Conagra Brands (CAG) Stock: Is a Double-Digit Dividend Yield a Red Flag?

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Key TakeawaysConagra shares have tumbled over 50% in three years, resulting in its demotion from the S&P 500 to the S&P SmallCap 600.Its 10% dividend yield tops the S&P 500, but Wall Street believes it’s unsustainable with new leadership in place.Wall Street expects CEO John Brase to reduce the dividend during the July 15 Q4 earnings call to reset expectations.The company shoulders $7.3 billion in debt obligations, draining almost $400 million annually in interest expenses.Among 21 Wall Street analysts, only 2 recommend buying the stock; consensus price target sits at $13.87.Conagra Brands (CAG) currently changes hands around $14.08, representing a devastating 50%-plus decline over three years. This dramatic selloff has inflated the company’s dividend yield to 10% — making it the highest-yielding stock in the S&P 500. However, for dividend-focused investors, this outsized yield may signal distress rather than value.Conagra Brands, Inc., CAGThe food manufacturer faces a significant downgrade, getting booted from the S&P 500 and relegated to the S&P SmallCap 600 index at June’s end. This represents a notable setback for the company responsible for household names including Slim Jim, Reddi-wip, and Marie Callender’s.Conagra installed John Brase, a J.M. Smucker veteran, as its new chief executive in April. Brase stepped in to replace Sean Connolly as the organization pursues a strategic reset.Market observers are closely monitoring Brase’s initial moves — with many anticipating a dividend reduction will rank high on his priority list.TD Securities analyst Robert Moskow recently sat down with Brase and reported that the board has granted him “a clean slate to evaluate investment spending, broad portfolio change, and a potential dividend cut to stabilize the business.”Moskow noted that the investment community would probably prefer the reduction to occur during the July 15 Q4 earnings announcement rather than being delayed. He maintains a Hold rating with a $14 price objective.Examining the Financial MetricsTechnically, Conagra maintains dividend coverage for now. Its payout ratio registers at 58%, staying below the critical 80–90% threshold that typically signals trouble. The organization produces approximately $840 million in annual free cash flow while distributing around $670 million to shareholders.Yet these surface-level figures mask underlying concerns.The company grapples with $7.3 billion in outstanding debt — reduced from over $8 billion twelve months prior, but still consuming nearly $400 million yearly in interest charges. This debt burden constrains the company’s ability to channel resources into brand development.Wall Street projects earnings will contract by more than 7% through the fiscal year ending May 2027. This negative trajectory compounds concerns for an already financially strained company.Deutsche Bank analyst Steve Powers maintains a Hold rating with a $12 price objective — roughly 14% beneath today’s trading level. He noted that investor discussions have evolved from questioning whether the dividend gets cut to debating the magnitude of the reduction.Debt Burden and Brand ErosionConagra has been actively streamlining its brand portfolio. The company divested Chef Boyardee for $600 million in June 2025, and sold off Van de Kamp’s along with Mrs. Paul’s frozen seafood lines for $55 million. Management has identified high-protein frozen offerings, featuring edamame and its Marie Callender’s Chicken Parmigiana Bowl, as expansion opportunities.However, the brand difficulties extend beyond quick fixes. Morningstar analyst Kristoffer Inton highlighted in December that frozen food — representing Conagra’s largest segment — confronts headwinds from fresh food preferences and evolving consumer patterns, including increased adoption of GLP-1 weight-loss medications.Numerous Conagra brands have failed to resonate with millennial and Gen Z shoppers.Among 21 Wall Street analysts tracking CAG stock, merely 2 assign Buy ratings, while 14 recommend Hold and 5 advise Sell. The consensus price target stands at $13.87, suggesting minimal appreciation potential from present prices.The company reports Q4 financial results on July 15.The post Conagra Brands (CAG) Stock: Is a Double-Digit Dividend Yield a Red Flag? appeared first on Blockonomi.