logo
PepsiCo to rebrand Lay's, Tostitos without artificial dyes, flavors

PepsiCo to rebrand Lay's, Tostitos without artificial dyes, flavors

Reuters17-07-2025
July 17 (Reuters) - PepsiCo (PEP.O), opens new tab is planning to highlight what will no longer be in its potato or tortilla chips - artificial colors or flavors - when it re-launches its Lay's and Tostitos brands later this year, executives said on Thursday.
The overhaul for the company's top-selling snack brands comes as U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pushes Americans to eat "whole foods" and pressures manufacturers to ditch dyes.
U.S. food makers have been announcing plans to remove dyes from their products and introduce new ones without the colors under pressure from Kennedy and the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) social movement backing him.
"We're trying to elevate the real food perception of Lay's. If you think about the simplest and most natural snack, it is a potato chip; it's a potato, it's oil, and it's a little bit of salt—the most simple, no artificial ingredients," said CEO Ramon Laguarta in a call with investors.
The company also said it was expanding use of avocado and olive oil across its brands, rather than the canola or soybean oil it uses. The MAHA movement has questioned the health benefits of certain food oils.
In April, PepsiCo said it planned to migrate its entire portfolio to natural colors, or give consumers the option to have a product without a synthetic dye. Its Cheetos snacks and Gatorade drinks rely on synthetic dyes for their bright hues.
It already offers Lay's and Doritos without artificial colors or flavors under its Simply segment.
'The Simply line extension for existing chip brands is still in early innings - consumers have not engaged so far, and given that, it will be seen how consumers react to a rebranding of Lay's and Tostitos over the next couple of quarters,' said Christian Greiner, F/m Investments senior portfolio manager.
The soda pop maker also said on Thursday it would use sugar in its products like Pepsi beverages if consumers want it.
On Wednesday, President Donald Trump said Coca-Cola (KO.N), opens new tab will start using cane sugar in its beverages in the U.S., a dietary preference of Kennedy's MAHA movement. Both Pepsi and Coke use high-fructose corn syrup for their sodas, which is generally more cost-effective.
The moves come at a time when packaged food companies like PepsiCo are seeing consumers reel in their spending after the industry raised prices over the years since the COVID-19 pandemic to shield their margins.
PepsiCo has been offering more products at lower price points and smaller pack sizes in its food segment to meet the demand for affordable snacks.
"While there is clearly demand for cleaner ingredients in food and beverage products, it remains to be seen if consumers will be willing to pay up for these more premium products, especially in today's inflationary environment and more price-sensitive consumer base," said Arun Sundaram, analyst at CFRA Research.
Laguarta also said on Thursday the company would be entering the "liquid protein" space, as protein shakes grow increasingly popular.
He also said the company would be adding protein options to its popcorn brand PopCorners and Quaker snacks.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man, 60, poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT
Man, 60, poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT

Daily Mail​

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Man, 60, poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT

A man was left fighting for his sanity after replacing table salt with a chemical more commonly used to clean swimming pools after following AI advice. The 60-year-old American spent three weeks in hospital suffering from hallucinations, paranoia and severe anxiety after taking dietary tips from ChatGPT. Doctors revealed in a US medical journal that the man had developed bromism - a condition virtually wiped out since the 20th century - after he embarked on a 'personal experiment' to cut salt from his diet. Instead of using everyday sodium chloride, the man swapped it for sodium bromide, a toxic compound once sold in sedative pills but now mostly found in pool-cleaning products. Symptoms of bromism include psychosis, delusions, skin eruptions and nausea - and in the 19th century it was linked to up to eight per cent of psychiatric hospital admissions. The bizarre case took a disturbing turn when the man turned up at an emergency department insisting his neighbour was trying to poison him. He had no previous history of mental illness. Intrigued and alarmed, doctors tested ChatGPT themselves. The bot, they said, still recommended sodium bromide as a salt alternative, with no mention of any health risk. The case, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, warns that the rise of AI tools could contribute to 'preventable adverse health outcomes' in a chilling reminder of how machine-generated 'advice' can go horrible wrong. AI chatbots have been caught out before. Last year, a Google bot told users they could stay healthy by 'eating rocks' – advice seemingly scraped from satirical websites. OpenAI, the Silicon Valley giant behind ChatGPT, last week announced that its new GPT-5 update is better at answering health questions. A spokesman told The Telegraph: 'You should not rely on output from our services as a sole source of truth or factual information, or as a substitute for professional advice.' Daily Mail have approached OpenAI for comment. It comes after clinical psychologist Paul Losoff told the that dependency on AI robots is becoming a huge risk, and warned against getting too close to ChatGPT. 'One might come to depend and rely on AI so [much] that they don't seek out human interactions,' he said. He explained that this could be especially detrimental for those who may already be struggling with anxiety or depression. Dr. Losoff explained that by using AI, these people may worsen their conditions and experience cognitive symptoms like chronic pessimism, distorted thinking, or cloudy thinking. And that in itself could create further issues. 'Because of these cognitive symptoms, there is a risk that an individual turning to AI may misinterpret AI feedback leading to harm,' he said. And when it comes to people who may be in crisis, this may only exacerbate issues. Dr. Losoff said that there is always a risk that AI will make mistakes and provide harmful feedback during crucial mental health moments. 'There also is a profound risk for those with acute thought disorders such as schizophrenia in which they would be prone to misinterpreting AI feedback,' he said.

NBC keeps U.S. Open thru 2032 in media rights extension
NBC keeps U.S. Open thru 2032 in media rights extension

Reuters

time31 minutes ago

  • Reuters

NBC keeps U.S. Open thru 2032 in media rights extension

August 13 - The United States Golf Association is keeping the U.S. Open media rights with NBCUniversal while striking a new agreement for its other championships with NBC's spinoff company, Versant. In all, the 11 USGA championships (professional and amateur) are staying in the familiar confines of NBC, USA Network and Golf Channel. The USGA on Tuesday extended NBC's rights deal to broadcast the U.S. Open through 2032. That deal also includes the U.S. Women's Open and U.S. Senior Open. All coverage will be streamed on Peacock as well. NBC has been the USGA's primary television partner since 1995. In 2015, the USGA struck a 12-year, $1.1 billion deal to team up with Fox Sports, but five years in, Fox paid a lump sum to exit the agreement and the rest of the current deal was transferred to NBC. Financial terms were not revealed. Puck reported that the annual value will be close to the $93 million the current pact is worth. New aspects of the extension include the U.S. Open receiving an extra hour of prime-time broadcast on Thursday and Friday. Meanwhile, the USGA's main amateur championships -- the U.S. Amateur, U.S. Women's Amateur, U.S. Junior Amateur, U.S. Girls' Junior, U.S. Senior Women's Open, U.S. Adaptive Open, Walker Cup and Curtis Cup -- will be carried by Golf Channel. And USA Network will carry roughly 35 hours of live coverage of the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open. Versant is the name of the new "spinco" that will be the parent company of most of NBCUniversal's former cable networks, including MSNBC, CNBC and E! as well as Golf Channel and USA. In a news release, Versant trumpeted the deal as its first sports media rights acquisition. "The USGA championships represent some of the most prestigious events in all of golf," Versant president of sports Matt Hong said in a statement. "USA Network's reach and Golf Channel's reputation as the television home of the sport are ideal platforms to bring the USGA championships to golf fans across the country." "We're incredibly proud of the partnership we've built over the years with NBCU and Versant, and we're equally excited to continue building on that legacy throughout our shared passion and dedication -- alongside people we're proud to call our friends," USGA CEO Mike Whan added in a statement. --Field Level Media

Delta, Aeromexico request extension to wrap up antitrust agreement
Delta, Aeromexico request extension to wrap up antitrust agreement

Reuters

time31 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Delta, Aeromexico request extension to wrap up antitrust agreement

MEXICO CITY, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Carriers Delta (DAL.N), opens new tab and Aeromexico on Tuesday argued against winding down their antitrust agreement, as proposed by the U.S. Department of Transportation, while asking for an extension to do so if needed. The two, in a filing to authorities, requested the deadline be extended to March 28 of next year, the end of the sector's "winter season," from the current October 25.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store