Smithfield Foods, Inc.
Smithfield Foods, Inc.
200 Commerce Street
Smithfield, Virginia 23430
U.S.A.
Telephone: (757) 365-3000
Fax: (757) 365-3017
Web site:http://www.smithfieldfoods.com
Public Company
Incorporated: 1936 as Smithfield Packing Company
Employees: 36,000
Sales: $5.15 billion (2000)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: SFD
NAIC: 112210 Hog and Pig Farming; 112990 All Other Animal Production
Smithfield Foods, Inc. is the world’s largest pork processor, with fiscal 2000 production of 6 billion pounds of fresh pork and processed meats. It is also the world’s largest hog producer (almost 12 million hogs annually). As a holding company, Smithfield Foods conducts its business through two groups, the meat-processing group and the hog-production group, each made up of a number of subsidiaries. In addition to North Carolina, where it operates the world’s largest hog-processing operation, the company operates industrial pig farms in ten states. Known as a leader in vertically integrated pork processing since 1987, Smithfield raises, slaughters, and processes meat. Its line of hams, hot dogs, bacon, sausage, and deli and luncheon meats is marketed wholesale, under private labels, and under such brand-name labels as Smithfield, Esskay, Gwaltney, Luter’s, Jamestown, and Patrick Cudahy. Beginning in 1998 Smithfield expands beyond the United States with acquisitions in Canada, France, and Poland.
1936 to 1969: All in the Family
Many would agree that Smithfield’s competitive edge is synonymous with the leadership of chief executive officer Joseph W. Luter III. After reclaiming in 1975 what was his own company, Luter had ushered Smithfield into the high-tech age by acquiring companies, forging partnerships, reducing overhead, and instituting capital improvements to boost efficiency. More importantly, he had elevated Smithfield to the elite ranks of those Fortune 500 companies offering the highest total returns to investors.
Since colonial times the small town of Smithfield, Virginia, had been known for its quality hams. Even today, under Virginia law, a ham may only be marketed as a “genuine Smithfield” if it has been cured for six months within the confines of the town. One such marketer, family owned Gwaltney Packing, was the employer of Luter’s father and grandfather during the 1930s. In 1936 these two decided to establish their own ham business and succeeded in raising $10,000 from local investors. They opened across the street from Gwaltney and built their small private company into a multimillion-dollar entity.
When Luter’s father died suddenly of a heart attack in 1962, Luter, near graduation from college, shelved his plans to attend law school and returned to oversee the business. Seven years later the company, with annual revenues of $35 million, had attracted the interest of Washington, D.C.-based Liberty Equities Corp., a small conglomerate. Luter sold the family company for $20 million but was retained as manager. After being summarily dismissed by the new owners six months later, Luter promptly launched a second career in real-estate development.
Mid-1970s to the Mid-1980s: From Bankrupt to First Billion
The packing plant, now operating as Smithfield Foods, Inc., fattened itself through non-pork acquisitions and unnecessary staff expansion. By the mid-1970s Smithfield was floundering along with Liberty Equities and Luter saw an opportunity to repurchase the company at a fraction of its worth. Because of actions taken by the Securities and Exchange Commission, Liberty had essentially reduced itself to Smithfield Foods, a failing $100 million pork-processing and fish wholesale business, further hampered by a nonproductive chain of 27 seafood restaurants. Price inflation throughout the food industry, as wel as poor management, had severely affected the company; its debt had risen to $17 million while net worth had plummeted to $1 million. Creditors were demanding a management change and Luter agreed to a salary and stock options package that encouraged turnaround. As one analyst in a 1988 Financial World article claimed, “Essentially, Joe Luter got the company back for ten cents on the dollar.”
Luter quickly reduced Smithfield’s debt by selling the non-pork operations. He achieved profitability within seven months by slashing nearly $2 million in overhead through the elimination of middle managers and via sharp reductions in data-processing costs. Thus streamlined and firmly back in the meat business, Smithfield began to expand through acquisition. In 1978 it purchased a plant in Kinston, North Carolina. In 1981 Smithfield snatched up Gwaltney (at 35 cents on the dollar) for $34 million. Luter derived special satisfaction from this acquisition because not only had Gwaltney been a longtime competitor, it had also succumbed to the trappings of conglomerate spending under ITT Corp. Luter continued to seek out and buy at bargain rates other underperforming pork companies throughout the 1980s. These included Hancock’s Country Hams, Patrick Cudahy Incorporated, and Schluderberg-Kurdle Co. (renamed Esskay, Inc.). By 1988 annual revenues had skyrocketed to $864 million, well within striking range of the billion-dollar mark.
1987 to 1992: Consistent and Predictable Growth
In 1987, in a particularly prescient move, Luter launched a 50–50 partnership with Carroll’s Foods, the country’s fifth-largest pork producer. Strategically located in North Carolina—within single-day transportation to half the U.S. population—Smithfield-Carroll’s had helped the company lessen its dependence on Midwest hog farmers, the traditional source for the pork-packing industry. Coupled with hogs supplied by East Coast giant Murphy Family Farms, the partnership-Generaled pigs helped to account for 50 percent of Smithfield’s annual requirements. In addition to saving on high-transportation costs, Luter also benefited from lower weight loss during shipment, thereby enhancing his product line’s quality and marketability.
According to Sharon Reier, “What is remarkable about Luter’s resurrection of Smithfield is that he did it in an industry plagued by plant overcapacity and a flat consumption pattern in pork product over the past ten years, and dominated by large, well-heeled conglomerates that could subsidize poor margins in meatpacking operations with profits from other divisions.” Of course, even Luter’s Midas touch had little control over four-year cycles in hog prices, which directly affected the company’s profitability. When prices are high, more pigs are raised and the eventual oversupply results in falling prices and undersupply—a true indicator of a high-risk commodity business. As a consequence of this predictable cycle, net income for Smithfield totaled $7 million in 1990 but rose sharply to nearly $29 million in 1991. Net income for 1992 began cycling downward again to $21 million.
Out of necessity, Smithfield was forced to take a long-term view of earnings performance through compound growth rates. In the 1991 letter to shareholders it explained, “an analysis of the Company’s performance over the last 16 years provides some enlightening results. When the 16 years are divided into four, four-year segments, the Company’s earnings fall into a consistent and predictable growth pattern. ... The Company’s sales, net income and net income per share have shown compound growth rates of 14 percent, 31 percent, and 33 percent, respectively, over the last 16 years.”
One distinct advantage of these cycles, both for the company and for investors, was that Smithfield stock prices also followed a dip-and-rise pattern. With his extra profits, Luter had capitalized on downswings to buy back some 50 percent of the company’s shares during the same 16-year period and had increased his individual stake to approximately 20 percent, according to a 1992 Forbes article.
To keep Smithfield on the cutting edge, Luter had concentrated on his niche markets, avoided high advertising budgets, and relegated more than half of his production to nonbranded commodity pork sales for the supermarket and food-service industries. Most promising for the future was Luter’s quest for the genetically perfect pig: lean, hardy, and easy-to-process. An exclusive contract between Smithfield-Carroll’s and National Pig Development Co. (NPD), a family owned British firm, proved to supply the answer. The first generations of NPD’s transplanted stock were raised at the North Carolina facility. In July 1992, according to David Ress, “Mr. Luter ran some tests on a 265-pound hog … comparing it with an especially lean American hog culled from the best of Smithfield’s current stock. The American pig had an inch of fat on its back. The British pig had less than half that, Mr. Luter said. The raw, or ‘green’ ham from the American pig yielded 52 percent lean meat after boning and after the fat was trimmed. The British pig’s yield was 62 percent.” Development and marketing of the pigs was expected to continue, particularly through Smithfield’s formation of Brown’s of Carolina and its centerpiece, a state-of-the-art slaughtering plant located in Bladen County, North Carolina, which opened for production in September 1992. Around this time, the company phased out a dated Baltimore facility, acquired a John Morrell plant in Wilson, North Carolina, and searched for a plant situated to serve the West Coast.
Company Perspectives:
Smithfield Foods now owns roughly 50 percent of the hogs we slaughter and raises additional hogs, which we do not process, that are marketed under long-term contracts to other companies. We realize a number of benefits by vertically controlling such a substantial portion of our raw materials. By controlling half our hog supply, our processing operations are ensured of a consistent, high-quality source of raw materials for many of the company’s fresh and processed meat products. Continued volume gains in processed meats are helping to further one of our most important goals: creating a balance between fresh and processed meats that maximizes that value from all of our cuts.
1990s and Beyond: Becoming a Pork-Industry Global Force
The Bladen County plant played a pivotal role in Smithfield Foods’ transition from a small, regional packer to the largest pork-packer in the world. By April 1998 operations expanded, changing the primary nature of the facility from a pork-processing plant to the central warehousing/distribution center for Smithfield Packing Co. In 1999, Smithfield received approval to increase processing from 24,000 to more than 30,000 hogs a day. In 2001 the plant killed 32,000 hogs per day, twice the capacity of a typical plant.
By the mid-1990s, pork processing was an industry in flux. Production was becoming more horizontally concentrated and vertically integrated. At this time, the meat-processing industry faced mounting federal regulations, a seesaw marketplace, and food-safety challenges. But at Smithfield, the company saw a smoother road. A trade publication, National Provisioned described Smithfield Foods as the market leader in vertically integrated fresh pork production, with the implementation system necessary to support future growth: long-term production agreements for hogs, and its high-tech North Carolina facility designed to ensure product consistency and quality.
Even in 1998, a year that saw a struggling pork industry, Smithfield was thriving. Planning and strategic initiatives contributed to sales of almost $4 billion in pork products, with profitable product sales and marketing achievements that allowed the company to turn its attention to global expansion. Product development strides included a new line of low-fat Italian sausage and a new precooked sausage line by Smithfield’s Wisconsin-based Patrick Cudahy division. But Luter knew that turning America’s chicken eaters into pork lovers wouldn’t be easy. The company’s meat would have to go outside this country. Smithfield Foods entered long-term production agreements with customers in Japan. And the company acquired Canada’s Schneider Corp. (Kitchener, Ontario) a pork producer, in February 1999, a year after it first started pursuing the company. In August 1999 Smithfield further pursued its international expansion through a 50 percent owned integrated pork joint venture in Mexico. In September 1998 Smithfield acquired the largest private-label manufacturer of ham, pork shoulder, and bacon products in France. The following year, Smithfield acquired a French meat processor, which doubled the company’s processed meats business in that country. Later Smithfield acquired Poland’s largest meat-packing firm, Animex SA. Today, environmental and other concerns prohibit Smithfield from expanding in some of the richest hog-producing areas of the United States.
In recent years, Smithfield Foods has faced a minefield of opposition to corporate pig farming. In 1997 Smithfield Foods drew the largest civil penalty ever, assessed for violations of the Clean Water Act, a $12.6 million fine. It was also ordered to pay $3.8 million for about 22,000 pollution violations in Virginia. In September 2000 Smithfield Foods and its North Carolina swine-production firms signed an agreement with the state of North Carolina that included a $15 million research and development commitment to conduct research on environmentally superior swine waste technology to protect the state’s water quality. Environmentalists, animal-rights activists, and independent farmers continued to rail against the company in 2001, with lawsuits charging that Smithfield Foods for years intentionally and systematically violated environmental laws including the Clean Water Act. In March 2001 a North Carolina judge dismissed two lawsuits brought against the company and its hog-production subsidiaries in the state.
In this hostile climate, Smithfield needed to diversify its offerings to supermarkets and find new arenas for growth. Between 1998 and 2000, Smithfield purchased or invested in 12 companies, many outside the United States. The acquisitions provided production operations to offset declining meat-processing margins. Because there was more money in raising pigs than slaughtering them, Smithfield bought out its hog-farm partners in 1999 and 2000 as the price of hogs fell to a historic low. Today, huge economies of scale enable Smithfield to raise pigs more cost-effectively than other producers.
Meanwhile, NPD genetics played a role in Smithfield’s Lean Generation Pork Products, which Luter believed could emulate Purdue and Tyson’s heart-healthy branding of chicken products. By late 2000 Smithfield was one of the few stocks that resisted the market’s downswing, thanks to a contract to supply Wal-Mart with prepackaged meats, an agreement Luter predicted would triple Smithfield’s sales of fresh-wrapped pork.
Key Dates:
- 1936:
- Smithfield Packing Co. is founded by Joe Luter, Sr.
- 1962:
- Joe Luter II dies. Joe III graduates from Wake Forest University and joins Smithfield Foods.
- 1966:
- Luter, age 26, becomes president of Smithfield Foods.
- 1969:
- Controlling stake of Smithfield Foods is sold to Liberty Equities Corp.; Luter leaves the company.
- 1975:
- Luter returns as president/chief operating officer.
- 1978:
- The company purchases a financially troubled North Carolina plant.
- 1981:
- Smithfield Foods buys their competitor Gwaltney.
- 1984:
- The company acquires Patrick Cudahy, Inc. and Esskay (processing only).
- 1987:
- Smithfield Foods begins joint hog production with Carroll’s Foods.
- 1991:
- The company negotiates exclusive U.S. and Mexico rights to National Pig Development Co. (NPD) genetics.
- 1992:
- Smithfield Foods buys 82 percent interest in Browns of North Carolina; and opens a new $76 million Bladen County, North Carolina plant.
- 1995:
- The company purchases John Morrell & Co.
- 1998:
- Smithfield Foods buys North Side Foods (who supplies precooked sausage to McDonalds); and acquires Schneider Corp.
- 1999:
- Bladen County plant operates at capacity of 32,000 hogs per day.
- 1999:
- The company acquires the following: SFGP (French ham, sausage, hot dog producer); Animex SA (Poland’s largest meat processing firm); and Carroll’s Foods; in addition company announces intention to buy Murphy Family Farms.
- 2000:
- Smithfield Foods announces decision to purchase Farmland Foods’ Dubuque, Iowa plant.
In early 2001 Smithfield and Tyson, the nation’s largest poultry company, had fought for IBP, the country’s largest beef company, which would have made either contender the nation’s largest meat producer. Tyson prevailed, but later cut off the merger deal. Smithfield had no immediate plans to resume its pursuit of IBP. Shortly thereafter Smithfield agreed to buy Moyer Packing Co., a smaller beef processor. The acquisition broadened the company’s line of prepackaged, branded meat, which doubles the profit margins of commodity meats. Meanwhile, the outbreak of “mad cow” and hoof-and-mouth disease in Europe portended well for Smithfield, as analysts speculated that the company might be able to boost exports to Europe, where it has a broad distribution network.
Principal Subsidiaries
Meat Processing: The Smithfield Packing Company, Incorporated; John Morrell & Co.; Gwaltney of Smithfield, Ltd.; Patrick Cudahy Incorporated; North Side Foods Corp. Hog Production: Brown’s of Carolina, Inc.; Carroll’s Foods, Inc.; Murphy Family Foods, Inc.
Principal Competitors
IBP Inc.; Tyson Foods Inc.; Hormel; ConAgra.
Further Reading
Arrandale, Tom, “The EPA and the ‘Virginia Problem,’ “Governing Magazine, October 1997, p. 13.
DiLorenzo, Jim, “Man with a Mission,” National Provisioned August 1995, p. 26. “Esskay, Inc. to Phase Out Production at Baltimore Plant,” Company Press Release, September 30, 1992.
Forster, Julie, “Who’s Afraid of a Little Mud?,” Business Week, May 21, 2001, p. 112.
Hinden, Stan, “Interest in Smithfield Stock Sparks a Flurry of Trading,” Washington Post, April 10, 1989.
Jaffe, Thomas, “Pig Out,” Forbes, December 1, 1986.
Koselka, Rita, “$ Oink, $ Oink,” Forbes, February 3, 1992.
Marbery, Steve, “Smithfield Foods Brainstorms Western Venture,” Feedstuffs, November 16, 1992.
McComas, Maggie, “Smithfield Foods Inc.,” Fortune, February 16, 1987.
Miller, Dale, “Straight Talk from Smithfield’s Joe Luter,” National Hog Farmer, May 2000.
Norton, Leslie P., “What’s Your Beef?,” Barron’s, Chicopee, November 27, 2000, p. 14.
Reier, Sharon, “High on the Hog,” Financial World, June 28, 1988.
Ress, David, “Britain’s Low-Fat Pigs Expected to Beef up U.S. Pork Market,” Journal of Commerce and Commercial, July 1, 1992.
Simon, Stephanie, “U.S. Top Hog Processor Accused of Planned Pollution in Lawsuit,” Los Angeles Times, March 1, 2001, p. A5.
Stovall, Robert H., “Small Stocks with Big Names,” Financial World, May 12, 1992.
“Top 200: Top 10 Snapshot,” National Provisioner, May 1999, p. 48.
Wal, Gretchen, “Waterkeeper Lawsuits Target Pork Industry,” National Hog Farmer, May 15, 2001.
Young-Huguenin, Barbara, “Making Waves,” National Provisioner, December 1994, p.24.
Young-Huguenin, Barbara, “Solid Foundation,” National Provisioner, December 1994, p.32.
—Jay P. Pederson
—update: Michelle Feder
Smithfield Foods, Inc.
Smithfield Foods, Inc.
501 North Church Street
Smithfield, Virginia 23430-0000
U.S.A.
(804) 357-4321
Fax: (804) 357-1379
Public Company
Incorporated: 1936 as Smithfield Packing Company
Sales: $1.05 billion
Employees: 5,400
Stock Exchanges: NASDAQ
SICs: 2011 Meat Packing Plants
Smithfield Foods, Inc. is the largest pork processor in the eastern United States. In addition to North Carolina, the company operates production facilities in Virginia, Maryland, and Wisconsin. Its line of hams, hot dogs, bacon, sausage, and deli and luncheon meats is marketed wholesale, under private labels, and under such brand-name labels as Smithfield, Esskay, Gwaltney, Luter’s, Jamestown, and Patrick Cudahy. Known as a leader in vertically integrated pork processing since 1987, Smithfield has strived to counter severe fluctuations in hog prices as well as high transportation costs by reducing its reliance on Midwest hog producers. The company’s joint hog-producing venture with Carroll’s Foods is instrumental in fulfilling this goal. Other southeastern U.S. suppliers, including giant Murphy Farms, have helped the company trim costs in the notoriously thin-margin, cyclical industry.
Many would agree that Smithfield’s competitive edge is synonymous with the leadership of chief executive officer Joseph W. Luter III. After reclaiming in 1975 what was his own company, Luter has ushered Smithfield into the high-tech age by acquiring companies, forging partnerships, reducing overhead, and instituting capital improvements to boost efficiency. More importantly, he has elevated Smithfield to the elite ranks of those Fortune 500 companies offering the highest total returns to investors.
Since colonial times the small town of Smithfield, Virginia, has been known for its quality hams. Even today, under Virginia law, a ham may only be marketed as a “genuine Smithfield” if it has cured for six months within the confines of the town. One such marketer, family-owned Gwaltney Packing, was the employer of Luter’s father and grandfather during the 1930s. In 1936 these two decided to establish their own ham business and succeeded in raising $10,000 from local investors. They opened across the street from Gwaltney and built their small private company into a multimillion dollar concern.
When Luter’s father died suddenly of a heart attack in 1962, Luter, near graduation from college, shelved his plans to attend law school and returned to oversee the business. Seven years later the company, with annual revenues of $35 million, had attracted the interest of Washington, D.C.-based Liberty Equities, a small conglomerate. Luter sold the family company for $20 million but was retained as manager. After being summarily dismissed by the new owners six months later, Luter promptly launched a second career in real estate development.
The packing plant, now operating as Smithfield Foods, Inc., fattened itself through non-pork acquisitions and unnecessary staff expansion. By the mid-1970s Smithfield was floundering along with Liberty Equities and Luter saw an opportunity to repurchase the company at a fraction of its worth. Because of actions taken by the Securities and Exchange Commission, Liberty had essentially reduced itself to Smithfield Foods, a failing $100 million pork-processing and fish wholesale business, further hampered by a nonproductive chain of 27 seafood restaurants. Price inflation throughout the food industry, as well as poor management, had severely affected the company, whose debt had risen to $17 million while net worth had plummeted to $1 million. Creditors were demanding a management change and Luter agreed to a salary and stock options package that encouraged turnaround. As one analyst in a 1988 Financial World article claimed, “Essentially, Joe Luter got the company back for ten cents on the dollar.”
Luter quickly reduced Smithfield’s debt by selling the nonpork operations. He achieved profitability within seven months by slashing nearly $2 million in overhead through the elimination of middle managers and via sharp reductions in data processing costs. Thus streamlined and firmly back in the meat business, Smithfield began to expand through acquisition. In 1978 it purchased a plant in Kinston, North Carolina. In 1981 Smith-field snatched up Gwaltney (at 35 cents on the dollar) for $34 million. Luter derived special satisfaction from this acquisition because not only had Gwaltney been a longtime competitor, it had also succumbed to the trappings of conglomerate spending under ITT Corp. Luter continued to seek out and buy at bargain rates other underperforming pork companies throughout the 1980s. These included Hancock’s Country Hams, Patrick Cudahy Incorporated, and Schluderberg-Kurdle Co. (renamed Esskay, Inc.). By 1988 annual revenues had skyrocketed to $864 million, well within striking range of the billion dollar mark.
In 1987, in a particularly prescient move, Luter launched a 50-50 partnership with Carroll’s Foods, the country’s fifth largest pork producer. Strategically located in North Carolina—within single-day transportation to half the U.S. population—Smithfield-Carroll’s has helped the company lessen its dependence on Midwest hog farmers, the traditional source for the pork-packing industry. Coupled with hogs supplied by East Coast giant Murphy Farms, the partnership-generated pigs helped to account for 50 percent of Smithfield’s annual requirements. In addition to saving on high transportation costs, Luter also benefitted from lower weight loss during shipment, thereby enhancing his product line’s quality and marketability.
According to Sharon Reier, “what is remarkable about Luter’s resurrection of Smithfield is that he did it in an industry plagued by plant overcapacity and a flat consumption pattern in pork product over the past ten years, and dominated by large, well-heeled conglomerates that could subsidize poor margins in meat-packing operations with profits from other divisions.” Of course, even Luter’s Midas touch has little control over four-year cycles in hog prices, which directly affect the company’s profitability. When prices are high, more pigs are raised and the eventual oversupply results in falling prices and undersupply—a true, high-risk commodity business. As a consequence of this predictable cycle, net income for Smithfield totaled $7 million in 1990 but rose sharply to nearly $29 million in 1991. Net income for 1992 began cycling downward again to $21 million. Smithfield, necessarily, takes a long-term view of earnings performance through compound growth rates. In the 1991 letter to shareholders it explained that “an analysis of the Company’s performance over the last 16 years provides some enlightening results. When the 16 years are divided into four, four-year segments, the Company’s earnings fall into a consistent and predictable growth pattern.... The Company’s sales, net income and net income per share have shown compound growth rates of 14 percent, 31 percent, and 33 percent, respectively, over the last 16 years.” One distinct advantage of these cycles, both for the company and for investors, is that Smithfield stock prices have also followed a dip-and-rise pattern. With his extra profits, Luter has capitalized on downswings to buy back some 50 percent of the company’s shares during the same 16-year period and has increased his individual stake to approximately 20 percent, according to a 1992 Forbes article.
To keep Smithfield on the cutting edge, Luter has concentrated on his niche markets, avoided high advertising budgets, and relegated more than half of his production to nonbranded commodity pork sales for the supermarket and food-service industries. Most promising for the future is Luter’s quest for the genetically perfect pig: lean, hardy, and easy-to-process. An exclusive contract between Smithfield-Carroll’s and National Pig Development Co. (NPD), a family-owned British firm, may prove to be the answer. The first generations of NPD’s transplanted stock are being raised at the North Carolina facility. In July 1992, according to David Ress, “Mr. Luter ran some tests on a 265-pound hog … comparing it with an especially lean American hog culled from the best of Smithfield’s current stock. The American pig had an inch of fat on its back. The British pig had less than half that, Mr. Luter said. The raw, or ‘green’ ham from the American pig yielded 52 percent lean meat after boning and after the fat was trimmed. The British pig’s yield was 62 percent.” Development and marketing of the pigs is expected to continue, particularly through Smithfield’s formation of Brown’s of Carolina and its centerpiece, a state-of-the-art slaughtering plant located in Bladen County, North Carolina, which opened for production in September 1992.
The phasing out of a dated Baltimore facility the same month, the late 1992 acquisition of a John Morrell plant in Wilson, North Carolina, and the company’s search for a plant situated to serve the West Coast all bode well for Smithfield. An analyst cited in Rita Koselka’s Forbes article “expects Smithfield’s earnings to double over the next four years, although not in a straight line.” While other, larger meat-packers are struggling, Smithfield remains supremely poised and may yet corner the market for high quality hog-marketing.
Principal Subsidiaries
Brown’s of Carolina, Inc. (86%); Esskay, Inc.; Gwaltney of Smithfield, Ltd.; Patrick Cudahy Incorporated (80%); The Smithfield Packing Company, Incorporated.
Further Reading
Jaffe, Thomas, “Pig Out,” Forbes, December 1, 1986; McComas, Maggie, “Smithfield Foods Inc.,” Fortune, February 16, 1987; Reier, Sharon, “High on the Hog,” Financial World, June 28, 1988; Hinden, Stan, “Interest in Smithfield Stock Sparks a Flurry of Trading,” Washington, April 10, 1989; Koselka, Rita, “$ Oink, $ Oink,” Forbes, February 3, 1992; Stovall, Robert H., “Small Stocks with Big Names,” Financial World, May 12, 1992; Ress, David, “Britain’s Low-Fat Pigs Expected to Beef Up U.S. Pork Market,” Journal of Commerce and Commercial, July 1, 1992; “Esskay, Inc. to Phase Out Production at Baltimore Plant,” Company Press Release, September 30, 1992; Marbery, Steve, “Smithfield Foods Brainstorms Western Venture,” Feedstuffs, November 16, 1992.
—Jay P. Pederson