Falling costs may boost McDonald's, other restaurant profits in 2023
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[January 30, 2023] By
Hilary Russ
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With the cost of butter plunging nearly 16% in a
month and wholesale broiler chickens getting cheaper, some big
restaurant chains including McDonald's and Starbucks are likely to tell
investors that their restaurants will be more profitable this year.
When it reports fourth quarter earnings on Tuesday, McDonald's Corp is
expected to provide its 2023 outlook, which could be rosier because of
falling commodities costs, as well as China's easing lockdowns and
persistent demand for Big Macs and fries.
"There will be more focus on margins than usual this year, given the
hole many are digging out of and potentially a wide range of outcomes,"
Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a note on Friday.
In 2023, restaurants are expected to be more profitable - though not
back to pre-pandemic levels - at McDonald's Corp, Taco Bell parent Yum
Brands Inc, Burger King owner Restaurant Brands International Inc,
Domino's Pizza Inc, Starbucks Corp and Olive Garden parent Darden
Restaurants Inc, according to Wells Fargo research.
Projected margins are highest for Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc at 25.7% in
2023, well above its 20.5% in 2019, Wells Fargo said.
Chipotle's menu prices were up about 13% in the third quarter. Those
steep increases could drive restaurant margins 500 basis points higher
when the burrito chain reports fourth quarter earnings on Feb. 7,
according to BTIG analyst Peter Saleh.
"Some consumers are likely to reduce or eliminate their visits given the
above-average price hikes," Saleh wrote. But investors should tolerate a
slight drop off in transactions because margins will still be
"significantly higher."
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The McDonald's logo is seen outside the
fast-food chain McDonald's in New York, U.S., October 22, 2019.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/
Record inflation last year forced restaurants to hike prices
multiple times. Now, with costs falling, higher menu prices are
catching up.
An order of 20 bone-in wings at a Wingstop in Newark, New Jersey now
costs $28.69 - $10 more than in 2019.
Meanwhile, average wholesale prices for chicken wings in December
had fallen to 89 cents per pound after peaking at $3.25 in May 2021,
U.S. Department of Agriculture data showed.
Privately held A&W Restaurants projects its total cost of goods will
rise just 2.4% this year, versus about 20% in 2022, Chief Executive
Officer Kevin Bazner told Reuters.
"There's increased confidence in 2023, maybe the inputs come down
and consumer demand seems to be holding up," said Bank of America
analyst Sara Senatore.
Investors had been somewhat reluctant to think positive signs could
persist, but they increasingly think the Federal Reserve will soften
the blow of interest rate hikes on the economy, she said.
(Reporting by Hilary Russ in New York; Additional reporting by
Ananya Mariam Rajesh in Bengaluru; Editing by David Gregorio)
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