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If you are wondering whether Campbell’s current share price makes sense, you are in the right place to look at what the numbers are really implying.
The stock last closed at US$27.98, with a 4.4% return over the past 7 days, 0.4% over 30 days, 1.0% year to date, but a 24.2% decline over 1 year and a 38.3% decline over 3 years.
These mixed returns have come alongside ongoing interest in Campbell’s position in the packaged food sector and how investors view its long term prospects. Recent attention has focused on how the business fits into consumer staples portfolios and whether the share price now reflects a more cautious stance on the stock.
On our checks, Campbell’s has a valuation score of 5/6. This sets up a closer look at how different valuation methods stack up, and it also hints at an even richer way to think about value that we will come back to at the end of this article.
Find out why Campbell’s’s -24.2% return over the last year is lagging behind its peers.
A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model looks at the cash Campbell’s is expected to generate in the future and discounts those cash flows back to today to estimate what the business could be worth now.
Campbell’s last twelve month free cash flow is reported at about $658.3 million. Analysts have provided explicit forecasts out to 2028, with free cash flow for that year projected at $763.5 million. Beyond that, Simply Wall St extrapolates additional annual free cash flow figures out to 2035 using a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity model, with projections such as $848.2 million in 2026 and $896.2 million in 2035 before discounting.
Pulling all of those projected cash flows together, the DCF model arrives at an estimated intrinsic value of about $59.68 per share. Compared with the recent share price of US$27.98, this implies the stock is 53.1% undervalued based on these inputs and assumptions.
Result: UNDERVALUED
Our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis suggests Campbell’s is undervalued by 53.1%. Track this in your watchlist or portfolio, or discover 868 more undervalued stocks based on cash flows.
CPB Discounted Cash Flow as at Jan 2026
Head to the Valuation section of our Company Report for more details on how we arrive at this Fair Value for Campbell’s.
For a profitable company like Campbell’s, the P/E ratio is a straightforward way to relate what you pay per share to the earnings that support that price. It is a quick check on how the market is weighing current profitability against what it expects in the future.
A higher or lower P/E often reflects what investors think about future growth and risk. Strong growth expectations or lower perceived risk can support a higher P/E, while slower growth or higher risk tends to justify a lower one.
Campbell’s currently trades on a P/E of 14.4x. That sits below the Food industry average of about 21.2x and also below the peer group average of 15.8x. Simply Wall St goes a step further with its proprietary “Fair Ratio” of 19.1x for Campbell’s, which estimates the P/E you might expect given factors such as earnings growth, industry, profit margins, market cap and key risks.
This Fair Ratio is more tailored than a simple peer or industry comparison because it weighs company specific characteristics rather than treating all food companies as alike. Since Campbell’s current P/E of 14.4x is meaningfully below the Fair Ratio of 19.1x, the shares appear inexpensive on this measure.
Result: UNDERVALUED
NasdaqGS:CPB P/E Ratio as at Jan 2026
P/E ratios tell one story, but what if the real opportunity lies elsewhere? Discover 1417 companies where insiders are betting big on explosive growth.
Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to think about valuation, so let us introduce you to Narratives, which are simply your own story about Campbell’s linked directly to numbers such as fair value, future revenue, earnings and margins.
On Simply Wall St’s Community page, used by millions of investors, you can create or follow Narratives that connect what you believe about Campbell’s business to a concrete forecast and then to a fair value. You can then quickly compare that fair value with the current share price to help decide whether the stock looks attractive or not for you.
Because Narratives on the platform update automatically when new information such as news or earnings is added, your story and valuation stay current without you having to rebuild your view from scratch each time.
For example, one Campbell’s Narrative on the Community page might assume a higher fair value based on stronger revenue and margin assumptions, while another assumes a lower fair value based on more conservative expectations. You can see both side by side to judge which better matches your outlook.
Do you think there’s more to the story for Campbell’s? Head over to our Community to see what others are saying!
NasdaqGS:CPB 1-Year Stock Price Chart
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
Companies discussed in this article include CPB.
Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team@simplywallst.com
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French Connection is back on the trail of global expansion with the aid of its cheeky initials-based slogan that made it so popular in the late 1990s.
The label once known for clothes bearing FCUK is seeking to reinvent itself again under the ownership of a group of British entrepreneurs based in the north of England who rescued it in 2021.
This week, the former high street darling signed a licensing agreement to develop and distribute men’s and women’s apparel and accessories across North America, which is understood to include plans to revive the FCUK branding.
It is the latest chapter in a rollercoaster story of success and setback. French Connection was founded in 1972 by Stephen Marks, who named it after the film starring Gene Hackman released the previous year.
The entrepreneur hired the French designer Nicole Farhi to head his design studio in the 1970s and she later launched her own label under the company’s umbrella. Together they made French Connection a hit, with a London stock market float in 1983 helping make Marks the UK’s 15th richest man for a time.
The pair also became partners romantically and had a daughter together before separating at about the end of the decade. By that point the brand had fallen out of favour, prompting Marks to retake directorial control in 1991.
It recaptured the public’s imagination thanks to the swear-adjacent slogan coined by the ad man Trevor Beattie in 1997 after he noticed the initials used in French Connection internal memos. It was emblazoned on T-shirts in phrases such as “FCUK Fashion” and “Hot as FCUK”.
For several years over this period Marks’s wife, Alisa, had a key design role, but they split in late 2003 after a decade of marriage and their expensive divorce forced Marks to sell shares in the business, relinquishing majority control.
Stephen Marks, who founded French Connection in 1972 and was once one of the richest men in the UK, in 2001. He sold up in 2021. Photograph: David Sillitoe/The Guardian
By the mid-noughties, shoppers had tired of the FCUK joke and it was dropped in 2005. The company, which still owns the Great Plains brand and once owned the YMC and Toast labels as well as Nicole Farhi, struggled to find a new identity and was also hit by bad debts partly related to the collapse of House of Fraser, where it had concessions.
A return to the bawdy branding in 2016 failed to revive the company in the face of heavy competition from cheaper rivals such as Asos, Zara and H&M.
Marks ran the business until he sold up in 2021, eventually relinquishing control after years of losses and mounting pressure from investors as the value of the firm dived from half a billion pounds in its heyday to less than £50m.
Its new owners no longer use FCUK in the chain’s handful of British stores, although the brand has been sold for short periods in the UK via retailers such as Urban Outfitters as a retro label that appeals to 1990s nostalgia.
It has, however, become a hit in India, where local licensee Myntra describes the clothing as having “distinct laid-back attitude for when you don’t want to look like you are trying hard to look good” accompanied by “powerful, provocative slogans”.
Apinder Singh Ghura, a Newcastle-based businessman, oversaw the £29m rescue takeover in 2021 of the brand that took it off the London Stock Exchange. The current owners also include his Manchester-based business partner, Amarjit Singh Grewal, and KJR Brothers, which is led by Rafiq Patel, a textile businessman.
A new French Connection design. Photograph: French Connection
The group’s new North American licensing deal with G-III Apparel Group, which controls brands including Calvin Klein, Karl Lagerfeld and DKNY, forms part of the road to reinvention. G-III will take over French Connection’s existing team in the US and oversees distribution via more than 700 boutiques and department stores.
Ghura, who spent years in the clothing industry before shifting to other investments including property and care homes and the Bench streetwear brand, which he has now sold, said French Connection was targeting the 25-plus market with good-quality garments at an affordable price.
“I see French Connection as a great brand with great equity and recognition, everything a blue-chip brand should have we have got,” he said.
Ghura said the UK government “hadn’t done the business community any favours” with its decisions on tax and pay, but the label could compete against cut-price competitors such as Shein as “every brand has its place and we appeal to our customers because of the DNA we possess”.
A summer sale sign at French Connection on Oxford street in central London in 2007. Photograph: Kevin Foy/Alamy
The brand, which at one time had more than 140 stores in the UK and hundreds of franchise outlets elsewhere, now has just 10 French Connection stores in the UK and 15 discount outlets but sells through 60 concessions, including every John Lewis.
It is also distributed on the websites of Marks & Spencer, Asos and Next in the UK and Otto in Germany and Austria, and is planning a small number of new high-street outlets.
In 2024, the brand’s sales fell 10% to £108m, but pre-tax profits shot up to £1.6m from just £0.3m a year before according to the latest accounts filed at Companies House.
The FCUK logo once felt ubiquitous, but is no longer used in the chain’s British stores. Picture taken in 2010. Photograph: Universal Images Group North America LLC/Alamy
Sales at established stores are now rising by more than 10% after the group improved quality, ditched poor-performing branches and brought in a new head of design – Helen Gallagher – from fashion brand Mint Velvet.
The performance stands out among the UK’s mid-market fashion brands, which have been hit by lacklustre spending as younger shoppers have less spare cash amid rising energy and phone bills and other costs such as Netflix subscriptions, gym memberships and music festivals.
The revival comes as fellow 90s stalwart Topshop attempts to win its way back into wardrobes via a new online stores and outlets in John Lewis, while River Island battles for survival with a rescue restructure.
A model sports new designs from French Connection. Illustration: French Connection
Ghura said French Connection would be focusing on “capital light” expansion via licensees, with hopes to find partners in south-east Asia and China and to widen its footwear and accessories ranges, rather than opening dozens of expensive UK outlets.
Simon Donoghue, the managing director of French Connection’s retail and online business, said the company had “zero tolerance of loss-making stores” and was now in its third season of strong underlying growth as it got the “value for money equation really sorted”.
“Prices are now similar to four years ago, but it is better quality and that resonates,” he said. “It comes back to design and product. Getting that right gives confidence to invest more in inventory.”
Rosie Jones in 1993 and 2025, standing up holding on to a rollator, smiling at the cameraRosie Jones in 1993 and 2025. Later photograph: Pål Hansen/The Guardian. Styling: Andie Redman. Hair and makeup: Lou Blake. Archive photograph: courtesy of…