r/stocks Jun 14, 01:23 AM
A Michigan Senator Bought Kraft Heinz One Day After Congress Moved on SNAP Food Rules Gary Peters disclosed a self-owned purchase of Kraft Heinz stock on May 21, 2026. The trade was small, between $1,001 and $15,000, but the timing was not ordinary: one day earlier, the House Rules Committee posted an Agriculture-FDA report package with food-classification language that touched the same federal programs Kraft Heinz had been pressing Washington on.
Kraft Heinz is the company behind Heinz, Kraft Mac & Cheese, Oscar Mayer, Philadelphia, Lunchables, Velveeta, Ore-Ida, Capri Sun, Kool-Aid, and Jell-O. Since at least Q1 2024, its federal lobbying disclosures show the company working on SNAP choice, the Farm Bill, school meals, ultra-processed food, healthy classification, sugar, animal welfare, tariffs, and trade. By Q1 2026, the issue had tightened: Kraft Heinz was pressing Congress, USDA, FDA, the White House, and trade officials on SNAP provisions, healthy-food classification, and tariff exposure.
The money path runs through the grocery aisle. The House report provided $101.24 billion for SNAP, including a $3 billion contingency reserve. USDA says most SNAP benefits are redeemed at supermarkets and superstores. Kraft Heinz told investors in May that SNAP changes were already hurting transactions and that its 2026 sales outlook included a 100-basis-point SNAP headwind.
On Kraft Heinz's 2025 U.S. net sales base of $16.784 billion, a 100-basis-point swing is about $168 million. On total 2025 company net sales of $24.942 billion, it is about $249 million. A separate grocery-wallet model is larger: Kraft Heinz's U.S. net sales were about 1.5% of USDA's $1.10 trillion 2025 food-at-home expenditure base. Applying that share to the $101.24 billion SNAP pool implies roughly $1.5 billion of SNAP-linked annual grocery demand exposed to Kraft Heinz's categories.
Full article: https://politraders.com/blog/peters-kraft-heinz-snap-food-rules
submitted by /u/st11es
[link] [comments]