Restaurants · NYSE
Current Price
$74.85
PE Ratio (TTM)
27.2x
Intrinsic Value
$86.82
+13.8% margin of safety
COMPETITIVE MOAT
↑Brand Recognition and Scale
QSR boasts globally recognized brands like Burger King and Tim Hortons. This scale provides significant purchasing power and marketing reach.
↑Franchise Model Efficiency
The company's heavily franchised model allows for rapid expansion with lower capital investment. This model also shifts operational risks to franchisees.
↑Real Estate Holdings
QSR benefits from owning valuable real estate for many of its restaurant locations. This provides a stable revenue stream and potential for appreciation.
INVESTMENT RISKS
↓Intense Competition
The quick-service restaurant industry is highly competitive. QSR faces constant pressure from other large chains and emerging concepts.
↓Changing Consumer Preferences
Evolving tastes and demand for healthier options can impact sales. QSR must continually innovate its menu and offerings.
↓Operational Execution Challenges
Maintaining consistent quality and service across a vast franchise network is difficult. Underperforming franchisees can negatively affect brand perception.
Base case
A base case PE valuation for QSR estimates a fair value of about $86.82 per share, against a current price of $74.85. The model assumes 9.7% annual earnings growth, a 27x target PE multiple, and a 10% discount rate.
Intrinsic Value
$86.82
Margin of safety
+13.8%
Expected annual return
+3.0%
Base case assumptions: 9.7% annual earnings growth, 27x target PE, 10% discount rate, 5 year projection. Data as of 2026-06-12.
This base case uses default assumptions and is not financial advice. The fair value changes significantly when the target PE or earnings growth rate changes. Open the calculator to set your own assumptions and see the full sensitivity range.
Adjust the target PE, earnings growth, and discount rate to see how the fair value and margin of safety for Restaurant Brands International Inc. respond.
Open PE Calculator for QSRRestaurant Brands International Inc. (RBI), a prominent quick-service restaurant enterprise, maintains its headquarters in Toronto, Canada. Established in 1954, the company operates globally, managing and franchising four distinct and widely recognized brands: Tim Hortons (TH), Burger King (BK), Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen (PLK), and Firehouse Subs (FHS). Through its Tim Hortons segment, RBI offers a diverse menu at its coffee, tea, and donut establishments. This includes a selection of hot and cold specialty beverages like espresso-based drinks, a variety of freshly baked goods such as donuts, Timbits, bagels, muffins, cookies, and pastries, alongside savory options like grilled paninis, classic sandwiches, wraps, and soups. Burger King, a renowned fast-food hamburger chain within RBI's portfolio, provides patrons with its signature flame-grilled hamburgers, an array of chicken and other specialized sandwiches, French fries, and various soft drinks. The company's Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen outlets are celebrated for their distinctive Louisiana-style fried chicken, chicken tenders, and fried shrimp and other seafood options, complemented by regional specialties like red beans and rice. Furthermore, RBI's Firehouse Subs restaurants serve a range of submarine sandwiches, beverages, and local culinary delights. Demonstrating significant international reach, RBI had approximately 29,000 restaurants spread across 100 countries under its four brands as of February 15, 2022.
PE Ratio (TTM)
27.2x
PEG Ratio
n/m
Earnings Yield
3.68%
ROE (TTM)
27.1%
Revenue/Share (TTM)
$27.63
Dividend Yield
3.35%
Debt/Equity
4.19x
The trailing twelve-month PE ratio of QSR reflects how much investors pay per dollar of Restaurant Brands International Inc.'s earnings. This metric is most useful when compared to Restaurants peers and the company's own historical range.
QSR's PE of 27.2x combined with a PEG ratio of -1.55 provides a growth-adjusted perspective. QSR has negative earnings, so its PE and PEG ratios are not meaningful here and cannot tell you whether the stock is over or undervalued. Keep in mind that PE-based valuation works best for profitable, mature companies — for high-growth or cyclical Restaurants, a DCF analysis may be more appropriate.
To value Restaurant Brands International Inc. using PE: (1) Compare the current PE (27.2x) against the Restaurants median to assess relative pricing, (2) check the PEG ratio (-1.55) to adjust for growth expectations, (3) review the 5-year PE range to identify where the stock sits historically, and (4) estimate fair value by multiplying a target PE by forward EPS estimates. This relative approach complements DCF's absolute valuation.
QSR's PEG ratio is -1.55, calculated by dividing the PE ratio (27.2x) by the expected earnings growth rate. Because QSR has negative earnings, its PEG ratio is not meaningful and should not be read as a sign of under or overvaluation. Note that PEG accuracy depends on the reliability of growth estimates.
PE ratio gives a quick relative read — how QSR is priced versus Restaurants peers. DCF provides an absolute value based on projected free cash flows. For QSR, with a strong ROE of 27.1%, both methods are worth using — PE for a market-relative check, DCF to stress-test whether fundamentals justify the price. Each method has blind spots: PE ignores capital structure and cash flow quality, while DCF is sensitive to growth and discount rate assumptions.
P/E and DCF value QSR with different methods and assumptions, so the two conclusions can differ. Compare the DCF intrinsic value.
Price as of 2026-06-12. Financial data from Financial Modeling Prep (trailing twelve months) · Valuation methodology by Charlie Wang.
This is an estimate, not investment advice.