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Kraft Heinz Plunges to Record Low on Writedown of Brands’ Value

The packaged food giant’s charge to reduce the goodwill value of the Kraft and Oscar Mayer trademarks and other assets.

Kraft Heinz Plunges to Record Low on Writedown of Brands’ Value
A bottle of Heinz Kraft Co. Heinz brand Tomato Ketchup is arranged for a photograph in Dobbs Ferry, New York, U.S. (Photographer: Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Kraft Heinz Co. plummeted the most on record Friday, one day after writing down the value of some of its best-known brands by $15.4 billion, an acknowledgment that changing consumer tastes have destroyed the value of some of the company’s most iconic products.

The packaged-food giant’s charge to reduce the goodwill value of the Kraft and Oscar Mayer trademarks and other assets came with disappointing fourth-quarter earnings and an accounting subpoena from securities regulators. The charges resulted in a net loss of $12.6 billion, or $10.34 a share.

Kraft Heinz Plunges to Record Low on Writedown of Brands’ Value

Kraft Heinz shares fell as much as 28 percent to $34.90 in New York.

Formed in a 2015 merger orchestrated by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and the private equity firm 3G Capital, Kraft Heinz’s portfolio plays mainly in the center of the grocery store, an area hit hard by shifts in eating and shopping habits, and the one at greatest risk of being disrupted by Amazon.com Inc.

The company, led by Chief Executive Officer Bernardo Hees, has tried to spruce up a tired suite of brands -- from organic Capri Sun to natural Oscar Mayer hot dogs. But the bigger question in the mind of investors has been management’s ability to pull off the large, transformative deals that shareholders crave.

Kraft Heinz tried to purchase Unilever in 2017 in a move that would have allowed management to do what it does best: slash overhead costs. But Unilever rebuffed the $143 billion deal, and Kraft Heinz shares have since lost about half their value as investors wait for the next big move.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

“Persistently weak organic sales growth generated by Kraft Heinz’s stable of branded cheeses, meats and coffee products has begun to weigh on its industry-leading operating margins. Management’s plan to shore up sagging cash flow and reduce debt leverage through reduced dividend payout and asset sales is a sign of the urgency to restore growth.”

--Kenneth Shea, global food and beverage analyst
Click here to read the research

On Thursday, the company’s fourth-quarter earnings missed even the lowest analyst estimate. It also flagged to investors in its quarterly results a subpoena it received last year from the U.S. 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 $25 million “increase to costs of products sold.”

Kraft Heinz Plunges to Record Low on Writedown of Brands’ Value

Berkshire Hathaway’s investment declined from a valuation of about $15.7 billion to $11.4 billion as the stock plunged to $35 at 10:04 a.m. in New York. Thursday’s announcement marks the second time this year that a Berkshire holding has disclosed unfavorable news after the markets closed, hurting its stock. Apple Inc. trimmed its revenue outlook in January, which pummeled shareholders. That stock has since recovered.

Kraft Heinz will cut its quarterly dividend to 40 cents a share from 62.5 cents, helping it pay down debt more quickly and adjust to its smaller size after selling some businesses. The company had been paying out dividends at the highest ratio to earnings of its U.S. packaged-food peers.

Europe-based food giants, including Nestle SA and Unilever, traded down in sympathy Friday, against modest gains in European stock indexes.

Kraft Heinz’s bonds dropped the most relative to Treasuries in the company debt market on Friday morning. Risk premiums on the company’s most actively traded debt, $1.1 billion of 4.625 percent notes due in 2029, increased 0.27 percent to 2.08 percent, weakening by the most since the debt was issued last year.

The cost to protect against a Kraft Heinz default for five years surged 27.7 basis points to 107.9 basis points, the most since 2013.

--With assistance from Katherine Chiglinsky, Cecile Daurat, Claire Boston and Jonathan Roeder.

To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Giammona in New York at cgiammona@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Anne Riley Moffat at ariley17@bloomberg.net, Rob Golum, John J. Edwards III

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.