Post Holdings

How much has Post Holdings raised?

Post Holdings is not venture funded. It is a public company (NYSE: POST) whose buying capacity is best read through revenue, cash flow, debt capacity, capex, acquisitions, and operational priorities rather than private funding rounds.

Public status
NYSE: POST
Funding type
Public equity/debt
Latest scale
$7.9B fiscal 2025 net sales
Operating signal
Q1 fiscal 2026 net sales of $2.2B; adjusted EBITDA outlook raised to $1.55B-$1.58B
Founded
2012 spin-off; Post cereal roots date to 1895
Seller signal
Enterprise procurement account

Post Holdings's capital history

Post Holdings's capital history is public-market scale, operating cash flow, acquisitions, divestitures, and capital investment rather than venture rounds.

  1. 1895Post cereal rootsC.W. Post launches the cereal business that becomes the Post brand.
  2. 2012Post Holdings spin-offPost separates from Ralcorp and begins trading as an independent public company.
  3. 2014Michael Foods acquiredPost expands into egg products and foodservice.
  4. 2017Weetabix acquiredPost adds the UK-based Weetabix cereal platform.
  5. 2025$7.9B fiscal net salesPost reports fiscal 2025 net sales near $7.9B across consumer brands, Weetabix, foodservice, refrigerated retail, and pet food.
  6. 2026Q1 outlook raisedPost reports Q1 fiscal 2026 net sales of $2.2B and raises adjusted EBITDA outlook.

Sources:Post annual reportsPost fiscal 2025 results

How much has Post Holdings raised in total?

Post Holdings does not disclose a venture funding total because it is a mature public company. The relevant capital base is the equity market listing (NYSE: POST), operating cash flow, debt facilities, plant and supply-chain assets, acquisitions, and reinvestment in the business.

That matters for account planning because budget is allocated through annual plans, segment priorities, facility-level ROI, procurement policy, and leadership sponsorship rather than a post-round growth budget.

What are Post Holdings's current scale markers?

The latest public scale marker used in this profile is $7.9B fiscal 2025 net sales. The operating context is Q1 fiscal 2026 net sales of $2.2B; adjusted EBITDA outlook raised to $1.55B-$1.58B, which gives a better signal of near-term spending posture than a generic market-cap snapshot.

For sales qualification, combine those metrics with segment priorities, plant or field footprint, supply-chain complexity, and whether a proposal improves margin, uptime, yield, product quality, or customer fill rates.

Who provides capital to Post Holdings?

Capital comes from public shareholders, lenders, bond or credit markets where applicable, retained earnings, asset sales, and operating cash generation. Strategic acquisitions, capacity projects, systems modernization, distribution investments, and shareholder-return programs compete for management attention.

This makes finance, procurement, operations, IT, legal, and business-unit leadership important stakeholders for any material purchase.

Why does Post Holdings's valuation move?

Post Holdings's valuation is exposed to commodity cycles, crop or protein conditions, input costs, pricing, mix, freight, customer demand, channel inventories, plant utilization, regulatory changes, capital allocation, and execution against management guidance.

Vendors should avoid over-reading a single quarter. The better signal is whether the proposed solution supports the company's current operating priorities, resilience goals, and measurable profit improvement.

What does Post Holdings's funding mean if you sell into them?

Post Holdings has public-company buying capacity, but purchases must clear mature procurement and operating scrutiny. Strong sales motions show hard savings, risk reduction, quality improvement, throughput, labor leverage, compliance, traceability, safety, forecasting, or integration value.

The account should be worked through a buying committee. Expect economic buyers in finance or business units, technical validators in IT or engineering, plant or supply-chain operators as daily owners, and procurement/legal as gating functions.

As of June 2026.Sources:Post annual reportsPost fiscal 2025 resultsPost Q1 fiscal 2026 results

Post Holdings — frequently asked questions

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