| Below is an important message from one of our highly valued sponsors. Please read it carefully as they have some special information to share with you. Dear reader, I just found this HUGE RED FLAG for AI stocks… And you need to prepare now… Because the last time I saw something like this was in the summer of 2008… When we were in the midst of the housing meltdown. At that time, I wrote a letter to top advisors in the presidential campaign and predicted: "We can expect another panic spike in October 2008. This financial crisis is not over." Sure enough, three weeks later, Lehman Brothers went bankrupt… Panic took over… Markets crashed across the world, ruining the retirement of millions. I never thought I would see something like that again… But here we are today… I now believe this major AI company will go bust… In a crisis that could be 10 times bigger than Lehman Brothers. And I'll also show you the five steps you need to take to prepare. Regards, Jim Rickards Today's editorial pick for you McCormick Stock Dips on Unilever Merger—But Is the Sell-Off Overdone?Posted On Apr 01, 2026 by Chris Markoch McCormick & Company (NYSE: MKC) posted first-quarter 2026 results that beat expectations on both the top and bottom lines. Net sales came in at $1.87 billion, up 16.7% year-over-year, with adjusted EPS of $0.66 versus $0.60 a year ago. Despite the beat, MKC stock dropped 6.11%, closing at $50.44 on volume of 12.09 million shares. The headline numbers weren’t the problem. The market’s reaction was almost entirely driven by the announcement of a merger with Unilever’s Foods business. This is a deal that reshapes McCormick’s long-term story in ways both exciting and uncertain. Table of ContentsThe underlying business delivered what it was supposed to. Adjusted operating income rose 18.8% to $267.6 million, with margins expanding 30 basis points to 14.3%. The company reaffirmed its full-year 2026 adjusted EPS guidance of $3.05 to $3.13, representing 2% to 5% growth. For a steady dividend aristocrat navigating macro volatility, that kind of consistency matters. The Unilever Foods Merger Could Triple McCormick’s Revenue BaseThe deal that rattled investors would combine McCormick with Unilever’s Foods business, creating an entity with roughly $20 billion in annual revenue. That is approximately three times what McCormick generated on a standalone basis. The strategic logic is compelling: McCormick would transform from a mid-cap flavor company into a genuine global food powerhouse with broader distribution, a deeper brand portfolio, and meaningful scale advantages. Investor concerns are understandable and shouldn’t be dismissed. Execution risk in a deal this size is real. Integrating two large global businesses across different supply chains and corporate cultures is a multi-year undertaking with no guarantee of a smooth landing. Timing risk matters too. If consumer spending softens during integration, the combined company faces headwinds with less flexibility than either business would have independently. Dilution risk rounds out the near-term concerns, and the deal structure will need close scrutiny for its per-share impact. But none of these risks are surprises to institutional investors. They’re standard deal considerations. A 6% single-day pullback may ultimately say more about MKC’s pre-announcement valuation than the deal itself. Volume Growth: The Underappreciated Story Inside the NumbersHere’s what most analysts aren’t discussing. McCormick’s organic growth story has largely been a pricing story. In Q1 2026, total organic sales grew just 1.2% on a constant-currency basis, driven by 1.9% pricing while volume fell 0.7%. That’s the familiar consumer staples pattern: charge more, sell slightly fewer units. A closer look at regional data is more encouraging. In the Consumer segment’s EMEA region, volume grew 2.4% alongside 1.3% pricing. In APAC, volume grew 2.1% while pricing was essentially flat at 0.1%. These are volume-led growth markets, and they matter in the current environment where most staples companies are watching units erode. The Unilever foods business has a similar volume profile in international markets, particularly in the regions where McCormick is already seeing expansion. A combined entity wouldn’t just be bigger; it could be volume-positive in ways the standalone McCormick has struggled to demonstrate domestically. That’s a quiet but meaningful differentiator if the merger closes and integrates on plan. The Chart Shows Buyers Stepped In Before the CloseThe technical picture on March 31 tells a nuanced story. MKC opened at $50.27, dropped to an intraday low of $48.31, but clawed back to close at $50.44, well off the lows. On volume of 12.09 million shares, that reversal suggests longer-duration buyers were actively absorbing the sell-off rather than running from it. Zooming out, the chart tells a harder story. MKC has been in a sustained downtrend since trading near $77 last summer, shedding roughly a third of its value over nine months before this earnings day. The stock is now near multi-year lows. That context cuts both ways—the technical damage is real, but so is the potential value for investors with patience and a long-term view. ![]() What Could Hold McCormick Back?Tariffs are the clearest near-term risk. McCormick’s 2026 outlook already bakes in an incremental tariff impact of roughly 5-6% on adjusted operating income and EPS, partially offset by mitigation strategies. That’s a material headwind, and it could worsen if trade policy deteriorates further before the year is out. The ERP system rollout is another watch item. The digital and ERP plan revision trimmed approximately 3-4% off the 2026 EPS outlook. Technology transformations of this scale routinely encounter cost overruns and delays, and McCormick is still in the midst of execution. Investors rarely reward consumer staples companies that miss earnings due to back-office IT issues. Volume softness in the Americas Flavor Solutions segment, down 1.7% in Q1, reflects weakness among large CPG and QSR customers. If that pressure deepens, it offsets the pricing gains that have been carrying the organic growth narrative and complicates the case for near-term EPS momentum. Bottom Line: Patience May Be Rewarded HereMcCormick is not a growth stock. It is a dividend aristocrat with deep brand equity, consistent cash generation, and a long track record of annual dividend increases. None of that changes because the stock fell 6% on a merger announcement. The $129 million returned to shareholders through dividends in Q1 alone reflects a commitment that doesn’t waver for a single day of trading. The Unilever deal, if executed well, could be genuinely transformational—tripling revenue, expanding geographic reach, and adding the volume contribution that standalone McCormick has struggled to deliver domestically. The risks are real but knowable. For value investors with a two- to three-year horizon, the sell-off may be an opportunity. The story to watch is integration execution—and whether the combined McCormick can deliver on what its new scale implies. This is a PAID ADVERTISEMENT provided to the subscribers of StockEarnings Free Newsletter. Although we have sent you this email, StockEarnings does not specifically endorse this product nor is it responsible for the content of this advertisement. Furthermore, we make no guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Your privacy is very important to us, if you wish to be excluded from future notices, do not reply to this message. Instead, please click Unsubscribe. StockEarnings, Inc
|
Thursday, April 2, 2026
The Next Big Collapse in America: 10X Bigger than Lehman?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Page List
Blog Archive
- April 2026 (129)
- March 2026 (2993)
- February 2026 (2529)
- January 2026 (2781)
- December 2025 (2836)
- November 2025 (2556)
- October 2025 (2219)
- September 2025 (2747)
- August 2025 (2903)
- July 2025 (2997)
- June 2025 (2807)
- May 2025 (2884)
- April 2025 (2766)
- March 2025 (2867)
- February 2025 (2635)
- January 2025 (2682)
- December 2024 (2451)
- November 2024 (2391)
- October 2024 (2862)
- September 2024 (2667)
- August 2024 (3156)
- July 2024 (3241)
- June 2024 (3107)
- May 2024 (3196)
- April 2024 (3104)
- March 2024 (3192)
- February 2024 (3006)
- January 2024 (3261)
- December 2023 (3176)
- November 2023 (3188)
- October 2023 (3191)
- September 2023 (2961)
- August 2023 (3120)
- July 2023 (3024)
- June 2023 (3042)
- May 2023 (3205)
- April 2023 (3030)
- March 2023 (2986)
- February 2023 (2584)
- January 2023 (2694)
- December 2022 (2745)
- November 2022 (2899)
- October 2022 (2916)
- September 2022 (2970)
- August 2022 (2981)
- July 2022 (2814)
- June 2022 (2759)
- May 2022 (2768)
- April 2022 (2692)
- March 2022 (2851)
- February 2022 (2550)
- January 2022 (2715)
- December 2021 (2641)
- November 2021 (2745)
- October 2021 (2836)
- September 2021 (2847)
- August 2021 (2756)
- July 2021 (2572)
- June 2021 (2738)
- May 2021 (2579)
- April 2021 (2698)
- March 2021 (2789)
- February 2021 (2532)
- January 2021 (2617)
- December 2020 (2664)
- November 2020 (2637)
- October 2020 (2824)
- September 2020 (2745)
- August 2020 (2704)
- July 2020 (2749)
- June 2020 (2669)
- May 2020 (2199)
- April 2020 (4060)
- March 2020 (5898)
- February 2020 (6963)
- January 2020 (7455)
- December 2019 (10)
Search This Blog
2026 Gold Forecast: A Perfect Storm For Demand
Explore how gold can safeguard your wealth—download your exclusive 2026 forecast now! ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ...
-
Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page . You are subscribed to Constit...
-
Plus, Deaths of foreign fighters draw renewed attention to the military volunteers in Ukraine. ...
-
View Images Library Photos and Pictures. Как сделать усилитель сигнала сотовой связи своими руками Усилитель 3G сигнала своими руками Антен...


No comments:
Post a Comment