KHC

Kraft Heinz Dives As Cost-Slashing Strategy Sputters

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Kraft Heinz ( KHC ) sales and profit fell short of Wall Street expectations last quarter, adding pressure on the food giant to fuel growth with a large acquisition.

[ibd-display-video id=3151711 width=50 float=left autostart=true] Earnings amounted to 90 cents a share in the fourth quarter, excluding some items, the company said on Friday. That was a nickel below analysts' estimates and a slight decline from 91 cents a year earlier. Though sales grew for the second straight quarter - reversing a string of declines - they still missed projections.

One year after Kraft Heinz was rebuffed in a bid to buy Unilever ( UN ), the weak results threaten to renew speculation that it needs a blockbuster deal. T

Kraft Heinz shares tumbled 5% to 69.10 in the stock market today , falling to their worst levels since August 2015.

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The results put a spotlight on the company's struggle to reinvigorate its stable of brands, which include Capri Sun, Lunchables, Oscar Mayer and Velveeta. Nuts and cold cuts were particularly weak in the U.S. last quarter, Kraft Heinz said.

"This reinforces that growth is extremely challenged for this company," said Ken Shea, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. "It's not surprising given the categories they're in and how difficult the retail environment is."

Sales came in at $6.88 billion last quarter, while analysts had estimated $6.91 billion on average.

Kraft Heinz Chief Executive Officer Bernardo Hees said the U.S. tax overhaul will help the company in 2018, but its results last year were disappointing. "Our financial performance in 2017 did not reflect our progress or potential," he said in a statement.

Since the U.S. tax changes passed late last year, the company has made plans to invest some of the savings. That includes using $800 million for capital expenditures, Kraft Heinz said. The company also vowed to put $1.3 billion into retirement benefit plans, and another $300 million toward "strategic investments to build our capabilities, our people skills and our brands."

Kraft Heinz was created in a 2015 merger orchestrated by 3G Capital and Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRKB). Two years earlier, those backers had teamed up to take Heinz private - with a strategy of slashing costs and ramping up profit margins. That's been the playbook at the new combined company too.

But with the company announcing Thursday that it had cut more than $1.7 billion in expenses since the merger, there is growing pressure to find another target to buy. And without a major deal, Kraft Heinz is starting to look like other U.S. packaged food companies struggling with changing consumer tastes.

"It's becoming more and more like the old Kraft," Shea said.

The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.


The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

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