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PepsiCo taps Walmart veteran as CFO, bets big on beverage revamp

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Good morning. PepsiCo is overhauling its beverage portfolio—refueling interest in drinks like Gatorade—and named a new finance chief.

On Thursday, the beverage giant (No. 45 on the Fortune 500) announced that Steve Schmitt will join as EVP and CFO effective Nov. 10. Schmitt, a Walmart veteran, currently serves as EVP and CFO for Walmart U.S., overseeing the finance function for its multibillion-dollar omnichannel organization. Schmitt joins at a trying time with activist investor Elliott Management pushing for major change within the company.

Schmitt joined Walmart in 2016, holding leadership positions across e-commerce, club, and mass businesses, and previously worked at Yum! Brands and UPS. At PepsiCo, Schmitt succeeds Jamie Caulfield, who will retire next year after more than 30 years at PepsiCo, but will stay on as an advisor through May 15.

PepsiCo CEO Ramon Laguarta highlighted Schmitt’s expertise in complex supply chains, adapting to omnichannel consumers, and delivering operational excellence at scale as “impactful” for PepsiCo’s growth strategy.

PepsiCo beat Q3 earnings expectations on both revenue and adjusted profit. However, Schmitt joins the company amid growing activist pressure. In September, Elliott Management disclosed a $4 billion stake in PepsiCo, labeling it a “dramatic underperformer” and urging a strategic turnaround to boost growth and profitability.

Elliott criticized PepsiCo’s North America beverage business for lagging behind peers in growth and margins, and argued that the company’s proliferation of brands and SKUs has impaired focus and execution. In response, PepsiCo stated that it values shareholder feedback, is reviewing Elliott’s perspectives, and remains confident in its current strategy around innovation, portfolio transformation, and productivity.

In a new feature article, my Fortune colleague Phil Wahba takes a deep dive into PepsiCo’s beverage overhaul, which includes a Gatorade reboot. Ram Krishnan, the CEO of PepsiCo’s U.S. beverages division, has taken the reins of a years-long effort to return Gatorade, the original bright-colored sugary sports drink, to growth. 

“The stakes are high for PepsiCo. With $29 billion a year in revenue, North America Beverages is the food-and-beverage giant’s single biggest division,” Wahba writes. 

Gatorade’s revamp includes new protein-focused products and expanded offerings like powdered mixes. Its newest release, Gatorade Lower Sugar—which contains 75% less sugar than the original and no artificial flavors or sweeteners—will arrive in stores in early 2026.

But Krishnan is facing intense pressure to make bold changes not just at Gatorade but across the beverage portfolio. “Other moves by Krishnan include the nearly $2 billion purchase in May of prebiotic soda Poppi and in late summer, PepsiCo’s increased stake in Celsius Holdings, making the brand its leader energy drink and one popular with millennial and Gen Z gym-goers and other active people,” Wahba writes. (You can read the complete article and more about Krishnan’s strategy at PepsiCo here.)

The months ahead will reveal whether a new CFO and a bold beverage play can satisfy investors and spark lasting growth.

Have a good weekend.

Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com

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Fortune 500 Power Moves

Todd Cunfer was appointed EVP and CFO of The Campbell’s Company (No. 425), effective Oct. 20. Cunfer succeeds Carrie Anderson, who is leaving the company to pursue new opportunities. Cunfer brings over 25 years of experience. He joins Campbell’s from Freshpet, where he served as CFO since 2022. Before that, he was CFO at Simply Good Foods Company, a nutritional foods and snacking products company. Previously, Cunfer spent over 20 years in senior finance roles at The Hershey Company, including VP of international finance, VP of global supply chain finance and VP of North America finance.

Every Friday morning, the weekly Fortune 500 Power Moves column tracks Fortune 500 company C-suite shifts—see the most recent edition

More notable moves this week:

Anthony Armstrong has been appointed CFO of xAI, Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence group, the Financial Times reports. Armstrong will replace Mike Liberatore, who left the startup this year for OpenAI after three months in the role. Armstrong will reportedly oversee the finance function for both xAI and the social media platform X. Musk merged X and xAI in March, valuing the combined group at $113 billion. Formerly the head of global technology mergers and acquisitions at Morgan Stanley, Armstrong was part of the team hired by Musk to facilitate the acquisition of X, then known as Twitter. Most recently, Armstrong worked for the Trump administration as a senior adviser to the Office of Personnel Management.

Marshall Witt was appointed senior vice president and chief financial officer of FedEx Freight, effective Oct. 15. Witt’s appointment completes FedEx Freight’s executive leadership team, joining the previously announced leadership roles. FedEx Corp. (NYSE: FDX) is preparing for the separation of FedEx Freight into an independent company. Witt is the former CFO of TD SYNNEX, a global IT distributor and solutions provider. Before that, he spent 15 years at FedEx, primarily within the FedEx Freight finance organization, where he most recently served as senior vice president of finance and controller.

Mary Holt was appointed CFO of CompoSecure, Inc. (NYSE: CMPO), a designer and manufacturer of metal payment cards. Holt succeeds Tim Fitzsimmons, who is retiring. Holt brings more than three decades of experience. Most recently, she served as SVP of finance operations, utilities and power SBG at Warren Equity Partners. Before that, she spent over 17 years at Honeywell, advancing through a series of increasingly senior roles, including VP of business analysis and planning/corporate finance; CFO of productivity solutions and services; and CFO for corporate entities and functions.

Brent Wahl, CFO of NextDecade Corporation (Nasdaq: NEXT), has resigned from his position, effective Oct. 20. The company has appointed Mike Mott, SVP of enterprise transformation, as interim CFO. Wahl is leaving NextDecade to join a digital infrastructure company, and he has agreed to serve in a consultant capacity through Dec. 31, 2025. The company will initiate a search process to find a permanent successor.

Anthony Coletta was appointed CFO of Sprinklr (NYSE: CXM), a customer experience management platform. Coletta has more than 20 years of experience. Most recently, he served as chief investor relations officer at SAP SE. Before this, Coletta served as CFO for SAP North America. 

Gibb Witham was appointed president and CFO of Hack The Box (HTB), a cybersecurity training and upskilling platform. Witham brings two decades of experience at the intersection of finance, strategy, and cybersecurity. He joins HTB from Paladin Capital Group, a cybersecurity-focused investment firm and early investor in HTB. 

Big Deal

Grant Thornton has released the third installment of its Digital Transformation survey, which examines executives’ perspectives on the role of governance and compliance in technology use and how these factors support resilience. Sixty percent of executives identified structured frameworks and specialized tools designed to manage rules, identify risks, and ensure compliance with regulations as essential tactics for making their technology use safer and more resilient.

Respondents were asked to rank the top priorities for their organizations’ technology enhancements; 57% chose cybersecurity and risk management as one of their top technology objectives. The findings are based on a survey of more than 550 cross-functional senior executives across industries.

Risk assessments are the foundation of strong resilience, according to Derek Han, cybersecurity and privacy leader for the firm’s risk advisory practice. Where these processes were once performed manually with the help of workflow tools, companies are now implementing AI to assist in the process. However, Han notes the importance of humans collaborating with AI.

“If we start using AI to simply replace humans to monitor, respond to, and mitigate security risks, the human foundation for cybersecurity could be diminished,” Han said in a statement. “It’s important to strike a balance between the use of AI tools and continuing to develop the expertise and critical thinking of the human security team.”

Going deeper

Here are four Fortune weekend reads:

Wells Fargo was reeling from scandal. Jamie Dimon protégé Charlie Scharf bet his career on saving the 173-year-old bank” by Shawn Tully

Exclusive: Coinbase and Mastercard have both held advanced talks to buy stablecoin startup BVNK for around $2 billion” by Ben Weiss and Leo Schwartz

California’s ‘impossible’ dream of ending fossil fuels isn’t working, and now it’s looking at price spikes and shortages” by Jordan Blum

You’re 10 times more likely to have a flight delay during the government shutdown, Transportation Secretary says: ‘These controllers are stressed out’” by Sydney Lake

Overheard

“In finance, as in life, the scariest things happen when the lights go out. Whether the rules change or not, what really matters is what investors demand — and what markets are willing to tolerate.”

—Richard Torrenzano, CEO of The Torrenzano Group, writes in a Fortune opinion piece titled, “Fewer earnings reports, more regret: The high cost of going quiet.” Torrenzano weighs in on the debate on whether public companies should end quarterly earnings and move to semiannual disclosures. For nearly a decade, he was a member of the New York Stock Exchange management and executive committees. 



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International students skipped campus this fall — and local economies lost $1 billion because of it

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This school year, American colleges and universities saw a 17% decline in new international student enrollment. If you set aside the year of the pandemic, that’s the steepest decrease in over a decade. This reduction is making waves far beyond the halls of higher-ed. Based on my recent analysis, it represents a nearly $1 billion hit to the U.S. GDP – a hit that’s particularly concentrated in the Main Street sectors that form the backbone of many communities.

The employers taking the largest hit are in the restaurant industry (700 jobs), retail (350 jobs), and residential and commercial property rental (345 jobs), and auto repair (100 jobs). This is where the science of input-output analysis meets the art of economic impact analysis. We don’t know exactly which specific firms will be impacted. But from my experiences on campus across the country, these are exactly the types of main street college town businesses that exist near campus and serve students of all types. 

My analysis quantified the impact of new international students’ non-tuition spending. The results? Hosting 21,587 fewer new international students (277,118 this year as opposed to last year’s 298,705) means 7,300 fewer jobs and $500 million in lost labor income. 

Further analysis reveals which occupations are most heavily impacted. Of the 7,300 jobs that are affected, 390 are retail sales worker jobs, 370 are food and beverage server jobs, 290 are home health aide jobs, 280 are health care diagnostics jobs, and 260 are material moving worker jobs. This only takes into account non-tuition spending. The effects of lost revenue will hit higher education institutions as well. 

What are the structural reasons that the economic footprint of new international students is so wide-ranging? As a whole, international students are high-spend consumers, shelling out significant sums on housing, food, transportation, healthcare, and retail. The dollars spent by international students cycle through local economies. For example, a landlord uses the student’s rent money to buy pizza, and the pizza shop owner uses the money the landlord spent on dinner to buy a new shipment of cardboard pizza boxes – and so on.

Collectively, this year’s 277,118 new international students’ spending supports 93,000 jobs and $12.6B in GDP. The would-be international students who faced visa application issues or got caught up in President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown will spend their money elsewhere, whether it’s in their home countries or in other study-abroad destinations. 

This demand shock hitting local economies and service jobs may seem quiet now, but as the school year goes on, and the spending shortage ripples through local economies, the implications are grim for local consumer spending, small business revenues, commercial real estate around campuses, and even tax collections. College towns and metro areas with large university footprints will see the strongest effects, especially in states with historically heavy international enrollment, like California, Texas, New York, Florida, and Illinois. 

Business leaders and government officials need to think about the myriad ripple effects of changes to international enrollment statistics in higher education. The broader linkages to both the local and national economy are underappreciated. Needless to say, fewer international students today can mean fewer skilled workers in sectors like tech, healthcare, and engineering tomorrow. What’s just as important, and maybe less apparent, is the immediate threat to jobs and GDP upstream of enrollment that a decline in new international students represents. 

New rules that make it harder for students to get visas and proposed caps on international students at some institutions present a threat to the U.S. economy at large and to small businesses in our communities – not just institutions of higher learning. We cannot ignore the  economic tradeoffs of national policy changes at the local level. Beyond the immediate economic impacts, my experience as a professor at campuses large and small have informed my view that international students enrich their communities in ways other than just the number of dollars they spend at local businesses. The perspectives they bring on both a personal and intellectual level are invaluable. They have spurred my thinking on topics from economics and development to the personal and profound. We are richer for their presence. 

International students are part of student spending in communities across the country and the number of new international students limits Americans’ ability to work and thrive, too. It is imperative that we not ignore or underestimate how this demand shock prompts a material headwind to growth in key regions.    

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.



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Political communication scholar on how Zohran Mamdani hacked ‘slacktivism’ to appear on your phone, on your street and in your mind

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Accounts of Zohran Mamdani’s campaign for New York City mayor have highlighted both his online presence and his ground game.

Mamdani won the general election with 50.4% of the vote, a larger share than was predicted by most polls, and his get-out-the-vote campaign has received some of the credit. Mamdani claims that his campaign had over 100,000 volunteers knocking on doors across New York City.

This focus on on-the-ground mobilization stands out given the increasing attention devoted to online campaigning over the past 15 years.

Particularly during that time period, online platforms have been a major focus of political campaigns and campaign research. Targeted advertising and new media strategies are increasingly viewed as central to campaign success. So is coverage of the campaign by legacy and social media more generally.

Moreover, solid empirical evidence of the effectiveness of door-to-door canvassing is limited. Recent work finds very few effects of in-person canvassing, except in very specific circumstances. One recent paper suggests that door-to-door canvassing by the candidate can make a difference to election outcomes. But in a race in New York City, it is not likely that Mamdani himself was able to reach enough voters to make a difference.

How much did Mamdani’s ground game contribute to his victory? As a political communication scholar, I know that assessing the impact of different methods used by political campaigns is difficult – in part because political campaigns include multiple lines of communication.

‘Hybrid’ campaigns

No campaign exists in isolation — nearly every candidate’s campaign occurs alongside opposing candidates’ campaigns. The effects of one campaign are often masked by the countering effects of the other.

The size of a campaign on one platform also tends to be correlated with the size of that candidate’s campaign on other platforms. When television advertising increases alongside social media advertising and door-to-door canvassing, identifying the effects of any single platform can be difficult.

Clever research designs are in some instances able to identify effects. These generally find that the impact of not just door-knocking but also ads and online advertising can be relatively limited.

In the modern technological environment, the impact of any single aspect of a campaign may be especially difficult to assess. Campaigning increasingly occurs in what researchers have called a “hybrid media” environment. Campaigns are waged in person, on the news and across multiple social media.

Each of these platforms comes with different advantages and disadvantages. Each also prioritizes different kinds of information.

Plainly stating your policy platform may work for coverage of a campaign stop on the evening news. But if you want that policy to go viral on TikTok, then you may need to add a dance – or an influencer.

Find volunteers online, send them knocking

Candidates have increasingly recognized the need to tailor messages for different communication platforms, such as television ads, Facebook posts and TikToks, building hybrid campaigns that attempt to spread a message across multiple, different spaces.

This interactivity across platforms has been especially evident in postelection assessments of the Mamdani campaign. His social media campaign was adept at producing the kinds of content that attract attention online. That campaign also appears to have been able to convert online engagement into real-world activism, including door-to-door canvassing.

There have been growing concerns among academics and campaign organizers about “slacktivism” — activism that amounts to one or two clicks online but nothing more. One worry is that a quick online endorsement may in some instances give people a sense that they have done their share and limit more active forms of engagement. The Mamdani campaign appears to have overcome this problem, at least in part.

But 100,000 people knocking on doors probably does not happen without the success of an online campaign. Finding and mobilizing campaigners was one important focus of Mamdani’s engagement online, after all.

Do it yourself − then repeat on socials

In-person campaigning by Mamdani, on the street and in the taxi line, is almost certainly made more effective through circulation on Instagram and TikTok.

Using mass media to broadcast campaign stops is not new, of course.

The construction of campaign stops that produce good social media content is becoming more common, however. The ways in which campaigns unfold in person are increasingly intertwined with the way they unfold online.

In this way, the Mamdani campaign may have been a textbook example of a modern hybrid campaign and an illustration of the coevolution of digital and on-the-ground campaigning.

To be clear, the success of the Mamdani campaign is probably not about his online presence or his ground game, but both at the same time.

Stuart Soroka, Professor, Communications and Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.





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America’s mobile housing affordability crisis reveals a system where income determines exposure to climate disasters

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Option A is a beautiful home in California near good schools and job opportunities. But it goes for nearly a million dollars – the median California home sells for US$906,500 – and you’d be paying a mortgage that’s risen 82% since January 2020.

Option B is a similar home in Texas, where the median home costs less than half as much: just $353,700. The catch? Option B sits in an area with significant hurricane and flood risk.

As a professor of urban planning, I know this isn’t just a hypothetical scenario. It’s the impossible choice millions of Americans face every day as the U.S. housing crisis collides with climate change. And we’re not handling it well.

The numbers tell the story

The migration patterns are stark. Take California, which lost 239,575 residents in 2024 – the largest out-migration of any state. High housing costs are a primary driver: The median home price in California is more than double the national median.

Where are these displaced residents going? Many are heading to southern and western states like Florida and Texas. Texas, which is the top destination for former California residents, saw a net gain of 85,267 people in 2024, much of it from domestic migration. These newcomers are drawn primarily by more affordable housing markets.

This isn’t simply people chasing lower taxes. It’s a housing affordability crisis in motion. The annual household income needed to qualify for a mortgage on a mid-tier California home was about $237,000 in June 2025, a recent analysis found – over twice the state’s median household income.

Over 21 million renter households nationwide spent more than 30% of their income on housing costs in 2023, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. For them and others struggling to get by, the financial math is simple, even if the risk calculation isn’t.

I find this troubling. In essence, the U.S. is creating a system where your income determines your exposure to climate disasters. When housing becomes unaffordable in safer areas, the only available and affordable property is often in riskier locations – low-lying areas at flood risk in Houston and coastal Texas, or higher-wildfire-risk areas as California cities expand into fire-prone foothills and canyons.

Climate risk becomes part of the equation

The destinations drawing newcomers aren’t exactly safe havens. Research shows that America’s high-fire-risk counties saw 63,365 more people move in than out in 2023, much of that flowing to Texas. Meanwhile, my own research and other studies of post-disaster recovery have shown how the most vulnerable communities – low-income residents, people of color, renters – face the greatest barriers to rebuilding after disasters strike.

Consider the insurance crisis brewing in these destination states. Dozens of insurers in Florida, Louisiana, Texas and beyond have collapsed in recent years, unable to sustain the mounting claims from increasingly frequent and severe disasters like wildfires and hurricanes. Economists Benjamin Keys and Philip Mulder, who study climate change impacts on real estate, describe the insurance markets in some high-risk areas as “broken”. Between 2018 and 2023, insurers canceled nearly 2 million homeowner policies nationwide – four times the historically typical rate.

Yet people keep moving into risky areas. For example, recent research shows that people have been moving toward areas most at risk of wildfires, even holding wealth and other factors constant. The wild beauty of fire-prone areas may be part of the attraction, but so is housing availability and cost.

The policy failures behind the false choice

In my view, this isn’t really about individual choice – it’s about policy failure. The state of California aims to build 2.5 million new homes by 2030, which would require adding more than 350,000 units annually. Yet in 2024, the state only added about 100,000 – falling dramatically short of what’s needed. When local governments restrict housing development through exclusionary zoning, they’re effectively pricing out working families and pushing them toward risk.

My research on disaster recovery has consistently shown how housing policies intersect with climate vulnerability. Communities with limited housing options before disasters become even more constrained afterward. People can’t “choose” resilience if resilient places won’t let them build affordable housing.

The federal government started recognizing this connection – to an extent. For example, in 2023, the Federal Emergency Management Agency encouraged communities to consider “social vulnerability” in disaster planning, in addition to things like geographic risk. Social vulnerability refers to socioeconomic factors like poverty, lack of transportation or language barriers that make it harder for communities to deal with disasters.

However, the agency more recently stepped back from that move – just as the 2025 hurricane season began.

In my view, when a society forces people to choose between paying for housing and staying safe, that society has failed. Housing should be a right, not a risk calculation.

But until decision-makers address the underlying policies that create housing scarcity in safe areas and fail to protect people in vulnerable ones, climate change will continue to reshape who gets to live where – and who gets left behind when the next disaster strikes.

Ivis García, Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning, Texas A&M University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.



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