McDonald's Corporation (NYSE: MCD)Share Price and News

McDonald's Corporation (NYSE MCD)

About McDonald's (NYSE:MCD)

Founded in 1940, McDonald’s Corporation has grown into one of the world's most recognisable brands, operating over 43,000 restaurants across more than 100 countries as of 2025. The company’s menu features iconic items such as the Big Mac, McNuggets, and McCafé beverages.

McDonald’s operates primarily through a franchise model, with approximately 93% of its restaurants franchised, allowing for scalable growth and local market adaptability. The company's global presence and consistent brand experience have solidified its position as a leader in the quick-service restaurant sector.

It has 46,000 restaurants worldwide that employ ~2m people as employees or franchisees and serve 65m people each day. Australia is the fourth largest market after the US, UK and France by revenue. It accounts for roughly a thousand stores and just over 100,000 employees – it is the largest youth employer in the country.

Its business model is unique, requiring franchisees to pay not just royalties on sales but rent for running ‘their’ business on a property – not to mention a whopping US$1.5m upfront charge that must be financed with the franchisees’ own money (yes, their own – not borrowed funds).

McDonalds tends to buy cheap land that will inevitably grow over a 20-year period during which their franchisees are contracted with them. And it sets up its stores with a plain, simple and consistent layout meaning minimal upfront costs for them.

 

McDonald's Company History

McDonald’s began as a single restaurant in San Bernardino, California, opened by brothers Richard and Maurice McDonald. In 1955, Ray Kroc (who was a milkshake machine salesman by trade) joined the company as a franchise agent and later purchased the business, leading to rapid expansion.The company went public in 1965 and those who bought 100 shares at its 1965 IPO for US$2,250 would have over US$8m today after splits and stock dividends.

McDonalds has stood apart in the sector amongst customers for its innovations such as the Big Mac (developed by one individual owner in Pittsburgh in the late 1960s), the McMuffin and its various marketing campaigns. In other respects, it has also taken others' ideas and done them better such as drive-through. Its famous golden arches were introduced in the 1970s and the 'I'm lovin' it' was first used in 2003.

The modern era of McDonald's has been defined by a sharper strategic focus. Current CEO Chris Kempczinski was hired in late 2019 and Its "Accelerating the Arches" strategy was launched in 2020. This strategy centred the business on its core menu icons, value, digital engagement, and delivery. The subsequent investment in technology — self-service kiosks, app-based ordering, a loyalty programme that now counts nearly 210 million active users across 70 markets — has transformed a brand once synonymous with analogue convenience into a genuinely digital-first consumer business.

Future Outlook of McDonald's Corporation (NYSE: MCD)

McDonald's closed out 2025 on a strong note, ending a year that had begun under pressure from value-conscious consumers and the lingering effects of a damaging E. coli outbreak in late 2024. Full-year consolidated revenues rose 4% to $26.9bn, with operating income up 6% to $12.4bn and diluted earnings per share increasing 5% to $11.95, or $12.20 on an adjusted basis excluding restructuring charges. Global comparable sales grew 3.1% for the year, while systemwide sales — which capture total sales across franchised and company-operated locations — reached $139.4bn, up 7%.

The fourth quarter provided the most encouraging reading. Global comparable sales rose 5.7% in Q4, with US same-store sales up a particularly strong 6.8%, driven by positive growth in both customer counts and average spend — a combination that suggests the company's value strategy is genuinely winning back traffic rather than simply discounting its way to higher receipts. Quarterly revenue of $7.01bn beat analyst expectations of $6.81 billion, while adjusted EPS of $3.12 exceeded the consensus forecast of $3.03.

On the cash generation front, the numbers were equally solid. Operating cash flow reached $10.6 billion for the year, free cash flow came in at $7.2 billion, and the company returned $7.1 billion to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks. The quarterly dividend was raised 5% to $1.86 per share, equivalent to an annual dividend of $7.44.

Looking into 2026, management's guidance is measured but confident. McDonald's expects operating margins in the mid-to-high 40% range, systemwide sales growth of 2.5% from unit expansion alone, and capital expenditure of between $3.7bn and $3.9bn.

The company plans to open approximately 2,600 new restaurants globally during the year, with over 1,000 of those in China. Management did caution that Q1 2026 same-store sales growth would likely moderate from Q4's elevated levels, citing the impact of winter storms and temporary restaurant closures in January as near-term headwinds.

Is McDonald's a Good Stock to Buy?

McDonald's occupies a rare position in global equities: a business of genuine scale, with predictable cash flows, a durable brand, and a track record of returning capital to shareholders that spans decades. For investors seeking stability, income, and resilience to economic cycles, it is difficult to find a more reliable name in the consumer sector.

The franchise model is the heart of the investment case. With approximately 95% of its restaurants operated by independent franchisees, McDonald's collects royalties and rent regardless of how individual locations perform. This insulates the company from the day-to-day volatility of restaurant economics and produces a stream of cash flows that is remarkably consistent. Free cash flow for 2025 reached $7.2 billion, and the company returned $7.1 billion to shareholders through dividends and buybacks — a near-complete pass-through of earnings to investors that few businesses of any kind can match.

The digital transformation underway also deserves attention. A loyalty programme with 210 million active users is an extraordinary asset, providing data on customer behaviour and a direct channel for personalised promotions that traditional fast food models could never have imagined. This is translating into measurable improvements in visit frequency and spend.

The risks, however, are real. McDonald's carries significant debt on its balance sheet — a consequence of years of shareholder-friendly financial engineering — which leaves it more exposed than peers in a rising interest rate environment. Consumer spending pressure among lower-income households is a structural challenge; McDonald's core customer is sensitive to value perception, and maintaining affordability while protecting margins requires constant discipline. Competitive intensity from rivals including Burger King, Wendy's, and an expanding fast-casual sector is unrelenting.

On valuation, McDonald's rarely trades cheaply. The stock commands a premium that reflects its quality and consistency, meaning investors should not expect rapid re-rating. For income investors and those seeking a defensive anchor in a diversified portfolio, however, McDonald's remains one of the most dependable holdings available on any major exchange.

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Frequently Asked Questions

As of March 2026, McDonald's pays a quarterly dividend of $1.86 per share, with a yield of approximately 2.27% on an annualised basis. The company has a history of consistent dividend payments, reflecting its financial stability.