$13.93-0.20 (-1.42%)
Conagra Brands, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, operates as a consumer packaged goods food company primarily in the United States.
Conagra Brands, Inc. in the Consumer Defensive sector is trading at $13.93. The stock is currently near its 52-week low of $13.61, remaining 17.1% below its 200-day moving average. Technical signals show neutral RSI of 43 and bullish MACD crossover, explaining why CAG maintains its current current market pressure. The Whystock Score of 40/100 suggests a balanced risk-reward profile.
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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. T...
Wondering if Conagra Brands at around US$14.36 is a bargain or a value trap? This article breaks down what the current price reflects about the stock. The stock has been under pressure, with returns of 0.1% over 7 days, a 7.3% decline over 30 days, a 17.0% decline year to date, and a 32.8% decline over the past year. Over the longer term, the 3 year and 5 year returns are declines of 52.8% and 51.4%, respectively. Recent attention on Conagra Brands has centered on how the company is...
The US House previously passed a farm bill that includes a very large US$187 billion reduction to SNAP, the largest federal food assistance cut in US history, posing a significant headwind for packaged food producers such as Conagra Brands. Away from policy risk, Conagra recently released its Fiscal 2025 Citizenship Report, underscoring advances in food safety, waste reduction, climate commitments, and community support that shape its long-term operating profile. We’ll now examine how this...
Conagra Brands has notably underperformed the broader market over the past year, and analysts are cautious about the stock’s prospects.
📈 Follow our live markets data and coverage. The enormous weighting of companies that pay no dividend, or hardly pay one ( Nvidia’s yield is 0.02%), obscures some household names yielding 6%, 7% and even 10%. Back then, the yield on the benchmark U.S. Treasury note was above 6% while today it’s below 4.4%.
It's a win for farmers, a loss for mass brands that 3.4 million Americans rely on. But apparently, it's for food security.