Wendy's plans hundreds of store closures to boost profits | Fortune
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Wendy's plans hundreds of store closures to boost profits | Fortune
"Wendy's plans to close hundreds U.S. restaurants over the next few months in an effort to boost its profit. The Dublin, Ohio-based chain said during a conference call with investors Friday that it planned to begin closing restaurants in the fourth quarter of this year. The company said it expected a "mid-single-digit percentage" of its U.S. stores to be affected, but it didn't give any more details. Wendy's ended the third quarter with 6,011 U.S. restaurants."
"The new round of closures comes on top of the closure of 240 U.S. Wendy's locations in 2024. At the time, Wendy's said that many of the 55-year-old chain's restaurants are simply out of date. Ken Cook, Wendy's interim CEO, said Friday the company believes closing locations that are underperforming - whether it's from a financial or customer service perspective - will help improve traffic and profitability at its remaining U.S. restaurants."
"Cook became Wendy's CEO in July after the company's previous CEO, Kirk Tanner, left to become the president and CEO of Hershey Co. "When we look at the system today, we have some restaurants that do not elevate the brand and are a drag from a franchisee financial performance perspective. The goal is to address and fix those restaurants," Cook said during a conference call with investors. Cook said in some cases, Wendy's will make improvements to struggling stores, including adding technology or equipment."
Wendy's will begin closing U.S. restaurants in the fourth quarter, targeting a mid-single-digit percentage of outlets to improve profitability and operations. The chain had 6,011 U.S. restaurants at the end of the third quarter; a 5% reduction would equal about 300 closures. These closures follow 240 U.S. location closures earlier in 2024 as many restaurants were deemed out of date. Interim CEO Ken Cook said closures will focus on underperforming sites, with options to renovate, transfer ownership, or close. U.S. same-store sales fell 5% year-over-year in July–September amid inflation and changing consumer demand.
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