Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Break Your Bowl Of Kellogg’s
















The Kellogg Company (K) has recently experienced falling demand for its cereal and snack products in the US, which is a significant hurdle as these products constitute a major portion of the company’s revenues. While international expansion is still a key driver for Kellogg’s growth, core product categories (cereal and snacks) have been suffering and the lack of funds could hit the company’s international expansion plans. Bidness Etc thinks Kellogg’s stock is a sell.

Introduction

Kellogg operates globally and in the US packaged foods and meat industry. Following its acquisition of Pringles for $2.7 billion in May 2012, Kellogg became the world’s second largest savory snack company after General Mills (GIS). The company specializes in the production of cereal and convenience foods and owns famous brands like Pop-Tarts, Frosted Flakes and Special K.
Read More : GIS - K - PG

Kellogg’s Corn Flakes vs. Cheerios – Let Your Taste Buds Decide
















Bidness Etc takes a look at the long and interesting history behind Kellogg’s and Cheerios’ rivalry. With more than 100 years of experience each, Kellogg and General Mills are considered the modern pioneers of the cereal industry

Read More : K - GIS

Kellogg – A Cereal Fall In Revenues
















The Kellogg Company’s (K) stock price rose 2% after the company announced a planned reduction of 7% in its global workforce by 2017. This announcement was made in its 3QFY13 earnings release on November 5 which beat consensus estimates. However, the company’s growth prospects remain bleak. Its sales in North America are declining as demand for its core product, cereals, is falling and negatively affecting the company’s US Morning Foods and US Snacks segments. Furthermore, its international expansion plans may be in trouble due to a possible shortage of funding, despite the company’s cost-cutting program, Project K.

Beat Estimates and Stock Price Rises

Kellogg’s reported earnings per share (EPS) of $0.90, besting analyst estimates by 4.7%. Sales revenues however, barely matched estimates, and internal revenue growth was just 0.5%. Following the earnings report and the job-cut announcement, the share price initially crept up 2% but then fell back to unchanged level.
Read More : GIS - K

Kellogg Serves up Breakfast While P&G Serves Smiles
















The Procter & Gamble Company (P&G), the leader in the global household and personal products industry and cereal manufacturer Kellogg Company (K) plan to join hands to give back to society this holiday season. P&G has recently launched its Power a Smile program and Kellogg has launched a social initiative called Breakfasts for Better Days™. The programs are a part of the corporate social responsibility initiatives of both companies aimed at improving their involvement with society.

Power a Smile Program

P&G’s Duracell® brand launched its Power a Smile program last month on November 22 under which it aims to donate up to a million batteries to the Toys for Tots program, which distributes new toys to less fortunate children every year during the holiday season. The brand will donate one battery from each Duracell Quantum AA 12-pack or CopperTop Alkaline AA 16-pack purchased by customers from the launch of the program up until December 27 this year.
Read More : PG - K - XLP

Buy General Mills for Dividends, Avoid Kellogg
















If an investor has to choose between General Mills, Inc. (GIS) and the Kellogg Company (K) on the basis of whichever of the two pays sustained and incremental dividends, Bidness Etc recommends General Mills. Here are our reasons.
General Mills has a long history of returning value to shareholders, having paid out dividends for the past 115 years at stable or incremental rates. Even though Kellogg also has a long history of paying out dividends (it has done so for the past 89 years), the company has reduced dividend payments at various times in its history.
Kellogg increased its quarterly dividends by 4.6% this year to $0.46, while General Mills increased its payout by a much larger 15.2% to $0.38. Similarly, over the last three years, General Mills’ dividends grew, on average, nearly 11% every year – in contrast, Kellogg’s investors received only 5% more in dividends every year over the same period.
And although both companies currently have the same 12-month dividend yield (2.8%), we expect stable and higher dividends in the future from General Mills, given its healthy cash flows from operations, lower debt-to-equity ratio, and ability to cover dividend payments with existing reserves.
Read More : GIS - K

Monday, November 11, 2013

Kellogg to cut 7 percent of workforce by 2017, lowers forecast



Kellogg Co (NYS:K), the world's largest maker of breakfast cereals, said it would cut about 7 percent of its workforce by 2017 and also trim production capacity, after reporting another quarterly decline in sales in its cereals business. Shares of the maker of corn flakes, Keebler cookies, Froot Loops cereals and Eggo waffles rose as much as 4 percent.

The company's cereals business, which includes Special K corn flakes and Rice Krispies, has been battling stiff competition from General Mills Inc (NYS:GIS) and private-label cereal brands. Increasing popularity of yoghurt, frozen egg sandwiches and other breakfast items has also hit the business.

Sales at Kellogg's U.S. morning foods business, which includes cereals, fell 2.2 percent in the third quarter ended September 28. The job cuts are a part of a four-year cost-cutting program, called Project K, that the company launched on Monday. The company said it would create regional hubs that will put resources closer to its plants. Read more.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Kellogg Co. to cut worldwide workforce by 7 percent over four years; Project K to save $475 million by 2018

Kellogg Co. announced a four-year efficiency program Monday that it says will result in a 7 percent reduction in the company's global workforce by the end of 2017. Called Project K, the program is being described as an efficiency and effectiveness program and will mean changes to the giant cereal maker's design and infrastructure that is expected to annually save Kellogg $425 million to $475 million by 2018.

The effort will include "an optimization of supply-chain infrastructure," according to the company that include the consolidation of facilities and the elimination of excess capacity, and it strive for increased productivity in global business services, which will mean the consolidation of "common processes or business services across multiple regions and functions." The company did not announce what facilities or operations would be effected or how consolidating may impact its operations in Battle Creek. Read more.