Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

McDonald’s adding outlets in China, S.Korea, Hong Kong

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McDonald’s Corp. said Thursday it plans to open 1,500 new restaurant­s in China, South Korea and Hong Kong as it looks to faster-growing markets to help drive a global turnaround.

McDonald’s said it is looking for partners to help finance that expansion. The company said it also will give local managers more decision-making power to respond to Asian customers.

McDonald’s, based in Oak Brook, Illinois, is overhaulin­g its business under CEO Steve Easterbroo­k after acknowledg­ing it failed to keep up with changing tastes. The total number of global diners visiting its restaurant­s fell last year.

“Asia represents a significan­t area of opportunit­y for McDonald’s to blend our global quality standards with local insights and expertise from partners who share our vision and values,” Easterbroo­k said in a statement. “These actions build on our turnaround efforts and will ad- vance local ownership, enable faster decision-making and achieve restaurant growth.”

McDonald’s currently has 2,800 restaurant­s in China, South Korea and Hong Kong, most of them owned by the company instead of franchisee­s. The company deems those “high-growth markets,” which it says have stronger expansion and franchisin­g potential.

The company previously announced plans to identify strategic partners in two other Asian markets, Taiwan and Japan.

McDonald’s says it plans to turn over more company-owned outlets to local owners, with a longterm goal of making 95 percent owned by franchisee­s.

The company reported earlier that sales worldwide rose 5 percent at establishe­d locations in the final quarter of 2015.

In the high-growth markets unit, sales climbed 3 percent. U.S. sales rose 5.7 percent and those in Britain and Canada rose 4.2 percent.

 ?? ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A customer walks past a statue of Ronald McDonald on display outside a McDonald’s restaurant in Beijing.
ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A customer walks past a statue of Ronald McDonald on display outside a McDonald’s restaurant in Beijing.

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