It’s Time to Buy Campbell Soup Company (CPB)’s Stock. Here’s Why.

It might not be obvious to the casual observer, but right now, today, Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB)‘s stock offers one of the best values available in the processed foods industry. Why?

Three reasons.

Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB)

Campbell is cheap
When you stack up the stock of Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB) against a couple of its bigger rivals — H.J. Heinz Company (NYSE:HNZ) and Mondelez International (NASDAQ:MDLZ) — it’s clear that Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB)’s stock is the best bargain of the bunch. Its 19 price-to-earnings ratio is nearly 15% cheaper than H.J. Heinz Company (NYSE:HNZ)’s 22.2 P/E, and it offers an eye-popping 37% discount to the 31 P/E at Mondelez International (NASDAQ:MDLZ).

Granted, looking into the future, improved profits at all three companies will bring their forward P/E ratios down, with Mondelez making the biggest “gains” in a decline to just 17.2. Even so, Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB) stock retains its “cheapest foodmaker” label, with a forward P/E of just 16.3 — lower than Heinz or Mondelez, either one.

Campbell has the best record around
Over the past five years, Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB) has grown its annual profits at the fastest pace of these three companies. While not burning up the track, exactly, its 3.8% growth rate still edges out Heinz’s 3.7%, and leaves Mondelez (sales down from $40.5 billion in 2008 to just $35.1 billion over the past 12 months) in the dust.

Admittedly, going forward, analysts see Mondelez and Heinz making up some of the ground they’ve lost. Mondelez in particular is expected to average annual earnings growth north of 11% over the next five years. Heinz, like Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB), should top 6% — but then again, with Heinz getting acquired by Berkshire Hathaway and 3G Capital, it’s going to be hard for investors to participate in that growth. Berkshire, after all, is pegged for only 5.4% earnings growth over the next five years.

Campbell pays you best
Perhaps most important to investors is that out of the three foodstuffs stocks discussed so far, Campbell Soup Company (NYSE:CPB) is generating the most cash from its business, giving you the biggest free-cash-flow bang for your investing buck.

Measured by dividing a company’s market capitalization (the price you pay for Campbell stock) into its free cash flow (the money your investment generates for you), the free cash flow yield from Campbell is the best of the three companies. For every $1 you invest in a share of Campbell stock today, you can expect the company to generate 5.6 cents’ worth of real, cash profits on your investment. (Try getting that from your bank account.) What’s more, Campbell’s free cash flow yield has been trending up more strongly than its rivals’ have in recent years.

CPB Free Cash Flow Yield Chart

CPB Free Cash Flow Yield data by YCharts

Campbell may ultimately use this cash to pay you bigger dividends (its current yield of 2.6% eclipses Mondelez’s 1.7% — and Heinz’s 2.8% yield will presumably vanish as it disappears into the depths of Berkshire Hathaway). Or Campbell could use its cash to buy back shares (increasing the size of your stake in the company for every share it takes off the table), or to reinvest in its business and maintain its stellar pace of growth. Any way you look at it, though, Campbell’s ability to generate cash offers investors a great reason to invest.

And that, Fools, is the reason I think now’s a great time to buy Campbell stock.

The article It’s Time to Buy Campbell’s Stock. Here’s Why. originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Rich Smith has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Berkshire Hathaway and H.J. Heinz and owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway.

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