Navigating Earnings Season: The Death of Price over Volume

Key Takeaways

  • Companies have shifted from prioritizing price increases over maintaining sales volume to focusing on regaining lost volumes through marketing efforts.
  • This shift has led to increased marketing spend, benefiting large platforms with significant consumer reach, known as "The Mad Metas."
  • Companies are investing in AI capabilities, with future trends potentially including the "Big Data Bid" for better AI inputs and the rise of "Kiosk Kings" to improve margins and address labor shortages.

Welcome to the second installment of our new blog series, “Navigating Earnings Season.” In this series, I dive into the world of earnings reports from major companies, spanning giants like JP Morgan and Pepsi, as well as niche players in various sectors. As the earnings season unfolds, these corporate outlooks offer real-world insights that often contrast sharply with the uncertainty emanating from the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).

Not long ago, price over volume—PoV—was rampant. Every earnings season was a sort of race for pricing power and a lack of care for losing volume. And it spanned everything from toilet paper and soft drinks to potato chips and candy. The commentaries on earnings calls were nearly identical, “We raised prices by x, and only lost y in volume.” Critically, price increases were radically outpacing the losses in volumes. Simply, it was good for business. After all, the revenue equation for the cohort is straight-forward: price multiplied by volume = revenue.

Net Revenue YoY Percent Change

Source: PepsiCo (emphasis added).