DayofPal– Yum! Brands, the U.S.-based parent company of KFC and Pizza Hut, has pulled the plug on its franchise agreement with Turkish operator İş Gıda, leading to the sudden closure of 537 restaurant locations across the country.
The move has plunged İş Gıda into bankruptcy, with debts exceeding 7.7 billion Turkish lira (approximately $214 million).
Yum! Brands officially cited “failure to meet operational and quality standards” as the reason for severing ties, but the timing of the closures has fueled speculation about the impact of the ongoing Gaza-related boycott in Turkey.
KFC’s sales in the country reportedly plummeted by 40% in recent months, exacerbating İş Gıda’s already precarious financial situation.
İş Gıda had aggressively expanded its footprint in Turkey after securing the KFC and Pizza Hut franchise rights in 2020. Within just a few years, the company more than doubled KFC’s locations from 125 to 283 and expanded Pizza Hut’s outlets from 45 to 254.
This rapid growth earned it Yum! Brands’ “Best Franchise Partner of 2023” award. However, behind the success lay a risky financial strategy heavily reliant on debt. Rising interest rates and liquidity shortages eventually pushed İş Gıda into a crisis it could not escape.
Adding to its burden, İş Gıda had diversified its investments beyond fast food, venturing into snack production, automotive parts, and media. These ventures, coupled with declining sales, accelerated its financial downfall. A Turkish court has granted the company three months to restructure under legal oversight.
The collapse of İş Gıda is the latest and most high-profile casualty of Turkey’s growing boycott of Israeli-linked businesses. In response to Israel’s genocide in Gaza, Turkish consumers have intensified their rejection of multinational brands, forcing companies to reassess their operations.
The Turkish government and private sector have taken concrete actions to reinforce the boycott. Turkish Railways and Turkish Airlines have removed Israeli-linked products from their services, while 45 municipalities governed by the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) have banned the sale of Israeli goods. The Turkish parliament has also eliminated Israeli products from its facilities.
On May 2, 2024, the Ministry of Trade took the strongest action yet, announcing a full halt on trade with Israel. Officials declared that the ban would remain in place until unrestricted humanitarian aid could reach Gaza. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has further bolstered Turkey’s stance by boycotting the World Economic Forum in Davos over its support for Israel.
The boycott’s impact extends far beyond fast food. Zorlu Energy Group, Turkey’s largest investor in Israel, recently divested from three Israeli companies, terminating $1 billion in investments due to public pressure.
The food and beverage sector has also felt the sting, with Israeli-linked soft drink sales plummeting by 50%, forcing companies to slash prices in a desperate bid to recover lost revenue.
As Turkey’s stance on Israel hardens and consumer sentiment shifts, multinational brands face increasing uncertainty. Whether other global franchises will suffer a similar fate remains to be seen, but the closure of KFC and Pizza Hut’s Turkish locations marks a significant moment in the country’s economic and political landscape.
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