Beyond Meat loss exceeds forecasts on higher costs, slow restaurant
sales
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[May 07, 2021] By
Nivedita Balu and Hilary Russ
(Reuters) - Beyond Meat Inc on Thursday
reported a wider quarterly loss than expected, as the plant-based meat
maker incurred higher freight costs, spent heavily on testing new
product launches, and sold less to pandemic-hit restaurants.
Shares of the California-based company fell nearly 7% in extended
trading.
The company, which sells faux meat in over 100,000 outlets worldwide,
last year benefited from consumers stockpiling their freezers with bulk
packages of its "burgers" during stay-at-home orders across the United
States.
However, sales to restaurants took a hit as many closed. Chief Executive
Officer Ethan Brown said during a call with analysts that he was seeing
a "slow thaw" of that trend.
Even so, Beyond Meat expects the recovery in its food service business
to lag the broader restaurant sector because it sells in many places
where capacity is recovering more slowly, including sports venues.
As restaurant sales fell, the company accumulated more pea protein,
leading to higher costs for warehousing, it said.
RIVALS CHOMPING
Competition is rising among plant-based protein makers. In 2020, U.S.
plant-based retail sales reached $7 billion, up 27% year on year,
according to the Good Food Institute and the Plant-Based Foods
Association (PBFA).
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A woman sits next to a poster at the booth of plant-based food
company Beyond Meat at VeggieWorld fair in Beijing, China November
8, 2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee
Impossible Foods Inc, Beyond Meat's biggest rival, is preparing for a public
listing which could value the company at around $10 billion or more, Reuters
reported in April.
Brown said Beyond Meat's "main competitor" was discounting two-thirds of its
sales and said he was "not going to react and get into some sort of discounting
war with them."
Beyond Meat expects second-quarter revenue in the range of $135 million to $150
million, a rise of 19% to 32%. Analysts had forecast revenue of $142.8 million,
according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
In the first quarter ended April 3, net revenue rose about 11% to $108.2
million, missing estimates of $113.7 million.
Excluding one-time items, it lost 42 cents per share - wider than analysts'
expectations of 19 cents.
Its bottom line swung to a net loss of $26.8 million from a profit of $1.8
million a year ago.
(Reporting by Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru and Hilary Russ in New York; Editing by
David Gregorio and Rosalba O'Brien)
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