Conagra Brands (CAG) delivered mixed third-quarter financial results, falling short on earnings while exceeding revenue projections. The packaged foods manufacturer reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.39, beneath the Street’s $0.40 expectation. Meanwhile, quarterly revenue reached $2.79 billion, outpacing the $2.76 billion analyst forecast.
Conagra Brands, Inc., CAG
Total net sales declined 1.9% compared to the prior-year period. However, organic net sales climbed 2.4%, supported by a 1.9% improvement in price/mix and a 0.5% uptick in volume.
The Refrigerated & Frozen division delivered particularly strong results. Organic net sales in this segment jumped 3.6%, with volume advancing 3.9% as the company regained market share previously lost during supply chain disruptions last year.
The Grocery & Snacks division recorded 1.8% organic net sales expansion. The Foodservice segment achieved 3.6% growth.
Volume improvements were particularly notable in frozen single-serve meals, frozen vegetables, meat snacks, and hot cocoa products.
Adjusted gross margin contracted 112 basis points to 23.7%. Although improved organic sales and efficiency initiatives provided support, they proved insufficient to counterbalance escalating input expenses.
The company now anticipates cost of goods sold inflation will approach 7% for the complete fiscal year, accounting for tariff-related costs. Adjusted net income tumbled 22.3% to $188 million.
Adjusted operating margin hit 10.6% during the quarter. Management projects the full-year metric will finish near the upper end of the 11.0%–11.5% guidance range.
Conagra reduced its full-year adjusted EPS guidance to roughly $1.70. This figure represents the bottom of the company’s prior $1.70 to $1.85 projection range — a signal that tempers optimism, though management hasn’t abandoned its forecast completely.
Management now anticipates annual net sales will land at the midpoint of previous expectations, which projected results between a 1% decrease and a 1% increase.
Escalating input expenses remain a persistent challenge. The company had implemented price adjustments to compensate for surging costs in commodities including cocoa, olive oil, and palm oil, alongside tariffs affecting tin-plate steel.
Price-sensitive consumers reducing discretionary spending and gravitating toward value brands have complicated this strategy. Additionally, the expanding trend toward healthier eating habits, partially fueled by growing adoption of weight-loss medications, has created headwinds for food manufacturers’ top-line performance.
Full-year cost of goods sold inflation, inclusive of tariff impacts, is anticipated to reach approximately 7%.
The post Conagra Brands (CAG) Stock Drops Following Q3 Earnings Shortfall and Revised Profit Outlook appeared first on Blockonomi.


