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CAG missed Q3 EPS estimates, cut full-year guidance and nearly doubled its COGS inflation forecast.
Next year EPS consensus has slipped from $1.81 to $1.71 in 60 days with no sign of stabilization.
A big dividend yield sounds attractive, but an 80% plus payout ratio on shrinking earnings is a red flag.
Conagra Brands (CAG - Free Report) is one of North America's largest packaged food companies, and it is caught in a squeeze between recovering volumes and collapsing margins.
CAG earns a Zacks Rank #5 (Strong Sell) and is today's Bear of the Day.
About the Company
Headquartered in Chicago, Conagra Brands is a North American packaged food company with nearly $12 billion in fiscal 2025 net sales and a portfolio spanning frozen meals, snacks, shelf-stable grocery, refrigerated items, and foodservice products.
The company operates across four segments: Grocery and Snacks, Refrigerated and Frozen, International, and Foodservice.
Conagra manages its portfolio in two distinct speeds: higher-velocity growth businesses in frozen and snacks, and mature cash-generating staples where the priority is margin and free cash flow.
CAG is valued at $6.5 billion and has a Forward PE of 8. The stock has Zacks Style Scores of “A” in Value, but “D” in Growth.
Q3 Earnings Miss
Conagra's reported Q3 results early in April, seeing revenue of $2.79 billion edged past the $2.77 billion estimate. Organic sales grew 2.4%, which was a genuine positive after quarters of volume pressure.
But the bottom line missed to the downside by 2.5%. Adjusted EPS came in at $0.39 against the $0.40 consensus, down 23.5% from $0.51 a year ago.
Adjusted gross margins fell 112 basis points to 23.7%. Adjusted operating margins contracted to 10.6% from 12.7% a year ago. Top-line recovery arrived, but the profits didn't come with it.
The guidance revision sealed the bearish case. Management cut full-year adjusted EPS to the low end of the prior range at $1.70, below the $1.73 consensus, and raised its COGS inflation forecast to 7% from a prior estimate of slightly above 4%.
The Estimate Collapse
Analysts have been cutting estimates since that April quarter.
Current year EPS stood at $1.73 sixty days ago and is now $1.70. Next year has gone from $1.81 to $1.71 over the same window.
With Goldman Sachs at Sell and a $15 target, Wells Fargo at Underweight with a $14 target, and multiple firms cutting price targets after the print, the analyst community is not waiting for a turnaround.
The Dividend Red Flag
The dividend looks great at first glance, but here is where it gets uncomfortable.
Free cash flow is covering it for now, and management explicitly cited dividend funding as a capital allocation priority. But with COGS inflation accelerating, margins compressing, and next year's EPS consensus barely moving off $1.71, there is very little cushion.
A high yield on a deteriorating earnings base is not income. It is a warning sign.
Some Bright Spots
The frozen and snacks businesses are genuinely improving. Eighty-eight percent of the frozen portfolio is holding or gaining volume share. Meat snacks grew roughly 9% in dollars and 10% in volume. Pricing actions in sweet treats are holding with minimal elasticity impact so far.
While the volume cliff is behind them, the margin cliff remains the issue.
Technicals Look Bleak
Not much to talk about when you look at the CAG chart. It’s a slow bleed as investors give up on a big name that now pays a nice-looking dividend.
The stock hasn’t crossed above the 21-day MA since March and it looks like sellers are showing up every moment it gets to that moving average.
In Summary
Organic volume is recovering, but COGS inflation nearly doubled in one quarter, margins are contracting sharply, EPS estimates keep drifting lower, and the dividend yield is doing more to mask the deterioration than to reward it.
The stock is down roughly 40% over the past year and the analyst consensus is clustered around Hold, Sell, and Underweight.
For those interested in a food related staple, check our Darling Ingredients (DAR - Free Report) . The stock is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) that is coming off a 43% EPS beat.
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Bear of the Day: Conagra Brands (CAG)
Key Takeaways
Conagra Brands (CAG - Free Report) is one of North America's largest packaged food companies, and it is caught in a squeeze between recovering volumes and collapsing margins.
CAG earns a Zacks Rank #5 (Strong Sell) and is today's Bear of the Day.
About the Company
Headquartered in Chicago, Conagra Brands is a North American packaged food company with nearly $12 billion in fiscal 2025 net sales and a portfolio spanning frozen meals, snacks, shelf-stable grocery, refrigerated items, and foodservice products.
The company operates across four segments: Grocery and Snacks, Refrigerated and Frozen, International, and Foodservice.
Conagra manages its portfolio in two distinct speeds: higher-velocity growth businesses in frozen and snacks, and mature cash-generating staples where the priority is margin and free cash flow.
CAG is valued at $6.5 billion and has a Forward PE of 8. The stock has Zacks Style Scores of “A” in Value, but “D” in Growth.
Q3 Earnings Miss
Conagra's reported Q3 results early in April, seeing revenue of $2.79 billion edged past the $2.77 billion estimate. Organic sales grew 2.4%, which was a genuine positive after quarters of volume pressure.
But the bottom line missed to the downside by 2.5%. Adjusted EPS came in at $0.39 against the $0.40 consensus, down 23.5% from $0.51 a year ago.
Adjusted gross margins fell 112 basis points to 23.7%. Adjusted operating margins contracted to 10.6% from 12.7% a year ago. Top-line recovery arrived, but the profits didn't come with it.
The guidance revision sealed the bearish case. Management cut full-year adjusted EPS to the low end of the prior range at $1.70, below the $1.73 consensus, and raised its COGS inflation forecast to 7% from a prior estimate of slightly above 4%.
The Estimate Collapse
Analysts have been cutting estimates since that April quarter.
Current year EPS stood at $1.73 sixty days ago and is now $1.70. Next year has gone from $1.81 to $1.71 over the same window.
With Goldman Sachs at Sell and a $15 target, Wells Fargo at Underweight with a $14 target, and multiple firms cutting price targets after the print, the analyst community is not waiting for a turnaround.
The Dividend Red Flag
The dividend looks great at first glance, but here is where it gets uncomfortable.
Free cash flow is covering it for now, and management explicitly cited dividend funding as a capital allocation priority. But with COGS inflation accelerating, margins compressing, and next year's EPS consensus barely moving off $1.71, there is very little cushion.
A high yield on a deteriorating earnings base is not income. It is a warning sign.
Some Bright Spots
The frozen and snacks businesses are genuinely improving. Eighty-eight percent of the frozen portfolio is holding or gaining volume share. Meat snacks grew roughly 9% in dollars and 10% in volume. Pricing actions in sweet treats are holding with minimal elasticity impact so far.
While the volume cliff is behind them, the margin cliff remains the issue.
Technicals Look Bleak
Not much to talk about when you look at the CAG chart. It’s a slow bleed as investors give up on a big name that now pays a nice-looking dividend.
The stock hasn’t crossed above the 21-day MA since March and it looks like sellers are showing up every moment it gets to that moving average.
In Summary
Organic volume is recovering, but COGS inflation nearly doubled in one quarter, margins are contracting sharply, EPS estimates keep drifting lower, and the dividend yield is doing more to mask the deterioration than to reward it.
The stock is down roughly 40% over the past year and the analyst consensus is clustered around Hold, Sell, and Underweight.
For those interested in a food related staple, check our Darling Ingredients (DAR - Free Report) . The stock is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) that is coming off a 43% EPS beat.