Yum! Brands have entered into definitive agreements to sell Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion in aggregates, offloading the long underperforming chain in a two-part deal that hands its international business to private equity and its mainland China operations to a former corporate sibling. Announced on June 16, 2026, the transaction sees LongRange Capital acquire Pizza Hut excluding mainland China for $1.5 billion, while Yum China Holdings takes Pizza Hut China for $1.2 billion in a separate agreement.
The sale completes a strategic review that Yum! began in November 2025, and which its leadership team and board concluded offered the strongest path to maximize shareholder value. Across the two transactions, Yum! expects to receive approximately $2.3 billion in net proceeds after taxes, closing adjustments and transaction contingent fees, excluding an earn-out of up to $75 million that LongRange could owe by 2030. The company expects to incur around $85 million in one time separation expenses through the remainder of 2026, and will continue to provide Byte by Yum!, its proprietary technology platform, to the ex-China business under a transition services agreement. Yum! chief executive Chris Turner framed the new ownership as positioning Pizza Hut for future growth under operators with depth restaurant industry expertise.
The rationale is written plainly in the numbers behind the brand. Pizza Hut has lagged its peers for years, with US same-store sales down 4% in the first quarter of 2026 and systemwide sales off 6%, following a 5% comparable sales decline across fiscal 2025. By separating the asset rather than persisting with an in-house turnaround, Yum! converts a persistent drag into capital, alongside a board-approved incremental $4 billion share repurchase authorization that signals where the proceeds and management focus will now go.
The structure is the more instructive part for business leaders. Rather than forcing a single buyer or a single model onto a business with very different dynamics across markets, Yum! has tailored ownership to geography — private equity for the international operations, where LongRange’s operationally oriented approach suits a turnaround, and Yum China for the mainland, where a locally listed operator already understands the market. Chief executive managing sprawling multi-brand or multi-region portfolios will recognize the discipline: the question is not only whether to divest an underperformer, but whether different parts of it are worth more under different owners.
The bigger picture is that strategic reviews are increasingly ending in separation rather than reinvention, particularly where a brand’s structure decline outpaces the parent’s appetite to find a fix. Private equity remains a ready buyer for exactly these assets, willing to take on operational risk that public market investors penalise. Executive teams sitting on a chronic underperformer should read the Pizza Hut outcome as a template for how to exit cleanly while retaining upside — through earn-outs, transition services and continued technology supply — rather than holding a declining business through yet another turnaround cycle. With both deals expected to close in the third quarter of 2026 subject to regulatory approval, the market’s verdict on Yum!’s more focused portfolio will become clear quickly.


