US meat giant Smithfield Foods has booked an drop in third-quarter profits on the back of restructuring charges and higher costs.
For the three months ended 29 January, net profit slumped 61% to US$79m. The figure included charges from the streamlining of manufacturing operations at Spanish processed-meats company Campofrio, in which Smithfield owns a 37.5% stake. Debt-extinguishment costs also hit earnings.
Discover B2B Marketing That Performs
Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.
Operating profit in the period amount to $170.5m, a 54.2% decline on the prior-year period.
Sales increased 9% to $3.48bn thanks to higher selling prices and strong demand for pork, particularly in Asia. However, Smithfield’s cost of sales increased 13.5% as it said raw material prices rose “significantly” and drove its gross profit down nearly 17%.
Total pork sales rose 11%, reflecting an increase of 19% for fresh pork and 6.2% for packaged meats, while the firm’s hog-production segment saw sales jump 17%, and its international business sales rose 1.3%.
“We have made significant progress on all of these fronts; however, we are not satisfied with our results and we are pursuing opportunities to further improve our business,” said Smithfield president and CEO Larry Pope.

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?
Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.
By GlobalDataHowever, he added: “All indications are that fiscal 2012 will be another very strong year for Smithfield and we expect to continue to deliver consistently solid results in fiscal 2013.”