Texarkana Gazette

General Mills has chocolate peanut butter Cheerios on the horizon

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MINNEAPOLI­S—General Mills Inc.’s latest results disappoint­ed investors, but executives said the company is on track to meet financial goals for its new fiscal year and revealed a potential hit product—chocolate peanut butter Cheerios.

Recalibrat­ing a financial model gone slightly awry, General Mills executives and staffers are now trying to slow down the drop-off in sales they saw over the last two years when they were lifting profits. They’re also trying to fix missteps in several product lines, including yogurt, soup and refrigerat­ed foods.

The results issued Wednesday for the June to August quarter, the first of its new fiscal year, showed the company, headquarte­red outside the Twin Cities, making progress on both goals. But it missed the consensus expectatio­ns of investment analysts, and the company’s shares tumbled 5 percent in response. General Mills shares are now down 16 percent for the year and trading at their lowest price since January 2015.

Executives attributed the miss on analysts’ targets to inventory streamlini­ng at retailers and an accounting rule change that affected the timing of some recognitio­n of revenue. In reports published after the results, analysts said they understood the explanatio­n but noted General Mills was now under considerab­ly more pressure to hit its full-year sales target.

Executives do it, pointing to new products and the payoff they are seeing from increased marketing on certain existing items, including Nature Valley snacks, Gogurt yogurts for kids and Gushers fruit snacks for kids and teens. The launch of a new Frenchstyl­e yogurt this summer, called Oui by Yoplait, exceeded expectatio­ns and provided a glimmer of positive news in a product category where General Mill has lost ground to competitor­s.

“We are pleased that the areas where we’ve invested marketing spending are the ones where we’ve seen the best results,” chief executive Jeff Harmening said.

The company has gone through some turnover in the top ranks of its marketing executives and it hired new advertisin­g agencies last year. Harmening said those agencies are starting to deliver for the company.

Chocolate peanut butter cereals generate $500 million in annual consumer sales and he expects the arrival of Cheerios brand into the flavor category will make a splash.

For the three months ended Aug. 27, the first quarter of General Mills’ fiscal year 2018, the company’s profit fell 1 percent to $404.7 million, or 69 cents a diluted share. Adjusted for one-time costs and benefits, the company earned 71 cents a share, which was below the 77 cents a share consensus forecast of analysts surveyed by Zack’s Investment Research.

Revenue was $3.77 billion, down 3.5 percent from $3.9 billion a year ago.

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