Is McDonald's Stock a Buy? Let's Crunch the Numbers
McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) has been a stalwart in the fast-food industry for decades, but is its stock still a bargain? Let’s dive into its latest financials to estimate intrinsic value using the discounted cash flow (DCF) model.
The DCF Playbook: Why Cash Flow Matters
The DCF model values a company by forecasting its free cash flows (FCF) and discounting them back to today’s dollars. The formula is:
Intrinsic Value = Σ (FCF_t / (1 + r)^t) + Terminal Value
Here, r is the discount rate (cost of capital), and t is the time period.
McDonald’s 2024 Financials: A Strong Foundation
Let’s start with the numbers:
- 2024 Free Cash Flow (FCF): $6.67 billion (down 7.9% from 2023’s $7.26 billion but still robust).
- Net Income: $8.22 billion (slightly down due to higher interest and taxes).
- Dividend Growth: 6% increase to $1.77 per share, marking 43 consecutive years of dividend hikes.
Ask Aime: "Is McDonald's (MCD) stock undervalued given its strong free cash flow and dividend growth?"
Building the DCF Model
Step 1: Project Future Cash Flows
Assume FCF grows at 3% annually for 10 years (conservative given its 2% revenue growth and $30B loyalty sales).
Step 2: Terminal Value
After Year 10, we apply a perpetuity growth rate of 2% (below GDP growth).
Step 3: Discount Rate
Use 8%—a reasonable rate given its stable business and 5.6% beta (slightly more volatile than the market).
The Math: Let’s Calculate
Year | FCF (B) | Discount Factor (8%) | Present Value (B) |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 6.87 | 0.926 | 6.38 |
2026 | 7.06 | 0.857 | 6.05 |
2027 | 7.25 | 0.794 | 5.76 |
2028 | 7.45 | 0.735 | 5.48 |
2029 | 7.66 | 0.681 | 5.22 |
2030 | 7.88 | 0.63 | 4.96 |
2031 | 8.10 | 0.583 | 4.72 |
2032 | 8.33 | 0.540 | 4.49 |
2033 | 8.56 | 0.502 | 4.29 |
2034 | 8.80 | 0.466 | 4.10 |
Terminal Value (Year 10):
(FCF_{2034} * (1 + 0.02)) / (0.08 - 0.02) = (8.80 * 1.02) / 0.06 ≈ $151.3 billion
Discounted to present: $151.3B * 0.540 ≈ $81.7B
Total Present Value of FCF + Terminal Value ≈ $63.3B + $81.7B = $145B
Per-Share Value:
Divide by 718.3 million shares (2024 average):
$145B / 718.3M ≈ $202/share
Reality Check: Risks and Dividends
- Headwinds: Declining global comparable sales (-0.1% in 2024) and U.S. competition (e.g., Wendy’s, Chick-fil-A).
- Upside: Loyalty programs (175M+ users) and value-driven menu items (e.g., $1 McCafé drinks) could boost sales.
- Dividend Yield: At $1.77/year, the yield is 0.58% (based on recent $306/share price). While modest, the dividend’s growth history offers stability.
Conclusion: A Buy, But Not a Slam Dunk
The DCF suggests intrinsic value of $202/share, significantly below McDonald’s current price of $306/share. Wait—this seems contradictory! What’s the catch?
Ah, the discount rate assumption. If we lower the discount rate to 7% (reflecting its defensive business), the intrinsic value jumps to ~$255/share. Add in strategic moves like expanding plant-based options and digital ordering, and the long-term outlook brightens.
However, McDonald’s valuation is already rich at 25x trailing earnings. For aggressive investors, it’s a “hold” with upside if margins rebound. For dividend seekers, the 0.58% yield pales next to peers like Coca-Cola (2.3%)—so focus on growth instead.
Final Take: McDonald’s is no longer a screaming buy, but its moat and global reach make it a “hold” with potential for 5% annual returns. For the bold, nibble at dips below $280.
Data as of February 2025. Past performance ≠ future results.