Business

McDonald’s sees higher profits as fast-food giant lifts prices carefully

This comes as restaurant chains are facing elevated costs for paper, food and labour

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 28 Jan 2022 1:00PM

McDonald’s sees higher profits as fast-food giant lifts prices carefully
McDonald’s has cited a successful menu and marketing blitz around the McRib and Crispy Chicken Sandwich in the US, as well as a broadly improving Covid-19 situation in some leading markets. – Pixabay pic, January 28, 2022

NEW YORK – Price increases helped McDonald’s report higher profits Thursday as the fast-food giant navigates an inflationary environment that it argues advantages the Big Mac maker over its competitors.

Facing elevated costs for paper, food and labour, the restaurant chain lifted prices “a little over 6%” in the United States last year without seeing consumer pushback, said CFO Kevin Ozan.

We “generally try and take small increments of pricing at various times versus take a lot at one time,” Ozan said on a conference call with analysts, adding that the fast-food giant continues to receive good scores on value from surveys of customers.

McDonald’s also cited a successful menu and marketing blitz around the McRib and Crispy Chicken Sandwich in the US, as well as a broadly improving Covid-19 situation in some leading markets.

But at a time when consumer inflation is a concern, McDonald’s executives argued that the chain is well positioned.

“As we go into 2022, we are in a share-taking mentality,” said CEO Chris Kempczinski, who added that the company has had “several years” of outperforming the industry by key sales benchmarks.

Tight labour market

Net profit in the fourth quarter was US$1.6 billion (RM6.72 billion), up 19% from the year-ago period.

The company reported comparable sales growth across its divisions, with the US jumping 7.5% and its two international divisions posting increases of around twice that level.

But ongoing Covid-19 restrictions in Australia resulted in “relatively flat” comparable sales, while China’s results were dented by a resurgence of the virus, the company said.

Markets such as France and Germany that were strong early in the quarter had “stops and starts” near the end of the period as the Omicron variant of Covid-19 spread, Ozan said. 

McDonald’s also contended with a drag from higher costs, which rose 14% to US$3.6 billion, a bit bigger than the 13% rise in revenues to US$6 billion.

Profits per-share lagged analyst expectations, pressuring the company’s stock. 

Ozan said costs for food and paper were up about 4% in the US last year and 3% in international markets. 

In both cases, McDonald’s expects “about double” that rate of inflation in 2022, with more of it occurring earlier in the year, Ozan said.

The chain also said the labour market remains tight. Last May, McDonald’s announced a 10% wage hike for thousands of US hourly workers. 

Company officials have not planned a similar step at this point, but said they would ensure pay is competitive in the industry in 2022.

Ozan said even with its higher menu prices, McDonald’s food compares well to other options in an item-by-item comparison of value.

“What helps us from a research standpoint is the way consumers view value and the perspective of value,” Ozan said. “And I think in 2022, that will continue to be really important as inflation is hitting customers potentially harder than it has in a long time.”

Shares slipped 0.2% to US$249.30 in afternoon trading. – AFP, January 28, 2022

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