Four food trends that can define the rest of 2025

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The food and beverage industry is a difficult place.

Inflation reduced sales due to the withdrawal of shoppers. However, the company’s cost is increasing as expenditures decrease.

Consumers are demanding more features in their food. This puts on the company to spend great consumption to premium ingredients that can support nutritional demands. The Trump administration’s tariffs and pressure to remove artificial dyes and other additives have also created a new financial headquarters.

To maintain, the company is reconstructing its operation, dismissing workers or selling assets. When they can do it, they also participate in small M & A transactions and are in trendy areas of conversation with consumer trends.

In 2025, Food Dive is looking at four large trends of food that can dominate the rest of the year.

Large food is feeling heat

Large food manufacturers were interrupted by numerous forces weighed in business in 2025.

The packaging food sector has seen a profit slide due to inflation, tariff uncertainty, spending consumer fullback and product costs.

Brittany Quatrochi, an analyst at Edward Jones, said, “The environment is still difficult.

Quatrochi added, “There is a lot of pressure that the company should absorb the cost, but there is not much flexibility to pass it.” She said sales can improve compared to the first half of the business, but it is likely to be offset by the increase in costs.

Craft Heinz’s sales fell almost 2% in the second quarter, and lunch manufacturers expect organic sales to decrease 3.5% from 1.5% in fiscal year 2025.

Conagra Brands, a healthy choice and slim JIM owner, warned that the 2026 fiscal year would be affected by the increase in product costs such as cocoa and eggs and the tariffs affecting steel and aluminum. It is estimated that the tariff will add about $ 200 million.

Some companies have announced job cuts, including Brown-Forman, the owner of GENERAL MILLS, POST HOLDINGS and JACK DANIEL.

Morgan Stanley’s analysts said in mid -August, “The continued low growth predicted an important restructuring of CPG (including food and drinks), and the company added that organic sales growth was bottomed out in the first half of 2025 and will be improved in the short term.

M & A focuses on building scale through small transactions.

After signing a small number of small and medium -sized contracts in 2025, food and beverage M & A is expected to be the same for the rest of the year.

The transaction was not so powerful until this year, but a small number of transactions have been made to increase the existence of the company in the fashion area.

PEPSICO purchased Prebiotic Soda Brand Poppi for nearly $ 2 billion, and Hershey purchased Lesserevil, a healthier snack manufacturer like Popcorn and Puffs. Ferrero also announced that Nutella manufacturers will buy Cereal Giant WK Kellogg for $ 3.1 billion, a contract that will help to expand US footprints.

In July, Robert Moskow, an analyst at TD Cowen, said in a July study that the large merger of food tends to overcome the width.

“We believe that food companies with concentrated portfolios and category leaderships (e.g. Hershey) are more likely to succeed than various companies that want to use operating and marketing functions in various categories.”

Manufacturers not only deal with the rapid paragraphs on consumer spending, but also reduce food stamps and uncertainty related to the Trump administration’s tariff policy.

Despite these headwinds, food and beverage companies are hungry for growth. When the right goal comes at a reasonable price, you can participate in small M & A.