General Mills closed out its fiscal year on a stronger note than the market had anticipated. Adjusted earnings per share of $0.95 – a figure that KeyToFinancialTrends reads as a meaningful inflection after a difficult twelve months for packaged food – surpassed the consensus estimate of $0.80 and represented a 28% improvement in constant currency over the prior-year comparable of $0.74.
Net sales came in at $4.61 billion, up approximately 1% from the year-ago quarter. The result includes a seven-point tailwind from the 53rd fiscal week in the company's calendar, which inflated the reported growth rate modestly. Organic net sales were flat, with a one-point benefit from trade timing partially masking underlying volume softness.
The reported GAAP result for the quarter was a loss of $2.1 billion at the operating line, driven by non-cash charges on goodwill and brand intangibles and a valuation loss linked to the planned divestiture of the Brazil business. These items, which are excluded from the adjusted figures investors focus on, reflect the continuing portfolio simplification underway at the company.
A $3 billion cumulative cost savings target through fiscal 2030 was the announcement that drew the most analyst attention, and it is precisely here that KeyToFinancialTrends marks a genuine strategic shift. Around $2 billion of that figure is expected from the Holistic Margin Management productivity programme, equating to about 4% of cost of goods sold annually. The remaining $1 billion comes from a broader global transformation initiative. Roughly $750 million of the total is expected to land in fiscal 2027 alone.
Fiscal 2027 guidance was cautious on the revenue line. The company is forecasting organic net sales growth between negative 1.5% and positive 0.5%, a range that reflects continued uncertainty in consumer demand across several of its core categories. Adjusted operating profit is guided to fall around 13% in constant currency, a decline the company attributes to elevated input cost inflation and the investments required to restore brand momentum.
Adjusted diluted EPS for fiscal 2027 is expected in the $3.00 to $3.20 range, below the prior-year full-year adjusted figure of $3.55 – a gap that the company says will narrow as cost savings accumulate. The board declared a quarterly dividend at the prevailing rate of $0.61 per share. On the earnings call, KeyToFinancialTrends notes, CEO Jeff Harmening described fiscal 2027 as a year focused on raising brand remarkability through intensified innovation and packaging investment rather than price-led volume recovery.
The market's initial reaction was constructive, with shares rising more than 7% in early trading after having fallen 25% over the course of calendar 2026 – a decline that reflected persistent concerns about volume weakness and shifting consumer patterns. Several consumer segments, including Cheerios and Nature Valley, showed improving penetration and share trends as the year progressed.
The balancing act embedded in the forward outlook is what the market will be watching most closely. The $3 billion savings programme has to fund brand reinvestment, absorb input cost headwinds, and still deliver EPS growth – a configuration that leaves limited margin for error. On that three-way tension, Key To Financial Trends draws the conclusion that execution discipline in cost delivery will matter more than revenue growth as the primary driver of investor sentiment over the next two reporting periods.
