Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Kraft Heinz may need new recipe as triple whammy wipes $15bn off value

- CRAIG GIAMMONA

PACKAGED food giant Kraft Heinz reported a troika of bad news last week — profit that missed estimates, a $15.4bn (€12.7bn) writedown on assets and an SEC subpoena that sent its shares plummeting as much as 28pc to a record low on Friday wiping out more than $15bn in market value.

It seems to be more than just a bad quarter for the maker of Oscar Mayer hot dogs and Kraft macaroni and cheese. The results raise existentia­l concerns about the investment thesis of a company that was created in a 2015 merger orchestrat­ed by Warren Buffett and 3G Capital, a private equity firm known more for its cost-cutting zeal than its ability to nurture consumer brands.

Two years after the merged Kraft Heinz tried — and failed — to buy Unilever for $143bn (€126bn) in a deal that would let it continue slashing costs and improving profit margins, it has struggled to boost sales with a portfolio of tired brands, including Capri Sun and Maxwell House.

Now, after a massive writedown on assets including the iconic Oscar Mayer and Kraft trademarks, and a profit miss driven by higher-than-expected supply chain costs, questions are emerging about the zealous expense reduction at the heart of 3G’s strategy.

“The cost-cutting mentality is coming back to bite them,” said Ken Shea, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “They need to get their house in order.” INVESTMENT THESIS When Kraft Heinz was created, analysts wondered where the growth would come with a suite of ageing brands, which also includes Jell-O and Kool-Aid. Changing consumer tastes and shopping habits have decimated sales at the largest food companies in the US, as shoppers gravitate to more natural and organic options, rather than pre-packaged and sugar-laden products. But that wasn’t supposed to matter for Kraft.

3G, with support from Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, had produced industry-leading margins after taking over Heinz in 2013 and slashing expenses. That was the plan at Kraft, and it worked for nearly two years. The combined company cut $1.7bn in expenses, beating the target it released when the deal was announced. And investors cheered, with the shares rising north of $90 apiece to trade at a big premium to packaged-food peers.

But after the fat had been cut from Kraft Heinz, management needed another deal so it could start again on improving profit margins. Two years ago, the company made the blockbuste­r bid for Unilever, and when news of the proposal leaked, Kraft Heinz shares closed at a record high.

Since Unilever rebuffed the proposal, though, the Buffett-backed company has been on a steady decline. OLD BRANDS Kraft Heinz’s inability to do a big acquisitio­n under chief executive Bernardo Hees has put a spotlight on its failure to boost sales. The writedown reported late last Thursday, essentiall­y a charge to reduce the goodwill value of its biggest-name trademarks, was more proof that the company has not managed its brands well, Shea said.

The charges resulted in a net loss of $12.6bn, or $10.34 a share. The company also slashed its dividend and flagged to investors a subpoena it received last year from the US Securities and Exchange Commission related to its procuremen­t practices. Kraft Heinz said that as a result of an investigat­ion with the help of an outside lawyer, it recorded a $25m “increase to costs of products sold.”

On the back of that bad news, the pressure will be even higher to do a deal. Over the years, speculatio­n about potential targets has centred on food peers like Mondelez, General Mills, Campbell Soup and Kellogg.

There have also been rumours it could look outside the food space in order to diversify its portfolio and grow into developing markets with the acquisitio­n of a consumer products company. M&A NEED Hees mentioned “industry consolidat­ion” on the earnings call, saying Kraft Heinz was working to strengthen its balance sheet, presumably so it can pursue a deal. Kraft Heinz said it would return to profit growth in 2020 and its strong operating margins give it the “balance sheet flexibilit­y for future consolidat­ion”.

If the ‘Bank of Buffett’ is still open, Kraft Heinz may still be able to get a transforma­tive deal done.

But with its shares plummeting to a record low and big questions emerging about the strategy, pulling off a big acquisitio­n — something that’s already been tough — may be even harder from here.

Berkshire Hathaway’s investment declined from a valuation of about $15.7bn to $11.4bn as the stock plunged to $35 at 10.04 am in New York.

“Kraft Heinz needs to be a consolidat­or and they haven’t been able to do it,” said Scott Mushkin, a senior analyst at Wolfe Research.

“You are in an industry that has very significan­t structural headwinds and one of the things you can do to try to offset that is to put some of these companies together.”

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