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Thread: Higher Chicken Prices Inbound

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2014
    Posts
    11,099

    Default Higher Chicken Prices Inbound

    https://finance.yahoo.com/news/tyson...155357374.html
    Tyson will shut a plant in Glen Allen, Virginia, with 692 employees and a plant in Van Buren, Arkansas, with 969 employees, according to a statement.

    Chicken demand will shift to other plants as part of a strategy to utilize the full capacity at each of its facilities, the company said.

    "The current scale and inability to economically improve operations has led to the difficult decision to close the facilities," Tyson said.

    Arkansas-based Tyson said last year it could not fulfill all its orders for chicken due to limited supplies and labor, and planned to boost production. The company previously bought chicken from other producers to meet demand.

    Tyson wrongly predicted last year that demand for chicken would be strong at supermarkets in November and December, Chief Executive Donnie King said on a quarterly earnings call last month. In January, the company replaced the president of its poultry business.

    Shuttering plants is difficult but justified as Tyson seeks to improve performance, said Arun Sundaram, senior equity analyst at CFRA Research. He said he was not surprised by the decision and expects Tyson may implement further restructuring.

    "There's been a lot of investor pressure to management about improving the chicken margins," Sundaram said.

    Tyson shares were slightly lower in afternoon trading.

    Overall sales missed analyst estimates for the quarter ending Dec. 31, when total operating margins dropped to 3.5% from 11.3% a year earlier. The company at the time said the current quarter would be weaker than the end of 2022.

    "They're desperate," said Magaly Licolli, director of Venceremos, an organization that advocates for poultry workers in Arkansas. "They're trying to save money and cutting workers and making other workers do more."

    Tyson had about 124,000 U.S. employees as of Oct. 1, including 118,000 workers at non-corporate sites like meat plants, regulatory filings show. In October, the company said it would relocate all corporate employees to its headquarters in Springdale, Arkansas.

    The United Food and Commercial Workers Local 400 union, which represents employees at Tyson's plant in Virginia, slammed the decision to close the facility.

    "These men and women risked their lives and the safety of their families to keep this plant operational during the pandemic, and this is the thanks they get?" said Mark Federici, UFCW Local 400 president.

    Tyson said workers losing their jobs could apply for positions at other company facilities.
    Yup, he's crazy...


    like a fox. The dude may be coming in a little too hard and crazy but 90% of everything he says is correct.

    Sort of like Toof. But way smarter.
    ~Scatter Shot

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    united states of america
    Posts
    21,593

    Default

    Everything follows the cost of oil.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Bowman
    Posts
    6,428

    Default

    Squeeze play by big meat. Competition is needed desperately in the poultry, pork and beef sectors.
    cut\'em

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Posts
    1,164

    Default

    Chicken prices have been down for months. Retailers and restaurants have been taking margin rather than reducing their prices. As a result, production volume did not rise as hoped/expected. Underperforming and higher expense ( Union shop ) plants are the smartest ones to close.

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