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Tyson Foods (NYSE:TSN) just delivered a mixed bagand the market better pay attention to what's really cooking. At first glance, the numbers look underwhelming: Q2 sales were flat, and GAAP earnings per share plunged 95% to just $0.02. But under the hood? Adjusted EPS jumped 48% to $0.92. The real heroes? Chicken and prepared foods. Tyson's pivot from low-margin beef to high-demand, branded proteins is working. CEO Donnie King made it clear: operational discipline, digital transformation, and a focus on value-added products are finally driving results.
But let's not sugarcoat itbeef is still dragging. Tyson expects up to $400 million in adjusted losses for that segment in fiscal 2025. Meanwhile, chicken is doing the heavy lifting, with forecasted profits between $1.0 and $1.3 billion. Prepared foods aren't far behind, expected to bring in up to $1.1 billion. And while free cash flow dipped 31% from last year, Tyson still slashed $738 million in debt and held onto $3.2 billion in liquidity. The outlook? Adjusted operating income between $1.9 and $2.3 billioneven after a $343 million legal hit baked into Q2 sales.
The market didn't love it, shares dropped 8% at 12.59pm after the release, spooked by that legal charge and flat topline growth. But look closer: Tyson's adjusted operating margin climbed to 3.8% from 3.1% a year ago. That's no small win. It signals cost controls and pricing are finally working. And over the last decade, revenue has steadily climbed while net income and EBITDA have been choppyso margin expansion isn't just nice to have, it's mission-critical. Thin margins break under pressure. Strong ones give companies room to breathe, react, and win.
Margins matter, and Tyson just reminded investors why. Tyson Foods might not be flashy, but its next act could be all about quiet strength
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.