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Home » TRANSCRIPT: ConAgra Brands’ Q1 FY25 Q&A Earnings Call

TRANSCRIPT: ConAgra Brands’ Q1 FY25 Q&A Earnings Call

Read the full transcript of ConAgra Brands’ Q1 FY25 Q&A Earnings Conference Call which was webcasted today October 2, 2024.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

OPERATOR: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the ConAgra Brands Q1 Fiscal Year 2025 Q&A conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today’s quick presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star and then one. To withdraw your questions, you may press star and two. Please also note today’s event is being recorded. At this time, I’d like to turn the floor over to Liz Napier. Ma’am, please go ahead.

MELISSA NAPIER: Thanks, Jamie. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us today for our live question-and-answer session on today’s results. Once again, I’m joined this morning by Sean Connolly, our CEO, and Dave Marburger, our CFO. We may be making some forward-looking statements and discussing non-GAAP financial measures during this session. Please see our earnings release, prepared remarks, presentation materials, and filings with the SEC, which can be found in the investor relations section of our website, for more information, including descriptions of our risk factors, GAAP-to-non-GAAP reconciliations, and information on our comparability items. Jamie, please introduce the first question.

Q&A Session

OPERATOR: Our first question today comes from Ken Goldman from J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead with your question.

[KEN GOLDMAN:] Hi, thank you. I wanted to ask two questions. First, your commentary or your tone on snacking is certainly better than what we’re seeing and hearing from a lot of other snack makers, or really almost all other snack makers out there right now. What are you seeing? Obviously, you have a little more of a protein bent in your snacking business, but even your popcorn business, the tone was positive on, and most popcorn brands that we see are not doing great. Just trying to get a sense of, is it execution? Is it the portfolio? What are you seeing out there that’s giving you that advantage right now?

SEAN CONNOLLY: Hey, Ken. It’s Sean. Our snack business is larger than I think people realize, and it’s also quite a bit different from other snack businesses in a couple of ways. Number one, it’s extremely focused on permissible snacks of protein and fiber-rich snacks, and number two, it’s a non-DSD snack business. So we kind of stay out of the chip space, and we’ve been kind of building scale in the permissible snack space for years now. We have a substantial business.

So what we’re seeing is, more broadly in snacks, there’s a clear pivot toward healthier permissible snacks, and in particular, anything that’s rich in protein or rich in fiber seems to be among the top priorities in those people who are consuming snacks. Obviously, snacking is a huge space. We’re very excited to add the fatty to our mix, because that kind of gives us an even more premium meat stick product. But meat sticks, as you can see in the prepared remarks, is the fastest-growing snack subspace of all snacks, and that’s where the bulk of our business is.

[KEN GOLDMAN:] Okay, thank you. And then quickly on frozen food, there’s a lot of comments being made in the industry about scratch cooking and how that’s picking up, partly because of the cost of eating away from home. I understand that, but what are your data showing about frozen food? It would seem to me that scratch cooking costs more than a frozen dinner. So do your data show a pickup or a significant pickup in consumers really shifting from restaurants over the last few months? Is that an accelerating trend? I know, Sean, you thought it would happen. I just don’t know quite how much you’re actually seeing in the data.

SEAN CONNOLLY: Well, I think it’s a really interesting question, because our demand science team is constantly giving us this data. And what we’re seeing is interesting. A year or so ago, we did see some behavior shifts toward more scratch cooking. And I’m talking very affordable stuff, a bag of rice, a pound of ground beef, things like that. Our products, like cans of tomatoes, would do well in that environment. But from what we’re seeing in the data now, the scratch cooking behavior shift we saw a year ago seems to be running its course.

And specifically, what we’re seeing now is there’s a pivot back to more convenient items. Even some of the strength you guys point out in the perimeter of the store tends to be things that can be prepared in less than five minutes. So consumers have pivoted back to convenience, which we are capitalizing on in our frozen space. You know, I pointed out that frozen has been a growth engine for over 40 years, in large part because of the convenience and affordability. We see that consumer pivot happening.

We are more active, as we should be, as the leaders in frozen than just about anybody else in the space. And we’re gaining as a result. So, you know, we invested to kind of nudge consumers back to this practice. But we had tremendous confidence that of all the consumer benefit areas we’ve tracked in the last 50 years, the single most unshakable one is the need for convenience. And that’s what we offer with our frozen business.

OPERATOR: Thank you, Sean. Our next question comes from Andrew Lazar from Barclays. Please go ahead with your question.

[ANDREW LAZAR:] Great. Thanks so much. Good morning.

SEAN CONNOLLY: Morning.

DAVID MARBERGER: Hey, Andrew.

[ANDREW LAZAR:] Sean, so it’s clear, you know, Conagra’s made obviously very good progress on large parts of the portfolio, right, most notably frozen and snack domains. But this progress has maybe too often been clouded by sort of various other parts of the portfolio, like maybe a little bit of a leaky bucket at times.