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Hormel faces margin pressure: Stephens lowers target to $25
Hormel Foods Corporation (NYSE:HRL) has captured the attention of investors seeking reliable dividends. However, the analysis firm Stephens has just significantly lowered its outlook on the stock. Last February, Stephens reduced its price target from $27 to $25, maintaining a Hold rating for the stock. This decision reflects immediate concerns about the pressure the company faces on its operating margins.
The impact of costs in the short term
Margin pressure is mainly concentrated in the first quarter, due to a timing mismatch between price increases and input cost movements. The gross profit margin stood at 15.7%, highlighting the extent of these challenges. Although Hormel’s management anticipates substantial profit improvements during the current year, margins remain under pressure. Three analysts have recently revised their earnings estimates upward for upcoming periods, generating some optimism among Wall Street followers, although immediate signals remain cautious.
Market factors: what weighs and what alleviates
USDA data suggest a more favorable outlook ahead. An increase in pig slaughter levels and higher weights during spring and summer months are projected, trends that could partially ease input cost pressures and boost the company’s profitability. However, there is a risk linked to highly pathogenic avian influenza, which could impact turkey operations. A more limited turkey supply would raise prices, but this potential benefit would be constrained by shared-cost contracts that reduce Hormel’s ability to expand margins.
Operational strength and 2026 outlook
Despite current pressures, Hormel’s scale remains a strategic strength. Its products hold key positions in supermarkets and convenience stores, ensuring stable volumes. In the third quarter, net sales exceeded $3 billion, while GAAP net income reached approximately $184 million. Both metrics grew year-over-year, although results fell short of market expectations. Stephens anticipates that as 2026 progresses, Hormel’s earnings will show significant improvement, alleviating some of the current burden on the company. With its positioning as a global branded food company, Hormel maintains competitive advantages that could translate into margin recovery in subsequent periods.