🍩 Krispy Kreme (DNUT): The 3G Mastermind, 7-Day Squeeze Trap, and the Great Post-IPO Cash Flow Resuscitation

Cinematic illustration of Krispy Kreme's turnaround story featuring glowing doughnuts, rising stock charts, insider buying activity, cash-flow recovery, and investors watching a potential comeback unfold.

Insider Buying Accelerates as Free Cash Flow Turns Positive and the Turnaround Gains Momentum 🍩🔥

How a 3G Capital Alumnus, a 7-Day Short-Squeeze Fuse, and a 66% CapEx Slash Are Fueling the Great Doughnut Turnaround

Krispy Kreme
NASDAQ: DNUT
$3.51
+0.24
(+7.34%)
As of Jun-05-2026 | 4:00:00 PM ET


🎯  FunFund Index™ : 7.95 / 10 🎯

Tooltip: A classic high-risk, high-reward turnaround. Debt remains elevated and profitability remains a work in progress, but insiders are buying aggressively, free cash flow has finally turned positive, and management appears to be executing the right playbook. Early innings, but increasingly interesting.


✅ FUNanc1al Atomic Statements

Atomic Statement #1

"The best turnarounds don't start with revenue growth. They start with cash flow."

Atomic Statement #2

"When insiders buy during a crisis, they're not betting on headlines. They're betting on the next chapter."

Atomic Statement #3

"A great franchise sells doughnuts. A great business sells doughnuts without owning every kitchen."


🍩 Welcome to the Doughnut Recovery Ward

Krispy Kreme doesn't need much introduction.

Founded in 1937, the company built one of the world's most recognizable food brands.

The glowing Hot Light.

The Original Glazed.

The ability to make grown adults drive across town because someone casually mentioned fresh doughnuts.

Unfortunately, public markets have been far less sweet.

Since reaching an all-time high of $21.69 shortly after its 2021 IPO, DNUT shares have collapsed roughly 83%.

Most investors stopped paying attention.

A few insiders started buying.

That's where things get interesting.


🧭 ZOOMING OUT

One insider purchase can be interesting. Hundreds start becoming a pattern. From insider buying and hedge fund favorites to compounders, turnarounds, growth stories, and hidden gems, Stocks FUN is our living collection of businesses that made us stop, think, and dig deeper.

👉 Explore Stocks FUN


🕵️ Trigger #1: Bernardo Hees Loads the Boat

When evaluating turnaround stories, few signals matter more than insider purchases.

Particularly when the buyer has serious credentials.

Bernardo Hees isn't simply another board member.

His résumé includes:

🍔 Former CEO of Burger King

🥫 Former CEO of Heinz

🧀 Former CEO of Kraft Heinz

📈 Former Partner at 3G Capital

🚗 Former Executive Chairman of Avis Budget

In short, cost discipline is practically embedded in the man's DNA.

Throughout May and June 2026, Hees executed a major accumulation campaign:

• May 26: Purchased 225,077 shares for approximately $769,000

• June 1: Purchased another 630,111 shares for approximately $2.1 million

Combined investment:

💰 Nearly $2.9 million

Current holdings:

🍩 More than 2.25 million shares

This isn't proof the stock will work.

But when a legendary turnaround operator buys aggressively below $4, investors should at least pay attention.


🏦 Trigger #2: The Float Is Tighter Than It Looks

Ownership structure adds another layer of intrigue.

Insider Ownership

👔 50.36%

Institutional Ownership

🐋 42.47%

Institutional Ownership of Float

🔒 85.57%

Major holders include:

• BNP Paribas

• HSBC

• Santander

• BlackRock

• Vanguard

• Dimensional

Meanwhile...

Short Interest

🚨 20.32%

Shares Short

17.5 million

Days To Cover

⏳ 7.2 Days

That's unusually high.

To be clear:

This is not exactly a meme stock.

But the setup contains legitimate squeeze potential if turnaround progress accelerates.

The squeeze is not the thesis.

The turnaround is the thesis.

The squeeze is simply the accelerant.

For Krispy Kreme (DNUT)'s Institutional Ownership breakdown, 🔍 see here


📊 Trigger #3: Valuation Looks Surprisingly Cheap

One challenge:

DNUT remains unprofitable.

No earnings means no meaningful P/E ratio.

That's a downer.

However, other valuation metrics remain compelling:

Price-to-Sales

0.37x

Price-to-Book

0.89x

Enterprise Value / Revenue

1.16x

Distance From ATH

-83.4%

At these levels, the market is pricing in substantial pessimism.

That's exactly where turnarounds become interesting.


📈 Trigger #4: The Turnaround Is Starting to Show

This is where the story becomes far more compelling.

Revenue declined.

Many investors stop reading right there.

That would be a mistake.

Turnarounds rarely look pretty during the early stages.

Krispy Kreme deliberately:

✅ Closed underperforming locations

✅ Refranchised operations

✅ Outsourced logistics

✅ Reduced CapEx

✅ Focused on margins

✅ Improved free cash flow

Sometimes less revenue can produce a much healthier business.


First Quarter 2026 Highlights

Revenue

$367 million

(-2.2%)

Adjusted EBITDA

$33.1 million

(+38%)

EBITDA Margin

9.0%

(+260 bps)

Operating Cash Flow

$20.2 million

(+$41 million)

Free Cash Flow

+$11.4 million

(+$58.1 million)

The most important figure?

Free cash flow.

For the first time since returning to public markets, Krispy Kreme generated positive free cash flow.

That's a major milestone.

 👉 Want the full picture? Dive into Krispy Kreme (DNUT)'s financials here.


🔧 The Four-Pillar Turnaround Plan

Management announced its turnaround plan in August 2025.

Execution so far looks encouraging.

1. Refranchising

Japan operations refranchised.

Western U.S. JV refranchised.

More franchise royalties.

Less capital intensity.

2. Capital-Light Expansion

CapEx slashed:

✂️ -66%

New shop growth increasingly comes through franchise partners.

3. Margin Expansion

U.S. logistics outsourcing completed.

Adjusted EBITDA margin improved significantly.

4. Sustainable Growth

276 new U.S. access points added.

Revenue per door increased:

📈 +16.7%

The company appears increasingly focused on profitable growth rather than growth for growth's sake.


💰 The Debt Situation

Let's address the elephant in the doughnut shop.

Debt remains high.

Net leverage:

⚠️ 5.5x

Not ideal.

However:

• Liquidity exceeds $300 million

• Net leverage fell by 1.2x in a single quarter

• Management remains focused on deleveraging

In other words:

The balance sheet isn't fixed.

But it is moving in the right direction.


🐂 The Bull Case

Investors interested in DNUT generally point to:

✅ Aggressive insider buying

✅ Positive free cash flow

✅ 66% CapEx reduction

✅ Refranchising strategy

✅ Margin expansion

✅ Strong brand recognition

✅ 20% short interest

✅ Trading 83% below ATH

✅ Cheap valuation metrics

If the turnaround succeeds, substantial upside could follow.


🐻 The Bear Case

Bears still have legitimate concerns.

⚠️ The company remains unprofitable

⚠️ Debt remains elevated

⚠️ Consumer spending remains uncertain

⚠️ Turnarounds frequently fail

⚠️ Analyst sentiment remains mixed

⚠️ Doughnuts, while delicious, are not recession-proof

This remains a speculative investment.

Position sizing matters.

💡💡💡 Curious about another deep oil exploration play? (joke)
Check our takes on UnitedHealth Group or even Oscar Health.


🎭 A Dash of Glazed Humor

Joke #1

Attempting to short a consumer brand just as free cash flow swings positive by $58 million while a legendary turnaround executive buys millions of dollars worth of stock feels... ambitious.

Joke #2

DNUT may make an investor's life batter.

Invest at your own risks.

Joke #3

If Krispy Kreme keeps cutting costs this aggressively, the doughnuts may eventually become lighter than the balance sheet.


🎯 The FUNanc1al Verdict

Krispy Kreme remains a classic turnaround story.

Not fixed.

Not proven.

Not risk-free.

But increasingly plausible.

The company is:

🍩 Generating positive free cash flow

🍩 Reducing leverage

🍩 Expanding margins

🍩 Refranchising intelligently

🍩 Cutting capital intensity

🍩 Attracting insider capital

Could it fail?

Absolutely.

Could it double if execution continues?

Absolutely.

That's what makes turnarounds fascinating.

And why Bernardo Hees may be buying.


📌 Signal Extract

"The best turnarounds don't start with revenue growth. They start with cash flow."


🎯 High-Conviction Takeaway

"When insiders buy during a crisis, they're not betting on headlines. They're betting on the next chapter."


⚡ Quick Take / TL;DR

✅ Bernardo Hees invested nearly $2.9 million of personal capital.

✅ Free cash flow turned positive.

✅ Adjusted EBITDA increased 38%.

✅ CapEx fell 66%.

✅ Debt remains high but is improving.

✅ Short interest exceeds 20%.

✅ Shares trade 83% below ATH.

✅ High-risk, high-reward turnaround.


❓ FAQ

Why are investors interested in DNUT?

Primarily because of the turnaround, insider buying, positive free cash flow, and low valuation.

Why is Bernardo Hees important?

He is a former 3G Capital partner and former CEO of Burger King, Heinz, and Kraft Heinz. His background is deeply rooted in operational turnarounds.

Is DNUT profitable?

Not yet. However, profitability metrics are improving and free cash flow recently turned positive.

What is the biggest risk?

Debt and execution risk. Turnarounds often look promising before they ultimately fail.

What is the bull case?

Successful deleveraging, margin expansion, franchise growth, and eventual earnings recovery.


🌎 Food for Thought: The Cross-Hub Connection

Turnaround investing isn't really about doughnuts.

Or burgers.

Or airlines.

It's about human behavior.

Markets often extrapolate recent pain far into the future.

Great turnarounds occur when management quietly improves the business while investors remain focused on yesterday's headlines.

Sometimes the sweetest opportunities emerge precisely when the market believes there's nothing left worth tasting.


👤 About the Author

Frédéric Marsanne is the founder of FUNanc1al — part market analyst, part storyteller, part accidental comedian. A longtime investor, entrepreneur, and venture-builder across tech, biotech, and fintech, he now blends sharp insights with a twist of humor to help readers laugh, learn, live better lives, and invest a little wiser.

When not decoding insider buys or poking fun at earnings calls, he's building Cl1Q, writing fiction, painting, or discovering new passions to FUNalize.


🧾⚠️📢 Fun(anc1al) but Serious Disclaimer: 🧾⚠️📢

This article is provided solely for informational and entertainment purposes and should not be construed as investment advice, financial advice, tax advice, legal advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. 

Investing involves risk, including loss of principal. Market conditions, company fundamentals, and management execution can change rapidly. Always do your own research, mind dilution and debt, and know your risk tolerance.

Also, read the labels (and earnings reports), never invest based solely on one article or confuse “interesting” with “safe,” and consult qualified financial professionals where appropriate. 

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Resist FOMO and never invest money you can’t afford to lose or mistake a charismatic CEO for a guarantee. 

We analyze.
We laugh.
We invest (carefully).

👉 We’re FUNanc1al — not advisors. 😄📉📈

The author may hold positions in securities mentioned.

Invest wisely, and at your own risks.🎢📉
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