Tyson Foods Inc (NYSE: TSN) Q3 2025 Earnings Call dated Aug. 04, 2025
Corporate Participants:
Sean Cornett — Vice President – Finance, Head of Investor Relations
Donnie King — President and Chief Executive Officer
Curt Calaway — Chief Financial Officer
Brady Stewart — Group President, Prepared Foods, Beef & Pork and Chief Supply Chain Officer
Devin Cole — Chief Operating Officer
Kristina Lambert — Chief Growth Officer
Analysts:
Leah Jordan — Analyst
Peter Galbo — Analyst
Benjamin Theurer — Analyst
Heather Jones — Analyst
Alexia Howard — Analyst
Pooran Sharma — Analyst
Michael Lavery — Analyst
Saumya Jain — Analyst
Andrew Strelzik — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the Tyson Foods Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] Please also note today’s event is being recorded.
At this time, I’d like to turn the conference over to Sean Cornett, VP, Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead.
Sean Cornett — Vice President – Finance, Head of Investor Relations
Good morning, and welcome to Tyson Foods third quarter fiscal year 2025 earnings conference call. On today’s call, Tyson’s President and Chief Executive Officer, Donnie King, and Chief Financial Officer, Curt Calaway, will provide prepared remarks followed by Q&A. Additionally, joining us today are Brady Stewart, Group President, Prepared Foods, Beef and Pork and Chief Supply Chain Officer; Devin Cole, Group President, Poultry and Global Business Unit; and Kristina Lambert, Chief Growth Officer. We have also provided a supplemental presentation which may be referenced on today’s call and is available on Tyson’s investor relations website and via the link in our webcast.
During today’s call, we will make forward-looking statements regarding our expectations for the future. These forward-looking statements made during this call are provided pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include all comments reflecting our expectations, assumptions or beliefs about future events or performance that do not relate solely to historical periods. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions which may cause actual results to differ materially from our current projections.
Please refer to our forward-looking statements, disclaimers on Slide 2, as well as our SEC filings for additional information concerning risk factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our projections. We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. Please note that references to earnings per share, operating income and operating margin in our remarks are on an adjusted basis or our fiscal period unless otherwise noted. For reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to their corresponding GAAP measures, please refer to our earnings press release.
Now, I’ll turn the call over to Donnie.
Donnie King — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Sean, and thank you to those joining us on the call. Let me begin by saying that I’m pleased with our performance this quarter and we’ve driven results in line with my expectations. Sales, adjusted operating income and adjusted earnings per share all grew year-over-year, marking our fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth across each of these key metrics this was no accident. We’re driving efficiencies across all businesses while delivering growth with world class service and value for our customers and with innovation for our consumers.
Our total volume was roughly flat to last year while Nielsen data shows that we grew retail branded volumes across prepared foods and chicken, we also grew volume and dollar share in aggregate across our top 10 categories including Tyson branded frozen chicken, Hillshire Farm snacking and lunch meat as well as Jimmy Dean breakfast products. Growth in profitability versus last year was driven by our prepared foods, chicken and pork segments, each delivering double-digit growth in adjusted operating income. The only soft spot in our business is the beef segment. With cattle availability at record lows, we continue to experience industry market headwinds.
But even in this difficult environment, we are improving our fundamentals with increased prioritization on efficiencies, reducing costs and bringing innovative new products to market, we’re poised to capitalize on tremendous opportunity ahead of us as we believe heifer retention has likely now begun and cattle availability should improve in coming years. We continue to take meaningful steps forward in building our financial strength with net leverage improving year-over-year and sequentially, a direct result of deliberate actions and disciplined capital allocation. Simply put, our strategy is working and we’re finding ways to win in today’s market. As you know, consumers generally remain cautious and more selective in how they spend.
Nielsen data shows food and beverage retail volume remains steady versus last year during the 13 weeks ending in June. However, protein continues to be the right place to play and beef, pork and chicken are all clear winners with consumers. Now, let’s take a closer look at our branded retail performance in Q3. Volume across these products grew 1.5%, far outpacing total food and beverage, dollar sales grew 2%. This growth was led primarily by Tyson branded frozen value-added chicken which saw a 10% increase in volume sales driven by our brand relaunch and strong performance. We are meeting consumers where they are and you can see that in new innovations like our Tyson Simple Ingredient Nuggets developed for those seeking high protein and simple ingredients with chicken, cheese and seasoning a great taste without compromise.
We also launched fun, family-friendly products like Mega Dino Nuggets that are driving engagement and incremental eating occasions. Our volume share increased 130 basis points and we’re growing off a base where we are the market share leader. We’re especially pleased with the momentum in our snacking portfolio where volume grew 20% and share increased 110 basis points, led by strong performance from Hillshire Brand Snacks. Our Jimmy Dean breakfast lines and Hillshire Farm Lunch Meats also delivered solid volume growth in the 13-week period ending in June.
Innovation, distribution gains and efficient marketing and promotional support are strengthening our brands and keeping us competitive in the marketplace. And importantly, as consumers look to the perimeter of the store, we are also offering high-quality fresh options where our Tyson branded pressed chicken volume grew 2.3%. As a world class food company and recognized leader in protein, Tyson Foods is well positioned to meet the robust consumer demand for protein.
Now, let’s walk through segment performance. Prepared foods delivered a strong third quarter with adjusted operating income up more than 21% and margins expanding by 150 basis points, reflecting continued progress on our multi-year plan to enhance profitability in this business. Importantly, the segment returned to top line growth in the quarter, successfully navigating higher raw material costs and improved product mix within and across channels.
Innovation and expanded distribution remain key pillars of our strategy driving both top- and bottom-line growth. And as mentioned earlier, our Hillshire snacking dips and spreads are contributing to volume and share gains at retail. We’re also leveraging our brand equity to thoughtfully expand into new spaces. We’re launching new Hillshire Farm handhelds featuring Ham and Cheese, Buffalo Style Chicken and Philly Cheesesteak, all designed to meet growing consumer demand for convenient high-protein options. This marks an exciting step into a new platform for the Hillshire brand and reinforces that we have our most robust innovation pipeline ever as well as our commitment to innovation across the company.
Our operational execution initiatives contributed to profit growth in Q3 and helped offset continued cost pressure from raw material inflation. We have strengthened our S&OP process and unlocked efficiencies in our plants, driving fill rates above 98% in the third quarter, the highest since 2019. This has enabled us to better serve our customers with greater consistency and reliability. These improvements have also helped by ensuring that we have the right product in the right place at the right time. We are working to culturize within prepared foods the operational discipline of that’s critical in our other businesses, while adding new tools and analytics to eliminate inefficiencies and reduce waste.
There’s still more work to do, but we are encouraged by the progress and excited about the long runway for growth and profit improvement in prepared foods. Chicken delivered another quarter of solid top- and bottom-line growth, including our third consecutive quarter of year-over-year volume growth. Value-added volume grew at more than 3.5 times the rate of total segment volume, driving a favorable mix shift that is positively impacting both sales and earnings. Adjusted operating income rose more than 12%, building on a very strong base from Q3 last year. With grain costs roughly in line with last year, profit growth this quarter came mainly from incremental efficiencies we’ve unlocked across our plant network.
We have made significant strides in transforming our chicken business over the past two years and haven’t taken our eye off the ball in driving operational excellence. In beef, as you know, we continue to navigate the cattle cycle. Cattle supply is noticeably tighter than a year ago, which significantly compressed spreads in the quarter despite resilient consumer demand. We are managing this market environment with discipline, controlling what we can across the supply chain to meet customer needs. We’re also seeing benefits from the network optimization efforts that shifted further processing volumes back into our harvest facilities. At the same time, we’re enhancing our value-added mix with the help of new data and analytics capabilities that support smarter, faster decision making.
These steps are helping to fortify the foundation for a more resilient and agile beef business both today and over the long term. In pork, we delivered our strongest third quarter adjusted operating income in four years, reflecting the purposeful actions we’ve taken to improve our operations. Like beef, we increased our capacity utilization by optimizing our network and enhancing our value-added mix. We have improved labor and asset efficiency through operational excellence. We have built a fundamentally better pork business and and this quarter’s results reflect that progress. In closing, we are executing our strategy, controlling the controllables and finding ways to win in today’s market.
With that, I’ll turn it over to Curt to walk through our financial results in more detail.
Curt Calaway — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Donnie. Third quarter enterprise sales grew 4% to $13.9 billion led by beef, with solid contributions from chicken and prepared foods, reflecting the healthy demand environment for protein. Adjusted operating income was $505 million up 2.9% driven by strong growth in chicken, prepared foods and pork, all of which helped offset the decline in beef. Adjusted earnings per share grew 4.6% to $0.91. And as Donnie mentioned, this is the fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth across sales, adjusted operating income and adjusted earnings per share. Our multi-protein, multi-channel portfolio, combined with our team’s attention on operational execution in a dynamic macro environment, continues to deliver results.
Turning to the third quarter segment performance, in prepared foods, sales were up 3.4% versus last year, primarily driven by progress on raw material cost recovery while continuing to enhance our product mix. Adjusted operating income increased 21% and margin improved by 150 basis points versus last year. Benefits from mix as well as continued progress on our operational execution initiatives drove the increase in profitability and more than offset ongoing net raw material cost increases. In chicken, we delivered another quarter of solid top-line performance with sales up 3.5% year-over-year. Volume contributed two-thirds of the increase, including a notable contribution from value-added product sales which also drove a favorable mix reflected in price.
Adjusted operating income increased 12% as we continue to drive efficiencies in our plants and capture the benefits of top-line growth. As we discussed last quarter, we increased our brand support investment both year-over-year and and sequentially to continue growing our value-added product sales. Sales in beef increased primarily due to a higher average price per pound, reflecting ongoing healthy demand. This offset lower harvest volume from an increasingly tight cattle supply.
Adjusted operating income declined as spreads compressed noticeably versus last year driven primarily by higher cattle cost in pork. Sales were roughly flat excluding the impact of a legal contingency accrual taken in the third quarter last year, adjusted operating income increased 64%, highlighting the benefits from network optimization and operational efficiencies leading to the strongest third quarter results since 2021.
Turning to our financial position, Our approach to capital allocation remains disciplined and deliberate. We are focused on maintaining financial strength, investing in the business and returning cash to shareholders. Year-to-date, operating cash flow was $1.6 billion and capital expenditures were $691 million, resulting in free cash flow of $929 million, well ahead of year-to-date dividends which were $524 million. We ended the quarter with $4 billion in liquidity and net leverage at 2.1 times. We have successfully reduced net leverage by nearly a full turn over the past year. With leverage continuing to decline and cash flows remaining strong, we restarted open market share repurchases under our share repurchase program late in the quarter, the first since Q1 of 2023.
In fact, we returned $201 million to shareholders through dividends in repurchases this quarter. While dividends remain our primary way of returning cash to shareholders, at current valuation, we believe share repurchases represent a very attractive opportunity. Our balance sheet remains healthy as we prioritize financial strength, our investment-grade credit rating and cash management to drive long-term shareholder value.
Now, let’s take a moment to review our updated outlook for 2025. We are raising our overall guidance based on our year-to-date performance and a solid outlook for the fourth quarter. We now anticipate full year sales to be up 2% to 3% year-over-year. We are raising the midpoint and narrowing the range for total company adjusted operating income which we expect to be between $2.1 billion to $2.3 billion, delivering significant growth versus last year across the entire range. We still anticipate interest expense of approximately $375 million and a tax rate of around 25%. We remain disciplined in managing cash with capex expected to be at or below $1 billion and free cash flow in the range of $1 billion to $1.3 billion.
Now to provide more color on our segment outlook. In prepared foods, we expect adjusted operating income in the range of $925 million to $1 billion. Our improvement plan is delivering results and offsetting significantly higher raw material costs. We are raising our adjusted operating income guidance for chicken to $1.3 billion to $1.4 billion, highlighting significant year-over-year growth of 33% at the midpoint. Based on year-to-date performance and the tight cattle supply conditions, we now expect adjusted operating income in beef to be between a loss of $475 million and $375 million. We are tightening the guidance report to the high-end of the range, anticipating $175 million to $200 million.
Our international business has performed well this year driven by effectively managing controllable costs, maximizing efficiencies and lowering conversion costs. We now expect adjusted operating income in international other to be roughly $125 million. That covers our segment performance and financial highlights.
Now, I’ll turn the call over to Donnie.
Donnie King — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Curt. I’m pleased with what we have accomplished, driven by the dedication of our team and encouraged about our future. Our diverse protein portfolio, commitment to innovation, focus on operational excellence and a healthy balance sheet continue to position us as a leader, meeting the growing market demand for protein while delivering value to our customers, consumers and shareholders. Thank you to our team members for all you do and of course, to those on the call for your ongoing support of Tyson Foods.
Now, I’ll hand things back to Sean as we move to Q&A.
Sean Cornett — Vice President – Finance, Head of Investor Relations
Thanks, Donnie. We will now move forward to your questions. Please recall that our cautions on forward-looking statements and non-GAAP measures apply to both our prepared remarks and the following Q&A. Operator, please provide the Q&A instructions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will begin that question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] At this time, we’ll pause momentarily to assemble the roster. And our first question today comes from Leah Jordan from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead with your question.
Leah Jordan
Thank you. Good morning and great job on the quarter. Given the lowered AOI guidance for beef in your comments earlier on the call indicating that heifer retention has begun, seeing if you could provide more detail on how you’re thinking about cattle supply and cost for that segment in the near-term and as we build move through this herd rebuilding phase.
Donnie King
Well, good morning and thank you, Leah, for the question. I will — I’ll start out and make a few comments and then I’ll let Brady add a little color to it as well. But cattle supplies are tightening, creating compression spread, as was noted in the remarks earlier. We anticipate that, we think that heifer retention has begun. For example, if you look at beef, cow slaughter is down 16% from January to June.
And so, that’s an early indicator of heifer retention beginning in terms of beyond that, we think herd rebuilding will begin in earnest in 2026. And we think that will — through the next couple of years. After that, that’s when we will get back, let’s call it 2028 is when we see herd rebuild and seeing the benefit from that and holding back heifers for breeding purposes. Brady, anything you want to add to that?
Brady Stewart
Thanks, Donnie. And I would just indicate that we’re confident in our ability to manage through competitively through this challenging economic time. The beef business continues to manage through this tightened supply. With the record high cutout values as well, teams really dialed into a strategy where we continue to use data and digital to make the best decisions, understanding the market dynamics that are in place today. We made some pivots here the last several months relative to how we manage our business.
We’ve reduced some of our line speeds to allow us to capitalize on the highest possible yield performance in our plants. And we like that strategy moving forward. And then we’ll continue to add value to our products and go to market where we see consumers going in the future, which is convenience and protein. And so, by using those three strategic pillars, we remain confident that we’ll continue to manage through this cycle in a very competitive structure.
Leah Jordan
That’s very helpful. Thank you. And then for my follow-up, I wanted to switch to prepared foods. You had a nice profit improvement in the quarter, but you did narrow your AOI guidance for that segment and the midpoint’s now kind of slightly lower than it was before. Just seeing if you could provide more detail on the input cost pressure you’re seeing in that business and how we should think about the flow through of further pricing from here.
Donnie King
Yeah, let me start with that. We have seen significant increase in raw material. In fact, it’s been going on all year. And in fact we talk about — we talked about some of the recapturing of the raw material increase as is those contracts where there’s a lag to the market. We’re starting seeing some of the benefit of that, but we’re managing that very well. I think there was roughly $60 million of unplanned raw material increase in the quarter and the team was able to offset that by really several things.
But let’s talk about our — from an operational execution perspective, our Prepared Foods business is performing better than in my opinion and I’ve been around here a long time and it’s ever performed. Just the fundamentals of the business innovation pipeline is extremely robust and we’re being successful with that innovation that we’re bringing to market. We think we talked about in the last quarter, I believe, or maybe two quarters ago that we were on a multi-year journey to improve the profitability of our Prepared Foods business and we’re on that road, we had the best Q3 that, that we’ve ever had. I think at midpoint, if you look at our 2025, I think it will be the best Prepared Foods year that we’ve had as a company and so a lot of good things relative to Prepared Foods.
Brady, any adders to that?
Brady Stewart
No, I think you covered it really well. Donnie, I would just reiterate what you said. We’re extremely excited about Prepared Foods within the quarter with having our best quarter ever. We’re really excited about the future as well and the foundation we’re setting. Just relative to maybe adding some context to your question specifically, Leah, I would just assert that at the end of our fiscal Q3 is when typically, we will see seasonally high raw material costs. When you think about pork trimmings, beef trim that goes into some of our prepared foods products, hams and bellies is really where we peak from a year. So that rolls into our COGS from an inventory build perspective and certainly is part of how we guide into Q4 as well.
Curt Calaway
Leah, just to add really quick, I think at the midpoint of what we shared for Prepared Foods, that would indicate a very nice performance in Q4 versus prior year. And as Donnie said on the year, a very attractive improvement on year-over-year for all the reasons that Donnie and Brady both pointed out.
Leah Jordan
Great. Thank you.
Operator
And our next question today comes from Peter Galbo from Bank of America. Please go ahead with your question.
Peter Galbo
Hey guys, good morning. Thanks for the question. Brady, I wanted to actually touch back on beef. Look, in the context of heifer retention beginning that’s obviously a positive but was pretty notable, I think the relatively large impairment taken in the quarter on the beef business and potentially that’s a push-out relative to prior expectations on recovery. So, maybe you can just compare and contrast what you’re seeing again in the market today on retention relative to the elongation of recovery that kind of triggered the impairment on the business.
Brady Stewart
Sure. Thanks for the question, Peter. First and foremost, I think it’s important to understand that this cycle has been different than cycles of the past and has created some dynamics that have been more challenging to forecast as we roll through it. So obviously, relative to the fact that we had a prolonged drought period at the midst of the beef cycle, we have moved into a period that has been more prolonged than the previous cycles over the last several decades as well. Relative to what we’re seeing from a data perspective, that supports Donnie referenced the beef cow harvest being down year-over-year significantly as well, which provides stability from a cow production perspective.
The other real data point that we’re looking at is feeder calf receipts into feed yards as well and seeing some change and some pivot relative to the amount of heifers versus steers that are going into those feed yards as well. So, that certainly sets the base for us to move forward and have increased supplies into the future as well. I’ll kick it over to Curt here to reference the impairment.
Curt Calaway
Yeah, thanks, Pete. Maybe just a couple other things to think about relative to taking the beef impairment this quarter. We had shared in previous 10-Ks and 10-Qs that our cushion for the fair value exceeding carrying value was less than 10% for that business. And we also detailed, in addition to what you talked about in our 10-Q this quarter, we detailed that as cattle costs have continued to rise, that also caused the carrying value of the beef reporting unit to increase as well. And all those were contributing factors in the ultimate recognition of impairment this quarter.
Peter Galbo
Great. Thank you for that and maybe as a follow-up as well on prepared and I’m not sure if Kyle is on as well, maybe it would be helpful to hear from him. But two questions. One, just the elasticity that you’re seeing so far as you put through some of the pricing on some of those items. And maybe secondly, just it’s a category that sometimes has odd competitive behavior. So just what are you seeing out of the competitive set across kind of prepared foods? And are folks kind of all behaving rationally? Thanks very much.
Brady Stewart
You bet. Thanks for the question, Peter. And I would just say this, number one is our ability to manage through these cost pressures that we see from a raw material. We’re highly confident in our ability to do that. We’re leveraging our strong brands. We have a fantastic innovation pipeline that continues to deliver for us everything from Jimmy Dean Griddle Cakes to our Jimmy Dean Chicken Biscuit. Our Hillshire Farm snacking portfolio continues to see significant growth. And then on bacon, we’re seeing growth as well. So our ability to manage through, we have an extreme amount of confidence on it.
From an elasticity perspective. We continue to track closely. We have a significant amount of data and great expertise sitting behind our ability to understand how consumers are behaving with any price increases that they certainly see at point of sale. And so, no real material changes in ’25 so far. We do see consumers continuing to prioritize protein, which we believe is pro Tyson, and protein typically has lower elasticity than other categories within the food space as well. So, we’ll continue to leverage that multi-protein and multi-value-added portfolio and believe it’s advantageous as we roll.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ben Theurer from Barclays. Please go ahead with your question.
Benjamin Theurer
Yeah, good morning and thank you very much for taking my question. One click on the chicken segment. So clearly, you’ve called out in the last call that you’re doing a couple of investments into the business and that’s why you were initially, I would say, hesitant on raising the guidance, despite already as of the first six months having had a very strong performance. Now, looking into to what you’ve been able to accomplish in the third quarter and what the implied guidance for the fourth quarter, it really looks solid here. So, just wanted to understand of these investments, are they still coming together as expected? Are you basically able to offset these costs right away? Just if you could share a little bit more thoughts and ideas around the investments and what you expect from them then as we move into 2026.
Donnie King
Good morning, Ben. Let me start off and then I will flip it to Devin and he can add some finer points to it. But the chicken business is running efficiently and consistently, delivering solid growth across the top- and bottom-line. In terms of the inputs and let’s think grain, grain is relatively stable year-over-year. That’s a bit of how we see it going forward. But in terms of the $100 million, we — we’ve talked about that investment and we will wrap up that investment here in the balance of the year in our Q4. But this business, we’re driving operational efficiencies and winning innovation.
We talked earlier about the success and the relaunch of the Tyson brand. And we’ve also talked about the new product on the script that the cheesy nugget, the simple ingredients with cheese and chicken and seasoning, that’s doing very well for us. But strategic partnerships are critical to us and that is a decision we have taken and we’re seeing the benefit of that now. Our business is running better than, perhaps, I’ve ever seen it run.
Certainly, would be in the top one or two kind of performance as I’ve seen in this business. And I’ve been around as many, many years watching this. But our chicken business, let’s just say it this way, we are back in the chicken business and executing at a very high level and we have momentum. We see that momentum. We saw the momentum in Q3, we’re seeing it in Q4, and we think it continues from this point forward. So, with that, Devin, you want to add to?
Devin Cole
Yeah, thanks. Maybe just a couple of comments. We are continuing to reinvest in this business and we will continue to do so. I think we’re seeing that we’re doing a better job of managing, making sure that that investment is driving the volume and the sort of returns that we want across the business. Just maybe recap a couple points that prove that branded chicken did grow 10%, but in total value added grew 8.8% for us in the quarter. And that’s really across all of our channels and categories.
And so, going forward, I think you see very similar strategy from us relative to innovation and how we support that in the marketplace. But maybe I’ll just ask Kristina to talk a little bit about the innovation pipeline and how we’re thinking about that.
Kristina Lambert
Yeah, thanks, Devin. I’m really thrilled with how the Tyson retail value-added poultry business is performing under the Tyson brand, right, that double-digit volume growth is really coming from increased household penetration, which was led by innovation. We had over 20 new items that we have been launching over the past year. A lot of those coming into marketplace now. So, we’ll start seeing that expanded distribution and velocity continue our momentum. We along with the product quality improvements and renovations that we’ve already made in our products and our packaging, the innovation and the marketing support behind that will help us continue to grow. Really proud of the business.
Benjamin Theurer
Perfect. And then one — real quick one for Curt. I guess as we look into the guidance, you’ve significantly lowered the capex number versus what was previous out there. But at the same time, you also brought down the free cash flow guidance. Can you help us reconcile how despite lower capex, free cash flow got like kind of like narrowed at the lower-end also considering you’re already at almost $1 billion anyway as a nine-month period. So, what are your expectations here for the last quarter? Thank you.
Curt Calaway
Yeah, thanks. So, I would start off by the run rate that we’re on for capex is a little under $700 million. That’s really on a pace of where we were through the first half of the year. So, while we had a range of $1 billion to $1.2 billion, I think we shared as well with you that we were probably at the lower-end of the range for capex perspective.
So, I would characterize that as not really much of a change in expectations of where we were supposed to be. Recognizing on a year-to-date basis we’re a little over $900 million in free cash flow and we narrowed the range from $1 billion to $1.3 billion. The real delta in that, I think, is the level of working capital investment as we continue to see top-line growth as well as some investments in working capital for things such as higher cattle costs running through.
Benjamin Theurer
Okay, thank you very much.
Operator
Our next question comes from Heather Jones from Heather Jones Research. Please go ahead with your question.
Heather Jones
Good morning. Congratulations on the quarter. I want to start from the beef segment. So in the last couple of quarters have noticed a pretty sizable step-up in the amount of cattle that you have hedged. Wondering if I assume that was because your guidance was better than I was expecting given the backdrop. So wondering, how much of that is a factor that did you have a significant chunk of your Q4 covered? Is this a new strategy and if this is a new strategy going forward to just consistently have a large proportion of your knees [Phonetics] hedged on the forward look.
Brady Stewart
Thanks for the question, Heather. I would just say this. We continue to manage our entire supply chain, whether it be hedging or whether it be live cattle purchases along with forward pricing, export sales and in aligning with our strategic customers in an integrated fashion. So, none of these pieces work independent of the other. And it’s part of a holistic strategy that we have deployed.
Heather Jones
Okay. And then my follow-up is on — is with — on beef too. So given the tariffs that’s been imposed on Brazilian beef and those flows slowed in anticipation of this, I’ve been a little surprised that we haven’t seen more of a reaction in pricing because it’s a pretty significant piece of the beef market. So, just wondering your thoughts on that and how you expect that impact to evolve in the markets going forward?
Brady Stewart
That’s a great question, Heather, and appreciate you giving us the opportunity to talk to it. Tariff impacts both on the export side and the import side obviously have a significant amount of timing associated with it. So, when the tariffs actually are imposed relative to the time that product actually hits shelf, there is a significant delay, especially with supply chain challenges from some of our imports on lean beef coming from the Southern hemisphere as well.
So, I’m not sure we’ve actually seen the opportunity for that to hit retail yet. And then, we are in a dynamic market where we’ve seen significant inflation in trim prices, specifically on fat trim within beef as well. That’s creating some changes in the dynamics from that beef complex as well. So, we’ll continue to monitor that and watch that as timing really hits the point where we’ll hit really POS.
Heather Jones
Okay, thank you so much.
Operator
Our next question comes from Alexia Howard from Bernstein. Please go ahead with your question.
Alexia Howard
Good morning, everyone.
Donnie King
Morning.
Alexia Howard
Two questions. Can I start with the beef side of things and how significant the threat from New World screwworms is. I know that the border’s been shut down with Mexico, but could this deter farmers from wanting to rebuild the herd and maybe what happens to practically if dehorning and castration can’t happen in certain regions, does that meaningfully reduce productivity? Is it just infected animals that have to be culled? I’m just curious about how you’re thinking about what that could mean if it continues to progress northwards.
Brady Stewart
Sure, and that’s a great question, Alexia, and one that we continue to monitor. And first and foremost, I think it’s really important to indicate our support the USDA and the actions that have been taken to protect livestock in the United States from New World screwworms. So, appreciate all of the efforts and forward looking thoughts that the USDA has taken to protect the US herd impacts to our business in general. I’m referring to the US industry from a beef business perspective. We’ve had around 500,000 less head imported from Mexico this year so far and so, there has been a supply impact that’s been caused by the border closure and I expect some of that tightening to occur basis those feeder calf placement losses here into the quarter as well.
From a actual producer decision making standpoint, we certainly have not heard any decisions that have been made from a US producer standpoint that indicates they’re making a decision to retain heifers or retain cows relative to a threat of new world screwworm. I think there is good confidence that the actions that are being taken by the USDA and working with Mexico will curtail any additional northern movement.
Alexia Howard
Thank you. And then as a follow-up, can I move on to the proposed renewable fuel standard that I think is due to be voted on at the end of October? It’s around biodiesel and sustainable aviation fuel. Could be fairly meaningful if that is approved and it leads to increased corn prices but fairly a decrease in soybean meal prices on the chicken side of the business. Are you able to significantly shift the mix of feed into soybean meal to take advantage of that over the next couple of years or is it a fairly fixed ratio? Thank you and I’ll pass it on.
Donnie King
It is a fairly fixed ratio in terms of trying to get the — the carbs and the protein in and between corn and soybean milled. There are other — it’s primarily all that’s in the formulation and chicken feed, a few vitamins, but it’s fairly fixed. I mean you can have depending on where you are. I mean we’ve used different carb sources at times but we’re looking at the entire caloric intake and per ton and so, I don’t see any significant change in that.
But I would also say, at least based on what we see right now, the grain prices, we think we see them as being very steady. We have a potentially really high US corn crop coming in. So, the — all the thought processes around why you might make a substitution, I don’t think will come into play at this point.
Alexia Howard
Great, thank you very much. I’ll pass it on.
Donnie King
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from Pooran Sharma from Stephens Inc. Please go ahead with your question.
Pooran Sharma
Good morning and thanks for the question. Just wanted to ask about pork here. Noted strong performance but just wanted to get a better understanding of the backdrop. I think if you look at the last couple of hogs and pigs reports, a little bit disappointing when it comes to the forward look on supply, except for the most recent one, I think we’ve got a little bit of green shoots and so, just wanted to get your thoughts on when we — when you expect to kind of see a supply recovery. I think in the past we had said that we expected to see something in the back-half of the year, but I think this has just gotten shifted out a tad bit. Just love to hear your thoughts on pork.
Donnie King
Let me remind you of this and if you look at our performance in Q3 and it’s largely true throughout the year, it’s the strong execution that’s driving profitability. In fact, in Q3 you will see, based on, excuse me, you’ll see some tightening of spreads in there, but we were able to offset that based on operational efficiencies mix improvement. There were some higher carcass weights and we also had fewer intercompany sales. But from a USDA perspective for ’25, we are projecting 0.9% increase in pork production. And then for 2026, we’re seeing from USDA 1.6% in 2026.
So Brady, anything to add to that?
Brady Stewart
I’m just thankful we got a question on pork because we’re really excited about all of the progress that has been made in that business over the last 2.5 years. Really want to thank the team for all of their work in moving that business forward in a very sustainable manner. Just relative to the supply question, I think there’s a few points that are really important. Number one is if you use the Iowa State University profitability model, we’ve reached a point here where the last 13 months have been positive and the expectation basis, some futures implied pricing would indicate the next year is also profitable. And so, that really sets the foundation for some expansion.
Now, the opportunity relative to a headwind for pork expansion just rides simply in the fact that to build additional pork housing in the future for live production housing, there’s been some inflationary cost. And so, I think the producers are really looking for plenty of sunshine ahead before they make those investments, but continue to feel very comfortable with adequate supply with continued improvements from a genetics and productivity standpoint we see from the industry.
Pooran Sharma
Appreciate the color there. I guess my follow-up would just kind of be on chicken. Obviously, you’ve made a ton of improvement over the past couple years in the business. As we look ahead, how should investors view kind of what a normalized operating margin should be? Do you think we’ve reached somewhat near a peak or do you think there’s a lot of room to go further in terms of operating margin improvement?
Donnie King
So, what I would mention to you this morning is that from a — and I’ll get to that. Has chicken profitability peak? If you look at the results that we saw in Q3, it was strongly driven by — from execution with better fill rates, yield improvements, labor management and S&OP process. We had strategic alignments. We’ve made some conscious decisions to align with strategic customers and partnerships in a more meaningful way than we have in the past. That’s been a two-year process for us. But our chicken business is running well execution as well. We have capacity to add to produce more value-added branded products within our portfolio and it’s setting up very well. I would tell you that the improvements that are made and let me add that if you look at the supply picture we’ve had for ’25 thus far, I think it is about the right size.
I think you have to remember that meat is essential as viewed by the customer and consumer. So high protein, it’s a priority for them, it’s a nutrient dense option for them and they’re choosing protein more often than they have before. But back to chicken. I don’t think we peaked in chicken. As a matter of fact, we’ve had a generally positive operating environment this year. There are things that are cyclical in nature. For example, you see higher-priced breast meat and lower-priced wings. But in total, they’re fine. We’re executing and will continue to execute against our manufacturing efficiencies growing our business continue with innovation that our customers and our consumers prefer.
We’ll continue to grow these strategic partnerships that I talked about will continue to shift our mix to value added and Brandon with — branded within the poultry complex and have higher value offerings. We’re excited about where we are. Our foundation is in good shape as it relates to chicken and we look at the balance ’25 even into ’26 and feel very comfortable with our business and the ability this business to not only perform through the balance of ’25, but even through ’26 and beyond.
Pooran Sharma
Appreciate the color.
Operator
Our next question comes from Michael Lavery from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead with your question.
Michael Lavery
Thank you. Good morning.
Donnie King
Good morning.
Michael Lavery
Just wanted to come back to prepared foods. You get a strong price lift or I guess price mix maybe it’s just a lot more robust than what we’re seeing with a lot of other packaged food companies having to give back on price in many cases. Can you just maybe talk to how much is mix driven? and what’s behind it? Is it really just the protein demand? Is there just a mixed lift, that’s a big part of that? How do we think about the momentum there?
Brady Stewart
Yeah, Michael, thanks for the question. Again, we’re really excited about our progress and prepared foods and we laid out a strategy last year relative to how we’re going to move forward and make sure that we were focused and executed on our value-added platforms within prepared foods as well, which tailors very, very nicely into your question on mix. And so, you’re exactly right. The price lift is really a combination of a favorable channel mix and is also driven by the strength of our retail business and the strength of the brands that we have within these specific categories in the portfolio as well.
Now, compounding on top of that is the fact that we have seen some raw material inflation and we have formulas with a lot of our customers and customer base. And so that certainly flows through from a pricing perspective as well. Last point is we do continue to lag pricing. As I mentioned, we walked out of Q3 with really the highest raw material pricing of the year. But we’ll continue to operate the business in a very rational manner and understand where those elasticities are and use data to drive the right decision for the business, but continue to expect to grow both top-line and bottom-line as we move forward well into the future on prepared foods.
Donnie King
So maybe a couple things to add to that. Brady and I mentioned this earlier that meat is viewed as essential, being a nutrient rich option. Consumers are continuing to prioritize protein. And so, for example, the way that manifests itself when a consumer goes to a grocery store, they’re not looking for the non-essential stuff, they’re looking for protein and food and we happen to offer chicken, beef, pork and prepared. So we’re — we believe protein is the right place to play and we’re certainly doing that. One thing I need to point out as it relates to our prepared foods business, I could not be prouder of our prepared foods team.
They’ve been on this journey that Brady just referenced and I referenced earlier today. But they are absolutely performing across every phase of the game from innovation and successful innovation and also, in terms of shifting their mix to more valuable products, you talked about the pricing. Well, the benefit from an AOI perspective, yes, there was some price recovery that we’d already incurred, but the operational execution across this business, I’ve not seen that at this level in our business. And there’s so much more that we can go do and are going to do in this multi-year journey. So, a lot of upside to prepared foods not only for the balance of the year, but as we as we continue to move further.
Michael Lavery
Okay, thank you. I’ll pass it on.
Operator
Our next question comes from Saumya Jain from UBS. Please go ahead with your question.
Saumya Jain
Hey, good morning. So your leverage continues to drop now at around 2.1. So, could you elaborate on how we should expect to see that going forward? Should we expect more excess cash going to shareholders or how is management thinking about capital allocation going ahead?
Curt Calaway
Thanks for the question. I think you should continue to expect us to follow our capital allocation priorities. I think significant — just call out, right, the significant improvement we made from where we were not only a year ago, but two years ago as leverage had peaked at 4.1 times. And so, tremendous execution by the team. Absolutely disciplined in following our capital allocation priorities and they would remain unchanged. We’ll look to continue to maintain our financial strength, invest in the business and return cash to shareholders. I would note as I made comment earlier at the opening that we did start restart our share repurchase program, although at a very small pace. The first time we restarted that since Q1 of ’23.
Saumya Jain
Got it, thank you. And then international margins continue to be strong. What are the key factors driving that and do you see those drivers continuing over the rest of the year or what are the key risks of that segment in the near-term?
Devin Cole
Yeah, this is Devin, thank you for that question. I would just mention at the very onset that much of the strategy that we’ve talked about in other parts of our business domestically, we have employed with our international business over the last year or so. And I think that the — the results that you’re seeing are certainly from things that we control primarily. So, operational excellence has been one of the key tenets for us. We’ve got very specific initiatives that have achieved better efficiencies, lowered our conversion costs and also, we’re actively managing the controllable costs within that business.
Certainly it’s a dynamic situation, both geopolitically and some of the economies that we operate in around the globe. But that team is working very well together. We expect to have a very good year. And quite frankly, all the things that we’ve put in place and the momentum that we’re seeing should translate into to going into FY26 as well.
Saumya Jain
Great, thank you.
Operator
Once again, [Operator Instructions]. Our next question comes from Andrew Strelzik from BMO. Please go ahead with your question.
Andrew Strelzik
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking the question I wanted to go back to the beef side to start now that we are seeing the start of the heifer attention and maybe have a timeline to think about on proper recovery. Can you talk about your expectations for the magnitude of the herd recovery or maybe compare what your expectations are for this herd recovery versus prior cycles and how does that inform your view of the beef profit potential and 2028 and beyond?
Brady Stewart
Thanks for the question, Andrew. I think you probably, probably highlighted when we really see that turnaround into the future as well. And so, it’s been challenging to really get a forecasted read here as we’ve moved through the last two years, just because what we’ve seen from a supply perspective has not necessarily managed what we’ve seen from a demand perspective on the packer side as well. So, we’ve moved into more of a prolonged period of time. The good part is as we move forward, we definitely have a tailwind relative to drought that we probably haven’t focused enough on relative to some of the commentary as well. And so, that has certainly provided a great opportunity for us to get some rebuild momentum across the industry as well.
Outside of that, again, it’s been a very dynamic environment. We’re seeing historic highs relative to beef and beef demand. The consumer has been extremely resilient in their demand for beef and how we rationalize the entire supply chain of beef from feeding and cow production into feeding into packers. We’ll continue to monitor that as we move through the next couple years as well.
Donnie King
So, maybe I…
Andrew Strelzik
I guess what I’m — sure, go ahead.
Donnie King
Yeah, I just want to add one comment on there and just to call out to our beef team. This is — this has been very challenging as you, as you well know. And we talk about this in terms of controlling what we can and we’ve done that. I would tell you that our beef assets are running better than they ever have before. And that’s not just my assessment, though that’s the assessment for the people who are in our organization who’ve been in our beef business for a long time.
In fact, they removed over $100 million of controllable cost out of our beef segment this year. And so, we’re obviously very proud of that. We’re trying to do what we can with what we have right now. And we look forward to to herd rebuild and to a better day in our beef business.
Andrew Strelzik
I guess what I’m trying to get at there, and I appreciate those comments very much, but is there anything that you’re seeing that would lead you to believe your normalized or mid-cycle or what have you — beef profits are different in this cycle than in prior cycles.
Brady Stewart
I’d just say that we continue to analyze where we walk out of the cycle and gauge where we’ll end up from a mid-cycle profitability perspective. So if you looked at the last 60 cycles inclusive of this current cycle, there are some differences in it. Again, the prolonged drought that we saw right at the bottom of the cycle created this elongated bottom of the cycle and that has created some challenges just relative to forecasting a very dynamic environment relative to the supply of cattle.
Traditionally, we’ve seen more changes or pivots from a demand perspective than we have this cycle as well. So, those two pieces will come together and really shape where we end up as we move into the midpoint in the years to come.
Andrew Strelzik
Okay, if I could just squeeze one other quick one in. In the past couple quarters, I think you’ve quantified the efficiencies that you’ve gotten in prepared foods. So, I was hoping you could maybe give us an update there and then maybe if we could think about the size or you could help us think about the size of some of the incremental efficiencies you’re talking about in chicken, that would be helpful as well. Thank you.
Brady Stewart
Thanks for the question. Just relatively prepared. Donnie did a great job earlier of framing up all of the advancements we’ve made from a prepared operations perspective. And there are certainly a number of dynamics that go into these calculations, raw material increase, packaging ingredient increases as well. Labor inflation, how you monetize that with and without these particular inflationary factors. Here’s what I’ll tell you today is there’s a sustained process with audits in place to make sure that the advancements we’re making from a manufacturing efficiency perspective in prepared foods is here to stay and we’re seeing those advancements really hit the bottom-line significantly from a prepared food standpoint.
Donnie King
Yes. And Andrew, let me add this. If you think about this, what I’m about to say, this applies to chicken, beef, pork, and our international business and every function and activity we have at Tyson Foods, we are focused on operational excellence. What does that mean? Is scaling the enterprise, leveraging all the assets and capability of this multi-protein behemoth that we have, driving cost savings across the enterprise, addressing inefficiencies and eliminating that where they exist, but also being aligned with customers and in terms of those relationships and what we’ve characterized as partnerships, and we’ve got more of that today than we’ve ever had.
And then from a consumer perspective, just the constant innovation and we’ve got the most robust pipeline we’ve ever had. And then you can layer underneath all of that or on top of all that, things like data and digital delivery. Our tools are such today that we’re able to make better, smarter decisions across this enterprise. And of course, the disciplined capital allocation and prioritizing cash flow, which is made up the capex and working capital specifically. So, that discipline we have exercised across this entire enterprise. And so, I’ll just — I’ll leave you with that.
Andrew Strelzik
Great. Thank you very much.
Donnie King
Thank you.
Operator
And ladies and gentlemen, with that, we’ll be concluding today’s question-and-answer session. I’d like to turn the floor back over to Donnie King for any closing remarks.
Donnie King
Thank you for your time and continued interest in Tyson Foods. We look forward to sharing our progress with you next quarter.
Operator
And ladies and gentlemen, with that, we’ll conclude today’s conference call and presentation. We do thank you for attending. You may now disconnect your lines.