Kraft Heinz and the cost of narrow capitalism ...Middle East

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Kraft Heinz has paused its proposed breakup, stepping back from dismantling the 2015 megamerger engineered by Warren Buffett and 3G Capital. The decision follows collapsing quarterly profits, declining sales, and a Berkshire Hathaway filing that would allow it to sell down its roughly 27.5% stake, a potential exit from a decade-long investment. It is the latest chapter in a years-long decline that many attribute to “portfolio problems”: old brands, too much processed cheese, sugary ketchup out of step with modern tastes. But that mistakes the symptom for the cause. Stale products didn’t sink Kraft Heinz. The real question is why they went stale in the first place.

From its 2013 Heinz buyout to the 2015 merger with Kraft, the strategy was financial engineering over value creation: leverage up, merge fast, cut deep. Research budgets were gutted, marketing hollowed out, suppliers squeezed. Sustainability and innovation were treated as distractions, not drivers. The 3G model boosted margins early. But it cut into muscle, not fat.

And the scoreboard doesn’t lie. Since the 2015 merger, Kraft Heinz shares have fallen roughly 65%–70%. Over the same period, the S&P 500 has more than doubled. 

In 2019, the company wrote down $15 billion in brand value. It restated earnings. It paid SEC fines. And it cycled through CEO after CEO, a leadership churn that signalled strategic instability, not renewal. 

Warren Buffett later acknowledged that Berkshire overpaid for Kraft and that he misjudged the investment. No amount of financial engineering, even by the world’s most celebrated investor, can rescue a business that has stopped investing in itself.

In 2017, Kraft Heinz launched a $143 billion hostile takeover bid for Unilever, where I was then CEO. The offer came with an 18% premium to shareholders, promising higher short-term returns funded by sweeping cuts to sustainability, R&D, jobs, and long-term investment. The approach followed intense short-selling activity in Unilever stock, raising questions in parts of the market about aggressive tactics surrounding the offer.

I won’t pretend the pressure wasn’t real. Defending a long-term model against the promise of immediate returns is never easy, especially when the premium is large. But our board, our investors, our unions, our NGO partners, and policymakers saw beyond the arithmetic. They understood that short-term extraction would destroy long-term value. Within 48 hours, the bid collapsed. But the philosophy behind it remained intact. 

Kraft Heinz continued to bet that value comes from cutting costs, not from sustainability and innovation. And when the world moved on, toward healthier products, regenerative sourcing, conscious consumerism, the company stood still. Underinvested, overstretched, and out of touch. 

Many competitors adapted more successfully. Danone pivoted toward plant-based and regenerative agriculture. Nestlé retooled entire product lines around health and sustainability. The issue is not that the food industry changed, it’s that Kraft Heinz had stripped itself of the capacity to change alongside it.

New CEO Steve Cahillane’s decision to pause the demerger and instead reinvest $600 million into pricing, renovation, and marketing comes as Berkshire heads for the door. It is a tacit recognition that you cannot cut your way to growth, and that the new leadership knows it. It may be the most hopeful signal to come out of the company in a decade. 

The deeper story that must be addressed though, is of a company run for a handful of owners at the expense of the millions of customers, employees, suppliers, and communities who made its success possible. This is a case study in the failure of shareholder primacy. When you strip out investment and trust in return for a quick payday, you lose the very engine of growth and resilience that capitalism depends upon. A little pruning can stimulate growth. But hack at the roots and collapse is inevitable.

This is not ideology. It’s market dynamics. Consumers are moving toward healthier, more sustainable food. Employees seek purpose-led brands. Regulators are raising the bar. Companies innovating toward healthier products and regenerative sourcing are capturing market share. Kraft Heinz, by contrast, regularly ranks in the lower half of major sustainability indices while most of its direct competitors sit in the top quartile. 

None of this is charity. It is simply running a business in line with where society is heading and profiting from solving problems rather than creating them. The core principle of any net positive business.

I know from experience that building a purpose-led business is no easy task. At Unilever, we faced constant pressure from investors who wanted faster returns. Not every bet paid off. The sustainability agenda attracted criticism from those who thought we were overreaching and from those who thought we weren’t going far enough. Balancing profit with purpose is a discipline, not a destination, and the companies that pretend to have “solved it” are often those who lose credibility fastest.

But the alternative is clear. Financial engineering may deliver margins for a few quarters. But it cannot sustain a company for decades. The question facing every board and CEO today is not just what your company sells, but what it stands for, and whether your model is built for the world that’s coming or the one that’s already gone.

That means investing back into the heart of the business: innovation, quality, supplier relationships, and the people who make it all work. It means linking executive pay to long-term value creation, not quarterly cost savings. It means treating sustainability as a growth driver, not a compliance burden. And it means building genuine alliances with stakeholders who can support you when pivots are needed or when the inevitable crises arrive.

Because here is the truth: short-term businesses live shorter lives.

Kraft Heinz’s fate is not an unfortunate misstep in brand management. It is a warning about where narrow capitalism leads. Build a company around enriching a few, and it will eventually serve no one. Build it around solving problems for billions, and you create something that lasts. Markets, eventually, know the difference. 

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.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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