PILGRIMS PRIDE CORP0000802481false00008024812025-03-142025-03-14

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of report (Date of earliest event reported): March 14, 2025
PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
(Exact Name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware1-927375-1285071
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(Commission File Number)(IRS Employer Identification No.)
1770 Promontory Circle80634-9038
GreeleyCO(Zip Code)
(Address of principal executive offices)
Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (970) 506-8000

Not Applicable
(Former name or former address, if changed since last report.)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each classTrading SymbolName of Exchange on Which Registered
Common Stock, Par Value $0.01PPCThe Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
    Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).
 Emerging growth company
    If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.




Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (the “Company”) is hosting an Investor Day event today, March 14, 2025 at 10 a.m. Eastern Daylight time. A copy of the slides to be used in conjunction with the Company's Investor Day presentation on March 14, 2025 is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1 and is incorporated by reference herein.
The information furnished in Item 7.01 and in Exhibit 99.1 shall not be deemed "filed" for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), or otherwise be subject to the liabilities of Section 18 of the Exchange Act, nor shall it be deemed to be incorporated by reference in any of the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Exchange Act.
Item 8.01 Other Events.
On March 13, 2025, the Board of Directors (the “Board”) authorized and declared a dividend of $6.30 per share on the Company's issued and outstanding common shares of stock and beneficial interest (the“Dividend”). The Dividend will be payable to the stockholders of record at the close of business on April 3, 2025.
The Company issued a press release on March 14, 2025 announcing the Dividend. A copy of the press release is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.2 and incorporated by reference herein.



Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.
Exhibit No.Description
99.1
99.2
104Cover Page Interactive Data File formatted in iXBRL



SIGNATURES  
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
 PILGRIM’S PRIDE CORPORATION
 
Date: March 14, 2025/s/ Matthew Galvanoni
 Matthew Galvanoni
 Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

Investor Day To be the BEST Pilgrim’s Pride Corporation (NASDAQ: PPC) March 14th, 2025


 
 Statements contained in this press release that state the intentions, plans, hopes, beliefs, anticipations, expectations or predictions of the future of Pilgrim’s Pride Corporation and its management are considered forward-looking statements. Without limiting the foregoing, words such as “anticipates,” “believes,” “estimates,” “expects,” “intends,” “may,” “plans,” “projects,” “should,” “targets,” “will” and the negative thereof and similar words and expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. It is important to note that actual results could differ materially from those projected in such forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in such forward-looking statements include: matters affecting the poultry industry generally; the ability to execute the Company’s business plan to achieve desired cost savings and profitability; future pricing for feed ingredients and the Company’s products; outbreaks of avian influenza or other diseases, either in Pilgrim’s Pride’s flocks or elsewhere, affecting its ability to conduct its operations and/or demand for its poultry products; contamination of Pilgrim’s Pride’s products, which has previously and can in the future lead to product liability claims and product recalls; exposure to risks related to product liability, product recalls, property damage and injuries to persons, for which insurance coverage is expensive, limited and potentially inadequate; management of cash resources; restrictions imposed by, and as a result of, Pilgrim’s Pride’s leverage; changes in laws or regulations affecting Pilgrim’s Pride’s operations or the application thereof; new immigration legislation or increased enforcement efforts in connection with existing immigration legislation that cause the costs of doing business to increase, cause Pilgrim’s Pride to change the way in which it does business, or otherwise disrupt its operations; competitive factors and pricing pressures or the loss of one or more of Pilgrim’s Pride’s largest customers; currency exchange rate fluctuations, trade barriers, exchange controls, expropriation and other risks associated with foreign operations; disruptions in international markets and distribution channels, including, but not limited to, the impacts of the Russia-Ukraine conflict; the risk of cyber- attacks, natural disasters, power losses, unauthorized access, telecommunication failures, and other problems on our information systems; and the impact of uncertainties of litigation and other legal matters described in our most recent Form 10-K and Form 10-Q, including the In re Broiler Chicken Antitrust Litigation, as well as other risks described under “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The forward-looking statements in this release speak only as of the date hereof, and the Company undertakes no obligation to update any such statement after the date of this release, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise, except as may be required by applicable law.  Actual results could differ materially from those projected in these forward-looking statements as a result of these factors, among others, many of which are beyond our control. In making these statements, we are not undertaking, and specifically decline to undertake, any obligation to address or update each or any factor in future filings or communications regarding our business or results, and we are not undertaking to address how any of these factors may have caused changes to information contained in previous filings or communications. Although we have attempted to list comprehensively these important cautionary risk factors, we must caution investors and others that other factors may in the future prove to be important and affecting our business or results of operations.  This presentation may include information that may be considered non-GAAP financial information as contemplated by SEC Regulation G, Rule 100, including EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA, LTM EBITDA, Net Debt, Free Cash Flow, Adjusted EBITDA Margin and others. Accordingly, we have provided tables in the accompanying appendix and in our previous filings with the SEC that reconcile these measures to their corresponding GAAP-based measures and explain why these measures are useful to investors, which can be obtained from the Consolidated Statements of Income provided with our previous filings with the SEC. Our method of computation may or may not be comparable to other similarly titled measures used in filings with the SEC by other companies. See the consolidated statements of income and consolidated statements of cash flows included in our financial statements. Cautionary Notes And Forward-Looking Statements I N V E S T O R D A Y 2


 
3 Today’s Speakers I N V E S T O R D A Y Fabio Sandri Bernie Adcock Sergio Nahuz President & CEO Head of US Fresh CMO & Head of Prepared Foods Ivan Siqueira Jesus Munoz Andrew Rojeski Matt Galvanoni President, Pilgrim’s Europe President, Pilgrim’s Mexico Head of Strategy, Investor Relations, & Sustainability Chief Financial Officer Kendra Waldbusser Head of FSQA & Live Tech Services


 
4 Global Fabio Sandri President & CEO


 
5 A Leading Food Company G L O B A L Data is measured by pounds per chickens sold. 1946 2007 2014 2017 CASE READY SMALL BIRD BIG BIRD PREPARED FOODS BUSINESS UNITS Founded Pittsburg, TX 1 4 IN MEXICO LBS OF CHICKENS SOLD OUT OF EVERY 1 4 IN THE U.K. NEARLY LBS OF CHICKENS SOLD OUT OF EVERY 2019 IN THE U.S. NEARLY LBS OF CHICKENS SOLD OUT OF EVERY 1 6 1 4 IN THE U.K. NEARLY LBS OF PIGS SOLD OUT OF EVERY 2009 2021 FRESH PROCESSING PREPARED FOODS MEXICO PILGRIM’S UK MOY PARK PILGRIM’S FOOD MASTERS EUROPE


 
DETERMINATION SIMPLICITY AVAILABILITY HUMILITY SINCERITY DISCIPLINE OWNERSHIP CREATE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES THAT HELP OUR TEAM MEMBERS SUCCEED DRIVE OWNERSHIP AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEEPER MAKE DECISIONS BASED ON KNOWLEDGE, FACTS AND DATA RELENTLESSLY PURSUE ROOT CAUSE Our Vision, Strategy, Methods & Values G L O B A L 6


 
An Unwavering Commitment To Safety As A Condition G L O B A L 7 0.13 0.04 2019 2023 Behavior – Standardized Operating Procedures – Job Rotation & Training Management – Root Cause Analysis – Safety Observations Tools – Repetitive Motion Assessments – Management KPIs Pilgrim’s Global Safety Index Source: PPC


 
• Improved yield performance • Reduced downtime • Superior quality • Enhanced net staffing Creating An Experienced, Stable Team For Our Business G L O B A L 8 U.S. Europe Mexico Pilgrim’s Turnover Comparison 2019 2024 Source: PPC -36% -31% -14% Decline Since 2019


 
A Commitment To Team Member Development and our Communities G L O B A L 9


 
G L O B A L 10 Mentality – “Sustainability Is Efficiency” – Integration Throughout Our Business Collaboration – Suppliers – Food system partners – Customers Approach – Resilient Food Systems – Improved Productivity – “Hands On” Engagement Cultivating A Better Future Through Sustainability Decrease in scope 1 and 2 emission intensity from 2019 to 2023 Reduction in absolute scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions from 2019 to 2023 Renewable energy use GHG emission reduction projects approved 20% 14.2% 17% 130+


 
Cultivating Partnerships With Key Customers G L O B A L 1. Reflects total % change from 2019 to 2024 for Key Customers In US. 41.0% 74.0% Volume Net Sales 11 Key Customer Partnerships Scale Scope Growth Trust Profitability Key Customer Global Growth From 2019 To 2024


 
United States Europe Combined With An Extensive Array Of Branded Offerings G L O B A L 12 Mexico


 
A Diversified Portfolio G L O B A L 13Source: PPC Sales by Geography Sales by Mix Sales By Channel 29% 59% 12% 53%33% 9% 5% 26% 74% Mexico Europe United States Other Food Service Retail Export Prepared (Value Added) Fresh


 
$300 $250 $125 $200 $180 $24 $140 $100 $60 $53 ($80) ($129) $93 $210 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024  2016 impacted by portfolio mix changes  2021 and 2022 impacted by inefficiencies from COVID-19, inflation, and staffing shortages  Commitment at every level from plant floor to senior leadership  Driven annually by Zero-Based Budgeting process To ta l C O G S an d S G & A S av in g s Driven By Enhanced Production Efficiencies Through Operational Excellence G L O B A L Operational Improvement ($MM) 14Source: PPC


 
Driving Profitable Growth G L O B A L 11,409 17,878 2019 2024 Sales ($MM) 974 2,214 2019 2024 ADJ EBITDA ($MM) 57% Higher Attribute Offerings – NAE, Veg Fed – NAIHM – Organic – Air chill Operational Expertise – Mix Management – Quality & Safety Protocols – Training & Development Management Approach – Zero-Based Budgeting – Organizational Structure – Root Cause Analysis 127% 15Source: PPC


 
Average 2022-2024 9.3% -15.0% -10.0% -5.0% 0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 A d ju st ed E B IT D A M ar g in Average 2019-2021 7.9% Resulting In A More Resilient Earnings Stream G L O B A L 16Source: PPC SEC Filings United States PPC Global Europe Mexico


 
Unlocking Shareholder Value Through Integrated Strategies And Differentiated Capabilities G L O B A L Consistent execution of strategies . . . . . . along with differentiated capabilities Unlocking Value For Shareholders • Drive Growth • Enhance Margins • Reduce Volatility • Key Customer Partnerships • Portfolio Diversification • Operational Excellence • Higher Attribute Offerings • Management Expertise • Safety & Training Protocols 17


 
Protein is a Bright Spot G L O B A L Consumption Forecast (Million MT) • Increasing focus on protein – 59% sought protein for diet in 2022 – Rose to 71% as of 2024 • Amplified interest in healthy, balanced diets through meat – 64% agreed in 2019 – Rose to 73% by 2024 • Advantaged nutritional attributes of chicken – Highest protein per serving among main animals – Lowest in fat and calories • Relative value compared to other proteins – Lower price per pound and per unit • Sustainable production characteristics – Lower water and land usage – Fewer GHG emissions per pound produced 18 126 131 17 19 74 91 143 160 0 150 300 450 2025 2033 Pork Lamb Beef/Veal Poultry • Chicken - Fastest growing protein • Accounts for over 50% of growth 360 391 Sources: OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook Database,,2024-20332024 IFIC Food and Health Survey, N= 3,000, Power of Meat, 2024, USDA, Circana Integrated Fresh, MULO, YTD 2-23-25, National Chicken Council Sustainability Report.


 
Building A Sustainable Competitive Advantage G L O B A L 19 Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility Drive Growth • Foodmasters Acquisition • Just Bare Launch • Athens & Merida Investments Enhance Margins • European Integration • Working Capital Management Reduce Volatility • Mexico Live Operations • Douglas Protein Conversion


 
20 US Business: Fresh Bernie Adcock Head of US Fresh


 
An Overview Of Our US Business U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 21Source: PPC LARGE 8 + L B S RETAIL 6 - 7 L B S SMALL 3 - 5 L B S HATCHERIES 32 TEAM MEMBERS ~34K BIRDS PER DAY ~6.3M FEED MILLS 24 PROCESSING PLANTS 37 LBS PER YEAR 9B+ Business Units Big Bird/Commercial Small Bird Case Ready 7 PROTEIN CONVERSION 4 PET FOOD


 
An Overview Of Our US Business U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 22Source: PPC $10.6B $9.5B Breakdown of US Sales Value Added Fresh Big Bird Small Bird Case Ready Protein Conversion/Other Breakdown of US Fresh Sales Breakdown of US Fresh Sales by Channel $9.5B Retail Food Service Other Export 90% 10% 53%38% 5% 24% 37% 6% 33% 4%


 
US Fresh: Revenue Overview U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 23Source: PPC 0% 25% 50% 75% 100% 2021 2022 2023 2024 % o f U .S . F re sh S al es Small Bird Case Ready Big Bird Debone Protein Conversion/Other Distinct Pricing approaches – Cost plus – Market Related – Commodity (Jumbo) – Negotiated Impact Of Key Customer Relationships – Long Term Arrangements – Unique Attributes – Distinct Sales Mix Tailored By Segment Dynamics – Small Bird – Case Ready – Big Bird 2024 Cost Plus Negotiated Commodity Market Related $8.2B $9.6B $9.0B $9.5B


 
(6,000) (5,000) (4,000) (3,000) (2,000) (1,000) - 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 M ar g in * U.S. Fresh: Reducing Volatility Through Diversification U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 24Source: PPC Notes: *Indexed to 2019 Big Bird Debone US Fresh Small Bird Protein Case Ready Adjusted EBITDA Volatility ( %) %) ( %) %) ( %) ( %) % % % % %


 
25 US Fresh Chicken: A Growing, On Trend Market U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H Affordability – Less expensive compared to other proteins – Relatively lower feed conversion costs Availability – Number one consumed protein – Consistent growth Flexibility – Broad application – Widespread appeal


 
Chicken Provides Convenient And Cost-Effective Meal Solutions For At Home Consumption U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H Source: Circana, National Eating Trends (NET), Years Ending Mar. $(0.40) $(0.20) $- $0.20 $0.40 $0.60 $0.80 $1.00 $1.20 $1.40 $1.60 $1.80 $/ LB Ground Beef vs. BSB Chicken Price Spread 87% of home prepared meals contain meat and poultry $/LB Top 3 factor in meat purchase decision 26


 
Dine-in 45% Takeout 40% Delivery 15% 11% 6% Chicken All Other On 95% of Menus Versatility Enabling Resilient Category Growth In Away From Home Environment U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H Source: Technomic Special Analysis on Chicken Chains 2023, Technomic US Away From Home Wallchart – 2022-2024 Sales, Datassential Annual Restaurant Sales Growth by Menu Type Share of Chicken Orders by Order Format 27


 
Getting Started: The Supply Chain U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 28 GENETIC IMPROVEMENTS Broiler Processing Traits • Growth • Feed Conversion • Uniformity • Yields • Meat Quality • Uniformity Animal Welfare • Livability • Skeletal Strength • Behavior Breeder • Fertility • Hatchability • Production • Persistency


 
Primary Breeder Pullet Farm Breeder Farm Supply Chain: An Overview U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 29 • Orders placed 18 months in advance • Five months for hens to reach maturity to lay eggs • Roughly one rooster for every ten hens • Hens typically remain in service until 65 weeks • About 165 eggs per hen • Egg production falls as hen ages • 25 genetic companies in 1980s • Only two remain as of 2025


 
Hatchery Broiler Farm Processing PlantBroiler • 21 days incubation • Farm typically has three to four houses • Distinct grower programs (NAE, NAIHM, organic, etc.) • Segmented by live weight • Flexibility limited somewhat by bird size Supply Chain: An Overview U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 30


 
Supply Chain: Driving Production U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 31Sources: USDA NASS, Hatchability calculated using placements 3 weeks after sets +5.7% Increase In Egg Sets Since 2019 306 bps Decline In Hatchability Since 2019 1,000 1,050 1,100 1,150 1,200 1,250 1,300 75.0% 76.0% 77.0% 78.0% 79.0% 80.0% 81.0% 82.0% 83.0% 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 In b ill io n s H at ch ab ili ty Egg sets Hatchability 210 bps Decline In Livability Since 2019


 
Key Considerations: Breeder Selection U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 32Sources: National Chicken Council U.S. Broiler Performance Feed to Meat Gain , Ratio USDA RTC Young Chickens LBS to USDA Young Chicken Live LBS Produced; Notes: *PPC Estimate ~65% Percentage of Total Live Cost that is Corn & Soybean Meal +$90MM Value Of 100 bps Improvement In Yield Across Ten Billion Pounds Of Production 1.55 1.60 1.65 1.70 1.75 1.80 1.85 1.90 1.95 75.10% 75.20% 75.30% 75.40% 75.50% 75.60% 75.70% 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Fe ed C on ve rs io n Yi el d Feed Conversion Yield *


 
Supply Chain: Driving Production U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H Sources: USDA NASS 36.0 38.0 40.0 42.0 44.0 46.0 48.0 6.00 6.25 6.50 6.75 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 P ro d u ct io n (b ill io n s of P ou n d s) A ve ra g e Li ve W ei g h t (P ou n d s) Total Production Live Weight 1.7% Increase In Average Live Weights since 2019 7.0% Increase In Ready To Cook Pounds Since 2019 30 bps Increase In Yields Since 2019 33


 
Complexity D if fe re n ti at io n An Overview: Attribute Comparisons U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 34Source: *Circana Integrated Fresh, Latest 52 Weeks Ending 1/26/25 NO ANTIBIOTICS IN HUMAN MEDICINE (NAIHM) •No use of antibiotics critical to human health •No hormones/steroids CONVENTIONAL •No Hormones/steroids NO ANTIBIOTICS EVER (NAE) •No antibiotics from hatch to processing •No hormones/steroids ORGANIC •100% organic/non-GMO feed •No antibiotics/hormones/steroids •Outdoor access •HFAC Standards •Certified facility AIR CHILL •Cooled via purified air, rather than fresh water •Relatively longer processing time compared to water bath Over 33% of fresh retail chicken is sold as Antibiotic Free or Organic*


 
PPC Dedicated Complex Grow Out Program Processing Techniques Differentiates PPC through operational capabilities – Grower programs in Live Operations – Distinct processing techniques (air chill, etc.) Reinforced via Key Customer partnerships – Dedicated complex – Mix with scale – Quality and service Creates durable competitive advantage An Example: Reinforcing Strategies U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 35


 
Sales growth driven by Key Customer Partnership – Leading player in Club channel – Expansion given interest in differentiated offering – Existing long-term relationship Enhanced margins through operational excellence – Simplified mix at scale – Dedicated complex – Quality and service Reduced volatility based on pricing mechanism – Distinct approach given higher attribute offering Case Study: Guntersville, AL (Case Ready) U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 36


 
2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Lbs Net Sales $ Unlocking Value For The Consumer To Generate Growth U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 1. Reflects total % change from 2019 to 2024 for Key Customers In US. Private Label Organic NAE Air Chill Pilgrim’s Growing Fresh Retail volume with Key Customers over 3X industry C h an g e Fr om 2 0 19 140% $ LBS 174% 37


 
Sales growth driven by increased in interest partnerships – Recognition of quality and service levels – Further presence in growing, profitable market Enhanced margins through operational expertise – Leverage existing technical and processing expertise – Upgrading product mix Reduced volatility given ownership of processing assets – Limited availability of industry capacity – Diminished reliance on outside processors Case Study: Douglas, GA (Protein Conversion) U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H 38


 
39 Key Takeaways: US Fresh Business U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H Drive Growth • Strengthen Key Customer partnerships through long-term arrangements and investments in distinct operational capabilities • Reinforce quality and service to cultivate existing relationships and attract new partners Enhance Margins • Continue to build scale throughout simplification of product mix • Identify and capture opportunities to improve feed conversion and yields • Upgrade product offerings, as appropriate Reduce Volatility • Refine pricing approach to mitigate the impact of market fluctuations • Invest in production assets to minimize operational risks, as needed


 
New Protein Conversion Capacity 40 What’s Next: US Business: Fresh U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility New Small Bird Capacity Convert Big Bird To Case Ready For Key Customers


 
41 US Business: Live Operations Kendra Waldbusser Head of FSQA & Live Tech Services


 
Biosecurity: Key Considerations U S B U S I N E S S : L I V E O P E R A T I O N S Structural • Number of Houses • Number of Birds Per House • Proximity of Houses Management • Reducing Foot traffic • Minimizing contact • Application of disinfectants • Training Equipment • Feed & Water Coverage • Dedicated tools Rigorous implementation of biosecurity principles are essential to preventing disease introduction into our poultry operations 42


 
43 USDA HPAI Approach • $500 million in investments in biosecurity for poultry, beginning with a focus on egg layers; • $400 million in relief/indemnity for affected farmers; • $100 million for vaccine research and development (including a public-private task force focused on developing protocols for vaccination and avoiding trade disruptions; • Temporary imports of eggs; and • Removing unnecessary regulatory burdens on egg producers U S B U S I N E S S : L I V E O P E R A T I O N S


 
44 Food Safety & Quality U S B U S I N E S S : L I V E O P E R A T I O N S • Uncompromising food safety & quality • 3rd Party Certification from GFSI scheme audits • Regulatory compliance with USDA Food Safety & Inspection Service Safe people, safe products and healthy attitudes


 
Animal Welfare U S B U S I N E S S : L I V E O P E R A T I O N S Our American Humane Certified Farm program provides third- party, independent audits to help verify that certified entities’ care and handling of farm animals meet our science-based welfare standards. The independent, multi-stakeholder organization that advances, supports, and communicates continuous improvement in sustainability for the poultry and egg value chain. PROFESSIONAL ANIMAL AUDITOR CERTIFICATION ORGANIZATION PAACO provides the means to validate humane industry practices with certified audits and well-trained auditors. Guidelines consistent with sound science and a consideration of economic realities. 45


 
46 Driving Profitable Growth: US Prepared Foods Investments Sergio Nahuz CMO & Head of Prepared Foods


 
85% 15% 45% 55% An Overview: US Prepared Foods U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S 47 Branded vs Private Label Sales by Channel Private Label Branded Retail Away From Home Mount Pleasant, TX Moorefield, WV Waco, TX Source: PPC


 
Prepared Foods: Large And Growing Market U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S 48Sources: Pilgrim’s Intelligence Estimates Wholesale Value and Market Growth, Par-Cooked & Fully Cooked MARKET SCOPE SIZE ($B) ‘19-’24 CAGR Retail Frozen $3.5 14% Retail Deli $1.3 4% Commercial $3.1 8% Non-Commercial $1.5 3% National Accounts $4.0 3% Other $0.6 4% Total $14.0 6% Retail Away From Home Prepared Foods: $2B opportunity to grow • Chicken consumption continues to see growth across both Retail and Away From Home channels • Prepared Foods growing almost 5X annual chicken production • As 2024 Pilgrim’s has 7% Market Share of Prepared Foods across all channels


 
Case Study: Identifying Where to Play U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S 49 $2.80 $3.70 $4.05 $4.93 $5.33 $5.66 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 15% CAGR Retail Frozen Chicken Category • Top 3 consumer need states: Easy Meals (55%), Low Cost (51%) and Versatile for Everyday (42%) • Category spans across a variety of eating occasions: Quick Lunch or Dinner (52%), While Watching TV (37%), Quick Snack (34%), Family Meals (34%) • 55% of grocery shoppers are Seeking Quick and Easy Solutions Sources: Circana Integrated Fresh, Latest 52 Weeks End 1/26/25


 
Case Study: Consumer Centric Approach U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S 50Sources: Pilgrim’s Intelligence Estimates Wholesale Value and Market Growth, Par-Cooked & Fully Cooked Family Pleasers Protein Seekers Convenience Seekers Mindful Shoppers 29% 17% 16% Cooking Avoiders 11% 15% Inspiration Seekers 12% Consumer Segments Segment Needs5-yr Sales CAGR 10% Family Pleasers Need: Make my family happy through meals they will love Mindful Shoppers Need: Feel confident the food I feed my family is good for them +26% -15% Share • Pilgrim’s re-launch in 2024 attracting younger more Multi-Cultural consumers with boredom-busting options for meals and snacks. • Just Bare attracting a relevant consumer to the frozen category • Two clearly differentiated brands perfectly positioned to address distinct and growing consumer segments.


 
Age: Millennial Education: 4+ years of College Living: Urban & Suburban – Affluent & Middle Class Lifestyle: More Affluent, Middle Class I’m not an over-the-top health nut, but I do care about what I bring into the house for meals: good quality protein, fresh fruits and veggies. And of course, we also have some treats! Consumer Lifestyle • 23% more likely to review labels vs average consumer • 20% more likely to actively seek foods with natural or organic • Home Chef: seeks different types of food and recipes (106ix) Consumer Need I want to be confident I’m making a smart protein choice in a sea of confusing claims while balancing my busy lifestyle. Case Study: Consumer Centric Approach – Meet Olivia U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S Source: Numerator 2024 51 Mindful consumer


 
Case Study: Just Bare Performance U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S 52Sources: Pilgrim’s Intelligence Estimates Wholesale Value and Market Growth, Par-Cooked & Fully Cooked $53.6 $26.0 $31.9 $29.5 JUST BARE CATEGORY AVG PRIVATE LABEL TOP 5 BRANDS (X JUST BARE) 104.5% 7.7% 4.7% 3.5% JUST BARE CATEGORY AVG PRIVATE LABEL TOP 5 BRANDS (X JUST BARE) • Just Bare velocity ($/Store/Week/item) is more than double the category average and beats the next 5 brands by more than 80% • Just Bare grew more than 100% in 2024. Current performance allows brand to expand distribution and double in size over the next 3 years • Just Bare is the fastest growing brand in Fully Cooked Chicken category Velocity $/STORE/WK/ITEM (L52 WKS) $Growth YoY (L52 WKS)


 
Case Study: Just Bare and Pilgrim’s Brands Performance U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S Pilgrim’s Retail Frozen Brands, Calculated Against Retail Frozen Fully Cooked Circana Integrated Fresh Sales 0.6% 10.1% 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Market Share $ 53 • Both Brands Household Penetration increased from 2.4% to 10% in just 5 years. • Just Bare Product reviews 4.7 average rating • Pilgrim’s gained 52% of Total Distribution in 2024 Vs. Prior Year


 
54 Brand Recognition U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S Organic Publication from allrecipes.com – Dec. 2024 (+10MM Followers) “There is a new Family Favorite in town allrecipes.com” Best of the Best 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Golden and crunchy exterior “nicely salted” and flavorful. tender and juicy… and “very chicken-y,” which is a good thing! “Looks and tastes homemade,” Remarkably juicy and the outer crust was crisp, with a texture similar to fried chicken. Qualifications  Available Nationwide  Labeled "nuggets”  Basic Recipe  Followed Cooking Direction


 
Case Study: Away From Home U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S Away from home is a larger market, more complex and poses a variety of operators unmet needs The Approach Understand The Landscape Build the winning Strategy Execution 55 • Increase reach via Physical coverage and digital solutions • Sales team redesign • Price Pack Architecture • Simplify Brand Architecture • Optimize the Portfolio by channels and needs • Build Go to Market capability by Sub Channel • Category and Operator Needs • Brand Equity • Portfolio gaps Background Market Attractiveness How to Win Deploy and Refine


 
2021 2022 2023 2024 Case Study: Away From Home Non-Commercial U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S 56Pilgrim’s Internal Sales Gold Kist Volume Growth 15% CAGR • Operators have different needs based on each segment they operate. • We grew by catering brands that appeal to each prioritized need/segment. • Opportunity still to grow business nearly 4X in Non-Commercial space given mapped addressable market.


 
Key Takeaways: US Prepared Foods U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S Drive Growth • Significant opportunity for growth across retail and away from home in prepared foods • Strong track record of performance across different brands and channels Enhance Margins • Branded portfolio approach tailored to distinct consumer segments and operator needs • Capabilities that are scalable for both retail and away from home channel Reduce Volatility • Leverage supply chain capabilities to ensure availability to service demand • Cultivate branded portfolio to mitigate impact of commodity fluctuations 57


 
58 What’s Next: US Prepared Foods U S B U S I N E S S : P R E P A R E D F O O D S Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility Prepared Foods New Capacity Portfolio Diversification Footprint Redesign


 
US Business: Q&A Session U S B U S I N E S S : F R E S H & P R E P A R E D Fabio Sandri Bernie Adcock Sergio Nahuz Kendra Waldbusser President & CEO Head of US Fresh CMO & Head of Prepared Foods Head of FSQA & Live Tech Services Lisa Burdick Robert Garlington Matt Galvanoni Head of Human Resources Head of Growth Chief Financial Officer 59


 
60 Europe Ivan Siqueira President, Pilgrim’s Europe


 
61 One Pilgrim's Europe Integrated Model E U R O P E Source: PPC One of the largest poultry processing companies in Europe. The UK's largest pork processor with a vast value-added portfolio. Strong brand portfolio and leader in chilled and frozen ready meals. 2017 $1,300m 2019 $350m 2021 $952m Together, we are a leading UK & European food company: #1 UK Private Label manufacturer (OC&C, The Grocer) #1 UK Prepared Foods Producer Creating powerful synergies in complementary categories and routes to market to form the UK’s most diversified food company Market leading meat & meat-free brands $5.1B Revenue FY24 20K Team Members 40+ Well-invested plants, hatcheries & feed mills PPC acquisitions 2024 – One Pilgrim's Europe


 
Business Categories & Footprint E U R O P E 62Source: PPC Well-invested production network across Europe United Kingdom 23 Ireland 2 France 3 Netherlands 1 66% 23% 9% Added Value Fresh Export Other Revenue split by category 2% Integrated business model across Poultry, Pork and Value Added 4 Fresh Chicken facilities 5 Fresh Pork & Lamb 22 Value-added facilities


 
Channel & Customers E U R O P E 63Source: PPC Select private label long term supply contracts Partner of choice to all major grocery retailers UK Export across China, Europe, Asia, Africa & Americas 56 Global markets 27 additional new countries opened in FY2024 (9 Pork;11 Chicken; 7 FPP) 13% growth in volume in 24 15% increase in new clients 63% 16% Export 9% B2B / Wholesale 11% Retail Away From Home Exports Other B2B and wholesale customers Sales channels Leading European Away From Home partner Starter to Dessert Solution Provider Permanent presence in > 16,900 restaurants in 20 European countriesFood Service Retail


 
64 Product Portfolio: Three Manufacturing Companies Into One E U R O P E Source: Circana; YouGov; Kantar; The Grocer: Britain’s Biggest Brands, 2024 Fresh Added Value Brands Fresh & Frozen Coated Chicken Fresh Pork, Bacon, Gammon & Sausages Fresh Lamb Cooked Meats Ready To Cook Fresh Ready Meals RICHMOND UK #1 Sausage brand +8% CAGR v 2019 93% brand awareness FRIDGE RAIDERS UK #1 Food to go Snacking brand +13% CAGR v 2019 Enjoyed by over 4 million consumers 10% of Total RevenueFresh and Marinated Chicken Savoury Snacks Frozen Ready Meals


 
Background The Results The Approach Case Study: Key Customer Strategy - Poultry E U R O P E • Long standing and positive trading relationship in a shared supply scenario • Secured 100% sole supply status for 10 years – a first in the industry • Customer consistent outperformance of +1.5 share points vs the market • Enhanced poultry welfare at above industry standard had lead industry change at scale • Allows growth in adjacent categories leveraging the core values of a partnership Key Customer Strategy A Compelling, Bold Vision Demonstrating Benefits Leveraging Our Strengths Differentiated Proposition True Partnership Deliver Commitments Surety Of Supply Trust & Transparency SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCED VOLATILITY Delivered through robust E2E aligned ways of working DRIVES OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCIES Benefits in operational cost of production WIN / WIN BENEFIT Mutually beneficial financial models provide strong basis for future growth and investment 1 2 3 4 Agriculture Technical People Marketing & Innovation 65


 
Case Study: Strategy of Integration E U R O P E Operated as 3 standalone companies with 31 operating factories Background The Results The Approach Integration all companies into one with new business structure Footprint Mix Cogs New portfolio for exports Innovations and Renovations in the Retail 1 2 3 4 Structure Optimisation Offices Agility SG&A Consolidate Specialise Efficiency Markets & Channels Procurement Productivity Consumption Footprint Reduced over 500 roles consolidate 2 sites into other sites Mix New Retail lines 27 new countries and 56 new export clients COGS Reduced over 700 roles through 12% improved productivity SG&A Reduced over 500 Roles through consolidation and optimisation of the leadership structure. 66


 
67 Profit Margins Improvements From 3.3% - 5.1% E U R O P E Source: PPC Poultry Business Developent Volume (Tons) 2023 2024 2023 2024 172 (3.3%) 263 (5.1%) Adjusted Operating Income [USD m] Adjusted Operating Income [USD mm] Historical Development 5,203 5,137 402.7 420.8


 
Our Business Model E U R O P E Adjusted Operating Income [USD m] Fresh Chicken & Pork Value Added Brands Diversified Business Portfolio > Reduce volatility 60%-65% 35%-40% Cost Plus Market Models: • Long term contract based on Cost of Production • Raw material pass through Business Model: Pricing Approach 68


 
Growth Strategy E U R O P E 69 Enhance Continue to Integrate and Optimize Grow Diversify & Grow through: • Value Added / Branded • Innovation • Accretive acquisitions Strengthen & grow core Enhance Key customer mix Leverage advantage Expand offerings


 
3.5% 4.9% 4.5% 0.2% 2.3% -1.0% UK Retail Grocery ROI Retail Grocery European Food Service* Value Growth Retail Volume/Food Service Visits Growth Key Market Performance & Consumer Trends E U R O P E Source: Retail Size: IGD, February 2025; Food Service Size: Statista, February 2025; Retail Growth: Kantar Worldpanel, 52 weeks to 29th December 2024 v PY; Food Service Growth: Circana, YTD October 2024 vs. YTD 2019. * European = Big 5 markets (UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain). Inflation data = UK: ONS, France: INSEE; Ireland: CSO; commentary based on data from Kantar, Lumina, Circana, GfK, INSEE and Irish League of Credit Unions $319.9bn $25.3bn $311.9bn $69.6bn $338.9bn $101.0bn $8.8bn $93.9bn $25.1bn $78.4bn UK Ireland France Netherlands Germany Food Service Retail Grocery Key Market Sizes Key Market Performance 70


 
Our Categories Are Performing Strongly, And There Is Headroom For Growth E U R O P E Source: Kantar Worldpanel, 52 weeks to 29th December 2024 v PY; Brands value and volume growth is internal data to year end 2024; Food service sector sizes from Lumina Intelligence Eating Out in the UK Report, 2024, converted from GBP with FX of 1.26 3.6% 5.1% 7.3% 5.2% 3.0% 0.2% 0.7% 2.6% 2.8% 2.6% Total Retail Grocery Fresh Added Value Meals Brands Value Growth Volume Growth $22.7bn $10.6bn $29.6bn Chicken lowest priced protein Coated and Slow Cooked driving growth Full Service Restaurants Hotels Contract Catering Other Food Service $61.4bn UK Retail Category Market Performance UK Food Service Market Fresh and premium meals driving growth Key GB brands driving growth Pubs & Bars: Target for growth QSR: Current focus Retail To Go: Current focus 71


 
Win In Our Heartland Expand Into New Categories Expand Channel Presence Expand Into New Markets Build & Buy New Brands Further expansion in retail & food service Into Universities Into Stadiums and Cinemas Oakhouse dispensers Branded Growth Strategy E U R O P E 72


 
73 Key Takeaways: Europe E U R O P E Drive Growth • Strong European platform created for growth • Strengthening and growing the core, enhancing mix and expanding offer into more value added • Branded growth and innovation model with new product development • Grow export into new markets and grow food service into current and new channels Enhance Margins • Further integration and operational excellence • Mix improvements with growth in value added and branded • Procurement and SG&A savings Reduce Volatility • Solid key customer portfolio • Diversified Business, Channel and Product Portfolio • Increased cost of production Pricing Approach


 
74 Mexico Jesus Munoz President, Pilgrim’s Mexico


 
• Started operations in Mexico in 1988 • 12,100 Team members • 2nd Largest Chicken Industry • 25% Mkt Share • Revenues of 2.1B USD • Vertically integrated • National coverage - 100% Background Footprint Value Chain: Grand Parents Breeders Feed Mills Hatcheries Broilers Processing Plant Distribution Centers An Overview Of Our Mexico Business M E X I C O Center Complex 3 Fresh Plant North Complex 3 Fresh Plants 2 Prepared Foods Plants Live Operations 75


 
An Overview Of Our Mexico Business M E X I C O 27% 14% 3% 29% 27% Breakdown of Mexico Sales 90% 10% Breakdown of Channel Mix Value Added Fresh QSR Away From Home Retail Wholesaler Live Sales 76Source: PPC


 
Mexico: Channel Overview M E X I C O Retail USD$ $582$263 2019 2024 2.2X 3.5X QSR USD$ $67$19 2019 2024 2.3X Food Service USD$ $295$132 2019 2024 38% Commodity (Wholesalers and Live Sales) USD$ $891 2019 2024 77 $1,226


 
Key Customer: Examples M E X I C O Retail Food Service QSR 78


 
25% 29% 32% 34% 37% 39% 42% 44% 75% 71% 68% 66% 63% 61% 58% 56% 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Commodity vs Strategic Channel (USD$) CommodityStrategic 79 Reducing Volatility M E X I C O Source: Pilgrim´s México Analysis Commercial Strategy: Increasing sales in strategic channels and reducing sales in commodity products to reduce volatility


 
80 Pilgrim’s Brand Performance M E X I C O Source: Pilgrim´s México Analysis Pilgrim’s branded product portfolio: Pilgrim’s brand has a wide variety of products and customer solutions for every consumer at every level Pilgrim’s Branded Products Sales (M USD$) Pilgrim’s brands grew +20% CAGR 2.9 X $309$105 2019 2024


 
Other Brands M E X I C O 81Source: Pilgrim´s México Info Brand with 16 years in the market, we have established ourselves as the leading brand in the category, becoming a trusted ally for Mexican households. Just Bare is a healthy protein Brand focused on quality providing quality protein and nutrition. Alamesa is a brand that all about ready meals that bring authentic flavors straight to the table. It has evolved into a main course option. • Just Bare was launched 2022 • 2024 Grew 2X vs Last Year • Del Dia Grows +13% CAGR • In the last 5 years grew +64% • Alamesa Grows +31% CAGR • In the last 5 years grew 3.7X


 
The Opportunity: Mexico Poultry Industry M E X I C O Source: UNA Report 2024 ConsumptionPoultry Industry Value MXP • 245 B MX$ / 12.3 B USD$ • 63% of the protein produced in Mexico comes from the poultry sector • 85% Domestic / 15% Imported • The poultry industry generated over 1.4MM jobs. • Chicken consumption continued to increase at 3% CAGR • The highest egg per capita consumption on the planet • Pork consumption increasing at 2.5% CAGR PRODUCT VOLUME (TONS) VALUE MXP Chicken 4,063,000 156,149 Egg 3,019,474 87,966 Turkey 8,461 1,220 TOTAL 7,090,935 245,335 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 Chicken (kg) Pork (kg) Beef (kg) Egg (kg) Turkey (kg) Per Capita 35.11 Kg Per Capita 23.23 Kg Per Capita 21.00 Kg Per Capita 15.3 Kg Per Capita 1.25 Kg 82


 
The Opportunity: Mexico Poultry M E X I C O Source: UNA Report 2024 Production and imports of chicken 2.91 3.03 3.18 3.28 3.38 3.47 3.55 3.6 3.66 3.76 3.85 3.94 .39 .42 .48 .50 .52 .52 .57 .55 .61 .59 .69 .70 3.29 3.43 3.65 3.78 3.9 3.99 4.12 4.14 4.27 4.35 4.54 4.63 1.8 2.3 2.8 3.3 3.8 4.3 4.8 5.3 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022* 2023 2024* Production Import Total Supply Consumption Per Capita (Kg) Th ou sa n d s of t on s K ilo g ra m s 42.0 40.0 38.0 34.0 30.0 26.0 22.0 36.0 32.0 28.0 24.0 28.16 29.01 30.46 31.18 31.86 32.26 33.00 32.87 33.47 33.77 34.78 35.11 83


 
84 Growth Plans: Main Projects M E X I C O


 
And New Processing Plant Veracruz Hatchery and Feed Mill Plant Veracruz New Broiler and Breeders Farm South Complex Building of 20 Broiler Farms in Veracruz and Mérida Grandparents New Farms for Female and Male and Incubator Expansion in Saltillo Prepared Foods Expansion Growth Plans: Sample Projects M E X I C O 85


 
86 Key Takeaways: Mexico M E X I C O Drive Growth • Recognize robust demand for chicken, especially in retail channels • Maintain investments in capacity to serve growth in long term demand for protein Enhance Margins • Upgrade product mix to minimize reliance on whole chicken offerings • Leverage scale in commodity market to further unlock value Reduce Volatility • Develop prepared foods and branded offerings to mitigate commodity market volatility • Invest in production assets to amplify service nationally and mitigate biosecurity risks


 
Processing Plants Automation 87 What’s Next: Mexico M E X I C O Add Small Bird Capacity Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility Expand Prepared Foods & Fresh Capacity Continue Reinforcing Brand wareness


 
88 International Management Q&A I N T E R N A T I O N A L B U S I N E S S : E U R O P E & M E X I C O Fabio Sandri Matt Galvanoni Ivan Siqueira Jesus Munoz President & CEO Chief Financial Officer President, Pilgrim’s Europe President, Pilgrim’s Mexico


 
89 Sustainability Andrew Rojeski Head of Strategy, Investor Relations, & Sustainability


 
Sustainability: An Overview S U S T A I N A B I L I T Y 90Source: PPC SOCIAL Health & Safety Achieve 30% improvement in Global Safety Index performance by 2025 vs. 2019 baseline Reduce Scope 1 & 2 GHG emission intensity by 30% by 2030 vs. 2019 baseline ENVIRONMENT Energy & Emissions Reach 60% renewable electricity by 2030 ENVIRONMENT Energy & Emissions ENVIRONMENT Water Reduce water use intensity by 2030 vs. 2019 baseline20% reduction from 2019 baseline 14.2% of the total electricity used in our global operations was renewable in 2023 6% increase from 2019 baseline 69% improvement in 2023 compared to 2019 baseline SOCIAL People Development Continue providing life-changing development and educational opportunities for team members and their families Provided more than 800,000 training hours to improve team members’ professional skills Enrolled more than 170 team members and/or their dependents in tuition-free, higher education classes via Pilgrim’s Better Futures GOVERNANCE Ethics & Compliance Internally investigate and close Pilgrim’s Ethics Line cases within 12 months of receipt and audit results beginning in 2025 We will begin to report in our 2024 Sustainability Report GOVERNANCE Ethics & Compliance Report 100% of substantiated critical Pilgrim’s Ethics Line cases to the Pilgrim’s Board of Directors each year On track


 
91 Making It Happen: Sustainability S U S T A I N A B I L I T Y Source: PPC • Approved 113 global GHG emission reduction projects though year-end 2022 • Established KPIs for energy usage by facility • Linked senior level compensation to Sustainability targets • Review progress against GHG emissions reduction targets at least monthly • Provides updates via Sustainability Report • Separate Sustainability Committee • Gives guidance on Sustainability matters • Monitors progress and provides feedback Complex Level Corporate Board Level


 
0.0125 0.011 0.0105 0.0103 0.0088 0.0000 0.0020 0.0040 0.0060 0.0080 0.0100 0.0120 0.0140 2019 Baseline 2023 Ideal Trend 2023 Actual 2025 Milestone 2030 Milestone Renewable Natural Gas Partnership with GreenGas USA Making It Happen: Sustainability S U S T A I N A B I L I T Y 92Source: PPC PPC Global Operations (GHG Intensity) G H G T on s p er 10 0 p ou n d s/ p ro d u ct • 320,00 bird places • Total build cost: Roughly $9M • CO2e reduction: c.1,250T PA (95% reduction) Beech Farm, UK Sumter, SC


 
93 Finance Matt Galvanoni Chief Financial Officer


 
- 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 Evolution of $100 invested – Total Shareholder Return PPC Peer Group Russell 2000 Total Shareholder Return F I N A N C E 94Notes: Peer Group Includes Tyson and Hormel $169 $78 $146


 
11,409 12,092 14,777 17,468 17,362 17,878 - 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Net Sales ($MM) U.S. Europe Mexico Net Sales Growth F I N A N C E 95Source: PPC 9.4% CAGR


 
974 788 1,289 1,648 1,034 2,214 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Adjusted EBITDA ($MM) Adjusted EBITDA Growth F I N A N C E 96Source: PPC 17.9% CAGR


 
How We Measure “The Best”? F I N A N C E Notes: US is Tyson Chicken vs. Pilgrim’s-US; Mexico is Bachoco vs. Pilgrim’s-Mexico; Europe is the average of Cranswick, Bakkavor and 2 Sisters vs. Pilgrim’s-Europe Competition PPC Adjusted Operating Income the last 2 years Competition PPC Competition PPC 3.4% 4.7% 7.4% 9.0%8.8% 5.2% 97


 
3.5% 7.8% 8.2% 8.4% 13.8% 15.9% 12.6% -1.9% -0.7% 2.1% 4.5% 5.0% 7.0% 14.2% 15.4% 11.5% 0.2% 0.8% -2.9% 3.0% 5.0% 6.2% 7.3% 1.8% -3.8% -1.5% 1.8% 4.8% 3.9% 3.9% 7.5% 8.4% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 1Q 21 2Q 21 3Q 21 4Q 21 1Q 22 2Q 22 3Q 22 4Q 22 1Q 23 2Q 23 3Q 23 4Q 23 1Q 24 2Q 24 3Q 24 4Q 24 PILGRIM'S PRIDE PUBLICLY TRADED CHICKEN COMPETITOR PPC better past 15 of 16 quarters A d ju st ed O p er at in g In co m e % Extensive Record Of Industry Leading Performance F I N A N C E Source: SEC Filings – Pilgrim’s Pride, Tyson Foods US Chicken Comparison 98


 
348 355 382 487 544 476 - 200 400 600 800 1,000 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 A m ou n t ($ M M ) “Maintenance” Capital of roughly $400MM per year Capital Expenditures – Investing In Our Business F I N A N C E 99Source: PPC


 
Record Date April 3rd, 2025 Dividend $6.30 per share Pay Date April 17th, 2025 Cash distribution of $1.5 Billion Capital Allocation Priorities: Dividend Excess Cash F I N A N C E 100


 
101 Generating Cash / Shareholder Value F I N A N C E Source: PPC Generated greater than $5 Billion of Cash Flow From Operations over last 6 years Invested on average over $430 Million of CapEx per year over last 6 years $950 Million acquisition of Pilgrim’s Foodmasters $1.5 Billion Dividend in 2025; $3.7 Billion in cumulative dividends since 2015


 
102 Strong Balance Sheet F I N A N C E Source: PPC Proforma year-end 2024 leverage ratio of 1.2x following $1.5 billion dividend Additional $1.1 Billion of additional Liquidity available through Revolving Credit Facilities Balance sheet remains flexible for strategic M&A Earliest Debt Maturity tower is 2031


 
Capital Allocation Priorities F I N A N C E Invest to Reinforce our Strategies • Long-Term Key Customer Partnerships • Differentiated Offerings • Working Capital Management • Operational efficiencies • ROCE Target of 15% • Net Leverage ratio target of 2-3x • Capital discipline • Diversify our portfolio Growth Unlock Margins Reduce Volatility Maintain Investment Grade Rating Preserve Flexibility for Strategic M&A Return to Shareholders 103


 
104 Capital Allocation: Strategic M&A F I N A N C E • Grow / Upgrade our Chicken and Protein Portfolio in current regions and leverage Key Customer relationships • Grow our Prepared Foods Operations – Acquire complimentary branded food companies that can further diversify our portfolio • Selectively expand into growth geographies where we can leverage our competencies/expertise in Chicken or other proteins


 
105 Key Takeaways: Finance F I N A N C E Drive Growth • Organic growth projects in the US and Mexico – estimated $350MM growth CAPEX in 2025 • Momentum in branded offerings across all regions • M&A opportunities across proteins • Identify investments to meet ROCE and payback targets Enhance Margins • Distinct operational capabilities aligned with demand • Leading shareholder returns - $1.5 billion in special dividends declared Reduce Volatility • Capture market upsides, while minimizing downside risks • Investments in capacity in the United States to meet demand and reduce volatility • Maintain focus on investment grade debt ratings and leverage ratio


 
106 Wrap Up Fabio Sandri President & CEO


 
107 Key Projects for Next Years C L O S E New Small Bird Capacity New Prepared Foods Capacity Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Drive Growth Conversion of Big Bird Plant to Case Ready for Key Customers New Protein Conversion Capacity United States Mexico Geographic Expansion Prepared Foods Growth Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Europe Further Business Integration Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility Reduce Volatility


 
Grow our Branded and Value Added Products 108 What’s Next: 2025 & Beyond C L O S E Add Small Bird Capacity Unlocking Shareholder Value Drive Growth Enhance Margins Reduce Volatility Support Key Customers Growth Improve our Portfolio Strategic Acquisitions


 
DETERMINATION SIMPLICITY AVAILABILITY HUMILITY SINCERITY DISCIPLINE OWNERSHIP CREATE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES THAT HELP OUR TEAM MEMBERS SUCCEED DRIVE OWNERSHIP AND ACCOUNTABILITY DEEPER MAKE DECISIONS BASED ON KNOWLEDGE, FACTS AND DATA RELENTLESSLY PURSUE ROOT CAUSE C L O S E 109 Fill up slide with the graphics below – look to small, too much white space Our Vision, Strategy, Methods & Values


 
Management Q&A Q & A Fabio Sandri Matt Galvanoni Bernie Adcock Sergio Nahuz President & CEO Chief Financial Officer Head of US Fresh CMO & Head of Prepared Foods Kendra Waldbusser Lisa Burdick Robert Garlington Andrew Rojeski Head of FSQA & Live Tech Services Head of Human Resources Head of Growth Head of Strategy, Investor Relations, & Sustainability 110 Ivan Siqueira President, Pilgrim’s Europe Jesus Munoz President, Pilgrim’s Mexico


 
APPENDIX


 
1. For further information regarding adjustments, please see previous SEC filings.


 
1. For further information regarding adjustments, please see previous SEC filings.


 
1. For further information regarding adjustments, please see previous SEC filings.


 
1. For further information regarding adjustments, please see previous SEC filings.


 
1. For further information regarding adjustments, please see previous SEC filings.


 
Pilgrim’s Announces $1.5 Billion Special Dividend and Long-term Capital Allocation Strategy Company Outlines Portfolio Enhancements, Brand Growth at Investor Day in New York GREELEY, Colo., March 14, 2025 -- Pilgrim’s Pride Corporation (NASDAQ: PPC), one of the world’s leading food companies, today announced a capital deployment strategy in support of its ongoing efforts to improve its capital structure, enhance its diversified portfolio, stimulate brand growth and generate shareholder value. As a part of the strategy, the company’s board of directors has approved the declaration of a special cash dividend of $6.30 per share. The total amount of the special dividend payment will be approximately $1.5 billion, based on the current number of shares outstanding. The special cash dividend is payable on April 17, 2025, to stockholders of record on April 3, 2025. “Pilgrim’s is confident in the future of our business and we believe our capital allocation strategy positions the company for continued, disciplined growth and enhanced earnings potential across our diversified portfolio,” said Fabio Sandri, CEO of Pilgrim’s. “The Board’s decision to pay a special dividend reflects our strong balance sheet and our commitment to create long-term stockholder value. Today’s announcement is a testament to our team’s ability to execute our key customer strategy, unlock value through differentiated offerings, and relentlessly pursue quality and service. In addition to the special dividend, the company is outlining the ways it is strengthening its portfolio, aligning with key customers and growing organically in the U.S. market. In the coming years, projects will include expanding in prepared foods due to brand growth; adding small bird capacity to support key customer growth; converting a big bird plant to a case ready facility for continued growth in retail; and expanding protein conversion capacity to upgrade the portfolio and reduce risk. With today’s dividend announcement, over the last five years, Pilgrim’s has invested more than $950 million in acquisitions, $1.8 billion in share repurchases and dividends, and $2.2 billion in capital expenditures.


 
During the investor day event, the Pilgrim’s leadership team will discuss its capital allocation strategy, growing momentum in branded offerings across its portfolio, and future growth plans. About Pilgrim’s Pride Pilgrim’s employs over 61,000 people and operates protein processing plants and prepared- foods facilities in 14 states, Puerto Rico, Mexico, the U.K, the Republic of Ireland and continental Europe. The company’s primary distribution is through retailers and foodservice distributors. For more information, please visit www.pilgrims.com. Media Contact: Nikki Richardson Head of Corporate Communications nikki.richardson@jbssa.com


 
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Cover Page
Mar. 14, 2025
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Entity Registrant Name PILGRIMS PRIDE CORP
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Entity File Number 1-9273
Entity Tax Identification Number 75-1285071
Entity Address, Address Line One 1770 Promontory Circle
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Entity Address, State or Province CO
Entity Address, Postal Zip Code 80634-9038
City Area Code 970
Local Phone Number 506-8000
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Trading Symbol PPC
Security Exchange Name NASDAQ
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