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McDonald's Dollar Menu threatened

Posted Jul 24 2008, 01:07 PM by Anthony Mirhaydari
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Rising food and energy prices are forcing McDonald's to take aim at its popular Dollar Menu. "In this current environment, we've got to make sure we're pricing smart, not just pricing low," COO Ralph Alvarez said as the chain reported better-than-expected quarterly results.

For hurried moms, nocturnal teens, lunch-run dads, and anyone who appreciated the food-inflation hedge of one dollar double cheeseburgers, the news comes as a super-sized disappointment.

Investors should be worried too. Unless the company refocuses on its premium, more healthful lineup -- giving the target demographic of its premium beverages a complementary meal option while providing a nice boost to profitability -- shareholders are in for a rude awakening.

Although the Dollar Menu only generates 14% of the company's total sales, it's a big driver of store visits and a key piece of the company's low-cost image. Just two months ago, CEO Jim Skinner proclaimed that passing costs on to consumers wasn't a good idea for just this reason. "They have long memories," Skinner said of McDonald's patrons.

The company hoped that vigorous use of derivative contracts on key inputs like beef, as well as strong overseas results, would allow the company to absorb some of the margin pressure while preserving store traffic. My guess is that they also expected the much-touted, high-margin specialty coffee rollout to compensate as well -- which is part of a wider beverage initiative that includes smoothies, energy drinks, and bottled items. Word on Wall Street is that its lattes and cappuccinos aren't meeting sales expectations.

McDonald’s had no choice but to surrender to the forces of inflation because ranchers are setting the stage for big-time increases in meat prices by cutting down herd sizes in response to unaffordable feed costs. Also contributing is Russia's recent ban on beef from Latin America, further increasing demand for U.S. beef exports due to a weak dollar.

Management is looking for beef prices to increase upwards of 9% this year, with chicken prices up 6% and cheese prices moving 21% higher. Back in April, the expectation was for beef prices to remain flat though the rest of 2008. Beef is the company's largest cost of goods sold expense, standing at 15% of total.

This is all quite unfortunate, since McDonald's steadfast resistance to major price hikes helped capture cost-sensitive business from casual restaurants and drive share performance during trying economic times. But margin contraction has individual franchise owners screaming for relief: Locations in Georgia have bumped the price of some items to $1.09 in response.

To make matter worse, political pressure continues to build against McDonald's and other fast food restaurants for their contribution to rising obesity rates. A Los Angeles city-council woman proposes a ban on the construction of new quick-service restaurants within a 32-square mile section of the city.

McDonald's shares reflect too much optimism for Deutsche Bank analyst Jason West, who downgraded the stock as "risks to the downside are building." Bank of America's Joseph Buckley notes that the company looks increasingly vulnerable to U.S. macroeconomic pressure, and sees elements of investor complacency.

(Disclosure: I don’t own shares in any of the companies mentioned)

Related reading:

Insiders bail as McDonald's brews trouble

Casual restaurants burned by inflation

Comments

 

Daniel****THANK YOU!!!! :-). You hit it exactly :-). ***Marlene: People don't DESERVE something just because they WANT it. If you want to be "GIVEN the chance" to eat out (buy a "toy", whatever...), then EARN more money! (Yes, it really does work that way---Get over it.).  Prices go up sometimes. You have no direct control over that. No one EXPECTS you to eat out anywhere. To all: What happened to actually buying and preparing REAL food at home (read: groceries)?Healthier AND cheaper (still!!). Work it into your schedule. Simple. It worked for centuries before people started "expecting" things that were once luxuries. You can't have it both ways, aren't "entitled" to be "given" ANYTHING.

When I go to a Mcdonald's it is because of the dollar menu.  I usually buy something else not on the dollar menu also.  If they would have to raise the price 10%, well that is what inflation is all about.

McDonald's needs to stick to what it does best--burgers and fries.  All the fancy coffee stuff is ridiculous--see where it got Starbucks?????

As a stockholder with  McDonalds,  and a avid follower of economic fluctuations, have seen these many times in the past. You will need to decrease the profit margin that you presently enjoy to ensure continued growth in the future. I will again, say, as a stockholder in "our" company, DO NOT BECOME GREEDY!!!!!

Here in Alaska there is no dollar Menu at McDonald's, Wendy's, BK or anything everything's either $1.50 or $2.00 Sucks too cuz that's expensive for just a burger and with an increase in the lower 48 states there sure will be a price rise here :(

The price of the food is the only reason to go to McDonald's.  It's definitely not because of the quality.

To "themike":

McDonald's did try pizza in several California markets in the 90's......big failure.

Hamburgers, hamburgers, yum yum yum, hamburgers, hamburgers in my tum.  tum, tum, tum.  I love a 99 cent hamburger.  Without the 99 cent menu, they'll fold, food is poor quality.  By the way, they are experimenting with pizza

Culvers is Great fast Food!!

are you serious that a 10 cent increase would make you stop buying a burger, where else are you going to eat that cheap, you have to be kidding me. What are you paying a month for internet service, maybe you should cancel that if 10 cents is going to put you over the edge

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