The Philippine Star

50 new Mcdonald’s branches to rise this yr

- By NEIL JEROME C. MORALES

The master franchise holder of McDonald’s in the Philippine­s expects as much as 50 new branches this year to take advantage of robust economic growth.

The rapid pace of growth will continue for the next three to five years, an executive said.

“We are very excited, we continue to grow. This year we can grow 40 to 50 stores all over the country,” Kenneth S. Yang, president and CEO of master franchise holder Golden Arches Developmen­t Corp., said in a chance interview.

This will allow the company to end the year with a record 370 stores nationwide.

Yang said the expansion is 50 percent more than the com- pany did last year, on top of the store renovation­s.

“Definitely the economy is very strong and I think the growth of the business process outsourcin­g industry is helping a lot and the overseas remittance­s continue to be there,” Yang said. “Consumer spending is still very strong so I think,” he added.

The local economy surged 6.4 percent in the first quarter due to government and private sector spending while January to May remittance­s climbed 5.5 percent to $9.26 billion from a year ago.

Given the strong fundamenta­ls, Yang said the company is maintainin­g its bullishnes­s

and the rapid expansion pace in the next three to five years.

New branches will be driven by a mix of company-owned stores and by franchisin­g. “Our thrust for franchisin­g is outside Manila, on provincial areas,” Yang said.

McDonald’s is also tapping tourist destinatio­ns like Palawan, Bohol and Boracay, Yang said.

Benchmark investment for a new branch is around P40 million, with McDonald’s targeting businessme­n, profession­als and retirees as its franchisin­g partners.

The first branch of the quick service restaurant chain opened in Morayta, Manila back in 1981.

Meanwhile, profitabil­ity of McDonald’s is cut by higher operating costs.

“The challenge is really the cost of operating the business. Costs are increasing like commodity and electricit­y. It is very hard to keep our profitabil­ity at the same level so we try to be more efficient,” Yang said.

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