PepsiCo, an American multinational food, snack, and beverage corporation, is now a $196 billion (by market cap) snack and beverage beast. Read more here.
PURCHASE, NY. — Three-and-half months after unveiling the $1.2 billion deal, PepsiCo, Inc. has wrapped up its acquisition of Mexican-American food and snack brand Siete Foods.
My long-term financial goal is to eventually collect enough passive income each year to cover my basic living expenses. Here's why I think the beverage and snacking giant can help me quench my thirst for more passive income.
The partnership by the two snacks’ giants comes at a time when the Indian snacks market is experiencing growth
PepsiCo is a great blue-chip company, with a solid recent dividend yield of 3.6% and 52 consecutive years of dividend increases. A business has to be run
Two big recent announcements highlight the potential for the future at this giant consumer staples company and show why Dividend King PepsiCo has been such a strong competitor for so long. What news did PepsiCo serve up?
PepsiCo and Coca-Cola are both undervalued, and I foresee an appreciable upside in 2025. Click here to read why both PEP and KO stocks are a Buy.
PepsiCo, Inc. PEP has been experiencing strength in its core categories, diversified portfolio, improved digital capabilities and flexible go-to-market distribution systems. In the latest revelation,
The Siete brand is the latest in a line of PepsiCo acquisitions that include PopCorners, Bare, Stacy's Pita Chips, and most recently, Sabra.
Traditional Indian snacks, or namkeen, have dominated the FMCG sector, with sales reaching nearly 50% of the salty snacks market in 2023-24. Major players like PepsiCo and Tata Consumer Products are venturing into this lucrative market.
Suntory Pepsico Vietnam Beverage (SPVB) is seeking permission to increase the output of its factory in Vietnam’s northern province of Bac Ninh by 65%, from 500 million to 825 million liters a year.