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McDonald's reset to change structure, cut costs, boost franchises

A water tower is seen at a McDonald's restaurant in Lancaster, California March 18, 2015. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/Files

By Lisa Baertlein (Reuters) - McDonald's Corp's new chief executive officer said on Monday he would reorganize business units, sell restaurants to franchisees and cut costs in a bid to turn the fast-food chain into a "modern, progressive burger company." The anticipated video announcement by CEO Steve Easterbrook left investors hungry for specific details on how the world's biggest restaurant chain would try to improve consumer perceptions of food quality and slow service. "I will not shy away from the urgent need to reset this business," said Easterbrook, who took the helm on March 1, following one of McDonald's most dismal years on record. Shares were down nearly 2 percent in premarket trading, and closed 1.7 percent lower at $96.13 on the New York Stock Exchange as investors digested the news. "Judging by the immediate investor reaction, there appears to be more of a 'prove it' sentiment among investors, rather than an full embrace of Mr. Easterbrook's plan," Miller Tabak & Co analyst Stephen Anderson said in a client note. Easterbrook said McDonald's will sell 3,500 restaurants to franchisees by 2018, taking global franchisee ownership to 90 percent from 81 percent. McDonald's prior plan called for selling 1,500 restaurants by 2016. He vowed to remove "cumbersome" management and scour the business for inefficiencies to find about $300 million in net annual savings, most of which will be realized by the end of 2017. Easterbrook also said McDonald's would return $8 billion to $9 billion to shareholders in 2015. McDonald's currently organises its business around major geographic markets: the United States, Europe, and Asia/Pacific, the Middle East and Africa (APMEA). Easterbrook said the new segments, which become effective July 1, will be organised around business similarities. The U.S. market, which accounts for more than 40 percent of McDonald's operating income, will continue to be led by Mike Andres. The new "international lead" market will include Australia, Canada, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom, which make up a total of 40 percent of McDonald's operating income. It will be led by Doug Goare, current president of McDonald's Europe. Dave Hoffman, now president of McDonald's APMEA unit, will lead a new "high-growth" market that includes China, Italy, Poland, Russia, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland and the Netherlands. Those countries account for about 10 percent of operating income. The "foundational" market includes the remaining countries where McDonald's operates. It will be run by Ian Borden, currently APMEA's chief financial officer. (Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Alden Bentley, Jeffrey Benkoe, Bernadette Baum and David Gregorio)