Sanderson Farms, Inc. (NASDAQ: SAFM) today reported results for
the third fiscal quarter and nine months ended July 31, 2021.
Net sales for the third quarter of fiscal 2021 were $1,352.8
million compared with $956.5 million for the same period a year
ago. For the quarter, the Company reported net income of $164.8
million, or $7.38 per share, compared with net income of $32.8
million, or $1.48 per share, for the third quarter of fiscal
2020.
Net sales for the first nine months of fiscal 2021 were $3,395.9
million compared with $2,624.2 million for the first nine months of
fiscal 2020. Net income for the first nine months of fiscal 2021
totaled $271.2 million, or $12.14 per share, compared with net
income of $0.35 million, or $0.02 per share, for the first nine
months of fiscal 2020.
Results for the three months ended July 31, 2021, reflect the
accrual of $10.2 million before income tax, or $0.35 per share net
of income tax, for probable liability for a contribution to the
Company’s Employee Stock Ownership Plan, and $45.9 million before
income tax, or $1.58 per share net of income tax, for probable
liability under the Company’s bonus award programs and equity
compensation awards.
Results for the nine months ended July 31, 2020, include a net
discrete income tax benefit of approximately $38.1 million related
to net operating loss carry-back provisions allowed by the
Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (“CARES”) Act, which
became law during the second fiscal quarter of 2020. Excluding this
discrete income tax benefit, the Company’s net loss for the nine
months ended July 31, 2020, was $37.7 million, or $1.72 per
share.
“Our financial results for the third quarter of fiscal 2021
reflect significantly improved demand and prices for products sold
to food service customers, continued strong demand for products
sold to retail grocery store customers, reduced volumes due to
planned egg set reductions that we implemented during the early
stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, and higher costs of feed grains,”
stated Joe F. Sanderson, Jr., chairman and chief executive officer
of Sanderson Farms, Inc. “Our results also reflect superior
execution in all areas of our business, including live production,
processing and sales. We benefitted from improved market conditions
for the products we sell to food service customers due to the
phased reopening of more food service establishments across the
nation. While food service customer demand has improved with more
people dining out, consumers also continue to prepare meals at
home. As a result, demand for the products we sell to retail
grocery store customers remained strong throughout the quarter.
“We produced approximately 1.21 billion pounds during the third
quarter, which is 53.2 million, or 4.2 percent, fewer pounds than
we would have produced at full production. This reduction in volume
is attributable to planned egg set reductions implemented during
the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic to compensate for the
decrease in demand from our food service customers.”
According to Sanderson, overall realized prices for chicken
products sold to retail grocery store customers remained strong
during the third quarter, and volumes reflected the strong demand.
In addition, the quoted commodity markets for products sold to food
service customers were higher across the board, reflecting the
improved demand from food service customers. The average quoted
market price for boneless breast meat was 71.4 percent higher
during the quarter compared with the third quarter of fiscal 2020,
the average market price for bulk leg quarters increased by 66.3
percent, the average market price for chicken breast tenders
increased by 107.3 percent and the average market price for jumbo
wings increased by 107.0 percent.
During the third quarter of fiscal 2021, the Company’s average
feed costs per pound of poultry processed increased by 45.8 percent
when compared to the third quarter of fiscal 2020, while prices
paid for corn and soybean meal, the Company’s primary feed
ingredients, increased 87.7 percent and 50.1 percent, respectively,
compared with the third quarter of fiscal 2020. In its report
published August 12, 2021, the USDA decreased its yield estimates
compared to earlier estimates for both corn and soybeans for the
2021-2022 crop year. Supplies of both corn and soybeans remain
tight relative to estimated demand, and the Company expects market
prices for both grains to remain elevated relative to historical
prices at least for the short term. Had the Company priced its
remaining fiscal 2021 feed grain needs at yesterday’s Chicago Board
of Trade closing prices, cash paid for feed grains during fiscal
2021 would be higher by $369.0 million compared to fiscal 2020,
based on fiscal 2020 volumes. The Company estimates those higher
prices, along with estimated basis costs, would increase feed cost
per pound of poultry processed during fiscal 2021 by 8.44 cents per
pound compared to fiscal 2020.
Sanderson added, “With respect to chicken production levels, the
USDA’s latest estimates forecast United States broiler production
during calendar year 2021 to increase less than one percent
compared to calendar year 2020. While egg sets have returned to
pre-pandemic levels, lower hatchability rates have resulted in
fewer chicks placed than egg set activity would suggest. We
estimate our total production during the fourth quarter of fiscal
2021 will be lower by 3.1 percent compared to the fourth quarter of
fiscal 2020. If that projection holds true, our total fiscal 2021
production will be 0.6 percent lower than our fiscal 2020
production.”
Sanderson Farms, Inc. is engaged in the production, processing,
marketing and distribution of fresh, frozen and minimally prepared
chicken. Its shares trade on the NASDAQ Global Select Market under
the symbol SAFM.
This press release includes forward-looking statements within
the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of Section 27A of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking
statements are based on a number of assumptions about future events
and are subject to various risks, uncertainties and other factors
that may cause actual results to differ materially from the views,
beliefs, projections and estimates expressed in such statements.
These risks, uncertainties and other factors include, but are not
limited to, those discussed under “Risk Factors” in the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended October 31,
2020, and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended July
31, 2021, and the following:
(1)
Changes in the market price for the
Company’s finished products and feed grains, both of which may
fluctuate substantially and exhibit cyclical characteristics
typically associated with commodity markets.
(2)
Changes in economic and business
conditions, monetary and fiscal policies or the amount of growth,
stagnation or recession in the global or U.S. economies, any of
which may affect the value of inventories, the collectability of
accounts receivable or the financial integrity of customers, and
the ability of the end user or consumer to afford protein.
(3)
Changes in the political or economic
climate, trade policies, laws and regulations or the domestic
poultry industry of countries to which the Company or other
companies in the poultry industry ship product, and other changes
that might limit the Company’s or the industry’s access to foreign
markets.
(4)
Changes in laws, regulations, and other
activities in government agencies and similar organizations
applicable to the Company and the poultry industry and changes in
laws, regulations and other activities in government agencies and
similar organizations related to food safety.
(5)
Various inventory risks due to changes in
market conditions, including, but not limited to, the risk that net
realizable values of live and processed poultry inventories might
be lower than the cost of such inventories, requiring a downward
adjustment to record the value of such inventories at the lower of
cost or net realizable value as required by generally accepted
accounting principles.
(6)
Changes in and effects of competition,
which is significant in all markets in which the Company competes,
and the effectiveness of marketing and advertising programs. The
Company competes with regional and national firms, some of which
have greater financial and marketing resources than the
Company.
(7)
Changes in accounting policies and
practices adopted voluntarily by the Company or required to be
adopted by accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States.
(8)
Disease outbreaks affecting the
production, performance and/or marketability of the Company’s
poultry products, or the contamination of its products.
(9)
Changes in the availability and cost of
labor and growers.
(10)
The loss of any of the Company’s major
customers.
(11)
Inclement weather that could hurt Company
flocks or otherwise adversely affect the Company’s operations, or
changes in global weather patterns that could affect the supply and
price of feed grains.
(12)
Failure to respond to changing consumer
preferences and negative or competitive media campaigns.
(13)
Failure to successfully and efficiently
start up and run a new plant or integrate any business the Company
might acquire.
(14)
Unfavorable results from currently pending
litigation and proceedings or litigation and proceedings that could
arise in the future.
(15)
Changes resulting from the COVID-19
pandemic, which could exacerbate any of the risks described above,
and could include: high absentee rates that have prevented and may
continue to prevent the Company from running some of its facilities
at full capacity, or could in the future cause facility closures;
an inability of contract poultry producers to manage their flocks;
supply chain disruptions for feed grains; further changes in
customer orders due to shifting consumer patterns; disruptions in
logistics and the distribution chain for the Company’s products;
liquidity challenges; and a continued or worsening decline in
global commercial activity, among other unfavorable conditions.
(16)
Risks relating to the Company’s
recently-announced entry into a definitive agreement to be acquired
by a joint venture between Cargill, Incorporated (“Cargill”) and
Continental Grain Company (“CGC”), including: the timing, receipt
and terms and conditions of any required governmental or regulatory
approvals of the proposed transaction and the related transactions
involving affiliates of Cargill and CGC that could reduce the
anticipated benefits of or cause the parties to abandon the
proposed transaction; risks related to the satisfaction of the
conditions to closing the proposed transaction (including the
failure to obtain necessary regulatory approvals or the approval of
the Company's stockholders), and the related transactions involving
affiliates of Cargill and CGC, in the anticipated timeframe or at
all; the risk that any announcements relating to the proposed
transaction could have adverse effects on the market price of the
Company's common stock; disruption from the proposed transaction
making it more difficult to maintain business and operational
relationships, including retaining and hiring key personnel and
maintaining relationships with the Company’s customers, vendors and
others with whom it does business; the occurrence of any event,
change or other circumstances that could give rise to the
termination of the merger agreement entered into pursuant to the
proposed transaction or of the transactions involving affiliates of
Cargill and CGC; risks related to disruption of management's
attention from the Company's ongoing business operations due to the
proposed transaction; significant transaction costs; and the risk
of litigation and/or regulatory actions related to the proposed
transaction or unfavorable results from currently pending
litigation and proceedings or litigation and proceedings that could
arise in the future.
Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on
forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of Sanderson Farms.
Each such statement speaks only as of the day it was made. The
Company undertakes no obligation to update or to revise any
forward-looking statements. The factors described above cannot be
controlled by the Company. When used in this press release, the
words “believes,” “estimates,” “plans,” “expects,” “should,”
“could,” “outlook,” and “anticipates” and similar expressions as
they relate to the Company or its management are intended to
identify forward-looking statements. Examples of forward-looking
statements include statements of the Company’s belief about future
production levels, commodity market conditions, grain prices,
supply and demand factors, global economic conditions and other
industry conditions.
SANDERSON FARMS, INC. AND
SUBSIDIARIES
Condensed Consolidated
Statements of Operations
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except per share
amounts)
Three Months Ended
July 31,
Nine Months Ended
July 31,
2021
2020
2021
2020
Net sales
$
1,352,756
$
956,455
$
3,395,942
$
2,624,244
Cost and expenses: Cost of sales
1,049,814
865,997
2,831,072
2,521,804
Selling, general and administrative
87,718
50,590
208,562
156,289
1,137,532
916,587
3,039,634
2,678,093
Operating income (loss)
215,224
39,868
356,308
(53,849
)
Other income (expense) Interest income
-
466
-
466
Interest expense
(623
)
(1,521
)
(1,958
)
(4,492
)
Other
3
2
19
7
(620
)
(1,053
)
(1,939
)
(4,019
)
Income (loss) before income taxes
214,604
38,815
354,369
(57,868
)
Income tax expense (benefit)
49,841
6,005
83,217
(58,220
)
Net income
$
164,763
$
32,810
$
271,152
$
352
Earnings per share: Basic
$
7.38
$
1.48
$
12.14
$
0.02
Diluted
$
7.38
$
1.48
$
12.14
$
0.02
Dividends per share
$
0.44
$
0.32
$
1.32
$
0.96
SANDERSON FARMS, INC. AND
SUBSIDIARIES
Condensed Consolidated Balance
Sheets
(In thousands)
July 31, 2021
October 31, 2020
(unaudited)
(1)
Assets Current assets: Cash and cash equivalents
$
245,429
$
49,061
Accounts receivable, net
211,016
147,546
Receivable from insurance companies
4,138
-
Inventories
364,262
290,007
Refundable income taxes
2,986
33,977
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
62,924
57,544
Total current assets
890,755
578,135
Property, plant and equipment, net
1,227,772
1,224,746
Right-of-use assets
30,849
40,785
Other assets
6,844
5,365
Total assets
$
2,156,220
$
1,849,031
Liabilities and stockholders' equity Current liabilities: Accounts
payable
$
141,367
$
111,463
Dividends payable
9,825
-
Accrued expenses
139,798
98,663
Lease liabilities
12,686
13,981
Total current liabilities
303,676
224,107
Long-term debt
-
25,000
Claims payable and other liabilities
13,082
12,175
Deferred income taxes
149,476
141,672
Long-term lease liabilities
18,235
26,804
Commitments and contingencies Stockholders' equity: Common stock
22,329
22,251
Paid-in capital
101,142
90,420
Retained earnings
1,548,280
1,306,602
Total stockholders' equity
1,671,751
1,419,273
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity
$
2,156,220
$
1,849,031
(1)
The Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet
at October 31, 2020, was derived from the audited consolidated
financial statements at that date, but does not include all of the
information and footnotes required by U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles for complete financial statements.
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210826005170/en/
Mike Cockrell Treasurer, Chief Financial Officer
& Chief Legal Officer (601) 649-4030
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