Gate News message, April 17 — PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP) warned that geopolitical tensions in the Middle East could push up the cost of its food and beverage products, signaling the company may need to raise prices. CFO Steve Schmitt told analysts the company assumes inflation will arrive and plans to deploy three measures: leveraging its vast supply chain infrastructure, improving productivity, and adjusting its “price pack architecture” (PPA)—which typically means raising average prices during inflationary periods. “We hope to achieve our goals primarily through the first two levers, but I think the reality will depend on the magnitude and duration of inflation, and we will likely need to act on all three,” Schmitt said.
On April 16, PepsiCo reported Q1 2026 results: revenue of $19.443 billion (up 8.50% year-over-year), organic revenue growth of 2.6%, net income of $2.327 billion (up 26.88%), and core EPS of $1.61 (vs. consensus estimate of $1.55). The company reaffirmed its 2026 full-year guidance, expecting organic revenue growth of 2% to 4%, and plans to return $8.9 billion in cash to shareholders. North American food and beverage divisions showed accelerating growth; food sales grew 2% aided by innovation and price cuts, reversing prior declines. In February, PepsiCo reduced prices on flagship products like Lay’s chips by up to 15%. International operations performed well across all segments, with Asia-Pacific food, Europe/Middle East/Africa, and international beverage franchises driving organic growth.
Beyond PepsiCo, other major consumer companies are signaling potential price increases. Coca-Cola’s largest bottler in India, SLMG Beverages, indicated it may raise prices if packaging costs become unmanageable due to Middle East tensions. Unilever announced in March a global hiring freeze for at least three months due to the conflict’s expanding impact. In quick service restaurants, Bernstein noted in March that McDonald’s and Restaurant Brands International (parent of Burger King, Popeyes, and Tim Hortons) management cited limited direct supply chain impacts so far but warned of broader macroeconomic effects as energy and commodity costs continue rising.
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