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Hidden among Kraft Heinz Co.’s brightly colored assets exists an unusual source of value: an over-funded pension plan.
Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway own a lot of Kraft Heinz stock, so what happens when they decide to sell KHC?
Hidden among Kraft Heinz Co.’s brightly colored assets exists an unusual source of value: an over-funded pension plan.
Kraft Heinz is eliminating some benefits and will offer medical and prescription coverage through the individual marketplace for retirees age 65 and older.
Kraft Heinz's potential spinoff of slower-growing brands such as Velveeta cheese is a risky last-ditch effort to boost ...
The fund owned 14,551 shares of the company’s stock after buying an additional 4,714 shares during the period. Public Sector Pension Investment Board’s holdings in Kraft Heinz were […] ...
A merger of H.G. Heinz Co. and Kraft Foods would mean the union of more than $13 billion in defined benefit and defined contribution retirement assets.
When food manufacturer Kraft merged with condiments titan Heinz in 2015, it created Kraft Heinz (Nasdaq: KHC), one of the world’s largest consumer goods companies. The new company started off with a ...
The top 10 pension fund holders of Kraft Foods Group stock made nearly $250 million Wednesday morning (on paper) after the announcement the firm would merge with H.J. Heinz Co.
In a 2015 deal backed by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, Heinz bought Kraft to create Kraft Heinz (KHC 4.79%).It was a huge step in the consumer staples space, driven by the notion that cost ...
Kraft Heinz Co., Pittsburgh, plans to contribute approximately $345 million total to its global defined benefit plans in 2016, the company announced in its recently filed 10-K with the Securities ...