QSR logo

Restaurant Brands International Stock Price

Symbol: NYSE:QSRMarket Cap: US$31.2bCategory: Consumer Services

QSR Share Price Performance

Recent QSR News & Updates

No updates

Restaurant Brands International Inc. Key Details

US$8.8b

Revenue

US$5.7b

Cost of Revenue

US$3.0b

Gross Profit

US$2.1b

Other Expenses

US$952.0m

Earnings

Last Reported Earnings
Mar 31, 2025
Next Reporting Earnings
Aug 07, 2025
Earnings per share (EPS)
2.91
Gross Margin
34.55%
Net Profit Margin
10.85%
Debt/Equity Ratio
282.4%

Restaurant Brands International Inc. Competitors

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

About QSR

Founded
1954
Employees
37600
CEO
Joshua Kobza
WebsiteView website
www.rbi.com

Restaurant Brands International Inc. operates as a quick-service restaurant company in Canada, the United States, and internationally. It operates through six segments: Tim Hortons, Burger King, Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen, Firehouse Subs, International, and Restaurant Holdings. The company owns and franchises Tim Hortons, a coffee and baked good restaurant chain that offers beverages, sandwiches, wraps, flatbread pizzas, and others; Burger King, a quick service hamburger restaurant chain that offers flame-grilled hamburgers, chicken, and other sandwiches; Popeyes, a quick service chicken concept that offers a Louisiana style menu, including fried bone-in chicken, chicken sandwiches, chicken tenders, wings, fried shrimp, and regional items; and Firehouse Subs, which offers subs with meats and cheese, as well as chopped salads, chili, soups, soft drinks, and other sides. Restaurant Brands International Inc. was founded in 1954 and is based in Toronto, Canada.

Canadian Market Performance

  • 7 Days: -0.7%
  • 3 Months: 8.7%
  • 1 Year: 17.0%
  • Year to Date: 9.5%
The market has stayed flat over the 7 days. More promisingly, the market is up 17% over the past year. Looking forward, earnings are forecast to grow by 11% annually. Market details ›
This week, we’re diving deeper into the world of agentic AI. We’re zeroing in on the core technologies that make these intelligent agents actually reliably work. We explore what all this could mean for software, start-ups, and most importantly, the opportunities and risks each industry faces by adopting Agentic AI.
Continue reading