"New offerings like McCafe coffee at Drive-Thru and the roll out of 'Create Your Taste' gave customers new reasons to visit McDonald's," said Simon Kenny, head of communications at McDonald's NZ. "Momentum has continued from 2015 into 2016, with a strong first and second quarter."
McDonald's has 166 restaurants, of which about 80 per cent are owned and operated by franchisees, and its sales are made up of company-owned restaurants and fees paid by franchisees. The company opened or relocated six new restaurants around New Zealand last year, while two food-court outlets closed and its store in Silverstream burned down.
A year ago it had 164 outlets.
The company paid dividends of $30 million, or $1.09 a share to its parent in 2015, little changed from $30.5 million, or $1.11 a share in 2014. The parent company typically gives a recommendation on the level of dividend payment, which is then ratified by the local board, McDonald's has said previously.
It also paid $21.4 million in service fees to its "ultimate chief entity", up from $18.6 million a year earlier.
Under related party transactions, the company paid $20 million in trademark fees to McDonald's Asia Pacific, up from $18.6 million in 2014, and fees for services such as accounting to McDonald's Australia of $4.4 million, up from $2.5 million. Trade payables to its ultimate parent were $2.3 million, up from $2.1 million in 2014 and it also paid "location fees" to McDonald's Asia Pacific. It paid tax of $16.8 million, down from $17.4 million a year earlier.
McDonald's today celebrated 40 years in the New Zealand market, offering Big Macs for 75 cents for four hours at its Queen Street store.
High global prices for beef weighed on 2014 earnings but those pressure abated last year, Kenny said. "We saw some supply chain relief, with commodity prices for core ingredients like New Zealand beef reducing as global prices dropped."