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Campbell's Holds Annual Goals as US Consumers Cut Spend

  • Campbell's Q3 profit beats estimates, but sales miss
  • Sees Q4 tariff refund benefits to be 3-4 cents
  • Expects tariff refunds to mostly offset Iran war-related costs

June 8 (Reuters) - Packaged food maker ‌Campbell's reaffirmed annual forecast on Monday, after trimming it earlier this year, and said the Middle East conflict is piling pressure on already strained U.S. consumers.

Consumer sentiment sank to record lows as rising gasoline prices linked ​to the Iran war dampened household purchasing power long weakened by stubborn inflation.

The ​pressure is pushing lower-income consumers toward cheaper private-label brands, while the rise ⁠of GLP-1 weight-loss drugs is further denting demand, weighing on companies such as Campbell's that raised ​prices to offset higher costs.

Campbell's expects organic sales to fall 1% to 2% and adjusted ​earnings per share at $2.15 to $2.25, factoring in early impacts from the Middle East conflict, including higher logistics costs.

It expects to offset these pressures through tariff refunds of 3-4 cents in the fourth quarter.

"From a ​net-sales perspective, I think the lower end... is probably a more realistic assumption at this ​point," Chief Financial Officer Todd Cunfer said on a post-earnings call.

Oil near $100 a barrel could lift fiscal ‌2027 ⁠inflation 2% to 3% above normal, the company said, adding it would rely on cost savings and price hikes if needed.

CEO Mick Beekhuizen said Campbell's is focused on simplifying operations while accelerating productivity and cost savings.

The company identified its salty snacks business, including Snyder's of ​Hanover, Kettle Brand and ​Pepperidge Farm, as its ⁠biggest opportunity, with plans to revive growth by prioritizing core brands, adjusting pack sizes and streamlining its product range

Campbell's posted third-quarter adjusted ​profit of 50 cents per share, beating analysts' estimate of 48 ​cents, according ⁠to data compiled by LSEG.

"(The) road ahead likely remains long and tough," RBC Capital Markets analyst Nik Modi said, adding there is no clear catalyst other than stronger, more consistent results.

Quarterly ⁠net sales ​of Campbell's, set to drop out of the S&P 500 ​index this month, fell 4% to $2.37 billion, slightly missing analysts' expectations. Its shares were down about 1%.

Reporting by Neil J Kanatt in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar

Source: Reuters


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