Hormel Foods Corp
XMUN:HO7
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Hormel Foods Corp
XMUN:HO7
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Hormel Foods Corp
Hormel Foods is a packaged-food company that makes and sells branded meat and food products. Its lineup includes items like SPAM, SKIPPY peanut butter, turkey products, deli meats, bacon, sausages, chilies, and other ready-to-eat or easy-to-prepare foods. It also sells food-service and ingredient products used by restaurants, schools, and other commercial buyers. The company makes money mainly by selling these products through grocery stores, club stores, food-service distributors, and other wholesale channels. Its customers are everyday shoppers, restaurant operators, and institutional buyers that want shelf-stable, refrigerated, or frozen foods from a trusted brand. Hormel’s business depends on turning livestock, crops, and other raw ingredients into branded packaged foods that can be sold at a higher value than the raw inputs. What makes Hormel’s business model different is its mix of consumer brands and food-service products, with a strong focus on categories that people buy again and again. It sits in the middle of the food supply chain: it sources agricultural inputs, processes them into finished foods, and then uses branding and distribution to reach large retailers and commercial kitchens.
Hormel Foods is a packaged-food company that makes and sells branded meat and food products. Its lineup includes items like SPAM, SKIPPY peanut butter, turkey products, deli meats, bacon, sausages, chilies, and other ready-to-eat or easy-to-prepare foods. It also sells food-service and ingredient products used by restaurants, schools, and other commercial buyers.
The company makes money mainly by selling these products through grocery stores, club stores, food-service distributors, and other wholesale channels. Its customers are everyday shoppers, restaurant operators, and institutional buyers that want shelf-stable, refrigerated, or frozen foods from a trusted brand. Hormel’s business depends on turning livestock, crops, and other raw ingredients into branded packaged foods that can be sold at a higher value than the raw inputs.
What makes Hormel’s business model different is its mix of consumer brands and food-service products, with a strong focus on categories that people buy again and again. It sits in the middle of the food supply chain: it sources agricultural inputs, processes them into finished foods, and then uses branding and distribution to reach large retailers and commercial kitchens.
Strong quarter: Hormel said Q2 was an excellent quarter, with organic net sales up for the sixth straight quarter and adjusted earnings growing in double digits.
Guide reaffirmed: Management reaffirmed full-year organic sales and adjusted EPS guidance, and said it is now trending toward the upper half of the earnings range.
Q3 caution: The company expects third-quarter adjusted earnings to be closer to last year because of higher fuel costs, commodity pressure, and inventory rebalancing.
Segment strength: Foodservice and International both posted strong growth, while Retail improved ahead of expectations and returned to positive organic growth.
Cost actions: Pricing, mix, productivity, and restructuring benefits helped offset logistics and commodity headwinds, and SG&A discipline remained on track.
Portfolio shift: Hormel closed the divestiture of its whole-bird turkey business and said it remains focused on higher-value, less volatile branded offerings.