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PepsiCo Reports Mixed Quarterly Results Amidst Consumer Budget Tightening
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PepsiCo Reports Mixed Quarterly Results Amidst Consumer Budget Tightening

L'essentiel

  • PepsiCo reported mixed second-quarter results, with strong international demand offset by struggles in its North American food and beverage divisions.
  • CEO Ramon Laguarta cited tightening consumer budgets due to inflation and rising gas prices as key factors impacting domestic performance.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

PepsiCo reported mixed quarterly results as strong international demand was offset by struggles in its North American food and beverage divisions. CEO Ramon Laguarta cited tightening consumer budgets due to inflation and rising gas prices as key factors impacting domestic performance.

Taille de police

PepsiCo on Thursday reported mixed quarterly results as the struggles of its North American food and beverage divisions offset strong international demand.

"Results were tempered in the quarter as U.S. food and beverage category performance moderated with consumer budgets tightening due to rising inflationary pressures," CEO Ramon Laguarta said in prepared remarks shared on the company's website on Thursday.

During Pepsi's second quarter, global oil prices swung dramatically due to the U.S. war with Iran. In the U.S., the national average gas price hit a four-year high of $4.56 per gallon in late May, leading many shoppers to watch their spending.

Shares of Pepsi were down more than 4% in morning trading.

Here's what the company reported for the quarter ended June 13 compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

Earnings per share: $2.20 adjusted vs. $2.21 expected

Revenue: $24.18 billion vs. $23.95 billion expected

Pepsi reported second-quarter net income attributable to the company of $2.98 billion, or $2.18 per share, up from $1.26 billion, or 92 cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding restructuring and impairment charges and other items, the company earned $2.20 per share.

Net sales rose 6.4% to $24.18 billion. Organic revenue, which excludes acquisitions, divestitures and foreign currency, increased 2.4% in the quarter.

Globally, volume for Pepsi's food increased 3%, while volume for its beverages rose 2%. The metric excludes pricing and foreign exchange fluctuations to reflect demand more accurately.

But Pepsi's volume growth came from its international markets. Demand was much weaker domestically. Its North American food business reported flat volume for the quarter, and its North American beverage division saw volume drop 4%.

"I think the consumer is worse than what we had anticipated, and it's driven mainly by gas prices," Laguarta said on the company's earnings conference call.

Demand was particularly weak at convenience stores.

"We need to see some improvement in the in the convenience and gas channel, and hopefully we'll get some tailwinds from gas prices to do that," CFO Steve Schmitt said.

Over the last two years, both North American segments have seen weaker demand as a result of higher prices. In February, Pepsi cut prices on Lay's, Tostitos, Doritos and Cheetos by as much as 15% to try to win back shoppers. The company has also been "restaging" some of its iconic brands, like Gatorade and Lay's, with fresh branding to boost their sales.

Pepsi expects that its North American volumes will recover, but that will take time, particularly after this quarter's setback.

"Our North America business was softer than we anticipated in the second quarter, and we now expect a more gradual improvement in performance trends for the balance of this year," Schmitt said in his prepared remarks.

For the full year, Pepsi reiterated its prior forecast that organic revenue will rise between 2% and 4% and core constant currency earnings per share will increase in a range of 4% to 6%.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Gradual improvement in North American performance trends.

    Probable

Questions ouvertes

  • Will gas prices continue to impact consumer spending?
  • How long will it take for North American volumes to recover?
  • Will PepsiCo's brand restaging efforts boost sales?

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This article was originally published by CNBC.

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