Daily Newsletter

15 August 2023

Daily Newsletter

15 August 2023

Smithfield Foods to close 35 hog farm sites in the US

Around 92 employees are set to be laid off in October.

Henry Mathieu August 14 2023

US pork processor Smithfield Foods is set to close 35 hog farm sites in Missouri, laying off 92 employees in October.

The meat group filed a Missouri Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) notice confirming that the move will affect 13 sites in Newtown, 12 in Lucerne and 10 in Princeton, according to Reuters.

Murphy-Brown LLC, a division of Smithfield Foods, is reportedly “reducing its hog farming operations” across the state and “must reduce its workforce accordingly,” the company said in the notice.

The layoffs are “specific to our Missouri hog production [farm] operations,” a Smithfield spokesperson told Reuters on Monday.

The employees are set to be affected on 8 October, according to the notice. All employees have reportedly been offered relocation opportunities.

Just Food has contacted Smithfield for further details about the closures.

China’s WH Group, Smithfield’s owner, revealed earlier this year that its first-quarter operating profit dropped 43.1% to $365m while profit attributable to owners of the company decreased 55.9% to $174m.

Before announcing its results, WH Group said: “Hog raising costs remain elevated, while pork prices have been adversely impacted by softer consumer demand.”

Smithfield’s planned closures come shortly after Tyson Foods announced the closure of four chicken plants in the US – two in Missouri and one each in Arkansas and Indiana.

The meat processing major estimated total charges of $300m to $400m from the closures.

In a call with analysts after revealing the closures, Tyson said it could consider closing more plants as it continues to face pressures across its chicken, beef and pork operations.

The dairy and soy food sector will see rising demand for lactose-/gluten-free products

GlobalData estimates that the global dairy & soy food sector will grow at a CAGR of 17% during 2022–27. The healthy eating trend has encouraged consumers to seek alternatives to traditional dairy products. Plant-based dairy alternatives are often perceived as healthier due to their lower saturated fat content. Moreover, increasing awareness about food allergies and intolerances, coupled with consumers’ interest in alternative diets, will drive manufacturers to launch lactose- and gluten-free products. Consumers in high-income countries are increasingly seeking products made from grass-fed and free-range livestock.

Newsletters by sectors

close

Sign up to the newsletter: In Brief

Visit our Privacy Policy for more information about our services, how we may use, process and share your personal data, including information of your rights in respect of your personal data and how you can unsubscribe from future marketing communications. Our services are intended for corporate subscribers and you warrant that the email address submitted is your corporate email address.

Thank you for subscribing

View all newsletters from across the GlobalData Media network.

close