We have another CPI report this Friday I believe. The government and Fed will tell you not to worry - as the US economy slows, inflation will magically go away. The same spin since last August. The consumer continues to face massive issues and I'd contend that inflation continues to get worse.. from already high levels. Again, I don't know whether to accuse this Fed and all these NYC bankers economists as poor forecasters or simply ignorant. The herd has their head in the sand, if someone like me saw this coming a year ago and these people making massive bucks cannot figure it out.
- Pilgrim's Pride Corp (PPC), the largest U.S. chicken producer, said on Wednesday it will close a chicken processing complex and nearly half of its U.S. chicken distribution centers as it copes with soaring feed costs and an oversupply of chickens.
- The news sent Pilgrim's Pride shares, as well as those of other chicken companies, higher on the theory that less production will benefit the chicken industry. "Clearly this news is positive for the group," Pablo Zuanic, food analyst at JP Morgan, said in a research note. "We expect by the summer combined cutbacks of about 3 percent by the industry."
- "I'm not surprised given the unusually high price of grain, which is restricting the ability to sell chicken domestically," Paul Aho, an economist with the consulting firm Poultry Perspective, said of the production cuts.
- "This is one shoe dropping and we might see another shoe dropping," he said.
- Pilgrim's Pride said it will take a charge of about $35 million, or 33 cents a share after taxes, for the closures, which will eliminate about 1,100 jobs, or some 2 percent of its work force. The company is looking at potential changes at other production facilities, including possible closings, with decisions likely in 30 to 60 days, Rivers said in the interview.
- "What is happening with feed ingredient prices, escalating as much as they have over the past year and half, it is causing us to look hard at some operations where we feel we have excess product or don't have our best cost structure," he said.
- "Part of the issue is the government continues to raise the mandate on ethanol so that we will pull another billion bushels of corn out of the system to make fuel. They don't have a policy in place in the event of a crop problem," he said.
- U.S. government's policies encouraging ethanol production have angered livestock and meat producers, who blame those policies for the higher corn prices.
- Based on current commodity prices, Pilgrim's Pride estimated it would cost at least an additional $1.3 billion to feed its flocks in fiscal year 2008 than it would have cost two years ago. “We simply must find ways to pass along these higher costs,” Rivers added.
- The company said on Monday that it is also exiting the turkey business because of slim profits.
Position: Continued disgust








4 comments:
On a tangent to this topic, what are your thoughts on one of your other more obsure Ag derivative plays - HOGS. My take is that with less meat in the US, there won't even be any 'emergency pork' being sent to China anymore. And since meat consumption in developing nations is one of the major reasons for Ag inflation - we have inherent proof that there is increasing demand for meat in those areas. Plenty of organic demand growth over there. Hence more pork packaging, distribution and refrigeration systems. So it all sounds good, but I'm having a hard time finding any comparables in this industry to value the company and its growth prospects. At 1.08 forward earnings, and recent 0.91 gives about an 18% growth rate (yahoo). Looks cheap... maybe? But this sounds like a commoditized and competitve business. I'd want to own the largest and most competitive player in the space, and HOGS seems small.
Hi Jeff,
I view HOGS more as a play on a fragmented market. Pork is like chicken or beef is here, the most popular food. HOGS is one of the larger players in a country with 300M or so emerging middle class. I expect them to consolidate part of the industry and maybe be a Smithfield Foods type in a much faster growing part of the world. But we will see. They are VERY young and I believe my smallest cap stock, so the smaller you guy the more inherent risks. This is a long term demographic play, I don't expect any great things in the short run. I don't watch it day to day, it is simply a smaller position and when it dips below 11 I buy and when it goes in 13s, 14s I sell. Eventually it will go higher than 14, I am sure.
There are no comparables for you to compare to - I don't even know if there is another "food producer" in China that trades in the US to be honest. Not to mention hogs specifically.
On another of your comments my belief is worldwide hoarding of food will be an eventual step if things continue down this path; in a very gradual basis. We are already seeing it in wheat... need to feed your own population first.
p.s. I would only use analysts estimates as very rough guidelines. If you used them for fertilizer you would of missed the entire bull run. I try to develop my own estimate. HOGS has a whopping 2 analysts who follow them, and their revenue is expected to increase by 60% but profits only 18%? (but even the 60% revenue gain is suspect, its only 1 analyst) Unless margins are expected to fall through the floor or tax rate is expected to explode I find it hard to believe. Hence take everything you see from analysts estimates with grain of salt. I posted a long commentary in the fertilizer space about 4 months ago on just that situation and how wrong analysts were on the future estimates, which has proven true. I still think they are wrong which is why I continue to be bullish in that space.
I found the numbers a little suspect aswell. Its hard to do that type of analysis when a company is young, and you don't really know how the margins might change. I would have though the profits should grow faster than the revenue..? They seem to be like a HOG service company. (as an oil service company is to oil) I do use the analyst numbers as a starting point, but try to decide if they are either too bullish, or too bearishs. That seems to be the best way to use analysts estimates. You do eventually want them to agree to your thesis, and not the other way around. That way you can sell it.
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