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McDonald’s (MCD) gets 90% of restaurant margin from franchised locations, saw U.S. comparable sales drop 3.6% in Q1 2025 then rise 6.8% in Q4 2025, and has a 0.496 beta. SPY (SPY).
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McDonald’s franchise model insulates corporate revenue from commodity cost spikes, but higher oil prices threaten demand among lower-income consumers who already showed weakness in early 2025.
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McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) looks like it should be deeply exposed to oil. Beef production is energy-intensive. Packaging is petroleum-derived. Drive-through customers feel every tick higher at the pump. Delivery partners burn fuel on every order. And with operations spanning 70+ markets globally, the logistics exposure is real.
But here’s where the story gets interesting. McDonald’s has quietly built one of the best structural defenses against commodity shocks in the restaurant industry.
Roughly 90% of McDonald’s restaurant margin dollars come from franchised restaurants. That matters enormously. When oil spikes and beef prices follow, when packaging costs inflate, when delivery economics deteriorate, it’s the franchisee absorbing those hits at the restaurant level. McDonald’s corporate collects royalties on systemwide sales. That revenue stream is far more insulated from input cost volatility than a company-operated model would be.
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CFO Ian Borden put the margin dynamic plainly on the Q4 2025 earnings call: “Growing margins requires strong sales growth. We experienced this in Q4 when our margins improved, especially in the U.S. In earlier quarters, we faced lower sales growth in the U.S. alongside rising inflation, which increased pressure.”
Translation: the real oil risk to McDonald’s corporate isn’t cost inflation. It’s demand destruction.
This is where $150 oil would actually bite. University of Michigan consumer sentiment is already at 56.4, approaching recessionary territory. CEO Chris Kempczinski acknowledged the underlying tension on the Q4 call: “Industry-wide, we’ve seen traffic hold up pretty well with upper-income consumers and traffic has been pressured with lower-income consumers.”
McDonald’s already lived through a real-world stress test. Q1 2025 U.S. comparable sales fell 3.6% as low- and middle-income consumers pulled back. That wasn’t $150 oil. That was just a soft consumer environment with modest inflation.
