Futures
Accédez à des centaines de contrats perpétuels
TradFi
Or
Une plateforme pour les actifs mondiaux
Options
Hot
Tradez des options classiques de style européen
Compte unifié
Maximiser l'efficacité de votre capital
Trading démo
Introduction au trading futures
Préparez-vous à trader des contrats futurs
Événements futures
Participez aux événements et gagnez
Demo Trading
Utiliser des fonds virtuels pour faire l'expérience du trading sans risque
Lancer
CandyDrop
Collecte des candies pour obtenir des airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rapide, Gagnez de potentiels nouveaux jetons
HODLer Airdrop
Conservez des GT et recevez d'énormes airdrops gratuitement
Launchpad
Soyez les premiers à participer au prochain grand projet de jetons
Points Alpha
Tradez on-chain et gagnez des airdrops
Points Futures
Gagnez des points Futures et réclamez vos récompenses d’airdrop.
Investissement
Simple Earn
Gagner des intérêts avec des jetons inutilisés
Investissement automatique
Auto-invest régulier
Double investissement
Profitez de la volatilité du marché
Staking souple
Gagnez des récompenses grâce au staking flexible
Prêt Crypto
0 Fees
Mettre en gage un crypto pour en emprunter une autre
Centre de prêts
Centre de prêts intégré
Campbell’s Stock Slides as Snack Sales Slump Takes a Bite Out of Earnings
Key Takeaways
Get personalized, AI-powered answers built on 27+ years of trusted expertise.
ASK
Americans eat a lot of snacks. But not enough, according to investors.
Campbell’s Company (CPB) shares were down 5% recently after the company, known for its namesake soup brand, reported weaker-than-expected fiscal 2026 second-quarter results and lowered its full-year outlook, citing weakness in its snacks business.
The Camden, N.J.-based firm reported adjusted earnings of $0.51 per share on net sales that declined 5% year-over-year to $2.56 billion. Analysts polled by Visible Alpha had expected $0.57 and $2.61 billion, respectively.
Why This Matters
Snack foods are a major profit driver for Campbell’s, which owns brands such as Goldfish and Pepperidge Farm. Weak demand is raising concerns about consumer spending on packaged foods, and the lower outlook signals a challenging year ahead for one of the largest U.S. food companies.
The results “fell short of our expectations due to weaker-than-expected performance in Snacks and storm-related shipment disruptions,” CEO Mick Beekhuizen said. “To stabilize Snacks, we are taking decisive action, focused on sharpening our value, new product innovation and in-market execution. We are also accelerating cost-saving initiatives to mitigate cost headwinds and support continued investment in our brands.”
Some of the company’s snack brands include Goldfish crackers, Snyder’s of Hanover pretzels, Lance crackers, Pepperidge Farm cookies and crackers, and Cape Cod potato chips.
Related Articles
Economic Factors Influencing Demand for Consumer Goods
High Food Prices Got You Down? Some Companies Are Cutting Them
In addition, “largely driven by the near-term outlook for our Snacks business and select incremental trade investments,” the company lowered its full-year guidance “to reflect a more cautious view for the balance of the year.” It now sees adjusted EPS of $2.15 to $2.25, down from $2.40 to $2.55, and organic net sales down 2% to 1%, from the prior range of down 1% to up 1%.
Campbell’s shares entered the day down 40% over the past 12 months, including 11% since the start of the year.
Do you have a news tip for Investopedia reporters? Please email us at
[email protected]