Frito-Lay Stock

Frito-Lay has no stock price of its own. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of PepsiCo (Nasdaq: PEP), which traded at approximately $145 per share in early 2026. Investors seeking exposure to Frito-Lay's cash flows must purchase PepsiCo shares, as the snack division has never had an independent public listing or traded separately from its parent.

Stock Price of Frito-Lay

Frito-Lay is a private PepsiCo subsidiary and has never traded independently. No standalone stock price exists.

PepsiCo (parent company) share price in USD — Nasdaq (PEP). Frito-Lay became part of PepsiCo in 1965 and does not trade independently. Data from 1965 to 2026.

Frito-Lay Stock Forecast

No standalone stock forecast applies to Frito-Lay. For investors seeking exposure to the division's earnings power, PepsiCo (Nasdaq: PEP) is the relevant security. Analyst 12-month price targets on PEP range from $150 to $190 for 2026, with bulls pointing to Frito-Lay's pricing power and steady volume gains as the primary upside driver. Key risks include consumer trade-down to private label snacks and commodity cost inflation.

Frito-Lay Valuation

Frito-Lay has no standalone valuation. PepsiCo market cap (USD) over the last 10 years is shown below as the closest public proxy.

Timeline of Frito-Lay Funding

  • 1932
    Founder Capital
    Charles Doolin purchases a corn chip recipe in San Antonio, Texas for $100 and begins producing Fritos by hand, self-funding the operation through early sales from his car trunk.
  • 1945
    Cross-Distribution Deal
    Doolin and Herman W. Lay agree to distribute each other's products in non-competing regions, effectively pre-funding the scale that makes the eventual merger possible and profitable for both businesses.
  • 1961
    Merger — Frito-Lay Inc.
    The Frito Company and H.W. Lay & Company merge in a stock-for-stock deal to form Frito-Lay Inc., pooling manufacturing, distribution, and brand assets into the US's largest salty snack company.
  • 1965
    PepsiCo Merger
    Frito-Lay merges with Pepsi-Cola to form PepsiCo Inc., giving the snack division access to Pepsi's bottling infrastructure and nationwide distribution reach in exchange for shares in the new combined entity.
  • 2010
    Manufacturing Expansion
    PepsiCo invests over $500 million in Frito-Lay North America manufacturing capacity and supply chain infrastructure, including the zero-net-water Casa Grande, Arizona facility, funded from PepsiCo's consolidated operating cash flow.

Frito-Lay Investors

Frito-Lay has no direct investors — it is a wholly owned PepsiCo division. The cards below reflect PepsiCo's major institutional shareholders, who hold indirect exposure to Frito-Lay's earnings through their PEP positions.

Vanguard Group
PepsiCo Stake~9.2%
Est. PEP Position~$18.4B
TypePassive / Index
CountryUSA
BlackRock
PepsiCo Stake~7.6%
Est. PEP Position~$15.2B
TypePassive / Index
CountryUSA
State Street Global Advisors
PepsiCo Stake~4.4%
Est. PEP Position~$8.8B
TypePassive / Index
CountryUSA
Warren Buffett / Berkshire Hathaway
PepsiCo Stake~0.7% (historical)
TypeActive / Value (reduced position)
NoteBerkshire held PEP stock but has largely divested
CountryUSA
T. Rowe Price
PepsiCo Stake~2.8%
Est. PEP Position~$5.6B
TypeActive / Growth & Income
CountryUSA