PepsiCo (PEP) on Solana
PepsiCo Price Chart
Showing PEPx (highest volume)PepsiCo Variants on Solana
| Token | Issuer | Price | 24h Change | 24h Volume | Tokenized Value | Trades | |
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PEPx
PepsiCo xStock
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- | $142.91 | -3.64% | $274 | $14.9M | 12 | Trade PEPx |
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PEPon
PepsiCo (Ondo Tokenize...
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- | - | - | No trades yet | - | 0 | Trade PEPon |
About PepsiCo on Solana
PepsiCo is available on Solana through 2 bridged or wrapped variants. The most actively traded variant is PEPx (PepsiCo xStock).
Each variant represents the same underlying PepsiCo asset but is issued by a different bridge or protocol. When choosing which to trade, consider liquidity, volume, and the trust level of the issuing bridge.
Popular PepsiCo variants:
PepsiCo news, features & analysis
Matched on exact asset name, explicit ticker mentions, or associated variant token mints.
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PepsiCo Q2 2026 Earnings Miss as North American Consumer Demand Weakens
PepsiCo reported Q2 2026 core earnings per share of $2.20, just below the $2.21 consensus estimate, as tightening consumer budgets dragged on North American volumes. Net revenue came in at $24.18 billion — up 6.4% year-over-year and ahead of analyst expectations — but the beat was driven largely by international markets. North America organic revenue fell 0.5% and North American beverage volumes declined 4%, reflecting what CEO Ramon Laguarta described as rising inflationary pressures weighing on U.S. food and beverage shoppers.
International operations provided a sharp contrast, delivering 7% organic revenue growth — the 21st consecutive quarter of mid-single-digit or better expansion in those markets — with EMEA up 10% and Latin America Foods rising 15%. Despite the North American softness, PepsiCo reaffirmed its full-year 2026 guidance, targeting 2–4% organic revenue growth and adjusted EPS of $8.55–$8.71, signaling management confidence in a gradual domestic recovery through the second half. Shares fell roughly 2.4% in premarket trading following the report.
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PepsiCo Set to Report Q2 2026 Earnings Thursday with 5.6% Revenue Growth Expected
PepsiCo (PEP) is scheduled to release its Q2 2026 earnings Thursday morning, with Wall Street expecting revenue growth of 5.6% year-over-year — a marked acceleration from flat revenue in the same quarter last year. In Q1 2026, PepsiCo posted revenues of $19.44 billion, up 8.5% year-over-year, beating analyst estimates on both revenue and EBITDA while narrowly clearing organic revenue expectations. Analysts have broadly held their estimates steady over the past 30 days, signaling confidence in the company's near-term trajectory.
Despite the constructive setup, PepsiCo has missed Wall Street's revenue estimates multiple times over the past two years, keeping some caution in the consensus. The average analyst price target sits at $168.50, roughly 16% above the current share price of $145.21, though the stock has gained only 3.2% over the past month compared to an 8.9% average gain across the broader consumer staples segment.
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Barclays Cuts PepsiCo Price Target to $144 as Turnaround Loses Momentum
Barclays lowered its price target on PepsiCo (PEP) to $144 from $158 ahead of the company's Q2 earnings, while maintaining an Equal Weight rating. The bank warned that improvements seen earlier this year may be difficult to sustain, pointing specifically to ongoing weakness in PepsiCo's core unflavored snack portfolio as a structural drag that limits meaningful recovery in the North American foods segment.
The downgrade in target reflects broader Wall Street caution: JPMorgan also trimmed its target to $170, citing expectations for weaker pricing and an unfavorable product mix, while UBS cut to $172 from $186. Analysts expect Q2 revenue of roughly $23.9 billion and earnings per share of $2.21. The confluence of analyst target cuts underscores growing concern that PepsiCo's turnaround narrative — centered on recapturing snack volume and narrowing the gap with consumer staples peers — is losing credibility as operational improvements fail to translate into category-level gains.
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PepsiCo Bets on Functional Beverages With $2 Billion Poppi Acquisition
PepsiCo has moved aggressively into the functional beverage category, most notably through its roughly $2 billion acquisition of prebiotic soda startup Poppi. The deal positions Pepsi directly in the fast-growing better-for-you soda segment alongside rivals such as Olipop, as the $160 billion global functional drinks market draws in major beverage players from Starbucks to Coca-Cola. Around 75% of millennials and 80% of Gen Z consumers now regularly drink functional beverages, and over half say they are willing to pay a premium for drinks with health and wellness benefits.
The broader industry shift — encompassing protein coffees, prebiotic sodas, and vitamin-enriched waters — reflects a structural move away from traditional carbonated soft drinks toward multipurpose products. For PepsiCo, the Poppi acquisition extends the company's portfolio beyond legacy brands at a time when North American snack and beverage volumes have faced headwinds, signaling that the company is counting on functional categories to drive the next leg of consumer growth.
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PepsiCo Leans Into Marketing Push as North American Snack Volumes Soften
PepsiCo is ramping up brand activations across its core snack portfolio in response to softening North American volumes, deploying campaigns such as limited-edition Mountain Dew and Doritos heritage cans on TikTok Shop and a Gordon Ramsay-fronted Doritos Formula 1 initiative. The marketing push is aimed squarely at the company's "core global snacks engine" at a moment when analysts are watching for signs that unit volumes can stabilize without compressing margins or straining cash flows amid rising input costs.
The bull case for PEP rests on whether these activations translate into volume recovery. Analysts project PepsiCo reaching roughly $106.5 billion in revenue and $12.3 billion in earnings by 2029, implying approximately 3.7% annual revenue growth from current levels — a trajectory that looks achievable only if snack demand firms up. Until that evidence materializes, the tension between aggressive marketing spend and dividend commitments keeps the investment case unsettled.
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