Global chicken meat oversupply improving, Brazil’s BRF says

Lower grain costs also expected to boost margins

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Published: May 16, 2023

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File photo of uncooked chicken wings. (Mimadeo/iStock/Getty Images)

Sao Paulo | Reuters — Chicken prices are rising as companies start to cut production to reduce global oversupply, Fabio Mariano, CFO of BRF SA, said on Tuesday, after a glut helped to push the Brazilian pork and poultry producer to a first-quarter loss.

The firm posted a 1.024 billion-real (C$287.7 million) net loss for the three months to end-March, with high grain prices also affecting results.

BRF CEO Miguel Gularte said a significant fall in grain prices, combined with efforts to improve operating efficiency, will help to shore up margins and bolster results going forward.

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Gularte said when he took over as CEO in August 2022, the plan had been to achieve “efficiency gains” of 24.5 per cent. He said the company had already reached 25.5 per cent despite a challenging operating scenario.

BRF’s results reflected weakness in export markets, with lower chicken prices dragging margins into negative territory in a business segment that has posted double-digit margins in the past.

The company said it has continued to increase sales of higher-margin, processed food products in markets like Turkey and in the Gulf states, retaining a leading position in those regions.

BRF also said it’s confident that confirmation of two highly pathogenic avian flu cases on wild birds in Brazil is unlikely to spark trade bans.

Brazil’s sanitary status remains unchanged, as per guidelines of the World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH), Gularte said to answer an analyst’s question.

— Ana Mano is a Reuters commodities correspondent in Sao Paulo.

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