Just caught something interesting happening in the industrial sector. Middleby is basically taking apart its business through a series of strategic moves, and there's actually a solid thesis behind it.



Here's what's going down. The company announced it's spinning off its food processing division, and already sold off 51% of its residential kitchen segment to 26North Partners for $540 million. What's left standing is a focused commercial foodservice equipment business pulling in around $2.4 billion annually. Sounds like a typical corporate restructuring, but the math underneath is worth paying attention to.

Middleby built itself through acquisitions, not organic growth. The playbook was straightforward: grab smaller equipment companies at 7-10x EBITDA, fold them in, and expand margins by roughly 15 percentage points. That's how brands like TurboChef and Taylor became household names in chains like McDonald's and Starbucks. Same story with food processing—grew from basically nothing in 2005 to over $800 million in revenue, supplying industrial production lines to players like Tyson Foods.

The spinning off of these segments makes sense when you think about valuations. Industrial machinery companies typically trade around 16x EBITDA. If you run the numbers conservatively at 14x on the combined EBITDA of $809 million, you're looking at roughly $11.5 billion in enterprise value. Subtract the net debt, and equity value sits around $9.6 billion against the current market cap of $8.5 billion. That's the gap management is trying to close.

The real play here is that a standalone food processing company gets its own shot at a premium multiple as an acquisition vehicle. With its own stock and management, it becomes more attractive for roll-up strategies. But at under $1 billion in revenue, it'll need to prove itself first.

There's a catch though. Food processing margins have taken a hit lately—tariffs and soft international demand knocked around 440 basis points off adjusted EBITDA margins in fiscal 2025. So the valuation math assumes those margins normalize going forward. Management's betting they will, and they've already been buying back shares with the $540 million from the residential segment sale.

Commercial foodservice is the stable anchor here, with 27% EBITDA margins keeping things grounded. It'll probably carry most of the $1.9 billion net debt. The spinoff is targeted for Q2 2026, so we'll get more clarity once the Form 10 filing comes through and we see another quarter of results. That's when we'll really know if this breakup actually unlocks the value management claims it will.
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