This post is part of our Battle of the Brands feature. Let us know which brand you prefer, and check out other Battle of the Brands posts.
While Kraft Foods Inc.'s (NYSE: KFT) Oscar Mayer brand and ConAgra Food Inc.'s (NYSE: CAG) Hebrew National may both have venerable histories, they also have very different personalities: "I wish I were and Oscar Mayer wiener" vs. "We answer to a higher authority."
In 1900, Oscar Mayer and his brothers ran one of the most popular sausage makers in Chicago. They pioneered the use of brand names and voluntary federal approval to protect the reputation of their products. The company was the first to offer packaged sliced bacon. Such innovations helped Oscar Mayer to become an industry leader. The first wiener-mobile rolled out in 1936, and its descendants can still be spotted today. The famous Oscar Mayer jingle was introduced in 1963, and today is one of the longest-running jingles still in use. In 1988 the company launched its Lunchables, prepacked cracker-and-cold-cut school lunches. Oscar Mayer became a Kraft Foods brand in 1989.
Kraft Foods is the largest U.S. food company, with $37.2 billion in sales in 2007. Oscar Mayer is one of seven Kraft Foods brands with more than $1 billion in revenue. The convenience meats category accounted for about 16% of total revenue.
This post is part of our Battle of the Brands feature. Let us know which brand you prefer, and check out other Battle of the Brands posts.
When it comes to this staple of kitchens and diners worldwide, the most common question after "Is it ketchup or catsup?" has got to be "Heinz or Hunt's?"
The Hunt Brothers Fruit Packing Company was founded in 1890 by Joseph and William Hunt in Santa Clara, California. It was a small canning business on the ground of a ranch, delivered locally by horse-drawn carriage. In 1946, tomato sauce became the flagship product, and a marketing push made the little red cans familiar across the U.S., and lead to plethora of other tomato-based products, including spaghetti sauce, barbecue sauce, and, of course, ketchup.
Today Hunt's is one brand of many belonging to packaged and frozen foods giant ConAgra Foods Inc. (NYSE: CAG) ranging from Healthy Choice to Slim Jims, from Orville Redenbacher to Egg Beaters. ConAgra reported $12 billion in sales last year.
ConAgra Foods (NYSE: CAG) is a top food producer, offering packaged and frozen foods, seafood and dairy products to retail, foodservice, commercial product and international customers. Among the company's many brands are Hunt's, Banquet, Chef Boyardee, Van Camp's, Healthy Choice, Orville Redenbacher's, PAM, Slim Jim and Wesson. Major competitors include Kraft Foods (NYSE: KFT) and Unilever (NYSE: UL).
The company pleased investors late last month, when it reported Q3 EPS of 63 cents and revenues of $3.53 billion. Analysts had been expecting 41 cents and $3.20 billion. Management also guided FY08 EPS to $1.80-$1.85 ($1.60 consensus) and announced that it would sell the company's trading and merchandising arm to the Ospraie Special Opportunities fund and others for $2.1 billion.
The Commerce Department's Q4-2007 final revision for GDP came in at +0.6%, but that was in-line and the data is now more than 75-days old. But it does highlight the concerns that the growth rates this quarter just can not be good. It also set the tone for more selling. It just goes to show that it still pays in today's climate to sell when you are feeling good about the market and buy when you feel overly concerned.
The Federal Reserve also auctioned off some $75 billion in treasury securities after receiving bids for some $86.1 billion. This was the first auction of its kind and the next auction is set for April 3. Below are the unofficial closing prices:
If you look at the unusual increase seen in short selling in many of the NASDAQ names from this morning, you might scratch your head. But that's the world we live in.
The company said its quarterly profit climbed to $309 million, or 63 cents per share due to higher prices and demand for its products. These numbers are up from $193 million, or 38 cents per share reported in the same period a year ago when the company's earnings numbers were dragged down by recall costs. Analysts, on average, expected quarterly earnings of 39 cents per share.
ConAgra's quarterly revenue grew to $3.53 billion, up from $2.9 billion a year ago. Revenue during the period was helped by strong gains from the company's food and ingredients segment which offset soaring commodity costs. Analysts expected the company show sales of $3.17 billion in the third quarter, according to Thomson Financial.
ConAgra (NYSE: CAG) is recently trading at $23 in pre-open trading, above its close of $21.89.
CAG reported Q3 diluted EPS of 63 cents. CAG reaffirmed long-term EPS view of 8-10%. CAG agreed to sell its commodity trading and merchandising operations to Ospraire Special Opportunities fund for approximately $2.1 billion.
CAG April option implied volatility of 51 is above its 26-week average of 27 according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com
Despite higher costs, ConAgra Foods Inc. (NYSE: CAG) fiscal third-quarter net income climbed 60% to $309.1 million, or 63 cents a share. Sales for the quarter increased 21% to $3.53 billion.
Hoop Holdings, a unit of Children's Place Retail Stores Inc. (NASDAQ: PLCE) and the operator of Disney Store North America, said late on Wednesday that it filed for Chapter 11. Children's Place isn't part of the Chapter 11 petition, but is in talks to sell a substantial part of the Disney Store business to Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS) in order to concentrate on its core namesake brand.
Rambus (NASDAQ: RMBS) shares are advancing another 4.4% in premarket trading after closing up over 38% yesterday following a court decision finding it wasn't guilty of fraud or violating antitrust laws in dealing with an industry group that set technology standards for dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, chips in the 1990s.
With the markets in a choppy/consolidation mode (or perhaps worse), it's best to consider including a few defensive stocks in your portfolio. And with the above in mind ConAgra is worth an evaluation.
ConAgra (NYSE: CAG) is one of the largest food companies in North America.
Analysts see moderate revenue growth for ConAgra in F2008, with large profits from its trading and merchandising businesses. CAG's food / ingredients unit should also register a solid increase in earnings.
Meanwhile, CAG's consumer foods line should perform adequately in F2008: analysts had originally expected the unit to record lower profits, but there are abundant signs that that will not be the case. The Reuters F2008/F2009 EPS consensus estimates for CAG are $1.59/$1.63.
ConAgra Foods, Inc. (NYSE: CAG) shares are trading higher today after the company raised its outlook for Q2 earnings (expected 12/20) due to strong performance in trading and merchandising. If you think that the company won't fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on CAG.
After hitting a one-year high of $28.35 last December, the stock hit a one-year low of $22.81 in November. CAG opened this morning at $24.90. So far today the stock has hit a low of $24.86 and a high of $25.61. As of 11:20, CAG is trading at $25.56, up $1.17 (4.8%). The chart for CAG looks bearish but improving, while S&P gives the stock a neutral 3 STARS (out of 5) hold rating.
For a bullish hedged play on this stock, I would consider a March bull-put credit spread below the $22.50 range. A bull-put credit spread is an options position that combines the purchase and sale of put options to hedge risk in case the stock doesn't do what you think but still leverage nice returns. This particular trade will make a 6.4% return in just 4 months as long as CAG is above $22.50 at March expiration. ConAgra would have to fall by more than 15% before we would start to lose money. CAG hasn't been below $22.50 at all in the past year and has shown support around $23 recently. This trade could be protected by strong support around $23 where the stock bottomed in early November.
Brent Archer is an options analyst and writer at Investors Observer. At publication time, Brent neither owns nor controls positions in CAG.
Update: Yesterday's (10-17-07) Wall Street Journal (subscription) article about this investigation began "Prominent American food companies are under scrutiny in a federal probe of possible fraud and corruption in the military's food-supply operations for the Iraq war", and went on to read "The inquiry is focused on whether the food companies set excessively high prices when they sold their goods to the Army's primary food contractor for the war zone." Today's (8-18-07) WSJ article about the investigation reported a very different slant to the story, suggesting that, rather than pursuing American producers, the government was investigating the wholesaler and companies involved in the Kuwait end. Given this change, I find the story I have written below no longer substantiated, and caution readers to wait along with me for more reliable information.
In accordance with our policy of owning up to what we have written, the post will remain.
A number of American food companies including Sara Lee (NYSE:SLE), ConAgra (NYSE: CAG) and Perdue Farms Inc. have come under suspicion of conspiring with Kuwait-based Agility Corp., a logistics supplier for the U.S. troops in Iraq, to inflate food supply costs. In June, Agility received a new, one-year, $2.8 billion contract to provide life support (billeting, motor pool, dining and medical support services) to troops in Iraq. Agility, until recently known as Public Warehousing, has enjoyed a series of support contracts throughout much of the Iraq conflict.
According to Reuters, the Defense and Justice Departments are investigating allegations that Agility may have taken kickbacks from its suppliers, as well as charging the U.S. military unreasonably high prices for provender.
Agility, founded in 1979, was taken public in 1997 and is traded on the Kuwait exchange. It employs over 20,000 people in over 100 countries, with an annual revenue of $4.5 billion. In June, it was also awarded a $43.6 million contract for base operations and maintenance services at U.S. Air Force bases in Spain.
Update: ConAgra has put out a press release claiming that the DOD is looking to them as witnesses, rather than perpetrators.