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Kraft Heinz Stock Gets Fresh Dividend Cut Warning Ahead of May 6 Earnings
25 April 2026
2 mins read

Kraft Heinz Stock Gets Fresh Dividend Cut Warning Ahead of May 6 Earnings

CHICAGO, April 25, 2026, 13:04 CDT

Kraft Heinz Company is back in the hot seat over its dividend, as BofA Securities recently moved the packaged-food giant into a higher-risk category for possible payout cuts—joining Conagra Brands, General Mills and Campbell’s in that group. Morgan Stanley, meanwhile, dropped its price target on Kraft Heinz to $22, down from $23, and kept its Underweight rating; that signals the firm sees the shares underperforming its broader coverage. Barron’s notes Kraft Heinz shares have tumbled over 40% in the last three years, amid a broader Big Food rout blamed on cost inflation, competition from store brands, tighter consumer spending, and the impact of GLP-1 diabetes and weight-loss drugs, which can dampen appetite.

Timing is in focus here. Kraft Heinz will post first-quarter numbers on May 6, with the stock closing at $21.94. That doesn’t give much cushion if results disappoint—especially for a company still struggling to turn around its U.S. demand.

The dividend’s doing some of the heavy lifting here. Kraft Heinz’s board last set its regular quarterly payout at 40 cents a share, with the check going out March 27 to anyone holding shares by March 6. Right now, with shares trading where they are, that yield isn’t just a sweetener—it’s a core draw for investors.

Kraft Heinz is already working through a turnaround. Back in February, the company hit the brakes on its planned split, opting to pump roughly $950 million into capital projects in 2026 and pivoting focus to a $600 million push in marketing, sales, and research to spark consumer demand, according to Reuters. Scrapping the split was set to shave about $300 million off 2026 expenses.

There’s plenty in the latest full-year report rattling investors. Kraft Heinz reported a 3.5% drop in 2025 net sales, and organic net sales were off 3.4%. The company swung to a $4.7 billion operating loss after booking $9.3 billion in non-cash impairment charges, but free cash flow improved to $3.7 billion.

The 2026 outlook offers few places for Kraft Heinz to duck. Management is projecting organic net sales to slide between 1.5% and 3.5% this year. Adjusted EPS lands in a range of $1.98 to $2.10—well under last year’s $2.60.

Chief Executive Steve Cahillane insists the reset is something Kraft Heinz can address, calling the issues “fixable and within our control.” But he conceded the company’s aggressive pricing moves left consumers “very disappointed.” TD Cowen’s Robert Moskow flagged that some investors probably saw the businesses as “not in strong enough condition” to operate on their own. Over at Deutsche Bank, analyst Steve Powers read the pause as a sign of “deeper problems than previously acknowledged.” Reuters

The industry’s still under pressure. Back in February, Reuters noted that food and beverage players were tweaking pack sizes, reworking ingredient lists, and even dropping some products as GLP-1 drugs shifted consumer demand. EY-Parthenon has put a number on the potential impact: $12 billion in snack sales could be at risk over the coming ten years, according to their estimates.

Kraft Heinz is adding more nutrition-focused products to its lineup. Coming soon: PowerMac, a new Kraft Mac & Cheese variant packed with 17 grams of protein and 6 grams of fiber per serving. The company’s also prepping “better-for-you” Lunchables, along with Capri Sun drinks that cut sugar and contain electrolytes. Reuters

The dividend warning isn’t a dividend cut—yet. Cash is still coming in. What comes next: watching if that $600 million spend can curb share losses, and do it without slicing too deeply into margins.

The bear case stands out: with input costs still climbing and shoppers downgrading, Kraft Heinz could end up squeezed—juggling brand investment, credit health, and stable cash payouts, with tough calls ahead.

At the moment, the stock’s trading more like a turnaround play with a yield than a typical staples ticker. Whether that judgment holds up—or proves premature—should be clearer after May 6.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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