Key Highlights Revenue exceeded expectations at $24.18B versus the anticipated $23.97B, marking a 6.4% year-over-year increase Adjusted earnings per share reached $2.20, falling just $0.01 sh
Key Highlights
- Revenue exceeded expectations at $24.18B versus the anticipated $23.97B, marking a 6.4% year-over-year increase
- Adjusted earnings per share reached $2.20, falling just $0.01 short of the $2.21 analyst projection
- Worldwide food volumes increased 3% while beverage volumes rose 2%, with international regions leading growth
- Domestic performance remained challenged — food volumes stagnant, beverage volumes declined 4%
- Company maintained full-year outlook: 2%-4% organic revenue expansion, 4%-6% core EPS improvement
PepsiCo delivered mixed second-quarter results on Thursday, surpassing revenue projections while narrowly falling short on earnings. Shares climbed 1% in response to the release.
PepsiCo, Inc., PEP
The beverage and snack giant generated $24.18 billion in revenue, exceeding Wall Street’s $23.97 billion estimate and representing a 6.4% jump from last year’s $22.73 billion. Adjusted earnings per share landed at $2.20, missing the consensus forecast of $2.21 by a single penny.
Organic revenue expanded 2.4% during the period. This metric excludes the impact of mergers, disposals, and currency fluctuations, providing clearer insight into underlying demand trends.
Net earnings attributable to PepsiCo totaled $2.98 billion, translating to $2.18 per share. This represents a substantial improvement from the prior-year quarter’s $1.26 billion, or 92 cents per share.
Core operating profit increased 4% to $4.07 billion. Despite this growth, core operating margin contracted by 40 basis points to 16.8%.
Chief Executive Ramon Laguarta noted that global organic volume has expanded at its fastest pace since 2022 thus far this year. He attributed the momentum to international operations and strategic portfolio adjustments — encompassing portion-controlled offerings, functional beverage innovations, and zero sugar alternatives.
The domestic picture painted a more challenging narrative. Food volume in North America remained unchanged for the quarter. North American beverage volume dropped 4%.
Chief Financial Officer Steve Schmitt acknowledged the disappointment, stating the North America operation was “softer than we anticipated.” He indicated the company now anticipates a “more gradual improvement” in performance trajectories throughout the remainder of the year.
Laguarta identified constrained consumer budgets as a significant headwind. Gasoline prices surged to a four-year peak of $4.56 per gallon in late May amid volatility in international oil markets connected to the U.S.-Iran conflict, prompting consumers to curtail discretionary spending.
Pepsi had previously been combating softness in its home market snack segment. In February, the corporation reduced pricing on Lay’s, Tostitos, Doritos, and Cheetos by as much as 15% to recapture consumer interest.
The company has simultaneously been updating brand positioning on flagship products including Gatorade and Lay’s to stimulate sales growth. Momentum has developed slowly.
Overseas Markets Compensate for Shortfall
Beyond U.S. borders, performance proved robust throughout regions. Asia Pacific Foods, International Beverages Franchise, and Europe, Middle East and Africa all delivered organic volume expansion.
The North America beverages division received some assistance from acquisitions completed in 2025, which boosted overall revenue growth despite persistent weakness in core demand.
Analysts at Vital Knowledge characterized the announcement as “mostly an inline/boring report,” while observing the specifics “skew net negative” considering the margin erosion and North American softness across both food and beverage categories.
PepsiCo confirmed its full-year 2026 projections: organic revenue growth between 2% and 4%, and core constant currency EPS growth spanning 4% to 6%. Factoring in foreign exchange advantages, the midpoint suggests core EPS growth of 5% to 7%.
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