Your Reading List

Tyson misses profit estimates

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: November 20, 2008

A US$91 million operating loss in Tyson Foods’ chicken business caused the U. S. meat giant to miss Wall Street earnings estimates on Nov. 10, sending shares down nine per cent.

High feed costs and low meat prices should continue to hurt Tyson’s chicken unit, its second largest behind beef. In a conference call, Tyson’s CEO said the chicken business could lose money in the current quarter and possibly the following quarter.

Shares of Tyson and other meat companies have fallen recently as investors worry about meat companies’ ability to pay bills amid talk of slowing meat exports and tight credit.

Read Also

Michael Lipsitz picks out a package of hot dogs while grocery shopping at the WalMart in Crossville, Tennessee March 21, 2008.  Food prices are soaring, a wealthier Asia  is demanding better food and farmers can?t keep up. In short, the world is in a food crisis that is in danger of boiling over.    REUTERS/Brian Snyder    (UNITED STATES)

Canada seventh on agri-food influence

Comparison of 19 G20 countries says Canadian agri-food needs investments, processing, action on retail consolidation to realize potential

“Given the combination of challenges currently facing the protein industry, management’s outlook in the press release was more bearish in tone, making no reference to potential favourable offsets from supply-side cutbacks,” Barclays Capital analyst Christopher Bledsoe said in a research note.

Tyson’s net profit for its fiscal fourth quarter ended Sept. 27 rose to $48 million, compared with $32 million a year earlier (all figures US$). Sales for the period were $7.2 billion, up 9.6 per cent from a year earlier.

The chicken unit, the nation’s second-largest behind Pilgrim’s Pride Corp., had an operating loss of $91 million, compared with a year-earlier profit of $63 million.

Tyson said it had $230 million of additional grain costs during the quarter versus a year earlier.

About the author

Bob Burgdorfer

Washington/reuters

explore

Stories from our other publications