NEW YORK, May 23, 2026, 14:03 EDT
PepsiCo Inc. shares finished Friday up 1.16% at $150.57, gaining some ground into the Memorial Day break after a mixed week marked by a new liquidity filing and renewed scrutiny of U.S. snack prices. The stock started the week at $149.06 and ended at $150.57, up about 1%.
U.S. stock trading won’t start up again until Tuesday, as the New York Stock Exchange marks Memorial Day, Monday, May 25, as a market holiday in 2026. That gives investors another day to look over PepsiCo’s credit filing and reports of a price hike for small-bag chips, along with the latest gains in U.S. equities.
S&P 500 gained 0.4% Friday to close at 7,473.47, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.6% to 50,579.70. The Nasdaq ended up 0.2% at 26,343.97. All three major indexes finished the week in positive territory, the Associated Press reported.
PepsiCo on Friday filed to end two unsecured revolving credit lines set for 2025, swapping them out for a new $5 billion 364-day facility and another $5 billion five-year facility. These are backup loan lines a company can use, pay back and use again, but PepsiCo had no debt drawn when the old credit ended. The move was a balance-sheet move, not a takeover or earnings update.
The short-term credit line runs through May 21, 2027, and the five-year facility ends on May 22, 2031. Both lines could go up to $5.75 billion if lenders agree. The five-year line also has a $1.2 billion same-day euro swing line, the filing said.
PepsiCo’s pricing plans came under scrutiny Wednesday after Reuters, citing Bloomberg, said the company may hike prices on some single-serve chip bags by 10 to 20 cents. Those bags currently go for $2.69. A small number of products would see the increase starting late June, according to the report. Reuters said the decision was linked to higher U.S. manufacturing, shipping, and store costs—not the Iran war.
That sits a bit awkwardly with PepsiCo’s latest message to investors about affordability and pushing for better volume. Back in April, the company reported first-quarter net revenue up 8.5%, and organic revenue increasing 2.6% — organic revenue meaning sales gains adjusted for things like currency swings, acquisitions, or divestitures. Chairman and CEO Ramon Laguarta pointed to a “notable improvement” in organic volume within convenient foods and said “business performance improved.” PepsiCo
PepsiCo stuck with its 2026 targets, calling for 2% to 4% organic revenue growth and core earnings per share to rise 4% to 6% on a constant-currency basis. Core earnings per share is an adjusted metric. Constant currency excludes the impact of currency moves.
Coca-Cola stays the main comp. Reuters said in April that over the last five years, PepsiCo shares trailed Coca-Cola. Inflation has led shoppers to pick up smaller packs and look for healthier snacks, which has increased the push on PepsiCo to show that cutting prices, relaunching brands, and a North America supply-chain rethink can move volumes higher.
PepsiCo’s new partnership with Elliott Management is being viewed as a good sign, Hightower Advisors’ Stephanie Link told Reuters. The activist revealed a $4 billion position in the stock. Link, whose firm owns PepsiCo shares, called the development a catalyst, adding, “And I think they will.” Reuters
PepsiCo faces a clear risk here: it might be forced to increase some prices while pushing the message that its snacks are still a good value. Shoppers could balk, cutting into the volume growth the company has been chasing. But if PepsiCo chooses to pause price hikes while its own costs climb, then the hit could land on margins.
Short trading week coming up, but it’s busy. Wall Street is set for consumer confidence numbers Tuesday, then jobless claims and home sales Thursday. Friday brings the revised Q1 GDP. Earnings from retailers and tech names also fill the schedule. PepsiCo’s events page doesn’t list anything new for the week, so the stock could move on broader market trends, last Friday’s credit update, and the late-June snack price checks.