Campbell’s beats estimates but cost pressures weigh
Investing.com -- Campbell’s Company (NASDAQ: CPB) reported third-quarter results that exceeded analyst expectations, though the company faced continued pressure from inflation and softer demand.
The food manufacturer posted adjusted earnings per share of $0.50, topping the analyst consensus of $0.49. Revenue declined 4% YoY to $2.4 billion, slightly above the $2.39 billion estimate. Organic net sales fell 4%, driven by lower volume/mix, though partially offset by positive net price realization. Shares rose 3% following the results.
"Our third quarter results were generally in-line with our expectations but remained under pressure, reflecting top-line softness and inflation-driven margin headwinds," said Mick Beekhuizen, Campbell’s President and Chief Executive Officer.
Adjusted EBIT decreased 24% to $274 million, reflecting margin pressure from cost inflation and supply chain costs, including tariff impacts. Adjusted gross profit margin contracted 240 basis points to 27.7%, though supply chain productivity improvements and cost savings initiatives provided partial offsets.
The Meals & Beverages segment saw net sales decline 4%, with U.S. soup sales down 8%, driven primarily by condensed and ready-to-serve varieties. The Snacks segment also posted a 4% decline in net sales, with weakness across salty snacks, crackers and fresh bakery products.
Campbell’s reaffirmed its full-year fiscal 2026 guidance for organic net sales of down 2% to down 1%. The company maintained its adjusted EPS guidance range of $2.15 to $2.25, representing a decline of 26% to 23% compared to fiscal 2025 results excluding the 53rd week. The midpoint of $2.20 compares to the prior year’s adjusted EPS of $2.91.
Year-to-date cash flow from operations totaled $839 million, down from $872 million in the prior year. The company delivered approximately $20 million in cost savings during the quarter, bringing total savings to $200 million toward its fiscal 2028 target of $375 million.
Following the release, analysts at Vital Knowledge said that "overall this CPB report belongs in the ’could have been worse”’bucket and might spark a (modest and brief) rebound rally (helped by a cheap ~10x PE and >7% dividend yield), but the underlying fundamentals are still grim (EPS down >30%) due to muted top line trends and continued cost/inflation pressures."
