Tyson Cuts Meat Sales View as Prices Hit Consumer Spending

Tyson Foods Inc. cut its outlook for meat sales this year as consumers switch to cheaper foods due to inflation.

(Bloomberg) — Tyson Foods Inc. cut its outlook for meat sales this year as consumers switch to cheaper foods due to inflation.

The biggest US meat company in a Monday earnings statement estimated full-year sales between $53 billion to $54 billion, below an earlier forecast of $55 billion to $57 billion. Shares fell more than 8% before the start of normal trading in New York. 

“While the current protein market is challenging, we have a strong growth strategy in place and are bullish on our long-term outlook,” Tyson Chief Executive Officer Donnie King said in the statement.

Consumers have been buying fewer steaks and burgers to reduce food costs while drought-hit cattle ranchers have been slashing herds, bringing cattle prices to a record. That’s squeezing meat companies like Tyson. Its beef sales in the second quarter fell 2.9% from a year ago.

Tyson posted increased poultry sales and a slight decline in sales of prepared foods in the second quarter compared with a year earlier. Prices for pork dropped more than 10%.

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