24/7 Wall St. Insights The McDonald's Corp. (NYSE: MCD) board of directors needs to decide if following the example set by Starbucks Corp.
24/7 Wall St. Insights McDonald's Corp. (NYSE: MCD) stock has not recovered since the fast-food giant released its earnings.
The freshest force in American politics wears striped socks, has fire-engine red hair and comes bearing french fries.
McDonald's (MCD) is hurt by dismal comps performance and high costs. The company's comps fall for the first time after increasing in 13 straight quarters.
McDonald's Corp. (MCD, Financial) presented disappointing second-quarter earnings on July 29. The quarter's indicators show how challenging the company's situation is, with negative same-store sales, flat revenue and an earnings miss.
And we talk with PG&E CEO Patricia Poppe about the company's turnaround and how it's serving the growing electricity demand from data centers.
Key Points McDonald's earnings fell short due to poor margins, declining traffic, and pricing issues.
A McDonald's employee working at a store in Georgia was sentenced to five years in federal prison for lighting a fire inside a dumpster because the restaurant was too crowded.
The recommendations of Wall Street analysts are often relied on by investors when deciding whether to buy, sell, or hold a stock. Media reports about these brokerage-firm-employed (or sell-side) analysts changing their ratings often affect a stock's price.
Zacks.com users have recently been watching McDonald's (MCD) quite a bit. Thus, it is worth knowing the facts that could determine the stock's prospects.
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McDonald's is seeing pressure from consumers pushing back on raised product prices. The company reported its first same-store sales decline in a quarter since 2020.