Food retail order boom may ease after big quarter, Conagra says

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Published: October 1, 2020

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File photo of a Conagra production facility at Oakdale, Calif., about 150 km east of San Francisco, on Dec, 18, 2015. (Photo: Reuters/Fred Greaves)

Reuters — Conagra Brands put better-than-expected first quarter sales on Thursday down to heavy ordering by retailers worried about the durability of supply chains in the months ahead as a second wave of coronavirus cases takes hold.

Shares in the foodstuffs maker dipped as much as three per cent before recovering after chief financial officer David Marberger warned that, while stocking up by its big retail customers had boosted sales growth by six full percentage points, ordering was likely to now ease.

CEO Sean Connolly added that many retailers had already stocked up against the end-of-year holiday period when they worry that coronavirus cases will spur new lockdowns and economic trouble that will hurt supplies of goods.

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Conagra and its retail customers have boomed since February as coronavirus-induced at-home eating boosted demand for all kinds of foods, including the frozen vegetables, snacks and ready-to-eat meals the Chicago-based firm is best known for.

Retailers were “seriously depleted” in the three months to Aug. 30, Marberger told a call with analysts. Restocking was so strong, the company increased third-party manufacturing to meet orders for its Birds Eye frozen vegetables, it said.

“Between manufacturing capacity overall and retailer inventories being light… we’re still in catch-up mode,” Connolly said.

Overall, organic net sales, which exclude impact from mergers and acquisitions and currency fluctuations, rose 15 per cent in the quarter, much higher than the 10-13 per cent range the company had previously expected.

It expects growth of six to eight per cent in the second quarter.

— Reporting for Reuters by Siddharth Cavale in Bangalore.

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