Dr Pepper Snapple Downgraded On Stifel Stub Value Analysis
Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc. (NYSE: DPS) is expected to be subsumed by Keurig Green Mountain in July. The stock has maintained substantial gains since the first merger announcement, and Stifel Nicolaus thinks it couldn’t do any better.
The Rating
Analysts Mark Swartzberg, Christopher Sinnott and Ryan Robinson downgraded the stock to Hold and maintained a $122 price target.
The Thesis
A review of the company’s recent earnings and debt paydown potential merited Stifel’s retreat. While price reductions accelerated K-cup volume growth, the metrics of gross margins, net sales, gross profit and operating income fell in the six months preceding March.
“We think the six month results look a lot like Zero Based Budgeting in the ninth inning: major cost cuts drive strong operating income growth, followed by a need for organic revenue growth to drive operating income growth,” the analysts wrote in a note.
Additionally, higher interest expense and lower Keurig Green Mountain forecasts together justify a drop in pro forma estimates.
“We recently reduced DPS forecasts for higher packaging and logistics costs, and the more we learn about Keurig Green Mountain, the more we are convinced it has limited capacity for operating income growth,” the analysts wrote.
Price Action
At time of publication, shares were down marginally at $121.44.
Related Links:
Barclays: Combined Dr Pepper Snapple, Keurig Are Undervalued
Deutsche Bank's Beverages Analyst Talks Dr Pepper-Keurig Union
Image credit: cyclonebill, Flickr
Latest Ratings for DPS
Date | Firm | Action | From | To |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jun 2018 | Stifel | Downgrades | Buy | Hold |
Mar 2018 | RBC Capital | Upgrades | Sector Perform | Outperform |
Mar 2018 | Stifel | Maintains | Buy | Buy |
© 2025 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Posted-In: Christopher Sinnott Keurig Green Mountain Mark Swartzberg Ryan Robinson Stifel NicolausAnalyst Color Downgrades Analyst Ratings Best of Benzinga