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How McDonald's Really Makes Money - YouTube
Channel: PolyMatter
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During recessions, consumer behavior tends
to change in fairly predictable ways.
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The hardest-hit businesses are, of course,
the most unnecessary.
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Travel and tourism, leisure and hospitality,
and manufacturing.
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Other companies actually stand to benefit.
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Like, fast food.
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Stomachs donât respond to economic downturns,
but smaller bank accounts do opt for cheaper
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alternatives, which is why chains like Burger
King and Wendyâs often perform better than
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average during recessions.
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From 2008 to 2010, for example, while other
businesses closed or downsized, Subway, added
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nearly 6,000 new locations.
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KFC added around 300 in roughly the same period.
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One company, however, stands out as the clear
fast food winner of 2008: McDonaldâs.
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That year, it continued its 55-month long
streak of same-store sales increases with
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even better performance than before the recession,
while opening 600 new locations, and with
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an impressive 29% return on equity.
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Some of this is for obvious reasons: During
that time, consumers were simply eating cheaper
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food.
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But thereâs also another reason McDonaldâs
is what some analysts call ârecession-proofâ:
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McDonaldâs is, first and foremost, a real
estate company.
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Glancing at its 2019 balance sheet, one number,
in particular, should grab your attention:
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$39 billion.
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Thatâs the current value of all its property
and equipment before it reports depreciation.
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That would technically make it the fifth-largest
real estate holder in the world, measured
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by total assets.
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Cover the name âMcDonaldâsâ, and this
might look like the financial statement of
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any other boring big-name real estate developer.
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Like Burger King and Subway, the company was
able to grow so fast and reach so many countries
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around the world through franchising.
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85% of its restaurants are owned by someone
who essentially âleasesâ the McDonaldâs
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name and brand, in exchange for a considerable
fee.
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What makes the company so unique is that,
unlike other similar fast-food giants, McDonaldâs
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makes the majority of those franchise revenue
from rents, not burgers.
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To be more precise, in 2019, 7.5, or 64%,
of its 11.6 billion dollars in franchise fees
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came in the form of rent.
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Hereâs how it works:
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Because McDonaldâs has decades of experience
buying and selling properties, it knows the
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precise ingredients of a successful location.
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It shops around usually for intersections
between two high-traffic roads and buys space
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in whichever corner has the most parking.
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The ideal space is around 50,000 square feet,
4 and a half thousand for building space.
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The intersection should also have traffic
lights.
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It then buys the property with long-term fixed
interest rates.
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Its huge existing property holdings provide
it with the most favorable deals.
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Then, when someone applies to operate their
own McDonaldâs location, they sign with
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the company a Franchise Agreement â stipulating
nearly every detail of how the business will
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operate â from how the burgers are cooked,
to the hours of operation.
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For example, they can only purchase from an
approved supplier, who may or may not be the
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best or cheapest option.
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The franchisee â that is, the local owner
â generally makes a total upfront investment
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of $1-2 million for a single location, including
an initial down payment paid in cash, one-time
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franchise fee of $45,000, and a percent royalty
of every monthâs revenues.
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These, usually 20-year contracts, also have
the unusual but highly consequential stipulation
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that the restaurant be located at that specific
address â the one McDonaldâs, the corporation,
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just bought.
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In other words, McDonaldâs instantly has
a tenant, and one who will always pay above-market
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rates.
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Depending on the value you attribute to good
location scouting, you might characterize
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this as a valuable service, or, a ruthless
business tactic.
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Indeed, one franchise union found that the
average franchise tends to pay an average
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of 6-10% of its sales in rent, while McDonaldâs
franchisees pay 8.5-15%.
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And if a location fails to perform as expected,
McDonaldâs can simply find a new franchisee
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for that location after the contract has expired,
or sell the land to someone else entirely,
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likely at a significant profit.
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So, why do franchisees agree to these stringent
requirements?
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Simply put: because itâs seen as an incredibly
safe investment.
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The advantage of this model is that while
the absolute numbers are abnormally large
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â the fees, the initial startup costs, and
even the annual revenues â the odds of success
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are relatively high.
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For example, the average location makes $2.7
million in sales every year, with a respectable
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but not incredible, all-things-considered,
$154,000 in final take-home profit.
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But precisely because McDonaldâs is so demanding,
can it be such a solid investment.
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Sure, applicants have to meet high standards
to become franchisees and once they do, they
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have little control over their own business,
but all these factors also reduce their risk.
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While other franchises may have fewer requirements,
they also come with greater risk.
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The owner of a McDonaldâs can be pretty
sure theyâre qualified for the job, have
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a good location, and are meeting customerâs
standards, because otherwise, they wouldnât
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be allowed in the first place.
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McDonaldâs trains its franchisees in what
it calls âHamburger Universityâ â the
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companyâs internal system of teaching business
owners all the skills and knowledge they need.
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For McDonaldâs, the benefits of owning property
are far greater than just an additional source
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of revenue.
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Itâs no exaggeration to call it an entirely
different business model: It understands that
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real estate is a far better business than
hamburgers.
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The first reason is just a function of American
tax law â which offers heavy tax breaks
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for depreciation, even while that same property
may increase in value over time.
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The biggest advantage is the long-term stability
of property prices.
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Along with Walmart, McDonaldâs was one of
the only two stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial
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Average to increase in value in 2008.
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Itâs also one of the 60 or so members of
the so-called âDividend Aristocratsâ â stocks
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that have increased their dividends annually
for 25 consecutive years.
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Recessions are only a welcome opportunity
to buy up discounted properties.
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When things are truly catastrophic â like
during a pandemic â the real estate model
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outsources risk to franchisees â who are
contractually obligated to pay a minimum amount
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of rent regardless of sales.
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All of this is reflected in the upward trend
of franchised McDonaldâs locations and downward
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trend of the few remaining company-operated
locations.
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If anything, McDonaldâs is actively trying
to remove itself from the fast food industry.
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But this naturally raises a question: If McDonaldâs
makes a huge portion of its profits in the
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form of rent, and managing real estate is
a fairly separate skill from creating new
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McThings, why not split-off the real estate
holdings into a new company?
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Do that, and you have a very stable, active,
and profitable real estate investment trust
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â one immune from the variability of fast
food and/ changing consumer appetites.
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A group of investors suggested this very idea
in 2015.
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The company, however, decided not to, believing
that its property model is what makes it unique,
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and that its remarkable efficiency is a function
of doing both.
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Now that you know the secrets of how one of
the worldâs great companies truly makes
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