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PepsiCo's Q2 Serves Up A Flat Beat
PepsiCo beat the numbers, but Wall Street's reaction was far from bubbly. The snack-and-soda giant reported second-quarter revenue of $24.18 billion, up 6.4% from a year earlier, while core earnings came in at $2.20 per share. The company also kept its full-year outlook intact. Shares closed down about 3.3% Thursday at $137.86, as investors looked past the headline beat and focused on the lack of fizz in the North American business.
The catch is that PepsiCo’s biggest brands are still running into a cautious consumer. Shoppers remain careful about where they spend, and PepsiCo's home market is showing the strain. North American snack volumes were flat in the quarter, while beverage volumes fell 4%. PepsiCo had already been cutting prices on some major snack brands to bring shoppers back, but higher gas prices and tighter budgets appear to be hitting impulse purchases at convenience stores and gas stations. That is not a great setup for a company built on snacks, soda, and quick trips to the checkout counter. The international business helped keep the quarter from looking worse. PepsiCo said overall snack volumes rose 3% and beverage volumes rose 2%, giving the company enough strength outside North America to protect the top-line momentum. Management is also leaning into cheaper pack sizes, bundled offers, more retail shelf space, and healthier products such as lower-sugar Gatorade and protein-focused snacks. Those moves may help, but they also underline the same issue investors are worried about — PepsiCo is relying more on pricing, packaging, and product tweaks to keep familiar brands moving. That makes the unchanged guidance a comfort, but not a cure. PepsiCo still expects fiscal 2026 organic revenue growth of 2% to 4% and core constant-currency earnings-per-share growth of 4% to 6%. The company is not broken, and the quarter was not bad. But the stock’s drop shows investors are not impressed with a small earnings beat when PepsiCo’s home-market consumer still looks stretched. PepsiCo can still pour out growth, but for now the fizz is coming from outside North America. SPONSORED CONTENT
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