PepsiCo beats earnings estimates on steady demand for sodas and snacks, names new CFO
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 10/09/25 08:09 AM EDT*
Q3 results beat driven by international growth
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Will cut costs in N. America snacking segment, CEO says
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Names Walmart U.S. finance head as new CFO
(Adds CEO comments on Elliott, new product launches and demand from conference call throughout, updates shares)
By Juveria Tabassum and Jessica DiNapoli
Oct 9 (Reuters) - PepsiCo
The company also named Steve Schmitt, who is currently U.S.
finance head at its biggest customer Walmart
The company is under pressure from activist investor Elliott Management for lagging behind main rival Coca-Cola, while also facing consumer pushback on price hikes over the years and scrutiny on synthetic flavors from the Trump administration.
CEO Ramon Laguarta said the company's interactions with
Elliott have been collaborative and he agrees with the activist
investor that the company is undervalued. He said many of the
investor's ideas were included in PepsiCo's
Laguarta, however, did not give a clear answer to the
activist investor's boldest idea to grow PepsiCo's
PepsiCo
"We'll see how consumers react," Laguarta said, adding
that the prices on the new products would be higher, helping
margins as PepsiCo
PepsiCo's
"I would characterize it (the results beat) as mildly
encouraging. Certainly they're being shaken up by Elliott
Management... that's probably got their attention," said Greg
Halter, director of research at Carnegie Investment Counsel,
which holds shares in PepsiCo
Its shares opened up 1% as the company maintained its annual organic revenue growth and adjusted profit in constant currency targets.
The company's 12-month forward earnings multiple, a common benchmark for valuing stocks, was 16.54, lagging Coca-Cola's 20.90.
Laguarta said PepsiCo
The company is also offering smaller pack sizes as consumers look for affordable options, a move that helped drive volume growth in some Asian markets this year. The company's international business accounts for about 40% of its revenue.
Overall consumer sentiment remained weak despite spurts of growth in India and Middle East markets, Laguarta said on the call, adding that immigration crackdown under the Trump administration was denting demand among its Hispanic customers.
While tariffs were a roughly three-percentage point headwind to its core earnings in the third quarter, the company plans to return to margin growth in the North America beverages category later this year, executives said. (Reporting by Prerna Bedi and Juveria Tabassum in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D'Silva)
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