Will Internal Strife Continue to Batter the Stock Price of Restaurant Brands International Inc.?

A culture war has engulfed Restaurant Brands International Inc. (TSX:QSR)(NYSE:QSR), and its stock price is feeling the pain.

| More on:

On Wednesday, July 12, an article in Bloomberg shed further light on some of the turmoil that is brewing within Restaurant Brands International Inc. (TSX:QSR)(NYSE:QSR).

In the report, Tim Horton’s franchisees expressed their dissatisfaction with the parent company’s profit-driven initiatives. A coalition of franchisees was formed in March to oppose reforms instituted by management, and the group even filed a class-action suit in June accusing company executives of overreach.

The share price was battered by the news and dropped 3.09% to close at $77.79. The stock is still up 21% in 2017, and until the rift escalated with the formation of the franchisee coalition things were looking rosy for the fast-food multinational company.

Restaurant Brands International’s adjusted per-share earnings were up 45% in 2016, and sales were up at Tim Horton’s and Burger King 5% and 7%, respectively. In the first quarter of 2017, total revenues surpassed $1 billion, which exceeded the $900 million in Q1 2016. It reported system-wide sales growth of 3% at Tim Horton’s and 6% at Burger King.

Should investors ignore the power struggle in Restaurant Brands International and buy the results? Or will this conflict continue to hurt the share price for months to come?

The culture change sweeping franchises is the management style known as the “3G Way,” an initiative trumpeted by the privately owned 3G Capital, the largest shareholder for Restaurant Brands International. The system aims to maximize growth by simplifying processes and optimizing the workplace.

One of the major shareholders in 3G Capital is Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, Inc., which has committed $3 billion of preferred equity to finance the transformation.

3G Capital and Restaurant Brands International CEO Daniel Schwartz reiterated that the focus for the parent company is growth, not cost cutting, and that anxiety experienced with changes is natural in any company.

One of the core complaints of the franchisees is the increased cost of bulk product. The long-term effect, they argue, will be the steady ouster of franchisees to be replaced by larger regional bosses which would be more cost effective.

The crisis at Restaurant Brands International is a familiar one for companies that undergo changes from the top down. The challenge for management will be to find a way to make the transition work more smoothly for franchisees and long-time employees who are accustomed to an older model. Changes put into place have yielded growth for the multinational and superb results for shareholders.

Should you buy Restaurant Brands International?

Tim Horton’s is a sacred brand in Canada, so it will be in the interest of Restaurant Brands International to exercise a steady hand in navigating the negotiation with franchisees in an attempt to continue with a smooth transformation.

The management team behind the company is world class, but in the short term, the media flare up will likely point to further volatility for the stock price in 2017.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Ambrose O'Callaghan has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway (B shares) and RESTAURANT BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INC.

More on Investing

Family relationship with bond and care
Dividend Stocks

3 Rare Situations Where it Makes Sense to Take CPP at 60

If you get lots of dividends from stocks like Brookfield Asset Management (TSX:BAM), you may be able to get away…

Read more »

Car, EV, electric vehicle
Tech Stocks

Why Tesla Stock Surged 16% This Week

Tesla stock (NASDAQ:TSLA) has been all over the place in the last year, bottoming out before rising after first-quarter earnings…

Read more »

A lake in the shape of a solar, wind and energy storage system in the middle of a lush forest as a metaphor for the concept of clean and organic renewable energy.
Dividend Stocks

Forget Suncor: This Growth Stock is Poised for a Potential Bull Run

Suncor Energy (TSX:SU) stock has been on a great run, but Brookfield Renewable Corporation (TSX:BEPC) has better growth.

Read more »

Female friends enjoying their dessert together at a mall
Dividend Stocks

Smart TFSA Contributions: Where to Invest $7,000 Wisely

TFSA investors can play smart and get the most from their new $7,000 contribution from two high-yield dividend payers.

Read more »

Dollar symbol and Canadian flag on keyboard
Investing

5 Incredible Canadian Stocks to Buy in May 2024

These Canadian stocks have solid fundamentals and good growth prospects to deliver above-average returns.

Read more »

A data center engineer works on a laptop at a server farm.
Tech Stocks

Invest in Tomorrow: Why This Tech Stock Could Be the Next Big Thing

A pure player in Canada’s tech sector, minus the AI hype, could be the “next big thing.”

Read more »

Various Canadian dollars in gray pants pocket
Dividend Stocks

TFSA Investors: 3 High-Yield Stocks to Own for Passive Income

Top TSX stocks for high-yield passive income.

Read more »

thinking
Investing

Down by 3.43%: Is Royal Bank of Canada Stock a Buy?

As the largest Canadian bank by market capitalization and revenue, here’s a better look at whether RBC stock can be…

Read more »