's going to be an optimal rate of that that isn't zero.
Seems like they exist to basically sell off a brand.
People thinking that Red Lobster is a good place to eat is a valuable asset, which can be traded for short-term profits until they catch onto what's actually going on.
One way to look at private equity is that they are playing an arbitrage game between the perceived value of a brand and the actual worth of the products the brand produces.
In a world where people had better access to true, recent information, perceived brand value wouldn't lag actual product value as much and there would be less opportunity to exploit the arbitrage.
> Private equity firms prey on companies that are already struggling. Yes, they take a struggling company and hasten its demise. But healthy companies don't end up getting bought by private equity in the first place.
From the finance/economics perspective, what should be the ideal replacement for Private Equity?
At least for me they seem like a part of the ecosystem responsible for extending the lifespan of some companies and eventually maximizing revenue in those that has success, and this premium is used to cover the losses in other bets.
I've been at 2 companies acquired by private equity firms. In one case, the company was totally healthy in the niche market of software for libraries. The company was sold because the owner wanted to retire.
The vampire capitalists did the standard playbook:
leveraged buyout.
transfer debt to the once healthy company.
extract yearly management fees.
fire and/or encourage many employees to leave.
shift maintenance to low cost foreign outsourcing company.
skimp on R&D and customer support.
In the short term, profits go up. Long term, the once healthy company slowly dies, as customers get pissed to the point they are willing to incur the cost of transitioning to a new vendor.
Not only was this company once healthy, it had astonishing employee retention. We are talking many programmers and support people with 20+ years of specialized knowledge. People seem to forget how much productivity is lost with high turnover.
>> To raise enough cash to make the deal happen, Golden Gate sold off Red Lobster's real estate to another entity — in this case, a company called American Realty Capital Properties
I wonder if the Golden Gate investors also own American Realty, or are good friends of theirs. Sure GG made their money, but owning the real estate seems like a second good investment so long as the chain doesn't go under and the lease terms are favorable.
What a short sighted, money grubbing decision by people that didn't actually care about the wellbeing of the company. Keeping the land the restaurants are on means higher margins of profit long term and the ability to weather problems. Selling it off and then leasing it back does...exactly what happened here.
The people in PE don't concern themselves with the wellbeing of a company in any sort of moral or sentimental sense. The company's future is dependent on what turns the highest profit on their time and investment. Sometimes the most money is made in value extraction and crippling the company long term. They are the vampires and vultures of the economy.
In fact you could argue that Red Lobster has suffered from a long term decline due to poor positioning in the marketplace, and the PE shops are accelerating what was likely to happen anyway.
You're responding as if the person you're replying to wasn't asking a question, but stating a fact. Do you know about the details or even a general outline of the considerations that went into this decision?
Bluntly, they're irrelevant. Selling off the real estate is a short-term books-juicer that's tantamount to pillaging the contingency fund. Classic corporate raider move.
Private equity firm wants to buy Red Lobster, but they don't have enough money. So to afford the sale, they make a deal to sell the land every Red Lobster sits on to a firm that will charge Red Lobster above-market rate rent to stay in business.
When the PE firm took over red lobster, it wasn't a thriving business. They made a gamble: if we sell the land, we can pay down the debt to reduce interest payments and restructure it into a profitable business.
It was always a risky proposition, but the alternative was probably slow decline. The PE firm lost their gamble and they suffered the losses for it.
If the PE firm sold the land to a landlord they owned at discount prices, then yea, that would be a conflict of interest but that isn't what happened.
Well, they DID have to scrape together a few % of the purchase price </s>
Isn't this what Gordon Gecko did in the movie Wall Street? Look for asset-rich companies, buy a controlling interest of the stock (the equivalent of the PE leveraged buyout) then strip them for parts? Also, wasn't that a cautionary tale of the worst of the 80's vs. a "how to" manual?
Chelsea FC the football club, was acquired by a PE firm in 2022.
It's been a grand mess from day 1. All of PE's common failings are on display for the 100s of millions of premier league viewers.
* Arrogantly uprooting working structures because PE knows better
* Lack of domain knowledge means over reliance on flimsy statistics
* a general sense of discomfort for every working member of the club
* Optimisticly dumping money to exploit so called loopholes that somehow every other team had missed (they hadn't, the loopholes were double edged swords)
* Destruction of legacy, eliminating the emotional aspect that keeps someone supporting a team.
* Haphazard changes with large impact that get touted as reform, but come across as cluelessness.
And this a *good* PE firm who is pouring money into an asset that is likely grow as the market grows. So not exactly a pclueless best.
_____
I've supported Chelsea for 20 years now, and 2022-24 was the only time my love for it has diminished.
I think that if ever founding another company, will definitely have corporate bylaws that resist similar strategies, as well as cap executive pay per year to a max multiplier of lowest and average salaries in the company.
> Unfortunately in the late Capitalism...all shall burn and rot and a new world may come forth.
What if VC and shareholders are just fulfilling their purpose in the capitalist circle of life? We can think of them as jackals, buzzards and bacteria combined into a superform. They cull herds, piece off the carrion and decompose what's left.
They are bringers and eaters of death, working as one.
It isn't just late stage capitalism. Robber barons became a glaring issue with capitalism very early on. People eventually realized that it took regulation and government intervention to correct for that, but the wealthy who wanted to keep peasants doing all the work in their fiefdoms have spent a very long time demonizing and weakening the kinds of government interventions that could keep them in check.
They've managed to con a huge number of people into agreeing that they should have unchecked power and that government (that thing 'we the people' have direct influence on) is the real problem. It's shocking to me how many people fell for it and would rather be ruled over by corporations than government even through they don't get any kind of vote for who their corporate masters are, while we can (ostensibly) vote for our government officials and vote them out if they displease us, replacing them with someone more aligned with our interest.
Increasingly government is either bribed into letting corporations do whatever they want, sabotaged by regulatory capture, or stripped of their power by the people who have either been suckered into voting against their own interests or who fantasize about one day being able to carve out their own fiefdoms full of peasants they can chain and exploit
One can blame the private equity investors buying it, but every sale requires not just a buyer, but also a seller. The owner of RL sold it to this private equity firm for an amount they felt was proper. The PE firm got more money out than they put in, so they increased the value of the assets. If this meant (in effect) shutting down RL in slow motion, then so be it. Sometimes it's best to just put a pillow over a company's face and say that's it.
PE is currently in the process of destroying my employer, a nearly 100-year-old engineering firm. Two PE firms teamed up to do some kind of financial voodoo debt transfer reverse mortgage buyout takeover and are slowing inserting their claws inch-by-inch into the management structure of the company.
We've been profitable every single quarter of every single year for almost a century. We're a money-printing machine that nobody has heard of unless you build nuclear reactors and satellites and need something only we make.
But we are not profitable enough. We are relatively vertically integrated in our niche field and are very, very, slightly less profitable than our competimates, within 1% of places like Northorp and Boeing (uhh.. when they, you know, make money) who outsource practically everything.
So fat needs to be trimmed to get that 1%.
I am moving on, going 1099 as a consultant, after 17 years at the same desk in the same office in the same building, as is practically everyone else and we're spending precisely 0% of our remaining time passing on our institutional knowledge.
"The thing that private equity does is just unload assets and monetize assets. And so they effectively paid for the purchase of Red Lobster by selling the real estate,"
They did the same thing with Sears and many others.They short sell the company, buy it, sell anything valuable and destroy it.
Watching private equity take over and subsequently destroy businesses is so frustrating! This is a story that comes up again and again and there isn’t yet the overwhelming backlash that’s necessary to stop it. I highly recommend the book “Plunder: private equity’s plan to pillage America” for an extremely cogent overview of the entire situation. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/62874267
They're currently buying up veterinary practices in the UK and turning them into cash cows. This has the effect that pet insurance has gone through the roof, and general vet bills are much higher than they used to be. Pets suffer too if owners can't afford to treat them any longer. (https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/mar/12/uk-vet-pric...)
My vet is absolutely considering selling his practice. We (selfishly, not seriously) suggested selling his practice and then opening a new one closer to where we live. (We moved out of the area several years ago, but continue to drag the cats in to see him.)
We said it in gest but he said he was already giving it serious consideration. When he bought his practice from the previous vet, the original owner did exactly that —- opening a new practice elsewhere.
I just saw a blurb about something similar in the US! Mars (the candy company) is 'the largest owner of stand-alone veterinary clinics in the United States.' Also: 'JAB Holding Company, the owner of National Veterinary Associates’ 1,000-plus hospitals (not to mention Panera and Espresso House), also holds multiple pet-insurance lines in its portfolio.'
Lucky! Our ancient Maltese has a heart murmur and was referred to, I kid you not, a canine cardiologist. The estimate started at $10K and went up from there.
The affected teeth got loose. We pulled them. The dog is happy and healthy. I would have liked for a professional to have done that for us in a more controlled and methodical manner, but there's no way I could justify spending at least ten thousand freaking dollars on a 13 year old dog who was at significant risk of dying on the table.
That sounds like a "we're not in the teeth cleaning business; go away!" price.
I love my dog and spend pretty freely on him, but no way is he getting an $800 teeth cleaning. At that point, you might as well locate your practice on the airport and cater only to people who fly their dog in on a private jet.
About 20 minutes, some disposable gloves, a disposable toothbrush head impregnated with toothpaste. So about €25 an hour. Commercial rents for small spaces are dirt cheap here - probably about €600/mo. That’s probably the driving factor in the U.K. - commercial property is eyewateringly expensive.
What about labor costs? I'm not GP but I appreciate this sort of breakdown. I wouldn't have considered that commercial RE for small business is much cheaper in Portugal than GB.
If the PE firm is charging more than a vet operating alone would, then why wouldn't a vet operating alone just undercut the PE firm's veterinary practice?
There must be some barrier to entry in the market that prevents that, and that's what I would target. Because the PE firm isn't the root cause. After all, if you can't just enter a market and charge whatever you want as a standalone vet, what makes a PE firm different?
Sister-in-law is a vet tech at a place that sold out to PE a few years ago. Wife is a pharmacist who worked at a small chain of pharmacies and had it taken over by one of the national ones. Both industries are seeing massive consolidation.
A couple of things that they observed between them:
A) a lot less interest among newly graduated pharmacists and vets for going into business themselves- they are deeply in debt from school, taking out business loans to start up a new business on top of those loans is a real threat to their financial stability
B) they want to do vet/pharmacy things with a reasonable work/life balance, not running a business things with an insane work/life balance while carrying that huge risk
C) (unique to vet) people want the convenience of big, one stop shops that can offer complimentary goods like grooming, boarding, surgeries, and their medications all in one place, which requires large capital investments- the vet firm my s-i-l works for just got a nice brand new facility with brand new fancy equipment and surgery centers etc.
D) (unique to pharmacy) Pharmacy Benefit Managers are destroying the reimbursement rates of small pharmacies, if you aren't a national chain you don't have the scale to effectively negotiate with the three PBM's that control 80% of the drug insurance business, and they are getting gutted by those PBM's, forcing pharmacy consolidation (one of those three PBM's is actually one of those national drug stores, CVS Caremark- thank the George W Bush administration for that bit of anti-competitive nonsense).
I'm not as sure about vet as I am about pharmacy, but at least in pharmacy it is not generally any harder because of regulations or anything like that, to start up than it was decades ago. My wife also points out that because we have more drugs than before, with more varied storage requirements, and they are more expensive than before, inventory costs a lot more than it did decades ago. So these newly graduated Pharm.D's with their 200k in debt would need to get even larger loans to start up a new business, and they get reimbursed less for it thanks to PBMs, making it hard for the indy pharmacies to stay in business whether they are new or old alike.
> There must be some barrier to entry in the market that prevents that, and that's what I would target.
Training to be a vet is a long process. The patients are nice (mostly), but don't communicate well, and some of the customers are terrible. In my area, there's a shortage of small animal vets because they can make a lot more money in the big city. There's an even worse shortage of large animal vets because the job is worse, and they can make a lot more money working with small animals in the big city. Our large animal vet won't do callouts for emergency/urgent services anymore unless you're on contract for annual checkups; routine visits are good for vet morale and help the budget.
Part of what's happening here is a combo of making a small business being expensive and a good chunk of the population living hand to mouth.
The people with the cash to start the business and get the space and equipment just sold to PE and you have people that were employees and a much smaller number of these people are going to be able to just quit and fire up a business.
> If the PE firm is charging more than a vet operating alone would, then why wouldn't a vet operating alone just undercut the PE firm's veterinary practice?
It takes capital to start a business and people don't have that.
> There must be some barrier to entry in the market that prevents that
People retiring are selling their brick and mortars and the next generation don't have the personal wealth to buy them because they're saddled with medical/education/credit card debt and stuck with bad rent terms that caused low savings.
The only people around to buy the places are private equity.
> If the PE firm is charging more than a vet operating alone would, then why wouldn't a vet operating alone just undercut the PE firm's veterinary practice?
Finance.
Throwing in with the PE firm means you don't have to negotiate real estate leases, don't have to think about POS systems, and don't have to worry about collections.
So, the vet probably gets paid the same and spends a lot more time on being a vet. On the other hand, the consumers spend a LOT more once the PE firm has a monopoly position and switches to gouging them.
You see the same with Dentist, the cost to start a practice after paying for college? Or get a job at a big PE owned Dentist Office and work for commission.
Optum is doing the same thing here in the US PNW for actual doctors' offices. My SO had a mysterious charge suddenly appear in her account that nobody would explain and then she got fired as a patient and sent to collections by them a few years ago. Now that they're buying all of the clinics she essentially can't get in to any providers because of it.
Something I don't understand is why private equity would destroy a business they themselves own.
It doesn't make any sense - they paid billions for Red Lobster, they made some money, they could make even more by having a viable business.
If this were a publicly owned company I could understand outrage, but it's privately owned, the owner presumably isn't interested in losing money. What's his motivation for taking these steps that are "obviously" bad?
IMO the fundamental issue is that the goal of private equity isn't to save the company, but to make as much money as quickly as possible off of it. The article hits on the exact pattern. Equity strips down a business, does whatever they can to juke the numbers with no concern for sustainability. As soon as they can make the numbers look appealing [enough], they sell it to the next sucker, and that person is left holding the bag, while the PE gets out with a tidy profit. From the article:
---
After the real estate move, Golden Gate sold 25% of the company in 2016 to Thai Union, a Thailand seafood company, for $575 million and unloaded the rest of the company to an investor group called the Seafood Alliance, of which Thai Union was a part, in 2020. Golden Gate likely came out ahead, but the same can't be said for Thai Union, which also controls the Chicken of the Sea brand. It is now looking to get out of its stake in Red Lobster...
---
The bigger question to me is why there are so many entities interested in buying up businesses from private equity, when this exact pattern has been repeated about a million times. I suppose in this game nobody ever thinks they're the sucker. After all if you can casually toss around billions of dollars, you must clearly have had plenty of financial success at some point, and it most certainly was due exclusively to your exceptional financial genius.
It reminds one of NFTs in a way. Spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on a poorly drawn picture of a cartoon ape is either moronic or brilliant dependent exclusively on whether you're the one left holding the cartoon.
When you value a business, part of it is brand and people's habits. The new owners are betting that they can trade in that value for cash, by selling a crap lesser product under the old name, and that this will return faster than a sustainable business.
It's not obviously bad from a finance point, it's just significantly shorter term thinking than the original owner.
Not certain, but I would guess it is to do with investment horizons and getting a 10x return on the money they put in to return to their fund, rather than 1x revenue per year.
Making money off restaurants is incredibly hard. It's just a lousy business. Even well-run, well-liked, well-attended restaurants are often running on incredibly thin profit margins.
Which seems crazy, since the costs of inputs are so low at most restaurants. They pay workers embarrassingly little money, and the ingredients have massive externalities. (Those "endless shrimp" are possible because of literal slave labor and environmental destruction in southeast Asia.)
And yet restaurants bleed money. There are so many invisible costs -- replacing bent silverware, repairing the walk-in fridge, shady suppliers whose produce you have to toss, etc etc etc etc. It's just a crappy business.
A private equity firm may not know how to turn a profit. Or they could run it with a tiny profit that just isn't worth their time and effort, and it's easier to just shutter it. It's a much bigger hardship to the employees than it is to them -- even the potential gains are too small.
The private equity fund who makes the decisions about what to do is buying the company with other people's money. They get a % of the other peoples money they manage as revenue and slice of the profits on success.
Also they often engineer things so the money the fund put into the deal comes back very fast. In this case they sold the companies real estate which got a big chunk of their initial investment back ASAP.
the simplified view - red lobster they bought it for $2.1b - they sold off the real estate for $1.5b and 25% of the equity for $575m - so the PE fund has $25m of their original investment in the deal. They borrowed a bunch of money and then paid out dividends on that $25m that were multiples times that amount.
It's rooted in societal culture and what people incentivize (ie assign the highest multiple to).
Until Americans take on a mindset of longterm/family (as I've seen many Chinese families express), they'll be doomed to make short term decisions. Right now very few Americans are able to accept an optimization that looks like "I invest today, and my grandkids will get the returns". So America is stuck in that local maxima of invest for next few quarters. The obvious tradeoff being the risks/ability to predict the future.
I want my investments to pay back over 30 years to me. I don't care about quarter to quarter returns. I don't need to invest for my grandkids for any of this.
As I understand the gross summarization of Chinese culture is that they're extremely family oriented. Anecdotally I've heard of grandmas acting like their homeless to earn a little money to give to a grandson which drives a Ferrari. They do it because they love and maximize for the next generation.
Plenty of money is being made by taking the short term route. Execs move factories to China and Mexico and they'll get a fat bonus while the workers will see their communities go into decline, and the government starts erecting trade barriers to protect what's left.
At some point in my lifetime, the mindset switched from "I'm investing because I want to see long-term, steady growth and get regular dividends" to "I want to make as much money as possible as quickly as possible and damn the consequences to others".
The short-sightedness and greed is destroying so much.
That's the trick though, they don't own it. They often take a company private and make the company "own itself". Then make it take out exorbitant loans to pay them their consultation fees. Then they fuck around as consulting management as the company struggles to meet even the interest payments on the massive loan taken out in its name.
It's understandable if you are a small business owner and someone makes an offer which means you can retire comfortably. The blame here is not with those owners, but with the private equity companies that exploit customers, and also the regulators that allow this monopolization & destruction of value to happen.
Not necessarily. I’ve seen it happen involuntarily several times - most recently, a client was acquired by another technology company in a mutually beneficial buyout - however, a year later, the buyer found themselves undergoing a hostile takeover by private equity.
They then gutted everything - all technology teams stripped back to nothing, or a single junior to KTLO as best as possible, all management fired, although of course kept all of sales and marketing. They handle amazingly sensitive data for manufacturers across numerous sectors, including the likes of Apple and BAE, and no longer have any infosec functions.
So in the case of the client, they didn’t sell to PE, and it’s a time bomb I’m quite looking forward to seeing go bang.
In another case, years ago, it was just a straight up hostile takeover initiated by a disgruntled investor who wanted out, and an asset strip followed by administration - we, their main technology partner, got screwed to north of £100k. One of the events that lead to me deciding to quit my previous business, as I couldn’t put down the murderous rage it incited in me. The money was almost immaterial, it was the fact that these fuckers essentially burgled a perfectly good and profitable business and then robbed their entire supply chain, from services to product, and cost several hundred people their livelihoods. Fire and ice in lucifer’s mouth for all eternity for these bastards.
Yeah, a decade on, still haven’t quite put that down - but again, not initiated by anyone who actually had anything to do with the business - I felt terribly sorry for all of them.
Are they entirely to blame? No. Everyone who capitalizes on the deal shares some blame. The consumer and the economy do get hurt. Late stage capitalism is starting to destroy what was good about capitalism and we need regulations to keep things sane.
There is a finite amount of capital in the world (with a little more printed each year of course). But they're not printing 20% more every year, so companies can't keep expecting to grow by 20% every year forever. It's just not possible and once a company reaches certain thresholds, we need regulations that prevent them from destroying the good parts of capitalism for simply more money than they had last year.
I don't have the books of Red Lobster, but the economic rationale is that if the enterprise is continuing to persistently lose money, it is destroying capital not increasing it.
It's likely that the real estate that the Red Lobsters were built on was worth more than the entire enterprise. In such a case the implication is that the ongoing operation is negatively valued. Splitting the real estate off and valuing the restaurants at zero is a rational action -- and good for the economy.
Put a mom and pop restaurant on the spot. Or a nail salon. Or anything that can justify its costs.
The "private equity kills beloved brand" stories are usually overcooked, as far as I can tell.
They usually involve PE taking over firms that were already in financial trouble, which is what made them attractively priced to PE in the first place. The PE firm would also prefer to have a nice profitable business, but if they can't turn it around, they have options like asset stripping or selling the name to a different company.
Here TFA mentions "flagging sales" already in 2014.
The most likely alternative to PE "killing" Red Lobster or Sears or Toys R Us wasn't that the businesses restructured with the same management and business model but 25% fewer stores. It was that they went out of business altogether.
I'm worried by PE buying up successful natural mom-and-pop businesses like dentists and vets and worsening the consumer experience at those. Not so worried about them managing the decline of massive national brands slightly more aggressively than another billionaire owner might.
> To raise enough cash to make the deal happen, Golden Gate sold off Red Lobster's real estate to another entity — in this case, a company called American Realty Capital Properties — and then immediately leased the restaurants back.
So private equity didn't try to make Red Lobster profitable before stripping it of its assets. That was literally their first move.
Because it was a dead man walking by the time PE bought it. The underlying assets were worth more than the sale price so it was never going to make sense to do anything other than what happened.
With that said, the tax code and employee law could be improved so there are stronger guardrails to protect some stakeholders more.
Sure, but Red Lobster should be able to make ends meet paying that rent. Their accountants should run the numbers and have numbers for what the restaurant made after paying rent, and what the real estate investment made from rent. Even though the same entity owns both they still need to know where the money is. If a restaurant cannot make money except that the real estate is paid off and thus rent free (or maybe bought at lower than current prices and so payments are artificially low) then they should close and rent the real estate out to someone else.
The above is something people often fail to think of. If you (as is common) have something that could be two independent business with one supplying the other, then you should have your accountants figure out the numbers for each separately. (this is not easy, and eventually not worth it)
How is owning real estate a distraction for a restaurant chain? Presumably their new landlords aren't going to maintain kitchen equipment and other infrastructure that makes up a lot of the maintenance burden. If it's really such a distraction, outsource it—but don't sell the real estate.
That depends - how long will the location be a great location for that business? You really need an good accountant and a reliable psychic to figure this out, an accountant can figure out how tax code, laws, and other details apply - while the psychic can tell you how the tax code, fads, and your life will change in the future. (I don't believe a reliable psychic exists - but you still need one to figure out the correct answer)
If you will be there for decades it is worth owning. The land can be paid off and still working for you. Likewise the building is depreciated and paid for (check with an accountant!), but you are still there using it - you still need to remodel and maintain it though. You pay more upfront, but long term it is a better investment.
However many businesses are fad - they do well for a few years and then people move on to the next fad and you should close up. If you only need the real estate for a couple years you should rent/lease: you won't see a payoff from the upfront costs, and you are stuck with the real estate while trying to sell it.
"Gives the primary business (making food profitably) a huge cash infusion, and removes a distraction"
This is so suspiciously MBA-esque:
- Owning real estate (and responsibilities associated with it) are not distractions: they are the cost (and responsibilities) associated with running a business.
- "a huge cash infusion" followed by [correspondingly] huge rent payments; the business becomes a prisoner.
There certainly are distractions when running a business, but owning the spot of land where it's installed is not one of them.
You are thinking about distraction wrong. Owning real estate isn't so difficult/time consuming that the managers lose much time/energy deal with it instead of running the business.
However it is an accounting distraction. If you own real estate you need to figure out which share of your profits comes from rent of real estate and which from the restaurant. If you cannot make both business profitable that means you should get rid of one. (sometimes that means sell the real estate and rent, sometimes it means close the business and rent the real estate to someone else). If both work out profitable, then keep going as is. (don't forget about intangibles, if real estate is a small loser it might be worth it just because you don't have to move and so can get loyal customers - but you should be intentionalable about accepting this loss)
Do you think every business owns the land and building it operates in? Real estate is expensive. Maintaining a building is expensive. There are plenty of businesses that rent to avoid the capital requirement and headache of property ownership.
> The "private equity kills beloved brand" stories are usually overcooked, as far as I can tell.
What are some well known examples of "private equity turned troubled brand into wild success" where products become better than ever and consumers couldn't be happier? It seems like all I ever hear are stories where a brand is "rescued" only for it to be butchered for parts in a couple years time.
Maybe Dell? Not exactly a consumer darling, but certainly a successful story for a PE LBO.
There was a side plot of "PE partners with charismatic former founder", but the main story was PE cost-cutting, layoffs and loading the company up with debt.
That has more to do with Silverlake capital preferring steady, regular cash flows. They like to buy up and hold and just run things like a normal business, no MBA shenanigans.
It's especially jarring to see a story like this with Red Lobster as its subject.
I'm curious if anyone who has a negative reaction to this article has actually been to a Red Lobster in the last 10 years. They serve poor quality food for similar prices as other sit-down restaurants. You're as likely to get poor service as you are anywhere else (maybe more so), but you'll still have to tip the same amount and spend the same amount of time there. There is no value proposition and certainly no cause for mourning or hagiographies.
Nitpick: You'll have to tip the same amount as another restaurant with bad service. If it's awful enough, that works out to about a 20% discount on the meal.
People who don't know how to tip bad for bad service (most of us!) are why tipping is bad. When you get a bill you should have a discussion about service quality with everyone and then decide what to tip (if you are solo is can be just you but still think). If you don't do that then you failed to use your tipping power.
We see eye to eye on this. I'm not a stingy tipper and I don't look for reasons to save a buck. I'm also suuuuper understanding about problems that aren't the waitstaff's fault: if the restaurant is packed but there are only 2 waiters and they're running themselves ragged, I'll do right by them. I delivered pizza when I was a kid and I feel a kinship with people trying to get food to a table.
If it's a normal night and I see our waiter playing with their phone or chatting with the bartender while I unsuccessfully try to wave them down for a drink refill, I'll remember that when I'm paying the bill.
> In 2014, amid flagging sales and pressure from investors, Darden sold Red Lobster for $2.1 billion to Golden Gate Capital, a San Francisco private-equity firm.
>The PE firm would also prefer to have a nice profitable business
Quotation needed. Usually they put no or little effort in this. They want to get their profit by destroying the business, either by breaking it down and selling the parts or by turning it into a shitty consumer-hostile money-grabbing version of its former self
I never understood how PE firms get blamed for rising costs in doctor's offices and vets. If a PE firm can just unilaterally raise prices, then why didn't he mom n pop practices do the same? Where is the competition? Why is there a barrier to entry that prevents some new young doctor or vet from coming in and undercutting the PE business?
Reducing the friction of starting new business is good. But I don't think it's sufficient to protect consumers. (If it was sufficient, we wouldn't need antitrust law at all, right?) For example, the rolled-up firms might have economies of scale that allow it to undercut new competitors.
They don't really prevent new competition, rather than target markets that specifically have a larger barrier to entry such that new competition is rare to form.
i.e. these vet clinics - a PE firm can buy up 40 disparate vet clinics in a large city then raise fees and cut staff. You may be lucky if a few new clinics appear over the next couple years once customers are fed up with the increased price and reduced quality.
It's still a win for the PE firm and a loss for most of the consumers.
This is exactly it - mom and pop businesses will charge enough for a comfortable lifestyle for themselves, but not really feel pressure to charge above that.
And if you have a vet, say, who is near the end of his career, he's already amortized all the training/educational expenses, and so can run out until retirement at relatively low rates compared to a brand new one.
The companies take advantage of this, but the customers also like it, too, because the offices will be fancy and feel new and they can schedule an appointment online.
Same thing that Great Clips et al did to barber shops.
The two groups have very different goals. One wants sustainable profit running a sustainable business, the other wants short-term profit by any legal means necessary.
> If a PE firm can just unilaterally raise prices, then why didn't he mom n pop practices do the same?
Because they have a connection to their community, which means both (1) they're more vulnerable to backlash, and (2) they don't want to, because it would be taking directly from other members of their community.
Mom-and-pop shops tend to price based on what is fair. PE firms tend to price based on what is profit-maximizing.
The mom and pop, if they raise prices too high, punish themselves when they lose business. Perhaps even to the point of insolvency and folding.
If the PE firm raises prices too high, they don't punish themselves at all, because those customers go elsewhere. "Elsewhere" being just another office/practice which they also own. Mom and pop couldn't do that themselves. They didn't have monopoly-like powers to ensure their success.
> Why is there a barrier to entry that prevents some new young doctor or vet
Because the young ones are getting started, and do not have the capital to start a practice (or to buy an existing one). How much does a dental x-ray machine cost? How much do the dental chairs cost? How much does the lawyer that fills out the paperwork to get the permits for that retail space to be a dental office cost, per hour, and how many hours of paperwork?
Someone in New Orleans (a town with a large Italian and specifically Sicilian population), left a one-line Yelp review of the one Olive Garden in the metro area (by the airport). "The 9/11 of Italian food"
Ah, American classism, where crap like McDonalds is OK, but pissing on Olive Garden and Applebees is a signal for "I'm not working class, I have taste".
Perhaps because the latter are associated with aspirational working class, which is to be mocked.
The upper middle class and higher going to coffee shops and restaurants targeting them and dialing the pretentiousness and crap fusion food and such to 11 is OK though, that's in high taste. And McDonalds is acceptable too, since it's seen as neutral.
> Perhaps because the latter are associated with aspirational working class, which is to be mocked.
No, what’s being mocked is the quality of the food. The “aspirational working class” in Europe has much better food options for even better prices—has nothing to do with classism and everything to do with the development of an American culture that ruined food in this country.
My grandparents grew up in rural Appalachia and what they prepared themselves and ate back then was much tastier and fresher than Olive Garden.
>No, what’s being mocked is the quality of the food
If that was the case the "quality of the food" would be mocked elsewhere, in tons of brands with crap quality. But those seem to be particular targets in the way that say McDonalds and other fast food or higher tier but still crappy brands are not.
Besides, most references/parodies I've seen (like online, on SNL, movies, and so on) always seem to mock the working class in that context (or the ignorant lower middle class), in some "lol, these people think they're eating fancy" - usually with stereotypes about their appereance and mannerisms to match.
McDonalds is constantly mocked for low quality food. Olive Garden is much higher prices, but not much better in quality.
Note, but quality what we really mean is either health or taste. Both McDonalds and Olive Garden are extremely high quality in that everything is exactly the same and so you can go into any one around the country (and most of the world) and order something and be unable to tell the difference from any other.
Olive Garden is hardly cheap. Eating there costs my family just as much as many local restaurants that have better food. It's not a class thing as much as a culture thing.
I mean, if McDonald's along with every restaurant in SoDoSoPa wanted to join Olive Garden and Applebees on a voyage into the sun, that wouldn't be a bad thing.
The fundamental problem is that all of these businesses are devoid of soul, and the majority of the profits don't go to the people working them.
>The fundamental problem is that all of these businesses are devoid of soul, and the majority of the profits don't go to the people working them.
That however is a problem of capitalism in general, not Olive Garden in particular.
And I'd say class snobbism against lower class "taste" (independent of unhealthy fast food vs fine cuisine, since for example something like In and Out is totally acceptable by the same people) is also a problem of capitalism.
In-n-Out is cheaper than McDonald's. A preference for McDonald's isn't a class issue, it's a taste issue.
The popular disdain for family dining comes from people who don't want to sacrifice food quality for table service. Olive Garden isn't competing against fine dining, it's competing against fast casual restaurants. And that's far less of a class divide than a generational divide: restaurant dining as widely available phenomenon is a relatively new concept, with it being a relatively rare luxury for the Greatest Generation. This put a level of perceived prestige on being served, which the family dining restaurants managed to reduce the cost of substantially the latter half of the century.
With ubiquity, though, the novelty wore off. Young people who grew up regularly eating restaurant fare aren't particularly impressed by table service, and thus for a given price point, on average, Millenials and younger tend to choose a fast-casual restaurant with better food quality over a family dining establishment that has to cut into their food quality to pay for table service.
What you're perceiving as a class divide is a urban/rural divide, where trends of all sorts (including this one) lag a decade or two behind in rural areas relative to urban ones.
>That however is a problem of capitalism in general, not Olive Garden in particular.
Sure, but the lengths Olive Garden's marketing goes to present the facade of a soul is so cringe that they deserve to be emblematic of said problem.
>And I'd say class snobbism against lower class "taste" (independent of unhealthy fast food vs fine cuisine, since for example something like In and Out is totally acceptable by the same people) is also a problem of capitalism.
Not to burst your class snobbism bubble, but as a former poor person I have to say the Dollar Menu kicks Olive Garden's ass all day long. For one (dollar), it isn't reheated cardboard!
I don't think fast food somehow being comparatively acceptable is a problem in and of itself, because fast food isn't pretentious. If anything, narratives that make it seem as if the "lower class" has no choice but to eat cardboard at Olive Garden if they want a dining experience, and that doing so is just a taste that's forced upon them, is laughable.
Right. My local non-chain Mexican restaurant charges far less than Olive Garden, or any other nearby chain for that matter, and manages to put out large quantities of very tasty food. Not surprising, the place is usually very busy.
Your McDonald's still has a Dollar Menu? Over here it's the "1-2-3 Dollar Menu" and there's nothing on it that costs less than $1.79 (a plain hamburger).
I wouldn't expect anything to change now. This is essentially what we're all doing to Earth: wringing it dry because we know we'll be dead before the oil runs out. People stopped dreaming of something better a long time ago.
That belies that fact that the play is usually to finance a bunch of debt to prop it up, pay themselves PHAT bonuses, and then let it burn to the ground. Honestly, it's gotten way past tiring that the government continues to let this same scenario play out over and over and over again.
Well, they have to make money somehow. You can't just buy a failing business, run it into the ground completely, and take the blame without being compensated.
If these businesses had a promising future, the owners would have been less interested in selling, someone interested in actually operating the business would have made an offer, or it could have been publicly traded.
I used to feel the same, but eventually I came to understand that they have a tremendously important role in the business ecosystem.
Like sharks in the sea or wolves in the wilderness, they identify and remove sick and ailing businesses. Additionally they offer a convenient exit to tired owners and investors, thus incentivizing further business creation. Finally, they identify and exploit regulation-created monopolies, enabling the government to re-allow competition through deregulation - something more and more important in today's populist and regulation-happy climate.
Did he?? He expanded a bullet list of the different owners to fit a 12 minute video, started and ended the video with an ad, literally said he "didn't have too much to say about Golden Gate Capital", and shares the insight that "Red lobster just needs to get to a point financially where they can be themselves..." OK.
Red Lobster did not go bankrupt because of Endless Shrimp. On the revenue side, customers generally have been turning away in favor of competing dining options. On the expenses side, the company has to deal with high labor costs, expensive restaurant leases - and meddlesome PE investors that have led to high leadership turnover.
Going into bankruptcy might actually allow them to address their debt and operational losses
Red Lobster has cheapened out its products all over the place. Pennywise, dollar stupid.
- Got rid of Thousand Islands and Raspberry vinaigrette dressing
- Got rid of the lobster and the fake lobster from the "lobster" bisque
- You only get 1 bread per person now
- Sweet chilli shrimp that used to be battered and fried at the restaurant replaced with some no name brand microwavable chilli scrimp
- To save money, they purchase the runt of the crab and lobster, the ones that barely make legal length, that no one wants to buy
- Mushroom caps mushrooms are now bottom of the barrel white mushrooms
This "restaurant" is now pure garbage.. used to go all the time, but quit going about a year ago. I'm not interested in spending 100$ per person for fast food
Tiffany Cianci is at the dead center of a battle with private equity trying to monopolize young child development centers. Her horrific personal story will open your eyes as to just how depraved and soulless private equity can really be in their attempt to take over the world. (TL;DR: they literally forced her give a deposition while she was having a miscarriage.) The government should be writing laws to curtail these kinds of bloodsucking parasites.
No one can force you to give a deposition during a miscarriage.
I’ve been through a few depositions and anyone can leave for medical reasons. It’s not like there are bailiffs there forcing you to attend. Even with the most basic of cases, I can just walk out and tell my attorney to reschedule. I may have to pay other counsel’s fees, but I expect with the reason “I’m having a miscarriage” no judge is going to uphold their claim.
I can’t wait until private equity companies are exposed as the exploitive side of our current system that needs to be corrected. At the heart of so many good companies are bad decisions driven by PE structures and personalities, most of whom seem very toxic and short sighted. Surely there is a better model of capitalism — I am not so vapid as to turn against the obvious advantages of the system. But I am also not willing to endorse the current approach as anything but exploitation with extra steps.
I haven’t been to Red Lobster since 2019, and even during that trip the quality of the food was severely degraded from what I remembered it to be. Their garlicky biscuits were quite nice, though. What baffles me about this story is the fact that they’re continuing to sell the endless shrimp, despite the fact that it lost them 11 million dollars. Old habits die hard, I guess.
Not sure about the expensive lease angle. The red lobster in my home town has had the same physical location longer than I’ve been alive. I assume many other red lobster locations are in the same situation.
I went to red lobster in Toronto yesterday as a "lets save red lobster Canada" idea I had in my head, they came to Canada the year I was born and my dad was obsessed so I have a lot of nostalgia.
Came out thinking: let em burn.
Worse than mediocre rubber for $200 after tip and tax.
> I went to red lobster in Toronto yesterday...Worse than mediocre rubber for $200 after tip and tax...Came out thinking: let em burn.
My homeless ex wanted RL for her bday last year. All of us and the families took her there for dinner. For me it was comparable to Walmart canned and frozen. She was happy enough with it but then she fixates on things.
I had a really bad dining experience the one single time I went to Red Lobster; happened at the same place probably (Toronto, the one in Bay Street?) hence why I want to share.
I came in to the restaurant and there was no one at the front desk, but the place seemed to be operating normally so I just went on to seat at the nearest table I found. Waiters just started ignoring me; at some point I realized this was
on purpose. Wtf.
Anyway, after like 20 mins. I stand up and ask one of the guys "what's going on?". He tells me that they knew I was there (!) but decided to ignore me because no one "seated me at that place". I tell him, well, do that now ... the guy just tells me they don't want to do that anymore because I should've done it when I entered the restaurant, then just like that asks me to leave the place (wtf x2).
I tell him that's ridiculous and he just says "I'm calling security" and walks away. After a few minutes, two huge guys come to my table and ask me what the problem is (they were actually quite polite). I tell them, I just walked into the restaurant, sat here, and just want to order something. They look at each other a bit confused (who knows what the waiter told them), ask me if that's it, "yes", ..., "ok, wait here a bit". After another like 10 mins., a different waiter comes up and starts catering to me.
Everything was normal afterwards, but that was super weird. Imagine getting beat up for walking into a restaurant and wanting to get some food.
Needless to say I never came back as the food turned out to be quite average, definitely not worth fighting for it, lol.
It sounds like you seated yourself at a section that wasn't open. "Sections" are often not obvious to customer, but they're really important to the wait staff. You don't grab tables outside your section; it can be seen as attempting to grab more tips. (A Red Lobster probably has tip pooling, but still, working outside your section is a no-no.) Eventually they got somebody to open your section.
Threatening to call security is also a no-no. He should have called the manager over. But if the host desk was unoccupied for more than a couple of minutes, it sounds like the manager was off fighting some kind of fire.
With the host desk unoccupied, the restaurant would prefer that you ask a passing waiter to find the host.
So I'm not surprised that wait staff were ignoring you. A better waiter would have figured out what was going on and signaled the host to come talk to you, and move you into an open section. But if you're waiting tables at Red Lobster, you're not being hired for your initiative.
Anyway... I hope that helps explain what happened. The upshot: don't seat yourself, but it sounds like they were being mismanaged anyway.
Been a while, but I served tables at RL for 4 years (in 2 different locations). Did not do tip sharing. However, we had designated sections and were prohibited from running more than 3 tables at a time; easily could be that the servers could have gotten in trouble for taking this extra table.
Same location and I also had an amusing experience, I asked the lady who brought our drinks over if she had any idea if the Canadian locations would be ok, and she said she knew about as much as I do, and then out of nowhere randomly said "you look rich, you should buy us!" - my wife almost spat our her drink laughing at that.
I think depending on staffing levels a restaurant at certain times does not have the capacity to handle all of its tables and so some are considered inactive. If you sit at a table that is not active it would be treated as equivalent to not sitting at a table at all.
It seems like once the bouncer types got involved they thought the reason you were ignoring their system might be because you were crazy or high and they might have to kick you out. Once they determined you weren’t either of those they accommodated you.
Chain restaurants especially seem to be very process oriented and the staff would not be as good at improvising as those at a local place.
My thinking in these kinds of situations is "Seems like one more business that thinks they make too much money", with the obvious consequence of not coming back except under extreme duress (like, someone in the party really insists or they are the only place open.)
Is there no awareness in that industry - at any level - that some rules are an excellent way to lose business?
A local place has (well, had) an outstanding, unusual pizza. We were big fans and went often. Soon they started ignoring the ingredient ratio in their own recipe, then started ignoring the (paying) "extra X" options in the order. We started pointing out the problem, then pointing out the problem at the time of the order, then making sure the staff knew what it was we wanted when we ordered... then obviously gave up. Some places just aren't cut out for staying in business.
To be clear here, you were the one who broke the norms of the restaurant. If you had waited to be seated 99% chance of them treating you like you expect to be. As someone who worked in restaurants for years, you would not believe what front of house staff has to deal with from the general public. I find no fault with how they responded.
The parent does mention there was nobody at the front to greet customers. Then nobody who considered fixing the situation.
Do you feel the problem (sorry, "norm") contributed to improve or lower the bottom line of that business? Do you feel this improved or hurt the likelyhood these customers will come back? Do you feel they were the only ones to have run into this problem?
Very tangential to the quality of chain restaurants that have decline in quality:
I'm from the US, but on the Canadian border, and Timmy's was the dominant coffee shop growing up. Even if you didn't drink coffee, that was the hang out.
We had a Dunkin that was probably less than 100 meters away from it that had a fire and never reopened. I definitely think it was a ploy for insurance money because they never had _any_ business. Tim Horton's dominated.
Then something happened around 2017 and their coffee became awful (it was never incredible, but it got much worse). Then their prices began to rise significantly. Whenever I go home, I get a cup of Timmy's coffee, but it's never good.
Turns out having nostalgia for a large food company doesn't play well in the long run. I'm sure the same applies to Red Lobster, but those kinds of places become part of your memories growing up and you want them to do well, maybe as a way of preserving those memories. Probably half of my friends and I had their first dates at Tim Horton's growing up. As much as I wish I didn't feel the need to drink their swill a few times a year, there's something that still draws me.
> Then something happened around 2017 and their coffee became awful (it was never incredible, but it got much worse)
Tim Hortons got acquired by Burger King (Restaurant Brands International / QSR) in December 2014, and the quality started to decline over the next year or two
Ah I didn't even consider the time correlation there. Makes sense. I guess I shouldn't be surprised that the same company that operates Burger King (and their god awful Seattle's Best coffee) would also decrease the quality of another food business.
But, it's like the 'default' addiction for Canadians and crappy coffee (especially after they switched their coffee supplier to a much worse grade).
Before that, it was removing their in-house bakeries and supplying flash-frozen donut offerings. (And then after shifting the "overton window" for a couple years - reducing sizes, but keeping prices the same - they sold that as "healthier")
They moved their yearly promotional contest to an "app-only" mechanism - and have had major errors in notifying winners for 2-years in a row. (This year, my wife was notified that she won a $70,000+ boat+trailer... well, apparently so did a quarter-million other Canadians...)
And then there is the ever shifting introduction of nightmare food offerings - they keep shuffling the chairs around like something is going to be a big "hit".
The latest is crappy "cardboard flatbread pizza" - and they seemed to have removed the simple "grilled cheese" to accommodate that.
Their franchise owners blatantly abused the TFW program for obtaining minimum wage workers - and now they are abusing the student visa changes, because the TFW program was tightened.
They need to go. (The conglomerate who owns them, not the franchises - or workers)
Did you read the article? In there you will find the explanation of why you had a costly low-quality experience. Maybe this will clarify who the "'em" is.
LJS was always an extravagant treat when I was a kid as it was seemingly more expensive than McDonald's or Taco Bell, and further away from where we lived.
When I started making my own money, it was one of my regular indulgences.
As an adult, I rarely ever see them anymore. And when I do go (it's been years), I'm always left feeling sick to my stomach, and yet still hungry. The portions sizes have shrunk considerably, even more shrinkflation. The greasiness, while expected with that kind of food, it so much worse. The fries are soggy, and you hardly ever get any crunchies anymore!
I'd like to see business schools codify "brand value extraction" or "enshittification" as explicitly unethical. Any activity that degrades a brand for short-term cashflow--and is reasonably know to decrease future business--is necessarily fraudulent.
If that is codified and taught, then journalists can point to that in all cases (of which we are overrun). It's pathetic.
In this context (the idea of making this unethical), a brand is built on investor money (not profits) and then later profits are achieved by cashing out the brand value.
But I'm guessing you knew that and disagree. Care to be more forthright?
> brand is built on investor money (not profits) and then later profits are achieved by cashing out the brand value.
Well for one, every new business is initially built on investor money, not profits, and "cashing out" is in the eye of the beholder, so I'm not sure how you're going to get everyone to agree on where the line is.
Furthermore, I think cory (and many of the folks here who have fallen in love with the term) misunderstands why platforms decay. Facebook doesn't suck because it is trying to please business customers at the expense of its users. Facebook sucks because it is attempting to please 2B users all at once. Every new little feature or notification or ranking change is loved by millions of people and hated by millions more (and merely tolerated by the vast majority). If the former is greater than the latter, it gets shipped to production. Rinse and repeat for 10 years across a myriad of teams, and you get a muddled, confusing mess that has a wider audience but much worse experience for most. That is the root cause of the decay.
tl;dr summary in 3 points:
1) Heavy debt from private equity deals and increased lease costs made Red Lobster financially vulnerable. 2) Customers drifted away to other dining options, and frequent leadership changes hindered a stable turnaround plan. 3) The Endless Shrimp promotion, while a poor decision, underscored the company's larger management issues.
It's unclear to me how much is private equity "ruining" the business and how much is making it visible. Here in Portland a private equity firm bought a bunch of local restaurants and mini chains during the pandemic. Now they struggle paying workers and rent and are closing a lot of these businesses. My suspicion is that they bought these businesses when they were distressed and otherwise wouldn't have survived at all. Now the pandemic recovery here has been famously bad and these businesses aren't recovering. I suspect the play here was to buy for cheap, help them through the pandemic and have a bunch of guys businesses. Honestly everyone would IMO have been a winner. Employees, customers, investors and even the founders who lost their business but at least got done money for it and see it continue. I don't think we can blame this particular private equity firm in this situation. As a customer the transition was not noticeable.
How many private equity acquisitions are like this but circumstances are less obvious and the measurers to rescue need to be more involved than just waiting for a pandemic to end? I genuinely don't know. But I suspect that it's very easy, looking in from the outside as a customer, to come to the conclusion that the business went bad when private equity came in when the business was already struggling but prior leadership was avoiding dramatic changes.
I never eat the stuff including lobster (non allergic) but one time I was relocated to Germany to help ship a new software release (English technical documentation) and was invited to a meal with my colleagues and his family.
Out comes a big bowl of shrimp for everybody with the skins and feet and antlers on - think we had a language misunderstanding.
Not wanting to offend and send it back - did not even know how to disassemble it - ate a few and back at the hotel you know what happened :).
Sorry, but no. I've thought that shrimp and lobsters were simply ocean bugs since I was a child in the 80s. It isn't quite accurate in science terms, but still holds out as a thing in my brain. Even if I happen to eat them (Not disgusting, not delicious either)
I'll also mention that folks allergic to shellfish also have to be careful with crickets and other land insects. They have their similarities.
Why is this profitable?
If the land is worth $1.5 billion, it should have cost PE more than $1.5 billion to buy the company. Then there would be no way to make a profit by selling the land, paying yourself, and letting the company go belly-up.
Why does PE keep doing this? Presumably because it works? But why does it work? Are the sellers less sophisticated at asset valuation than the buyers, and frequently lowball themselves? Or maybe owners/stockholders are sometimes just tired of holding this asset, want cash to reinvest somewhere else, and are willing to cash out at a discount?