Continued elevated inflation rates have made it harder to find bargains at the store. It seems like the price of everything is up a lot.
However, while inflation has made most consumer products more expensive, it has had the opposite impact on the value of many leading consumer staples stocks. Shares of Conagra Brands (NYSE: CAG) and Kimberly Clark (NASDAQ: KMB) look like bargain buys right now for those with $1,000 to invest.
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Conagra Brands is one of the leading branded food companies in North America. Its portfolio includes Healthy Choice, Marie Callender’s, and other brands.
The food stock has lost about 50% of its value over the past three years. Inflation has eaten into demand for its products, prompting customers to switch to lower-priced generic alternatives. Conagra’s net sales declined by 6.8% during its fiscal 2026 second quarter (due in part to the sale of several non-core brands), while its margins remained under pressure. For the fiscal year, Conagra expects its organic sales to be roughly flat year over year, while delivering adjusted earnings of $1.70 to $1.85 per share.
With its stock price down to around $19 apiece, Conagra trades at about 11 times forward earnings. That’s a bargain in today’s market as the S&P 500 trades at nearly 22 times forward earnings. That cheap price is why Conagra currently has a 7.3% dividend yield, the highest in the S&P 500, where the average is around 1.2%. While the company’s dividend payout ratio is approaching 80%, well above its 50%-55% target, its strong cash flow positions it to maintain the payout while it waits for market conditions to improve.
Kimberly Clark has lost about a quarter of its value over the last three years. The maker of Huggies, Kleenex, Scott, and other trusted brands has also struggled to grow sales (they were down 2.1% last year, primarily due to divestitures). Meanwhile, its adjusted earnings per share rose 3.2% to $7.53.
With Kimberly Clark’s stock currently over $110 per share, it trades at about 15 times earnings. While it’s not quite the bargain that Conagra is, it’s still a lot cheaper than the broader market. That’s why the company also offers a high dividend yield (4.3%).
Kimberly Clark recently extended its streak of dividend increases to 54 years in a row. That qualifies it as a Dividend King, a company with 50 or more consecutive years of annual dividend increases.
finance.yahoo.com
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