Chicago, May 2025 – Conagra Brands has agreed to sell its Chef Boyardee canned pasta business to private equity firm Pinnacle Partners for $600 million in cash. The deal – expected to close in Q1 of fiscal 2026 – transfers an iconic, 97-year-old brand out of Conagra’s portfolio after about 25 years of ownership. Conagra confirmed the transaction covers Chef Boyardee’s shelf-stable operations and Milton, Pa. manufacturing plant (about 820,000 sq. ft. with 500 employees), while Conagra will retain the rights to license the frozen skillet meals line.
Conagra CEO Sean Connolly said the divestiture is “another milestone in reshaping the Conagra Brands portfolio for better long-term growth”. He emphasized that Conagra is doubling down on faster-growing categories – chiefly frozen foods (e.g. Birds Eye, Healthy Choice) and snacks (Slim Jim, popcorn) – and moving away from older, shelf-stable commodities. The sale comes on the heels of Conagra offloading other legacy brands (like Peter Pan peanut butter and Wesson cooking oil) and acquiring higher-margin niche players (e.g. Fatty’s premium meats), as it refocuses on “modern consumer brands” and pays down debt. Connolly noted that divesting Chef Boyardee would slightly dilute near-term EPS (roughly 4% in FY2025) but would allow debt reduction and sharper capital allocation toward growth businesses.
A Century of Chef Boyardee: From Immigrant Kitchen to Canned Meals
Chef Boyardee traces its origins to 1928, when Italian-born chef Hector “Ettore” Boiardi began canning his restaurant pasta sauces in Cleveland, Ohio. After the brand rapidly grew through mid-century (including serving US troops in WWII), it eventually changed hands to American Home Foods and was acquired by Conagra in 2000 as part of a $2.9 billion deal. In its heyday, the Chef Boyardee business generated roughly $800–850 million in annual retail sales (around 2001). However, consumer preferences have shifted sharply since then. The brand’s net sales have fallen steadily: about $450 million of Conagra’s FY2024 sales came from Chef Boyardee products (roughly $480 million in 2023), down from roughly $740 million in 2015. (Conagra never breaks out brand-level figures, but industry research confirms Chef Boyardee’s market share and volume have declined as shoppers moved away from canned meals.)
The shrinking demand for canned pasta reflects broader health and lifestyle trends. Health-conscious consumers are increasingly wary of high sodium and artificial ingredients found in many shelf-stable foods. Markets for legacy convenience items like canned spaghetti and ravioli have contracted – analysts estimate the U.S. canned pasta category is around $2.1 billion today and may shrink at roughly a 2% annual rate through 2030. As one industry analyst noted, “the problem has been the category – consumer tastes have shifted away from shelf-stable options”. Even large canned-food peers have seen stagnation; for example, Campbell Soup reported a mid-single-digit drop in U.S. soup sales in early 2024 (volumes down ~5% year-over-year), underscoring tough market dynamics for comfort-food staples.
Conagra executives pointed to sharp differences in profitability between Chef Boyardee and their core growth lines. On the company’s investor call, Connolly noted that the canned-pasta business runs at “low-single-digit” or mid-single-digit operating margins (roughly 8%), versus nearly 18% margins in the Frozen Meals segment. By exiting a lower-margin business, Conagra can streamline its cost structure. (Indeed, Conagra’s recent performance hinges on maximizing margins through pricing and trimming unprofitable promotions.) In short, Connolly argued the sale “builds a more focused company” centered on higher-margin categories.
Wall Street took the deal in stride. J.P. Morgan analysts applauded the $600M price, noting it implies a healthy multiple (roughly 9x Chef Boyardee’s EBITDA) that reflects the brand’s still-steady cash flows. Meanwhile, UBS warned privately that turning around a legacy food brand often prompts aggressive cost-cutting under private-equity ownership. (Indeed, other PE-owned food firms like Hostess and Planters initially improved margins but have sometimes slashed R&D and marketing, raising concerns about long-term brand health.) Rabobank analysts added context by pointing out that Chef Boyardee’s struggles are emblematic of the broader decline in shelf-stable foods, and that offloading such businesses has been a recurring trend across consumer staples. Overall, investors view the deal as a fairly clean break: Conagra gets $600M cash to plug debt holes, and Hometown (Pinnacle’s Brynwood-backed vehicle) bets it can revitalize the pasta line for niche markets.
Pinnacle Partners (through its Hometown Food Co.) is no stranger to heritage food brands. Its strategy will likely emphasize reinvestment and optimization, rather than gutting Chef Boyardee. Hometown’s CEO Tom Polke and Brynwood’s chairman Henk Hartong stressed that this is Brynwood’s largest deal ever, intended to “reinvigorate the Chef Boyardee brand”. Plans reportedly include modernizing recipes (lower-sodium and cleaner-label versions), expanding into new formats (e.g. bowl meals or value-priced multipacks), and stepping up marketing that plays on nostalgia and convenience. The Milton plant’s capacity and geographic reach (already supplying dollar stores and grocery chains) provides a foundation for any reformulation or line-extension. In short, Pinnacle/Hometown will aim to “leverage the iconic heritage” of Chef Boyardee, updating the brand for today’s shoppers while optimizing the supply chain, rather than dismantling it outright.
However, private equity turns can be a mixed bag. Some past PE deals in packaged foods have delivered quick profits at the cost of brand equity – carving costs out of back-office operations, ingredients, or labor. Hostess Brands (Twinkies) and Kraft Heinz’s Planters (acquired by Hormel) both underwent controversial cost cuts under PE owners. Critics of such deals caution that short-termism can come at the expense of innovation or product quality. Pinnacle will need to balance lean operations with investment in the brand’s future; otherwise, the risk is “pulling out as much cash as possible on the way down” if growth stalls.
By shedding Chef Boyardee, Conagra concentrates its portfolio. Analysts estimate roughly 60% of Conagra’s remaining sales will be in frozen meals and snacks after the deal. In the frozen-snacks category, Conagra faces fierce competition – global giants like Nestlé and Kraft Heinz hold strong market positions and scale. Morningstar’s Erin Lash observes that Conagra’s “lack of moat” in commoditized foods means it must keep innovating to drive growth, and its new focus areas are no exception. On one hand, the frozen food segment has strong tailwinds (at-home convenience, plus a wave of “better-for-you” frozen innovations, including some Conagra GLP-1-friendly products); on the other hand, any market slip-ups could leave Conagra exposed to rival pricing and distribution power. Conagra’s stock has risen modestly (about +8% year-to-date) but still lags the broader S&P 500 gain of +14%. Going forward, investors will watch how Conagra reinvests the Chef Boyardee proceeds: accelerating frozen/snacks growth and innovation will be critical to justify the divestiture.
Data Appendix (U.S. / Conagra):
- Chef Boyardee sales: $480M in 2023 (vs. $740M in 2015)
- Canned Pasta Market: ~$2.1B (2023) ➔ projected -2% CAGR to 2030
- Conagra stock (CAG): +8% YTD (S&P 500: +14%)
- PE food deal activity: ~$23B (2023, ~18% YoY decline)
- Campbell Soup (US Soup): –5% Q1 2024 (year-on-year)