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  • Big and tasty for just a dollar.

  • You did your thing, dawg.

  • Remember the dollar menu?

  • Well, you may be hard pressed to find any fast

  • food item that actually costs a dollar anymore.

  • $17 for three Filet-O-Fish at McDonald's.

  • Are you kidding me?

  • I don't have the money to buy fast food anymore.

  • Don't you just miss the days when fast food was

  • actually cheap?

  • When looking at fast food menus nationally, here are

  • the average prices for fries from McDonald's, a

  • Happy Meal and a burger combo from Burger King.

  • But I paid even more than that.

  • Here are the prices at fast food locations by the NBC

  • offices in Midtown Manhattan. Broadly speaking.

  • Sales are performing much stronger than foot traffic,

  • and that's due in part to higher prices.

  • The Consumer Price Index measures inflation or the

  • average increase in prices over time.

  • Fast food falls into the limited service meals

  • category. Think anything that's typically ordered at

  • a counter and taken to go from 2019 to 2023, prices in

  • this category are up nearly 28%.

  • That's more than full service meals.

  • Think sit down restaurants with servers, which

  • increased nearly 24%.

  • And it's also more than overall inflation, which

  • increased 19%.

  • So why are fast food prices so high and where will they

  • go from here? Can I please get a Titan turkey?

  • Can I get a foot long?

  • Yeah, just that.

  • Between 2022 and 2023, the cost of food, beverage and

  • packaging rose around 11% for both McDonald's and

  • Chipotle. Still, as of late, labor is the main

  • culprit. Food is about a third of the cost of a menu

  • item.

  • So even as those costs moderate in many cases, and

  • particularly given the the laws that were seen in

  • California and some of the other, you know, minimum

  • wage laws and just increases that are happening

  • is that that wage pressure remains elevated.

  • The fast food labor market became increasingly

  • competitive for employers during the pandemic, as

  • companies struggled to fill their restaurants.

  • In 2022, the number of employees in the limited

  • service restaurant category were still below 2019

  • levels. During that same time, the number of limited

  • service establishments grew by over 4%.

  • As things normalize after Covid, you still see a

  • higher amount of job openings and less people

  • coming in to fill those jobs.

  • Compared to 2019, the percentage of sales that

  • goes towards paying for labor has grown for many

  • limited service restaurants like Wendy's and Shake

  • Shack, where it has actually decreased for

  • restaurants like The Cheesecake Factory and

  • Darden Restaurants, which owns chains like Olive

  • garden, Longhorn Steakhouse, and the Capital

  • Grill.

  • In order to maintain the same service levels and

  • expand their operating hours to accommodate the

  • consumers late night snack demands and demands for

  • earlier breakfasts.

  • Fast food restaurants need to hire more labor across

  • the day part, and so as they're competing with other

  • potential employers, they need to make the job more

  • enticing. And the easiest way to do that is by raising

  • the wage rate.

  • And companies are passing these costs onto the

  • customer, especially as states like California have

  • raised the minimum wage for workers.

  • In an obviously, despite this huge wage inflation,

  • there's a lot of other factors at play.

  • I think when you look at inflation within limited

  • service, first of all, you're starting with a lower

  • check average. And so any increase of $1 or $2 that an

  • operator passes on just by definition as a higher

  • percentage increase on it.

  • From December 2023 to February 2024, the national

  • average for a quick service restaurant check was about

  • $18, which is 4.5% more than the same time period

  • last year. That's a higher percentage increase than

  • both casual and fine dining, and full service

  • restaurants are capitalizing on the

  • decreasing price gap.

  • How is this Chili's three for me, only $10.99.

  • When fast food is so expensive.

  • It could be because we don't have to pay for any mascots.

  • Please. I was born for this.

  • It has created a shift in fast food consumer behavior.

  • Perhaps before they were going there ten times, but

  • now they're still only spending $100, and maybe

  • they're going there eight times or seven times.

  • Right. And so you start to see this, this traffic

  • falloff because they're still spending essentially

  • the same amount, but they're now going less

  • frequently.

  • Although prices for fast food have soared, sales have

  • remained strong. Mcdonald's, Wendy's and Yum

  • brands, which owns KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell,

  • have all seen revenue surge past pre-pandemic levels.

  • A lot of the sales are still going up, and a lot of

  • that's driven by price as opposed to frequency or

  • visits.

  • A lot of investors are now focused on who is best

  • positioned to drive growth based on volume, because you

  • can obviously only push your price higher for so

  • long.

  • And that for so long may have arrived.

  • Mcdonald's missed earnings estimates in the first

  • quarter of 2024, and an Evercore analyst called it

  • one of the most sobering quarters for the fast food

  • giant. Others, like KFC and Pizza Hut, are experiencing

  • the same consumer pullback.

  • We must be laser focused on affordability, which means

  • good entry level price points available every day.

  • In the markets where we're doing this well, the

  • business is outperforming.

  • In some markets, however, it's clear we still have

  • opportunities to strengthen our proposition.

  • $100K plus income households are really powering through

  • and still spending at kind of normalized levels where

  • we see a lot of the constraint or perhaps

  • behavioral changes is the 50 K and below consumer.

  • And so your lower end consumer who just doesn't

  • have enough spending power to keep doing everything

  • that they were doing when the economy had a lot of

  • additional Covid stimulus available.

  • Remember the $5 footlong at subway?

  • Well, that's a thing of the past. This turkey sub cost

  • me over $11.

  • The bad news about inflation is prices aren't

  • going to go down. The good news is the increases are

  • slowing.

  • Prices in general across the economy very rarely ever

  • come down once they've been reset higher.

  • One of the reasons for that is wages.

  • Once they're reset higher, very rarely get pushed back

  • down and reset lower.

  • To combat the decrease in value offered by fast food,

  • chains are relying on apps and loyalty programs.

  • In its 2023 fourth quarter earnings call, Wendy's says

  • that it plans to invest approximately $15 million,

  • primarily in 2024 to further enhance its mobile

  • app experience, McDonald's announced its goal to expand

  • its loyalty program from 150 million to 250 million

  • 90 day active users by 2027.

  • They haven't been able to do before is have targeted

  • advertisements that go directly to consumers based

  • on their consumption preferences, and the

  • companies will be able to see, almost in real time,

  • the return on investment of those advertisements and

  • those promotions that they push to the consumer,

  • because they can tell I pushed them the promotion on

  • Tuesday, and they made a purchase on Wednesday or on

  • Thursday.

  • The value offered by fast food is something that

  • customers will continue to evaluate each time they make

  • a purchase, and it may ultimately determine how the

  • industry reacts going forward.

  • Restaurants still take dollars to the bank, not

  • consumer visits. And as long as they're able to

  • continue to drive growth from a value or from a

  • dollar perspective, I think, you know, that's

  • still good news for the industry.

  • Two burgers 447.

Big and tasty for just a dollar.

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B1 中級 美國腔

Why Fast Food Has Gotten So Expensive

  • 51 3
    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 05 月 05 日
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