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Hormel warns of lower inventory, stresses maintaining supply chain, production efficiency is ‘critical’

“Due to the significant demand for our products in the third quarter, and limiting factors on production of key brands, inventory levels were unseasonably low as we began the fourth quarter,”​ Hormel CFO and executive vice president Jim Sheehan told analysts during the company’s third quarter earnings call Aug. 25.

He estimated that finished good inventory levels currently are about 24% lower now than last year with the grocery products and refrigerated food segments most impacted by the lower levels.

He explained that historically the company builds inventory levels during the third quarter in preparation for increased seasonal demand around the holidays in the fourth quarter, but because of heightened consumer demand in the second and third quarters related to the coronavirus pandemic, the company has not been able to build up its inventory.

Indeed, Hormel CEO and president Jim Snee said, Hormel has burned through its “buffer”​ inventory with which it began 2020 in order to meet increased demand during the pandemic despite some “plant pauses and more significant disruptions to the supply chain”​ during the early days of the pandemic.

“As we head into the fourth quarter, it’s going to be very important – paramount, if you will – that we keep our supply chain operational … and our production efficiencies are where they need to be”​ to meet continued increased demand for at-home products, he said.

Snee was quick to reassure analysts that the company is “not going to put any of our business or our shelf space at risk,”​ by catching retailers off guard with short orders.

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