McDonald's Profit Narrowly Tops Estimates
23 4월 2009 - 1:34AM
Dow Jones News
McDonald's Corp. (MCD) is winning new customers and keeping
existing ones with a focus on classic products like Quarter
Pounders and Chicken McNuggets, helping the chain drive
first-quarter sales growth and narrowly top analyst expectations
despite a big hit from unfavorable foreign exchange rates.
The world's largest hamburger chain says its tiered-pricing
strategy with value-, mid- and premium-priced products is helping
McDonald's pick up share in all markets. Same-store sales rose 4.3%
across the globe, including increases of 4.7% in the U.S., 3.2% in
Europe and 5.5% in the Asia/Pacific, Middle East and Africa
region.
But some pockets of weakness remain in countries like Germany
and China, as the global economic slowdown takes a toll on consumer
spending. McDonald's said that April sales trends were as good or
better in all of its regions compared to the first-quarter.
While McDonald's gains market share, there are signs that
fast-food chains are fighting over a smaller pie. Customer traffic
fell 1% at quick-service restaurants this past winter, according to
NPD Group, the first seasonal decline since 2003. Morgan Stanley
earlier this week suggested that the fast-food industry is becoming
a "zero sum industry" as companies battle for the same pool of
customers.
McDonald's, with an unmatched advertising machine, could stand
to benefit in that tug-of-war for consumer dollars, even as
competitors increase their discounts and giveaways. In an earnings
call with analysts, McDonald's Chief Executive Jim Skinner said the
company would hold firm to its pricing strategy, even if
competitors use declining food prices to offer better deals at
their stores.
"I don't see us dictating any change in strategy around that,"
Skinner said.
The company is continuing its push into the speciality coffee
category, where it has added McCafe at about 10,000 stores and is
on track to complete its U.S. rollout in the next two months. Sales
of its beverages could pick up steam once a national ad campaign
launches in the coming weeks, and analysts are suggesting that
McDonald's could pick up significant sales from the likes of
Starbucks Corp. (SBUX)
Earlier, McDonald's said it earned $979.5 million, or 87 cents a
share, in the first quarter, up from $946.1 million, or 81 cents a
share, in the year-earlier period. The latest results included a 4
cents a share gain from the gain on the sale of the company's
minority interest in Redbox Automated Retail, putting the results a
penny ahead of consensus estimates of 82 cents a share.
The narrow beat was a contrast to prior quarters, where the
company's handily topped estimates, which may indicate McDonald's
settling into a steadier growth track.
"There are lots of companies in consumer-land that would love to
have McDonald's numbers today," Edward Jones analyst Jack Russo
said.
Currency translation hit quarterly earnings by 8 cents a share.
McDonald's added that if exchange rates stay roughly where they
are, the annual impact will be 32 cents a share.
Shares rose 52 cents, or 1%, in recent trading, to $56.16. The
broader market rose as well, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
up 0.6% and the S&P 500 rising 0.9%.
McDonald's, the only Dow Jones component other than Wal-Mart
Stores Inc. (WMT) to see shares rise in 2008, is down about 10% so
far this year, as investors develop a greater appetite for risk and
move into beaten down names.
In the restaurant space, shares of casual dining names are
rising on expectations that tighter cost controls will help chains
top earnings estimates. P.F. Chang's China Bistro Inc. (PFCB) on
Wednesday reported first-quarter earnings well ahead of consensus
estimates on lower costs despite still declining sales, pushing
shares up 22.3% in recent trading.
Still, many view McDonald's as a more stable consumer name since
it is still posting solid sales increases and winning over
customers from competitors. Sit-down restaurants are seeing the
opposite take place, as they are shedding both customers and
sales.
-By Paul Ziobro, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2046;
paul.ziobro@dowjones.com