Time To Buy Pilgrim’s Pride Stock

 | Feb 25, 2021 07:00AM ET

Poultry products producer Pilgrims Pride (NASDAQ:PPC)) stock took a hard hit from the 2020 pandemic as shares have yet to recover to pre-COVID levels. However, the COVID-19 vaccine rollouts and loosening of restrictions are helping the Company regain footing on its way to recovery.

Shares are outperforming the benchmark S&P 500 index in 2021, almost triple the index performance. Yet, shares are still relatively cheap compared to the performance of the poultry group which include Tyson Foods (NYSE:TSN) and Sanderson Farms (NASDAQ:SAFM). A number of tailwinds in 2021 in addition to economic recovery, rising chicken prices, the chicken sandwich wars, and a resumption of in-restaurant dining can help push shares higher. Prudent investors seeking undervalued stocks that can benefit from the recovery can monitor shares of Pilgrim’s Pride for opportunistic pullback levels to consider building a position.

h2 Q4 2020 Earnings Release /h2

On Feb. 11, 2021, Pilgrim’s Pride reported its Q4 2020 earnings for the quarter ended December 2020. The Company reported an earnings-per-share (EPS) profit of $0.25, excluding non-recurring items missing consensus analyst estimates for a profit of $0.35, by a (-$0.10).

Revenues beat consensus estimates coming in at $3.12 billion versus $3.11 billion, rising 1.8% year-over-year (YoY). Net GAAP income for Q4 was $0.1 million and adjusted EBITDA was $205.4 million, a 6.06% margin, up 27% YoY. The Company noted a robust recovery in its Mexican operations, rebounding strongly to finish in-line with prior years. The Company appointed Matthew Galvanoni as CFO, effective March 15, 2021. Galvanoni was VP of Finance at Ingredion (NYSE:INGR) since 2016.

h2 Conference Call Takeaways /h2

Pilgrim’s Pride CEO, Fabio Sandri detailed:

“For the year, in US, our retail and QSR (quick service restaurants) business performed extremely well due to strong demand across our customer base. Operationally, our commodity large big bird deboning also continued to improve despite tough market conditions.”

This was largely affected by the chicken sandwich wars as fast food brands quickly armed themselves with new-fangled chicken sandwich rollouts after the success of Popeye’s chicken sandwich. Online volume for Just BARE brand case-ready grew 230% in 2020 and gaining more brick and mortar retail distribution for the brand. The Company is doubling case-ready capacity in the Cold Springs, MN plant and raising production of Just BARE brand by 20%. The US Prepared Food business revenues fell (-22%) on 29% less volume YoY. Most of this was from pandemic-related school closings.

The Company raised margins by 36% by better optimizing the mix in food service and retail channels and improved buying costs by 5% by simplifying the retail and foodservice portfolio. China continues a large importer of U.S. dark meat and paws and the rest of the world demand has offset pullbacks from China “beyond our near-term expectations, primarily due to very robust demand from other developing countries.”

h2 2021 Tailwinds/h2
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The chicken sandwich wars should continue into 2021. Most importantly, the return to normal will hinge on vaccinations. CEO Sandri specifically noted:

“Outside of QSR, demand from industrial foodservice customers was stable, but still below last year, and we do not expect volumes to return closer to prior levels until the population is more widely vaccinated.”

This is where the vaccine acceleration will be instrumental in 2021 especially with schools reopening by 2H 2021.