Close Menu
Control.vg
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Games
    • Mobile
    • PlayStation
    • Xbox
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's Hot

Dell AI Server Earnings Smash Estimates With 757% Revenue Spike

Broadcom AI Guidance Miss Sends AVGO Down 13% After Pre-Earnings Run

Broadcom Q3 Revenue Guidance of $29.4B Defies 13% Stock Drop

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
RSS
Control.vg
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Games
    • Mobile
    • PlayStation
    • Xbox
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
Control.vg
You are at:Home » Tomato Price Spike Is Piling Pressure on CPB and CAG

Tomato Price Spike Is Piling Pressure on CPB and CAG

By adminJune 11, 20264 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
tomato price spike food stocks

The tomato price spike hitting food stocks comes as retail prices reached $2.69 per pound in April, up nearly 40% year over year and the highest BLS-recorded level since 1980, putting Campbell’s and Conagra Brands in an uncomfortable position: both companies were already losing ground before input costs surged.

Metric Detail
Tomato price, April 2026 $2.69/lb, +40% YoY (BLS)
Tomato price, March 2026 $2.26/lb, +15% MoM
Fresh produce inflation, April 2026 6.5% YoY vs. 3.2% overall food
CPB consensus rating Reduce, PT $22.88
CAG consensus rating Reduce, PT $15.27
Mexico tariff on fresh tomatoes 17% (initiated July 2025)

The price run-up was not sudden. CNBC reported that field-grown tomatoes averaged $2.26 per pound in March, already the highest in more than eight years, after a 15% single-month jump. February had added another 6%. By April, the acceleration was clearly not a blip.

Three factors are driving it. Florida’s cold, wet 2026 growing season cut domestic supply. Elevated diesel costs, tied to the Iran conflict, raised trucking expenses at exactly the wrong time for a perishable crop that cannot be moved to storage. And the 17% tariff on Mexican tomatoes, imposed in July 2025, is now flowing fully through spring 2026 prices since the prior growing season had already cleared inventory before the tariff landed.

Domestic producers cover only about 30% of supply. Mexico accounts for roughly 90% of imports. The tariff is not a background risk; it is a structural cost embedded in every case of fresh tomatoes moving through the supply chain this season.

Fresh produce is running well ahead of the broader food basket. Blue Book Services put fresh fruit and vegetable inflation at 6.5% year over year in April, more than double the 3.2% overall food inflation rate. That gap matters for companies whose margins depend on predictable commodity costs and whose pricing power with consumers is already being tested.

Campbell’s Tomato Price Spike Exposure Comes on Top of Multi-Quarter Weakness

Campbell’s (NASDAQ: CPB) brands with direct tomato exposure include Prego, Rao’s, V8, and Campbell’s Soup. The problem is that the tomato price spike for food stocks like CPB lands on a company already deteriorating across multiple quarters. Barchart data on Campbell’s Q1 FY2026 (reported December 9, 2025) showed net sales down 3% to $2.7 billion, adjusted EBIT down 11% to $383 million, and adjusted EPS down 13% to $0.77. Shares fell 5.2% that day.

Q2 was worse on guidance. The company slashed its fiscal 2026 EPS outlook by 26%, with snack margins down 7%. Then, in early June, Campbell’s updated full-year FY2026 adjusted EPS guidance to $2.15 to $2.25, bracketing the Street consensus of $2.17. The same week, Bernstein downgraded CPB from Market Perform to Underperform and cut its price target from $21.00 to $19.00, below current levels.

The Rao’s acquisition is a specific drag. Consumers have pushed back on $9 pasta sauce jars in an environment where trading down is visible across the grocery store. Premium brands face a harder sell when household budgets are stretched by broad food inflation.

CPB is down roughly 20% over three months and carries a Reduce consensus with an average analyst price target of $22.88. The stock is trading near $21, so the target offers little upside buffer, and Bernstein’s $19 call suggests the risk is still skewed lower.

Conagra’s Numbers Show the Tomato Price Spike Compressing Gross Profit Directly

Conagra (NYSE: CAG) runs Hunt’s, RAGU, Chef Boyardee, and Healthy Choice, making its tomato exposure as direct as any company in the packaged food sector. The Q3 FY2026 press release shows net sales fell 1.9% to $2.8 billion, gross profit dropped 7.4% to $658 million, and adjusted EPS came in at $0.39, down 23.5% from $0.51 in the prior year period.

The company is projecting 7% COGS inflation for the full fiscal year. Free cash flow was cut nearly in half year over year. CAG’s dividend yield sits near 11%, which typically signals a payout the market does not believe is sustainable at current earnings levels.

Both stocks carry Reduce ratings. CAG trades around $12.86, well below its 52-week high of $22.81, with a consensus target of $15.27. The tomato price spike hitting food stocks adds a new cost layer to two companies that were already cutting guidance and watching margins compress before spring planting season even showed up in spot prices.

For CAG, the next binary event is whether the company trims its dividend. A cut would likely accelerate selling. For CPB, the Bernstein $19 target becomes the key level to watch if the broader tape softens into summer.

Author

  • The Subscription Fatigue Epidemic: How Consumers Are Purging Their Monthly Bills
    admin
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleMarvell NVIDIA Trillion-Dollar Endorsement Sparks 33% Rally
Next Article Yum Pizza Hut Sale Creates a Valuation Floor for QSR Stock

Top Articles

Broadcom AI Guidance Miss Sends AVGO Down 13% After Pre-Earnings Run

June 11, 2026

Broadcom Q3 Revenue Guidance of $29.4B Defies 13% Stock Drop

June 11, 2026

HPE Q2 Earnings Blowout Signals a New Phase in AI Hardware

June 11, 2026

Latest Articles

Cybersecurity ETF HACK Rally Hits 49% as AI Breach Costs Climb

By adminJune 11, 2026

Coca-Cola India IPO Targets Dual Exchange Listing in 2027

By adminJune 11, 2026

Yum Pizza Hut Sale Creates a Valuation Floor for QSR Stock

By adminJune 11, 2026
Most Popular

Stock Split Explained, Why Companies Cut Their Share Price — and What It Really Means for You

April 15, 2026

How a Single Short-Seller Report Erased $1 Billion from the UK Car Finance Market

March 19, 2026

The Wow! Signal Decoded? Astronomers Uncover a Disturbing Pattern in Fast Radio Bursts

March 19, 2026
Pages
  • Contact
  • Homepage
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
Contact

Control LLC trading as control.vg

Keyway Chambers
Quastisky Building
Road Town, Tortola
British Virgin Islands

contact@control.vg

© 2026 Control LLC trading as Control.vg. ⚠ Investment Disclaimer Investment Warning: All information provided on Primary Ignition is for educational and informational purposes only. Stock markets involve substantial risk of loss and are not suitable for every investor. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and consult with licensed financial advisors before making investment decisions. We do not provide investment advice, and no content should be considered as such.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.