--- title: "General Mills Earnings Call Sets Stage for Recovery" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/279704796.md" description: "General Mills Inc held its Q3 earnings call, revealing a cautiously optimistic outlook despite short-term challenges. Management reaffirmed fiscal 2026 guidance, anticipating improved sales and earnings in Q4 and FY27, driven by strategic investments and innovation. Key highlights include strong growth in new products, a successful Pet segment launch, and consistent performance in salty snacks. However, Q3 faced margin pressure due to supply chain issues and a decline in Foodservice profitability. The company is reshaping its portfolio for higher margins and addressing execution risks to support recovery." datetime: "2026-03-19T00:07:48.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279704796.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/279704796.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279704796.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/279704796.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/279704796.md) # General Mills Earnings Call Sets Stage for Recovery General Mills Inc ((GIS)) has held its Q3 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 70% Off TipRanks Premium - Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions - Stay ahead of the market with the latest news and analysis and maximize your portfolio's potential General Mills’ latest earnings call struck a cautiously optimistic note as management balanced short-term margin and execution setbacks with visible strategic progress. Leadership acknowledged Q3 pressure from supply chain disruption, inflation, and pockets of weakness in Snacks and Foodservice but emphasized building momentum from remarkability investments, innovation, and productivity heading into Q4 and beyond. ## Guidance Reaffirmed and Path to Stronger FY27 General Mills reaffirmed its fiscal 2026 guidance and signaled a meaningful step-up in both sales and earnings beginning in Q4 and extending into fiscal 2027. The improvement is expected as most base-price reinvestments roll off and more of the company’s remarkability framework—including stronger brands, innovation, and execution—begins to fully benefit results. ## Remarkability Investments Gaining Traction Management highlighted early but broad-based payoffs from its remarkability investments across core categories, including better household penetration and baseline volume growth. These efforts are also driving wider distribution and share gains, suggesting that after three quarters of work, the strategy is starting to reset the competitiveness of key brands in crowded center-store aisles. ## Innovation Fuels Top-Line Growth Innovation remains a standout growth engine, with new products tracking around 25% growth in North America Retail and about 20–25% for the overall portfolio. Flagship examples include Cheerios Protein, which is on pace for roughly $100 million in sales by year-end, and Ghost protein bars plus multiple renovations that refresh existing brands while keeping shelves dynamic. ## North America Retail Rebuilding Share In North America Retail, increased investments have helped rebuild household penetration and restore baseline growth in core categories. Management expects dollar-share performance to improve further in fiscal 2027 as pricing actions fully lap and remarkability initiatives, including brand support and merchandising, gain more traction in mainstream retail channels. ## Pet Platform and Love Made Fresh Momentum The Pet segment’s Love Made Fresh launch is emerging as a key growth platform, with the brand now in more than 5,000 coolers and supported by strong early marketing and execution. Weekly store-rep visits are improving on-shelf availability, and a new stand-up resealable pouch—already about 55% of fresh sales and delivering roughly twice the dollar ring of rolls—is rolling out nationally. ## Salty Snacks Delivering Consistent Strength Salty snacks were a bright spot, growing double digits in Q3 and notching three straight quarters of pound and dollar share gains. This performance is driven by deliberate price-pack architecture and flavor renovations, including Chex Mix innovations, which are helping General Mills capture incremental snacking occasions despite a competitive shelf. ## Portfolio Reshaping Supports Margin Mix General Mills continues to reshape its portfolio toward higher-margin global platforms, underscored by its agreement to sell the Brazil business, including Yoki and Kitano. Management noted that nearly one-third of net sales have been turned over since fiscal 2018, a shift that should lift International margins as lower-return assets are exited and capital redeployed. ## Transformation and Productivity as Margin Levers The company is leaning on a multi-year transformation program and ongoing productivity work to offset cost pressure and support margin recovery. Management expects another year of industry-leading Holistic Margin Management of at least about 4%, arguing that as volumes stabilize, these savings could help move gross margin from the low-30s toward the mid-30s over time. ## Q3 Margin Pressure Underscores Execution Risk Despite strategic progress, Q3 featured a notably low gross margin and a profit shortfall versus expectations, highlighting ongoing execution risk. Supply chain disruptions, shipment timing mismatches, and the timing of reinvestment weighed on profitability, and management declined to pin down specific margin targets for fiscal 2027, citing lingering uncertainty. ## Foodservice Hit by Yogurt Sale and Flour Weakness Foodservice was a clear weak spot, with profitability down materially in Q3 due largely to the previously announced yogurt divestiture and softer flour volumes. Management estimated about half the decline came from yogurt and roughly 30–35% from flour, noting that flour-related pressure may persist into Q4 before conditions are expected to normalize. ## Snacks Dragged by Totino’s Packaging Misstep Overall Snacks revenue fell high single digits, driven primarily by weakness in hot snacks, especially Totino’s, after a packaging change from bags to boxes reduced perceived value. The company is moving quickly to revert that decision and restore the prior format, expecting this course correction to support a recovery in Totino’s performance over the coming quarters. ## Pet Volatility From Retailer Inventory Swings Pet results were also choppy, as quarter-to-quarter swings in retailer inventories created about a three-point gap between underlying demand and reported shipments. Management admitted it is difficult to precisely predict these timing effects and is modeling Pet as roughly neutral in Q4 to avoid over-reliance on inventory-driven upside. ## Inflation and Cost Backdrop Still Uncertain Inflation remains a structural challenge, with labor, freight, and commodity pass-throughs continuing to pressure the P&L even as headline input costs moderate. General Mills expects overall inflation next year to be roughly in line with this year but is embedding risk from stubborn wage and logistics costs, including potential diesel and freight headwinds, into its medium-term planning. ## Mechanical Tailwinds Support Q4 Organic Growth Management stressed that part of the expected Q4 organic sales improvement will be mechanical rather than purely demand-driven, as retailer inventories flip from a drag to an estimated 200-basis-point tailwind. In addition, the timing reversal of trade spending and the benefit of a 53rd week will support reported growth, while underlying category demand is assumed to remain broadly stable. ## Wider Profit Range Reflects Supply Chain Variability The profit guidance range for Q4 remains wide, reflecting ongoing variability from supply chain disruptions, shipment timing differences, and weather-related impacts. Management cautioned that recovery of the extra costs tied to these issues may be only partial at the low end of the range, underlining that execution on the ground remains a key swing factor for near-term earnings. ## Price-Mix Headwind Now, Tailwind Later Price-mix was a drag in fiscal 2026 as General Mills deliberately reinvested in shelf pricing to regain competitiveness and close value gaps with rivals. The company expects this headwind to turn into a tailwind in fiscal 2027 as it laps these actions and leans on innovation, mix, and revenue management to restore positive price-mix contribution. ## Guidance and Outlook Emphasize Recovery Ahead Looking ahead, management’s reaffirmed fiscal 2026 guidance calls for a stronger Q4, aided by a roughly 200-basis-point benefit from retailer inventory normalization and the mechanical lift of a 53rd week. With new products tracking around 25% growth, Pet expected to be neutral despite inventory noise, and at least 4% productivity gains, General Mills sees a path to gradual margin recovery from the low-30s toward mid-30s as volumes stabilize. General Mills’ earnings call painted a picture of a company managing through near-term disruptions while steadily fortifying its long-term growth and margin profile. For investors, the story now hinges on whether Q4 and fiscal 2027 can deliver on the promised acceleration in organic growth and margins, turning today’s operational progress into more consistent, compounding earnings power. ### Related Stocks - [General Mills, Inc. 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