Chart Of The Day: McDonald's Sharp Pullback Headed For Reversal

 | Nov 11, 2020 10:02AM ET

Shares of McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD), the world's largest fast food restaurant chain, surged in premarket trading on Monday, gaining 6.2% after the company reported better than expected Q3 2020 results. The Chicago-based company also announced it will be raising its dividend.

The mega cap purveyor of Big Macs, Chicken McNuggets and french fries among other menu items, posted an adjusted earnings per share of $2.22, surpassing the consensus $1.91 EPS. Revenue did a little better than estimated. While comparable store sales fell 2.2% around the world, they increased 4.6% in the US, as domestic customers—able to pick up orders or have them delivered as well as eating on-site but outdoors—were less restricted than consumers in other countries where lockdown measures were more severe.

But, after the stock opened 4.8% higher on Monday, it closed down 1.5%, in the red at the end of the day's trade. Given that Monday was also the day markets vaulted higher after the announcement of the Pfizer and BioNTech's potential coronavirus vaccine breakthrough, it's hard to understand why the stock of such a high-profile restaurant chain, which would benefit from any COVID-19 therapy, would experience such a drastic about-face. 

It isn’t convincing that markets may have been reacting to McDonald's disappointing global numbers, since those were overshadowed by domestic gains. Also difficult to believe is that the higher fixed costs management spoke of on the conference call should be so dramatic as to turn a huge advance into a decline.

Perhaps investors were focused on cyclical stocks, at the expense of equities that could be considered good, long-term, fixed income buying opportunities. Or perhaps the technical chart provides the elusive reason.