FTC, PepsiCo and price discrimination
PepsiCo Inc. closed 20.10% short of its 52-week high of $183.41, which the company achieved on May 16th.
PepsiCo is a great blue-chip company, with a solid recent dividend yield of 3.6% and 52 consecutive years of dividend increases. A business has to be run
Two big recent announcements highlight the potential for the future at this giant consumer staples company and show why Dividend King PepsiCo has been such a strong competitor for so long. What news did PepsiCo serve up?
Barclays analyst Lauren Lieberman maintained a Buy rating on PepsiCo (PEP – Research Report) today and set a price target of $158.00. The
The Federal Trade Commission sued PepsiCo (PEP) alleging that the second-largest food company in the world has engaged in illegal price
The Federal Trade Commission on Friday sued PepsiCo, alleging the beverage company forced many consumers to pay higher prices by providing a single large retail buyer with unfair pricing advantages. The lawsuit,
The Robinson-Patman Act was passed in 1936, but the federal government stopped enforcing it during the deregulation of the 1980s. The FTC resumed its enforcement in December when it sued Southern Glazer’s, the largest U.S. distributor of wine and spirits.
The commission alleges that the retailer, whose name was redacted in the statement from commissioners, received “unfair pricing advantages” that were not made available to others.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission sued PepsiCo on Friday for offering preferential pricing to a large retailer, whom a source familiar with the matter confirmed was Walmart .