CAG
ConAgra Foods (CAG)
NYSE
$13.57+$0.71 (+5.56%)
Price as of Jun 23, 2026 12:50 PM EDT
  • $6.1B
    Market Cap
  • -35.39%
    1-Year Change
  • Packaged Foods
    Industry

Key Performance

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  • Earnings Score: 15
  • Momentum Score: 14
  • True Yield: N/A
  • Financial Health Score: 13
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Latest Research & News

Is This Ultimate High‑Yield Stock Actually Going to $0?

Conagra Brands offers an unusually high 9.8% dividend yield, but the Motley Fool warns investors to exercise caution. The company faces weak financial performance with declining organic sales, reduced earnings guidance, and leverage concerns. While bankruptcy is unlikely, the company's position as a second-tier competitor in packaged foods makes it vulnerable to economic downturns and changing consumer habits.

05/31/2026, 2:15 PM • The Motley Fool

4 Brilliant High-Yield Stocks to Buy Now and Hold for the Long Term

The article examines four high-yield consumer goods stocks suitable for long-term income portfolios. Philip Morris International and British American Tobacco offer strong dividend growth supported by smoke-free product transitions. Hormel Foods is a turnaround story with a 60-year dividend history but elevated payout ratios. Conagra offers the highest yield but carries dividend sustainability risks. The author emphasizes distinguishing between yields reflecting healthy businesses versus those signaling distress.

05/18/2026, 8:30 AM • The Motley Fool

This 7.2% Yield Is Safe and On Stronger Ground Than It Seems

Consumer staples companies Conagra and General Mills face business headwinds that have pushed their stock prices down and dividend yields up to 9.9% and 7.2% respectively. While both companies cover their dividends through cash flow with ~80% payout ratios, General Mills is the safer choice due to its stronger financial position, superior brand portfolio, 127-year dividend history, and better interest coverage ratio, making its 7.2% yield more sustainable despite current market challenges.

05/17/2026, 12:15 PM • The Motley Fool

From Kleenex to Fish Fingers: A 5-Pack of Staples Stocks Yielding up to 11%

The article examines five consumer staples stocks offering high dividend yields (up to 11%) despite sector challenges. While staples traditionally provide defensive value, recent inflation concerns and private-label competition have pressured these stocks. The five highlighted companies—Kimberly-Clark, Nomad Foods, Conagra Brands, Cal-Maine Foods, and Flowers Foods—offer attractive yields but face headwinds including input cost inflation, GLP-1 adoption impacts, and earnings pressures that could threaten dividend sustainability.

04/24/2026, 11:32 AM • Investing

Forget This 9.4% Yielding Dividend Stock: 1 Rock‑Solid Income Stock That's Much Safer

While Conagra Brands offers an attractive 9.4% dividend yield, the stock has plummeted 42% over the past year amid declining revenue, falling operating profits, and goodwill impairments. Target, with a lower 3.5% yield, presents a safer alternative with a new CEO driving a 35% stock gain, improving margins, and an impressive 54-year dividend increase streak. The article recommends Target over Conagra for income investors seeking stability.

04/22/2026, 7:12 AM • The Motley Fool

$1,000 and a Rocky Market: These 6 Cheap Stocks Are Exactly Where I'd Start

During market volatility, consumer goods stocks with durable demand and strong fundamentals offer attractive entry points. The article recommends six undervalued consumer stocks suitable for long-term investors with $1,000 to deploy: Post Holdings, Utz Brands, Hormel Foods, Bath & Body Works, Conagra Brands, and Clorox. These companies benefit from steady consumer demand and offer resilience during economic uncertainty.

04/18/2026, 7:21 PM • The Motley Fool

Why Conagra Stock Flopped Today

Conagra Brands announced a CEO change, replacing Sean Connolly with John Brase effective June 1, 2026. The leadership transition caused the stock to drop 4% as investors grew concerned about the company's recent struggles and its portfolio of packaged foods that are falling out of favor with health-conscious consumers. Brase brings extensive food industry experience from J.M. Smucker and Procter & Gamble.

04/13/2026, 6:17 PM • The Motley Fool

Conagra Stock Hits 52-Week Low - Here's Why

Conagra Brands (CAG) shares fell 4.78% to a new 52-week low of $14.45 following the announcement of a leadership transition. John Brase will become CEO on June 1, 2026, replacing Sean Connolly. The stock decline comes after the company missed earnings expectations with adjusted EPS of 39 cents versus 40 cents consensus, and sales declined 1.9% year-over-year. The company also narrowed its fiscal 2026 guidance slightly below analyst estimates. CAG has declined 45.19% over the past 12 months and shows weak technical indicators with bearish short-term trends.

04/13/2026, 2:35 PM • Benzinga

These 3 Beaten-Down Stocks Haven't Been This Cheap in Over a Decade

Nike, Kimberly-Clark, and Conagra Brands have all declined significantly over the past five years and are trading at valuations not seen in over a decade. While these stocks present potential buying opportunities at low valuations, each faces substantial headwinds: Nike struggles with competition and margin pressure, Kimberly-Clark faces uncertainty from its planned Kenvue acquisition, and Conagra battles weak growth and concerns about dividend sustainability.

04/08/2026, 10:30 AM • The Motley Fool

Rising Food Prices Could Force the Fed's Hand. Here Is the Chain Reaction Investors Are Not Talking About Enough

Middle East geopolitical conflict has driven up oil and natural gas prices, which will ripple through the economy via transportation costs and fertilizer prices. This could trigger food inflation that forces the Federal Reserve to act. Companies like Amazon, Walmart, and Conagra are already facing margin pressure from higher transportation and ingredient costs, which they will likely pass on to consumers through price increases.

04/07/2026, 9:15 PM • The Motley Fool

Fertilizer Prices Are Surging, and Food Costs Could Be Next. Why the Iran Energy Shock Runs Much Deeper Than Your Gas Bill

Middle East geopolitical tensions are driving up oil and natural gas prices, which impacts not just gasoline but also fertilizer production and food costs. Transportation companies are already implementing fuel surcharges, while food manufacturers face rising input costs from expensive fertilizers. Companies like Conagra and General Mills are passing these costs to consumers through price increases, with potential for further food inflation if fertilizer supply constraints reduce crop yields.

04/07/2026, 2:15 PM • The Motley Fool

Conagra Stock Yields Nearly 9% After a 60% Decline—Time to Buy?

Conagra stock has declined 60% from its highs but now trades at deep-value levels with a 9% dividend yield. Despite mixed Q3 2026 results and weak guidance, technical indicators suggest support at $15 (2009 lows), and institutional buying activity indicates a potential market bottom. The company maintains stable cash flow and is expected to return to growth in fiscal 2027, presenting potential upside as valuations recover.

04/02/2026, 3:06 PM • Investing

If You Like Conagra's Dividend But Not Its Business, You'll Love General Mills' Dividend and Its Business

While Conagra offers an attractive 8.9% dividend yield, its weak business fundamentals—including 3% organic sales decline and brand write-downs—make it less appealing than General Mills. Despite General Mills also facing headwinds with a 3% sales decline, its focus on owning industry-leading brands and strategic portfolio reshaping positions it better for long-term success. With a 6.5% yield and management expecting an inflection point, General Mills may be the better choice for dividend investors.

04/01/2026, 8:15 PM • The Motley Fool

Conagra Brands Announces Quarterly Dividend Payment

Conagra Brands (NYSE:CAG) announced that its Board of Directors approved a quarterly dividend payment of $0.35 per share to be paid on June 3, 2026 to stockholders of record as of April 30, 2026. The company has maintained consecutive quarterly dividend payments since January 1976.

03/31/2026, 7:30 AM • Benzinga

6 Surprising Stocks Affected by High Oil Prices

Rising oil prices due to Middle East geopolitical conflict are rippling through the economy beyond the energy sector. Travel companies like Carnival and JetBlue face higher fuel costs, shipping companies UPS and FedEx are implementing fuel surcharges, and consumer staples makers like Procter & Gamble and Conagra will see increased ingredient and packaging costs. Companies are expected to pass these rising costs to consumers through price increases and shrinkflation.

03/22/2026, 7:15 PM • The Motley Fool

Peers

Statistics

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Day Range
$12.82
$13.29
$12.85
1-Year Range
$12.58
$21.61
$12.85
Latest Close$12.85
Change
-$0.35 (-2.72%)
Volume11,706,534
Market Cap$6.1B
Shares Outstanding478.4M
P/E (TTM)-142.30
Diluted EPS (TTM)-$0.09
Enterprise Value$21.4B

Information as of 06/22/2026

Company Profile

$6.1B
Market Cap
-$43.3M
Net Income
Sector: Consumer Defensive
Industry: Packaged Foods
222 West Merchandise Mart Plaza, Chicago, IL, United States, 60654
312 549 5000

Conagra Brands, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, operates as a consumer packaged goods food company primarily in the United States. The company operates in four segments: Grocery & Snacks, Refrigerated & Frozen, International, and Foodservice. The Grocery & Snacks segment primarily offers shelf stable food products through various retail channels. The Refrigerated & Frozen segment provides temperature-controlled food products through various retail channels. The International segment offers food products in various temperature states through retail and foodservice channels outside of the United States. The Foodservice segment offers branded and customized food products, including meals, entrees, sauces, and various custom-manufactured culinary products packaged for restaurants and other foodservice establishments. The company sells its products under the Birds Eye, Marie Callender's, Duncan Hines, Healthy Choice, Slim Jim, Reddi-wip, Angie's, BOOMCHICKAPOP brands. Conagra Brands, Inc. was incorporated in 1919 and is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois.

Key Executives

  • Sean Connolly
  • John Brase
  • David S. Marberger
  • Thomas McGough
  • Noelle O'Mara

Current Ownership Distribution

  • Institutions7.4B (67.70%)
  • Mutual Funds3.5B (32.16%)
  • Insiders15.4M (0.14%)
  • Other0 (0.00%)