BrewDog co-founder James Watt launches bid to buy back beer firm
BrewDog co-founder James Watt has made a bid to buy back the craft beer firm just months after it was acquired out of administration by US company Tilray.
In a post on LinkedIn, Mr Watt revealed he had tabled an offer to buy BrewDog through his new beer firm Second Best, claiming that 43,000 so-called equity punk investors have joined forces for the bid.
The move follows New York-based Tilrayโs acquisition of BrewDog in March, which rescued the company out of administration, resulting in the closure of 36 bars in the UK, with close to 500 workers losing their jobs.
Mr Watt said: โIf we succeed, every registered punk gets their BrewDog equity back, for free.
โWeโd also restore the real living wage, bring back the teamโs equity, and put the community back at the heart of the business.โ
Around 20,000 people invested in BrewDogโs Equity For Punks, typically spending about ยฃ500 each on shares, which were then worth nothing when the firm collapsed into administration.

Mr Watt said on LinkedIn: โThe punks and the crew built this company and BrewDog deserves to belong to them once more.
โEquity Punks, you backed me once. This time, Iโm backing you.โ
Mr Watt co-founded craft beer giant BrewDog in Aberdeenshire in 2007 with the brand growing rapidly afterwards.
He stepped down as chief executive in 2024 to become its โcaptain and co-founderโ.
He has apologised to staff and investors for what he said were โmistakesโ made during his time at the helm.
He said in March he was โheartbrokenโ for those who had lost investments after the company was taken over by Tilray.
In a social media post at the time, he said: โI am heartbroken for all of the hard-working and passionate team members who have lost their jobs.

โI am heartbroken for all of our brilliant equity punks who did not get the return on their investment they wanted.โ
He continued: โI was 24, working part time on a fishing boat, and still living in my dadโs spare room when we started BrewDog. I had never run a business before, I had no idea what I was really doing and I just made it all up as I went along.
โWhen an underdog strategy works so well that people perceive you as the incumbent, that strategy breaks down, and I should have recognised that earlier.
โWith the benefit of hindsight there are also so many other things I would have done differently.
โAt times we expanded too fast, diversified too broadly and I feel that I did not respond to certain crises that we faced (and we faced many) in a way that was authentic to who we were.โ
