Report
Zain Akbari
EUR 850.00 For Business Accounts Only

Morningstar | Tariffs Weigh on Short-Term Prospects for Tyson, Pilgrim's, and Sanderson; Long-Term Thesis Intact

We plan mid- to high-single-digit percentage cuts to our fair value estimates for no-moat Tyson (currently $73 per share), Pilgrim's Pride ($34), and Sanderson Farms ($121) to reflect trade-related pressure that led Tyson to reduce its fiscal 2018 earnings per share outlook to $5.70-$6.00 from $6.55-$6.70 (we had called for $6.59). We expect it will take time for oversupply to clear and producers to redirect product to countries with more favorable trade regimes, but our long-term forecast, which already assumed profitability normalization from recent highs, should remain largely intact for all three firms.

The trade issues validate our no-moat ratings for these producers. While the industry has reduced volatility through cost-based contracting, strategies to reduce mismatches in cut demand, and specialty production, much of what drives results remains outside firms' control, including trade policy, weather, industry supply, and feed costs. We had expected conditions to normalize from strong years in 2015-17, with low-double-digit adjusted operating margins dipping into the high single digits for Tyson's chicken segment and Sanderson (acquisition activity has made Pilgrim's metrics less comparable). We anticipate trade challenges will accelerate that process, but over time we expect production and scale-based efficiency to combine with strong domestic demand to counteract the more difficult export conditions. As such, our long-term view of low-single-digit growth and high-single-digit operating margins should remain in place for all three firms.

While each firm carries risk, reflected in our high uncertainty ratings, we believe Pilgrim's offers the best opportunity. We expect its balanced portfolio of bird sizes, specialty lineup, and Mexican unit (with locally produced product) to drive results. The shares appear attractive despite our planned valuation cut, though Pilgrim's coming earnings report should offer more insight into the impact of trade upheaval.
Underlying
Tyson Foods Inc. Class A

Tyson Foods is a food company. The company's operations consist of breeding stock, contract farmers, feed production, processing, further-processing, marketing and transportation of chicken and related allied products, including animal and pet food ingredients. Through its wholly-owned subsidiary, Cobb-Vantress, Inc., the company is engaged as poultry breeding stock supplier. The company also processes live fed cattle and hogs and fabricates dressed beef and pork carcasses into primal and sub-primal meat cuts, case-ready beef and pork and fully-cooked meats. The company produces a range of fresh, frozen and refrigerated food products. The company operates in Beef, Pork, Chicken and Prepared Foods segments.

Provider
Morningstar
Morningstar

Morningstar, Inc. is a leading provider of independent investment research in North America, Europe, Australia, and Asia. The company offer an extensive line of products and services for individual investors, financial advisors, asset managers, and retirement plan providers and sponsors.

Morningstar provides data on approximately 530,000 investment offerings, including stocks, mutual funds, and similar vehicles, along with real-time global market data on more than 18 million equities, indexes, futures, options, commodities, and precious metals, in addition to foreign exchange and Treasury markets. Morningstar also offers investment management services through its investment advisory subsidiaries and had approximately $185 billion in assets under advisement and management as of June 30, 2016.

We have operations in 27 countries.

Analysts
Zain Akbari

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