Investors devour strong first-quarter results from Taco Bell, sending parent company's shares soaring.

Table of Contents Yum! Brands delivered an impressive first-quarter performance, exceeding Wall Street expectations across key financial metrics. The quick-service restaurant giant reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.50, beating the analyst consensus of $1.38, while quarterly revenue of $2.06 billion slightly surpassed the $2.04 billion projection. Yum! Brands CEO: "We delivered solid topline momentum to start the year, with our fundamentals as strong as ever. Taco Bell delivered an outstanding 8% same-store sales growth, meaningfully ahead of the QSR industry…"$YUM: +2% Pre-Market pic.twitter.com/WnS2YxK3fo — The Transcript (@TheTranscript_) April 29, 2026 The company’s net income soared to $432 million, translating to $1.55 per share, compared to $253 million, or 90 cents per share, during the same period last year. Total net sales increased 15%, bolstered by enhanced revenue from company-operated locations following Yum’s acquisition of over 100 Taco Bell restaurants in the Southeast region during the previous year. Shares climbed approximately 2.5% following the earnings announcement. Yum! Brands, Inc., YUM Taco Bell emerged as the undisputed star performer. The Mexican-inspired fast-food chain achieved 8% same-store sales growth during the quarter, substantially exceeding the 5.6% StreetAccount estimate. Chief Executive Officer Chris Turner characterized the results as “an outstanding” achievement that was “meaningfully ahead of the QSR industry.” Digital revenue also showcased impressive momentum. Company-wide digital sales approached $11 billion, while the digital sales mix reached an all-time high of 63%. The company revealed plans to broaden its implementation of AI-powered A/B testing throughout Taco Bell drive-thru operations following a successful first-quarter trial. This technology enables the brand to optimize layouts, visual elements, and customer-facing messaging to maximize effectiveness. KFC posted 2% global same-store sales growth, falling short of the 2.5% forecast. Within the United States, KFC system sales dropped 2% during the quarter. Yum has discontinued separate reporting of U.S. same-store sales for KFC, a decision that suggests the domestic segment now represents a smaller portion of the overall business. The United States now ranks as KFC’s third-largest market by system sales, trailing China and Europe. Turner emphasized that the U.S. business remains “strategically important,” though acknowledging improvement opportunities. KFC is emphasizing value propositions and product innovation, incorporating insights from its Saucy concept, which specializes in chicken tenders. Pizza Hut presented a divergent quarterly performance. Global same-store sales remained flat, exceeding the projected 0.7% decrease, while U.S. same-store sales dropped 4%. International same-store sales climbed 2%. The pizza chain has consistently represented the most challenged component of Yum’s brand portfolio. Last November, Yum disclosed plans to evaluate strategic alternatives for Pizza Hut. Recent industry reports have identified Apollo Global Management and Sycamore Partners as prospective acquirers. Yum refrained from offering an official update on this strategic review during Wednesday’s announcement, though the earnings materials notably featured a breakdown of system sales, restaurant count, and core operating profit that excluded Pizza Hut — suggesting the organization is positioning its business presentation without the brand. Yum opened 1,030 gross new locations during the quarter, maintaining unit expansion at 5%. Core operating profit advanced 6%. Looking ahead, Yum continues targeting 5% annual unit growth, 7% system sales growth on a constant currency basis, and minimum 8% core operating profit growth on average.