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Charts Turn Tasty: McDonald's, Coca‑Cola And Yum Brands Stocks Hit Golden Crosses

Benzinga·12/23/2025 16:58:30
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The market's latest bullish signal didn't come from AI, chips, or high-beta growth. It came from burgers, soda, and fried chicken. Over the past few sessions, Coca-Cola Co (NYSE:KO), McDonald’s Corp (NYSE:MCD), Yum! Brands Inc (NYSE:YUM) and Yum China Holdings Inc (NYSE:YUMC) have all flashed a Golden Crossa technical pattern that often signals a shift in longer-term momentum.

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For each of these stocks, the 50-day SMA (simple moving average) has crossed above the 200-day SMA, making a Golden Cross. What makes this notable isn't the indicator itself. It's the lineup.

These are global fast-food giants that typically move when investors favor stability, pricing power, and cash-flow visibility over riskier growth narratives.

Read Also: Druckenmiller’s Viking Trade Just Hit A Golden Cross — And A Sweet 36% Gain

Not All Bullish Signals Look Alike

Dig a little deeper and the signals tell slightly different stories.

Chart created using Benzinga Pro

Yum! Brands and Yum China look like the momentum leaders of the group. Both stocks are trading well above their longer-term trends, with technical strength suggesting buyers are still in control rather than fading rallies.

Chart created using Benzinga Pro

These are charts that look like trends already in motion.

Chart created using Benzinga Pro

McDonald's sits closer to the middle. Its golden cross signals steadier, more measured momentum—not explosive, but controlled. It's the kind of setup that tends to attract investors looking for reliability rather than excitement.

Chart created using Benzinga Pro

Coca-Cola, meanwhile, is the quiet one. The stock has been consolidating rather than chasing higher, and its momentum indicators remain subdued. But that restraint is often the appeal. KO's signal looks less like a chase and more like a defensive reset.

What The Market May Be Saying

When multiple fast-food and consumer staples names turn bullish together, it's rarely random. It can hint at a broader rotation toward durable brands, global scale, and predictable demand — traits that tend to matter more when markets grow less forgiving.

This isn't about fries or fizzy drinks. It's about where leadership may be quietly forming. When fast food starts flashing bullish signals in unison, the market may be sending a subtle message: comfort trades are back on the menu.

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Image: Shutterstock