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Return to Virginia Business - November 2004

Cover story

New path for pork giant
Facing limits to expansion at home, Smithfield Foods looks to Eastern Europe


by Paula C. Squires and Lynn Waltz
Virginia Business

November 2004

WEB POINTERS
For more information:
Smithfield Foods
Securities and Exchange Commission filings
Online business information

Nearly every day hogs are trucked into Gwaltney of Smithfield’s plant, and spiral hams, bacon slices and sausages are trucked out. The cycle requires many steps, and some of the work isn’t for the faint of heart.

The operation begins on the kill floor. The Gwaltney plant is capable of slaughtering 9,000 hogs a day. When the pork is ready for processing, a conveyor system hauls meat to various stations. It’s cold on the plant floor — below 40 degrees in many areas — and the machinery drowns out conversation. Employees wearing smocks, gloves, rubber shoes and hairnets cut and package the pork. On the “deboning line,” workers in safety gear wield sharp knives, hacking meat away from bone. Typically, they debone more than 800 hams an hour.

Getting pork from the farm to the table is difficult work that raises tough issues. “We process animals. We discharge fluids,” says C. Larry Pope, the president and COO of Smithfield Foods. “We’re steadfastly committed to the environment, but we struggle with some of the perceptions out there.”

Since being hit in 1997 with a $12.6 million federal fine for polluting the Pagan River, Smithfield Foods has strengthened its environmental programs, winning praise from state and federal officials. But that step has not changed everyone's perception of the company. An environmental group led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has sued Smithfield Foods, and Sen. John Kerry questioned the effects of its large hog farms on small farmers during his presidential campaign.

“When you get to be big, you get to be the target for all the special interest groups,” says Pope. “It’s the cost of getting bigger.”

Smithfield Foods is bigger than anyone else in the business. From a small, family-owned company known for producing the hams enjoyed at holiday dinners, Smithfield Foods has evolved into the world’s largest pork producer and processor. The company has eight plants in the U.S. (three in the Southeast and five in the Midwest), operations in France and Poland and joint ventures in Spain, Mexico, China and Romania. The U.S. facilities alone produce 2.9 billion pounds of fresh pork a year and 2.5 billion pounds of processed meats.

Company Chairman and CEO Joseph W. Luter III also has diversified into beef. Smithfield Foods is the fifth largest U.S. beef processor. The company’s growth has created antitrust rumblings at home, and now Luter is aggressively expanding into Europe. “We’re very, very excited, and we believe in the next five years we can create a dominant position in Europe just as we have in the United States,” he told shareholders at the company’s annual meeting in September in Richmond.

***

Smithfield Foods’ dominance in its industry is evident in Hampton Roads where it’s one of the area’s largest private employers. The company’s corporate headquarters along with its two packing plants in Smithfield provide jobs for 4,800 employees. Statewide, the Fortune 500 company has offices and facilities in six other locations for a total work force of 6,200. Overall, its payroll covers 46,400 workers, including those in overseas subsidiaries.

As the company has grown so have its profits. Since 2000, Smithfield Foods has doubled its sales revenue from $5 billion to nearly $10 billion. For its most recent fiscal year, which ended in May, the company earned a profit of $227 million, or $2.03 a share, up from $26.3 million, or 24 cents a share, in 2003. Boosted in part by the popularity of high-protein diets such as the Atkins diet, sales reached $9.3 billion in 2004, 30 percent more than the previous year. Shareholders have done well, too, with a five-year average return on investment of 17.6 percent.

As Smithfield Foods shifts from essentially an American, commodity-based company to one with a growing global presence in processed meats, its growth strategies are increasingly under scrutiny. Key to building the company has been a series of acquisitions and vertical integration, the concept of controlling every step of production, from raw material to finished product. The company raises nearly half of the hogs it slaughters on large farms.

Kerry has assailed the development of corporate farms. While stumping in Iowa, the country’s largest hog-farming state, Kerry pledged to stop Tyson Foods Inc. and Smithfield Foods from raising their own hogs. He says the practice helps processors control supplies and dictate prices, thereby hurting small farmers. In 2000 and 2002 the Iowa legislature strengthened a law banning meatpackers from owning livestock.

Smithfield Foods sued and a federal district court found Iowa’s law unconstitutional. The state appealed and an appellate court recently upheld the legality of the Iowa statute. Nine states have passed laws prohibiting meatpackers from owning livestock, and the U.S. Senate included a federal ban in its 2002 Farm Bill, but the provision didn’t make the bill’s final version.

As political resistance builds, Smithfield Foods executives acknowledge that vertical integration may have run its course in the United States. The company already processes 27 million hogs annually, representing a 27 percent share of the U.S. market. Luter said at September’s annual meeting that, if Smithfield Foods reaches a one-third market share, he expects federal authorities to halt any further acquisitions in this country.

“There are limited growth opportunities to expand the hog raising side of our business due to governmental and environmental restraints,” says Joseph W. Luter IV, the son of the CEO, who is Smithfield Foods’ executive vice president. But, he adds, vertical integration transformed the pork industry “in terms of the quality of the hog and the quality of meat coming to market. … It has benefited the industry.” The younger Luter disagrees with Kerry’s contention that the company’s hog farms are running independent farmers out of business. “It’s more rhetoric than reality,” he says, noting that Smithfield Foods buys half of its hogs on the open market.

In search of new growth opportunities, the company is turning its sights overseas, particularly to the emerging markets of Eastern Europe. In the last five years, Pope says the company has invested $150 million, putting in hog farms and manufacturing equipment. In 1999, the company paid $51 million for a controlling interest in Animex, Poland’s largest meat and poultry processor.

***

Through all the challenges and change, Smithfield Foods’ longstanding CEO has rolled with the punches and, some would say, has delivered a few jabs of his own, beating out rivals for prime acquisitions. With the company’s shift to an overseas strategy, some investors wonder if there will be a shift in the top job as well. In July, the CEO quietly celebrated his 65th birthday. While no formal succession plan is in place, company executives say discussions have begun on who will fill Luter’s shoes whenever he retires. Speculation outside the company centers on 39-year-old Joseph Luter IV, the fourth generation of the Luter family to work for the company, and Pope, 50, a 24-year Smithfield Foods veteran.

“We are beginning to put into place the primary person, myself, who could be…” Pope says, leaving the sentence unfinished. He adds hastily that “Mr. Luter has made no decision on retirement.” Pope describes Luter as the company’s visionary and strategist, the guy who “flies at 20,000 feet,” phoning executives frequently and traveling abroad in search of acquisitions. “Mr. Luter gets all the credit. … I’m the person responsible for executing strategy,” Pope says.

Asked about his chances of becoming the company’s next CEO, young Joe Luter is diplomatic: “That’s a big if. I certainly have my ideas and things I would do, but at this point it’s my role to give opinions and input when I’m asked. I’m very respectful of Larry and my father.”
Who’s in charge after the senior Luter steps down will be an important decision for Smithfield Foods’ board as the company continues with international expansion and concentrates on boosting profits from processed meats, the company’s most consistently profitable operation.

Jonathan Feeney, an analyst with Wachovia Securities in New York who follows the company, recently downgraded the stock from “outperform” to “market perform,” in part because of political risks. “A Kerry victory combined with an at least partially Democratic Congress would create major uncertainty for vertically integrated pork and chicken companies like Tyson and Smithfield,” Feeney says in a written analysis. Still, he finds the stock — which traded around $24 in mid-October — “undervalued from a long-term perspective.”

Analyst Ann Gurkin with Daven-port & Co. in Richmond expects the company to continue to thrive. “We like them. Demand for protein is very strong with Atkins,” she says. “The price of pork is a good value for consumers. Their return on investments overseas looks better for future growth and with higher-margined, pre-cooked processed meat.”

To meet increased demand for cooked ham products, Smithfield Packing Co. — a subsidiary of Smithfield Foods — plans to build a new $85 million ham-processing plant in Kinston, N.C. The 180,000-square-foot plant is expected to open in 2006 and will employ 206 people. Smithfield Packing already has a meat processing facility in Kinston. North Carolina is home to Smithfield Food's Murphy-Brown hog production subsidiary and its largest hog processing plant in Bladen County, where a failed union drive has prompted a labor dispute.

***

The story of Smithfield Foods begins in Smithfield, a picturesque town of 6,300 on the banks of the Pagan River. This is where Joe Luter III’s grandfather, Joe Luter, and his father, Joe Luter Jr., founded the Smithfield Packing plant in 1936. Joe Luter III began his career with the company after his father died suddenly of a heart attack in 1962. Fresh out of Wake Forest University, Luter worked his way up to president, sold the company in 1969 and was promptly fired by the new owners. By 1975, though, with mounting debt and plunging sales, the company’s board asked Luter to return. He accepted and is credited with saving the company from bankruptcy.

In 1998, Smithfield Foods moved its offices from downtown Norfolk to a new $7 million corporate building on Commerce Street in Smithfield, one of many steps that have earned the company high marks from town officials. “They stay actively interested in assisting the town and improving the community,” says Smithfield Town Manager Peter Stephenson. Many of the town’s residents work at the packing plants where company officials say high school graduates can earn wages of $15 to $16 an hour.

Smithfield Foods began expanding in 1981 with the purchase of its local rival, Gwaltney of Smithfield. Since then, it has gone on a buying spree, making 24 other acquisitions, extending the company’s reach and diversifying its products. For instance, its 1999 acquisition of Carroll’s Foods Inc. of Warsaw, N.C., the nation’s second-largest hog-production company, transformed Smithfield Foods into the largest hog producer in the world.

Last year Smithfield Foods bought Farmland Foods in Kansas City, Mo., for $377 million. That deal prompted Kerry, a member of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, to request an antitrust investigation by Attorney General John Ashcroft. Kerry wrote in a letter to Ashcroft, “It is evident that this acquisition, which would give Smithfield control over nearly one-third of the U.S. pork processing industry, has the potential to harm consumers, small producers, and rural communities alike.”

Mirroring Tyson’s revolution in the poultry industry, Smithfield Foods was a leader as pork processors in the 1990s began consolidating; purchasing livestock operations and buying hogs through long-term production contracts. Proponents of vertical integration say it promotes efficiencies and a higher quality of meat while mitigating exposure to cyclical swings in hog prices. The result, however, are farms that generate huge amounts of waste. In addition to water pollution controls, the Environmental Protection Agency is raising the possibility of regulating air emissions from the farms.

Typically, farms store hog manure in open-air lagoons, then spray it on surrounding fields as fertilizer. Environmental and conservation groups allege that the farms release liquefied hog manure into waterways in violation of the Clean Water Act. And they allege that overspraying can increase runoff into streams and rivers and contaminate groundwater supplies.

Since the mid-1990s, North Carolina — the second largest pig producer in the country — has prohibited new corporate farms. A federal lawsuit brought by Robert Kennedy’s group, Waterkeeper Alliance, against a Smithfield Foods farm in North Carolina in February 2001 is scheduled to come to trial next spring. It alleges that the farm repeatedly released hog wastes into waterways in violation of federal laws.

Kennedy’s group and others are keeping watch on the company’s activities in Poland. Kennedy says he has lobbied against Smithfield Foods’ corporate farms. “The argument I’ve been making to the Polish officials is that these are short-term commercial values … not a good long-term business strategy,” he says.

Pope dismisses the efforts of what he describes as a small group of protesters. “We’re not the bad guys in the U.S., and we’re not the bad guys in Europe,” he says. “We’re bringing tremendous commerce and opportunities to countries that desperately need those opportunities. …We’re bringing them Western technology, Western management and we’re giving them tremendous benefits.”

Expanding in Eastern Europe is easier than in other parts of Europe, because labor costs are lower. In Poland and Romania, Pope says workers earn $2.50 an hour for the same work the company would pay more than $20 an hour for in other parts of Europe. “We’re an opportunistic company,” says Pope. As the European Union expands in Eastern Europe, people there are “begging for jobs. They’re an agrarian economy. They can deal with meat processing.”

Meanwhile, at home the company has taken high-profile steps to improve its environmental record. In 2002, it hired Virginia’s director of the Department of Environmental Quality, Dennis Treacy. Since then, the company has implemented management systems on all its farms, and Treacy says water violations from the state have dropped 75 percent in the past two years. “The whole world watches us,” Treacy says. “We’re not in a position to make mistakes. We’ve come a long way very quickly.”

Frank Daniel, regional director of the Tidewater office of the Department of Environmental Quality, says the company is doing a much better job. Several years ago, the state fined Smithfield Foods for runoff from its hog farms into swamps and streams, but the farms are in compliance now. “They were spraying their biosolids at rates the fields couldn’t handle. They’ve totally turned things around,” says Daniel.

Last month Gwaltney of Smithfield (a Smithfield Foods subsidiary) was one of 16 companies that received a 2004 Environmental Excellence Award from Businesses for the Bay. The awards, sponsored by the Environmental Protection Agency’s Chesapeake Bay Program, recognized Gwaltney for a project that reduces nutrients in the wastewater at its Smithfield operation.

To publicize its environmental programs, Smithfield Foods produces an annual environmental stewardship report accessible from its Web site. It includes information on recent initiatives, including a $20 million hog waste-to-biodiesel energy project in Utah and a voluntary agreement the company signed in 2000 with the North Carolina attorney general. Smithfield Foods has agreed to pay $50 million over 25 years to support environmental measures that will enhance the state’s water quality. In addition, it has committed $15 million in research to North Carolina State University to find environmentally safe ways to treat the wastes from hog farms.

These days, Pope says the company’s survival depends on its commitment to high principles. “We stand for three things that the company will never compromise: food safety, environmental safety and worker safety. Those three things can’t be compromised. Those could put us out of business.”

***

The treatment of workers is one of the issues behind charges of unfair labor practices at the company’s 5,000-employee Bladen County plant in North Carolina. The charges were made after two failed union drives in 1994 and 1997 by the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. After hearing weeks of testimony in 2000, an administrative law judge with the National Labor Relations Board found that Smithfield Foods violated federal labor laws in dealing with the 1997 union election, which ended in a fight. A 436-page ruling included a cease and desist order, saying Smithfield can’t threaten employees with closing the plant or being fired if they vote to be represented by a union. The order has been stayed, pending an appeal. If upheld, Smithfield Foods would be required to hold new elections, rehire workers who were fired with back pay and publicly post the remedies sought by the NLRB.

Greg Robertson, an attorney with Hunton & Williams in Richmond who represents Smithfield Foods on labor issues, says the company disagrees with the judge’s conclusions. And, he says, it made no sense for management to incite violence since the union had lost the vote. “We won. Why would we do that? But this happened seven years ago, and we’re focusing on where we are today and the work force we have today.”

A new complaint was filed in July by the National Labor Relations Board after reviewing grievances raised by the same union involved in the earlier case. The complaint alleges that company security and a cleaning contractor assaulted workers in November 2003 and threatened some Latino workers with arrest by immigration authorities. A hearing before an administrative law judge was scheduled for Nov. 1. Robertson says the company had nothing to do with the contractor’s dispute and did not assault or threaten any workers.

The Bladen County dispute has caught the attention of Human Rights Watch, a New York-based group, which plans a report this month on labor actions at the plant. It will be an update to an earlier report in 2000.

About half of the Smithfield Foods’ total 40,000-plus work force is unionized. Smithfield Foods does a good job of bargaining with workers at plants where they are unionized, say union officials. “If a union is rightfully voted in, we’ll work with the union,” says Joseph Luter IV.

***

Going forward, as customers become more health conscious, Smithfield Foods will probably expand into more products such as its Lean Generation line of meats. Pope sees the company as someday resembling Kraft Foods with many brands under its umbrella. “Essentially, we will be a marketing company,” he says.

That would bode well for Luter IV, who came up through the sales and marketing ranks. If he gets passed over for CEO this go-round, he still has time to one day lead the company. “I don’t take anything for granted,” he says. “It’s a much different company today.” Years ago, he notes, Smithfield Foods’ products had a shelf life of five days and were sold to customers within a 200- to 300-mile radius. “Now the shelf life is 50 days and we’re shipping fresh pork to Japan.” For Smithfield Foods, the prize hog may be far from home.

Return to Virginia Business - November 2004


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