PepsiCo has struck a deal with activist investor Elliott Investment Management, agreeing to slash its US product lineup by 20 percent and sharpen focus on affordable snacks and drinks. The beverage and snacks giant also plans layoffs as part of broader cost-cutting moves to boost growth and win back Wall Street confidence. Shares barely budged after hours, down 4.2 percent year-to-date while the S&P 500 climbed 16 percent.
Elliott built a $4 billion stake earlier this year, pushing for a simpler portfolio after PepsiCo lost share in beverages. Marc Steinberg, an Elliott partner, called the plan a driver for revenue and profit growth, though the firm will keep engaging. PepsiCo now forecasts 2-4 percent organic revenue growth for fiscal 2026, topping analyst estimates of 2.7 percent. Staff at North American offices, including headquarters in Purchase, New York, Chicago, and Plano, Texas, got told to work from home this week-a common sign before layoff news.
Elliott Pushes for Leaner Portfolio and Affordability:
Elliott hammered PepsiCo over too many brands and a shrinking drinks business. The pact trims the US lineup by 20 percent, zeroing in on affordability to fight rivals and lure back shoppers. Details on axed products stay quiet, but Elliott eyed sales of SodaStream, Starry lemon-lime soda, cereals like Life and Cap’n Crunch, plus Quaker Oats and Rice-A-Roni.
PepsiCo already moved on snacks, tweaking Lay’s barbecue chips to ditch artificial dyes for natural ones. New Doritos and Cheetos lines cut all synthetic colors, with more protein and fiber options rolling out. CEO Ramon Laguarta stressed cost cuts, productivity gains, and factory upgrades to free cash for growth areas. Executives talked “right-sizing the workforce” before Elliott jumped in, signaling layoffs were brewing.
Layoffs Hit as Remote Work Order Goes Out:
Jennifer Wells, North America chief people officer, warned Sunday of “structural changes” impacting roles. The remote mandate for key offices mirrors patterns before staff cuts at other firms. PepsiCo shut Frito-Lay plants in Orlando, Florida, last month, axing over 450 jobs for “business needs.”
No word on layoff scale or timeline, but moves tie to Elliott talks wrapping up fast. Laguarta aims to recapture momentum after sales slowed, blending cuts with portfolio tweaks. The deal skips Elliott board seats, but Steinberg welcomed PepsiCo’s “board refreshment” pledge. Steve Schmitt, ex-Walmart exec, joined as CFO in November, replacing retiring Jamie Caulfield.
PepsiCo’s Path Forward Post-Elliott Pact:
Wall Street awaits details on how PepsiCo executes the slimmed-down portfolio and workforce tweaks amid shifting consumer tastes. Affordable snacks and drinks target budget shoppers, while plant upgrades promise efficiency gains to fund marketing pushes. Laguarta’s team must deliver on the 2-4 percent revenue target to shake off the yearly share lag against peers.
Cost Cuts Aim to Spark Revenue Rebound:
PepsiCo bets the overhaul reignites growth in a tough market. Organic sales outlook beats expectations, excluding buys and currency swings. Salty snacks stay core, with drinks getting affordability push amid competition.
Elliott’s pressure forced quick action on complexity plaguing the lineup. Layoffs and plant closures trim fat, letting funds flow to hits like reformulated chips. Investors watch if changes lift shares from yearly slump. As talks end, PepsiCo eyes steadier path, balancing cuts with innovation to claw back market edge.



