Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

JBS Delivers Record Sales, But Margin Squeeze Persists As U.S. Cattle Costs Bite


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) JBS, the world's largest meat company, posted third-quarter 2025 net income of $581 million, down 16% from a year earlier, even as net sales climbed 13% to a record $22.6 billion.

Adjusted EBITDA came in around $1.83 billion, for an 8.1% margin, reflecting resilient demand offset by a tough U.S. cattle cycle and higher live-animal prices.

Performance was uneven across the portfolio. Beef North America generated about $7.2 billion in revenue on firm consumer demand, but profitability remained pressured by scarce cattle and historically high input costs.

In Brazil, beef export accelerated on stronger volumes and better pricing. Seara, the poultry and prepared-foods arm, reached the highest export volumes in its history following the late-September normalization of shipments after avian-influenza restrictions earlier in the year.

However, lower global chicken prices capped margins, which settled near the mid-teens. Australia was the only major unit to expand margins versus 2024.



Trade flows shaped the quarter. With hefty U.S. duties limiting Brazilian beef access, packers redirected volumes to Asia and new channels in Latin America.

China absorbed larger shipments, while Mexico emerged as a more meaningful destination. The strategy-shifting product to higher-yield markets rather than relying on protected ones-helped sustain top-line growth despite external frictions.

Pilgrim's Pride, JBS 's U.S.-listed poultry subsidiary, contributed steady results on the back of lower grain costs and solid retail demand, with adjusted EBITDA margins in the low-teens. That tailwind supported group cash generation but could not fully offset U.S. beef headwinds.

Why this matters: JBS is a bellwether for the global protein cycle. The company's quarter shows that disciplined execution, diversified product mix, and agile export reallocation can defend revenue when policy shocks and supply constraints collide.

For investors, the question is timing: as the North American cattle herd slowly rebuilds and trade routes normalize, margins should have room to recover-provided companies are free to compete and price efficiently.

Until then, expect strong sales with careful cost control, continued focus on higher-return export lanes, and tight capital allocation.

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The Rio Times

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