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Papa John’s reviews fresh $1.5 billion take-private bid from Irth Capital, WSJ reports

By Thomson Reuters Mar 11, 2026 | 12:55 PM

March 11 (Reuters) – Papa John’s International is reviewing a fresh bid from Irth Capital Management to take the U.S. pizza chain private, valuing it at about $1.5 ​billion, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, ‌citing people familiar with the matter.

Shares of Papa John’s were up 18% in afternoon trading following the news.

Irth has offered $47 per share for the company, the report said, representing a premium of about 44% ‌to ​the stock’s last close. Papa John’s ⁠has a market value of ⁠around $1.07 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Papa John’s and Irth did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

Apollo Global withdrew its offer to take the ​pizza chain private for $64 a share, Reuters had reported in November.

Following this development, activist investor Irenic Capital Management ⁠built a stake in Papa John’s, ⁠adding to the mounting speculation about the pizza ​chain’s future.

Apollo and Irth Capital Management submitted a joint offer ​for the company at just above $60 per share ‌earlier last year, before Apollo submitted a solo bid in early October, Reuters previously reported.

There is no certainty Papa John’s will accept Irth’s offer under review and another bidder ⁠could emerge, the WSJ report said, adding that the proposal includes backing from Brookfield Asset Management.

Irth, established in 2024 and backed by ⁠a member of ‌the Qatari royal family, is led by ⁠co-founders Sheikh Mohamed bin Abdulla Al-Thani and ​Matthew ‌Bradshaw.

A deal for Papa John’s would be ​among its ⁠first major transactions, the report said.

Papa John’s started in Jeffersonville, Indiana, in 1984 and went public in 1993. It has been attempting a turnaround strategy after years of battling weak demand under multiple CEOs.

(Reporting by Sanskriti Shekhar in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Shreya Biswas)