Panera buys into a second, higher-end concept

panera bread exterior

Panera Bread has purchased a majority interest in a five-unit breakfast-and-lunch chain in Boston called Tatte Bakery & Cafe, with plans to test the concept as a possible growth vehicle into residential urban and upscale suburban markets.

Panera has an option to expand its stake in Tatte beyond the 50.01 percent it quietly bought at the end of 2015, CEO Ron Shaich revealed to financial analysts yesterday.

Shaich described Tatte as an “urban craft bakery-cafe” serving “high-end customers.”

“Importantly, Tatte will continue to operate as an independent company with support from us as appropriate,” Shaich commented.

Tatte is not the first diversification for Panera. In its early days, the company bought the Paradise Bakery chain from the Charthouse restaurant group, and bought a stake in a small Southeastern bread company several years later.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

How Popeyes changed the chicken business

How did a once-struggling, regional bone-in chicken chain overtake KFC, the formerly dominant player in the U.S. market? With a fixation on sandwiches and many more new restaurants.

Financing

Get ready for a summertime value war

The Bottom Line: With more customers opting to eat at home, rather than at restaurants, more fast-food chains will start pushing value this summer.

Food

Inside Chili's quest to craft a value-priced burger that could take on McDonald's

Behind the Menu: How the casual-dining chain smashes expectations with a winning combination of familiarity and price with its new Big Smasher burger.

Trending

More from our partners