Sandwich chain Subway is exploring a sale of its business, a source told Reuters on Wednesday.
The sale could value the sandwich chain at more than $10 billion, the Wall Street Journal first reported.
The process, which is at an early stage, is expected to attract potential corporate buyers and private-equity firms, the report said, adding that it is possible there won't be a sale or other deal.
"As a privately held company, we don't comment on ownership structure and business plans," a company spokesperson told Reuters in an emailed statement.
Subway, one of the world's largest quick-service restaurant brands, has more than 37,000 restaurants in over 100 countries. The Milford, Conn.-based company, known for its foot-long sandwiches, has been owned by its two founding families for more than five decades.
In 2021, media reports said Subway was tidying itself up for a sale, but the restaurant chain had denied it.


Abu Dhabi Crown Prince arrives in India for AI Impact Summit
India AI summit stumbles as Bill Gates pulls out, chaos mounts
UAE President appoints new Federal Tax Authority chief
Uber expands into 7 new European markets in food-delivery push, FT reports
