Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Chicago packaged frozen food brands (NYSE: CAG) ~$11.9B FY2025 revenue; Birds Eye 40%+ frozen veggie share, Slim Jim #1 convenience meat snack, Pinnacle Foods acquisition 2018 competing with Nestlé and General Mills.
Conagra Brands, Inc. is a Chicago, Illinois-based packaged food company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: CAG) as an S&P 500 Consumer Staples component — marketing a portfolio of branded consumer foods and foodservice products including frozen meals (Birds Eye, Healthy Choice, Marie Callender's, Banquet), condiments and sauces (Hunt's, Slim Jim, Duncan Hines, Vlasic), snacks (Angie's BOOM CHICKA POP, Bigs seeds, Orville Redenbacher's), and international brands through approximately 18,000 employees. In fiscal year 2025 (ending May 2025), Conagra reports revenues of approximately $11.9 billion, navigating consumer trade-down behavior (consumers buying fewer premium branded frozen meals and choosing lower-price options or home-cooked meals) and competitive private label penetration in frozen meal categories (Birds Eye, Healthy Choice, and Marie Callender's facing increased competition from Kroger, Walmart, and Costco private label frozen meal options priced 20-30% below branded alternatives). CEO Sean Connolly has executed Conagra's "Conagra Way" transformation: divesting commodity businesses (Lamb Weston potato processing — spun off as independent public company in 2016; private label operations sold) and building the brand portfolio through the 2018 acquisition of Pinnacle Foods ($10.9 billion — adding Birds Eye, Duncan Hines, Vlasic, and Gardein plant-based foods) — concentrating Conagra's capital and marketing investment on premium branded frozen and packaged food categories where Conagra holds #1 or #2 market share positions. Conagra's frozen vegetable leadership (Birds Eye — 40%+ US frozen vegetable market share) and frozen meal portfolio (Healthy Choice café steamers, Marie Callender's pot pies and dinners) position the company in categories that benefit from the "cooking-at-home" preference when dining out costs rise.
Las Vegas Sands Asia integrated resorts (NYSE: LVS) $11.4B FY2024 revenue; Sands China Macau $8.2B, Marina Bay Sands Singapore $2.93B (+14%), Londoner Macao renovation, competing with Galaxy and Melco.
Las Vegas Sands Corp. is a Las Vegas, Nevada-based integrated resort developer and operator — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: LVS) as an S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary component — developing, owning, and operating luxury integrated resort destinations in Macau, China (through Sands China Ltd., 69.4% owned subsidiary listed on Hong Kong Stock Exchange) and Singapore (Marina Bay Sands) through approximately 40,000 employees, following the 2021 sale of its Las Vegas properties (The Venetian, Palazzo, Las Vegas Sands Expo Center) to Apollo Global Management for $6.25 billion. In fiscal year 2024, Las Vegas Sands reported revenues of $11.4 billion (+5.7% year-over-year), with Macao Operations generating $8.2 billion ($4.49B at The Venetian Macao, $2.0B at Sands Macao, Four Seasons Macao, Parisian Macao, and Londoner Macao) and Singapore's Marina Bay Sands generating $2.93 billion (+14.3%). CEO Robert Goldstein leads Las Vegas Sands' strategy of Macau portfolio renovation and Singapore expansion: the Londoner Macao renovation ($2 billion+ investment transforming the former Sands Cotai Central into the Londoner Macao resort) completed its final tower renovations in 2024, while the Marina Bay Sands Tower 3 expansion (adding 1,000 hotel rooms, additional gaming floors, and a new arena for concerts and events) received Singapore government approval targeting 2028 completion.
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