TYSON FOODS, INC. News
Tyson Foods, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, operates as a food company worldwide. It operates through four segments: Beef, Pork, Chicken, and Prepared Foods. The company processes live fed cattle and live market hogs; fabricates dressed beef and pork carcasses into primal and sub-primal meat cuts, as well as case ready beef and pork, and fully cooked meats; raises and processes chickens into fresh, frozen, and value-added chicken products, including breaded chicken strips, nuggets, patties, and other ready-to-fix or fully cooked chicken parts; and supplies poultry breeding stock. It also manufactures and markets frozen and refrigerated food products, including ready-to-eat sandwiches, flame-grilled hamburgers, Philly steaks, pepperoni, bacon, breakfast sausage, turkey, lunchmeat, hot dogs, flour and corn tortilla products, appetizers, snacks, prepared meals, ethnic foods, side dishes, meat dishes, breadsticks, and processed meats under the Jimmy Dean, Hillshire Farm, Ball Park, Wright, State Fair, Aidells, and Gallo Salame brands. In addition, the company offers its products under the Tyson and ibp brands. It sells its products through its sales staff to grocery retailers, grocery wholesalers, meat distributors, warehouse club stores, military commissaries, industrial food processing companies, chain restaurants or their distributors, live markets, international export companies, and domestic distributors who serve restaurants and food service operations, such as plant and school cafeterias, convenience stores, hospitals, and other vendors, as well as through independent brokers and trading companies. The company was founded in 1935 and is headquartered in Springdale, Arkansas.
see moreTYSON FOODS, INC. Market News
12d
Tyson Cuts Shifts, Closes Plant; Beef Losses Soar!
- Tyson Foods reported weaker Q1 results and warned of sizable beef-segment losses, prompting plant closures and shift reductions. The company has filed for $500M in senior notes as it retools operations amid the smallest U.S. cattle herd in decades—pressuring TSN near-term.
26d
Tyson Beef Losses, Plant Cuts Pressure TSN Shares!
Tyson Foods faces a costly beef downturn: a $319M beef operating loss, permanent closure of its Lexington plant and reduced shifts in Amarillo remove meaningful U.S. processing capacity. TSN stock has shown volatile trading this week as investors weigh continuing strength in chicken and prepared foods against deep beef headwinds and recent policy-driven import shifts.
17 Feb at 14:48
Tyson Cuts Plants Amid Cattle Shortage, TSN Drops.
Tyson Foods has moved to reduce beef capacity—closing the Lexington plant and cutting shifts in Amarillo—amid the smallest U.S. cattle herd in decades. Those actions aim to arrest losses in the beef segment that weighed on TSN shares. Meanwhile, rival Smithfield is expanding pork capacity with a $1.3B plant, underscoring divergent strategies across protein producers.