Yum! Brands just made its boldest strategic move in years: saying goodbye to one of the most recognizable names in fast food.
The Louisville-based restaurant giant announced on June 16 that it has agreed to sell Pizza Hut for a combined $2.7 billion.
The deal splits the business into two, with different buyers taking ownership of different parts of the world.
It’s a major shift for a company that has spent decades building Pizza Hut into a global icon. And for investors, it signals a clear new direction.
Why Yum! Brands decided to let Pizza Hut go
Pizza Hut wasn’t a struggling brand. It still generated meaningful revenue, particularly in international markets. But inside Yum! Brands (YUM), it was increasingly the odd one out.
The company launched a formal strategic review of Pizza Hut in November 2025. After months of evaluating options, Yum!’s leadership team and board concluded that a sale was the cleanest path to maximizing value for Yum! shareholders and for Pizza Hut itself.
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The logic is straightforward.
- KFC and Taco Bell are growing fast.
- KFC posted 6% system sales growth in the first quarter of 2026.
- Taco Bell U.S. delivered 8% same-store sales growth in the same period, marking its eighth consecutive quarter of outperformance over the broader quick-service restaurant (QSR) industry.
- Pizza Hut, by contrast, has faced tougher headwinds in many of its core markets.
- Selling the brand lets Yum! channel its resources, technology, and management attention where the growth story is strongest.
In a company statement, Yum! CEO Chris Turner stated:
“These transactions enable Yum! to be a more focused company that continues to leverage scale, technology and talent to accelerate our raising the B.A.R. priorities.”
Here’s how the $2.7 billion Pizza Hut deal breaks down
The sale is structured as two separate transactions.
- LongRange Capital, a private equity firm, will acquire Pizza Hut’s operations outside of mainland China for approximately $1.5 billion.
- Yum! also has the opportunity to collect an additional $75 million earn-out by 2030, tied to performance milestones.
- Yum China Holdings will separately acquire Pizza Hut’s mainland China business for approximately $1.2 billion.
Yum China already operates KFC in China, making it a natural home for the Pizza Hut China portfolio.
After taxes, closing adjustments, and transaction fees, Yum! expects to pocket roughly $2.3 billion in net proceeds, excluding the earn-out.
The company also expects to incur around $85 million in one-time separation costs before the year is out.
Both deals have been unanimously approved by Yum!’s board of directors. Barclays and Goldman Sachs are serving as financial advisers to Yum! on the transactions, according to a company statement.
Both transactions are expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, pending regulatory approvals.
Yum! Brands has offloaded its entire stake in Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion
What Yum! plans to do with the cash
Alongside approving the sale, Yum!’s board authorized an incremental $4 billion stock buyback program.
That’s a sizable commitment and a direct signal that the company plans to return a significant chunk of the proceeds to investors.
Yum! generates roughly $1.8 billion in operating cash flow annually, excluding Pizza Hut. When the proceeds from this deal are added to that baseline, the company will have substantial capital to deploy.
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KFC CEO Scott Mezvinsky, speaking at the NYSE European Investor Conference in London on June 16, noted the sale doesn’t change day-to-day operations at KFC. But it does free up bandwidth at the top.
“Chris has made clear that Sean and I will be 100% focused on our brands,” Mezvinsky said, referring to himself and Taco Bell CEO Sean Tresvant, according to a company transcript from the event.
KFC is currently in the midst of a significant growth push, expanding its Kwench beverage platform, rolling out new loyalty programs across 20 markets, and modernizing its brand identity globally.
Taco Bell International is accelerating too, with same-store sales up 23% on a two-year stacked basis in the U.K. and 45% in India as of the first quarter of 2026.
What’s next for Pizza Hut and for Yum!
Pizza Hut remains one of the largest pizza chains in the world by unit count and has real strengths in markets like the Middle East, China, and Latin America, where it posted 11% and 8% system sales growth, respectively, in the first quarter of 2026.
Under LongRange Capital, Pizza Hut Ex-China will continue to use Yum!’s proprietary Byte technology platform, at least during a transition period.
Yum! will also provide certain corporate services under a transition services agreement.
For Yum!, the cleaner portfolio means the company can fully commit to what Turner has called its “Raise the Bar” strategy, focused on battling for the future consumer, accelerating restaurant unit economics, and unlocking the full potential of its Byte digital platform.
Management will provide a more detailed financial update, including any changes to its 2026 outlook, when it reports second-quarter earnings on July 30.
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