Key Takeaways
- Ongoing Iran war is elevating energy and commodity expenses, pressuring profit margins at McDonald’s (MCD) and Restaurant Brands International (QSR)
- Lower-income diners are reducing fast-food visits as elevated fuel prices drain disposable income previously allocated to dining out
- Asian supply chain networks face disruptions with “spotty” reliability and climbing logistics expenses affecting both restaurant operators
- Bernstein maintains Market Perform stance on MCD with $340 price target, suggesting approximately 10% potential upside from trading levels
- Both restaurant chains report no discernible anti-American backlash connected to the current conflict
The escalating Iran conflict is beginning to materialize in financial metrics — and forward guidance — at two global quick-service restaurant leaders.
Following this week’s investor meetings with executives from McDonald’s and Restaurant Brands International (QSR), Bernstein analysts emerged with a consistent theme: the geopolitical situation is generating headwinds across both consumer demand patterns and operational supply networks.
While neither restaurant operator confronts an immediate existential threat, operating conditions are tightening, with the latter portion of 2026 potentially presenting steeper challenges should energy markets remain elevated.
McDonald’s maintains hedging strategies designed to mitigate short-term volatility in energy and commodity markets. These instruments are currently providing protection for company-operated locations and franchise partners against the immediate price surge.
However, these hedging mechanisms carry expiration dates. Should elevated pricing persist, renewals will lock in at prevailing higher market rates — transferring that burden directly onto franchisee profitability.
This dynamic carries significance because franchise operators finance restaurant remodeling initiatives and technology investments. Sustained margin compression in their operating statements could decelerate these capital improvement programs.
Budget-Conscious Diners Retreating
The correlation between fuel costs and restaurant traffic is undeniable. Lower-income households allocate proportionally larger shares of their budgets to transportation fuel, meaning sharp gasoline price increases function as an effective reduction in available funds for restaurant dining.
This consumer segment has traditionally represented the baseline demand level for quick-service restaurants. While both MCD and QSR have amplified value-oriented promotions to defend this baseline, weakening signals are emerging, especially across international territories.
Transaction data from early March indicates decelerating consumer expenditure patterns. Concurrent severe weather events across the United States are further obscuring first-quarter performance, complicating efforts to isolate fundamental business trends.
Bernstein noted that restaurant brands with concentrated exposure to the Northeastern United States and Canadian markets may encounter amplified difficulties, given consecutive adverse developments affecting those geographical areas.
Asian Logistics Networks Face Disruption
From an operational perspective, Asian markets represent the most pronounced challenge area. Management teams at both organizations characterized supply chain reliability as “spotty” while noting escalating transportation and logistics expenditures throughout the region.
For RBI — which operates Burger King, Popeyes, and Tim Hortons franchises — the difficulty lies in maintaining coherent value positioning while local franchisees navigate mounting operational costs.
McDonald’s operates approximately 5% of its global restaurant footprint in Middle Eastern territories. This region experienced tangible operational challenges stemming from anti-American consumer sentiment during 2023 and 2024. Notably, neither organization has observed this pattern resurfacing with the current Iran situation.
This represents a substantive departure from previous geopolitical tensions and eliminates one potential risk factor from current investment considerations.
Bernstein continues its Market Perform rating alongside a $340 price objective for MCD. Trading at $308.93, this implies roughly 10% appreciation potential to the target level, although InvestingPro analysis suggests the shares trade above Fair Value calculations.
McDonald’s boasts a 50-year consecutive dividend increase streak. The current dividend yield stands at 2.41%.
The corporation is preparing new value-focused promotions for April rollout, featuring menu selections priced at $3 and below, complemented by $4 breakfast combination offerings.
