JBS S.A.

JBS S.A
Sociedade Anônima
Traded as BM&F Bovespa: JBSS3
Industry Food processing
Founded 1953
Headquarters São Paulo, Brazil
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Joesley Mendonça Batista (Chairman and CEO)
Products Food and beverages
Revenue Increase US$ 45.0 billion (2014)[1]
Profit Increase US$ 895.4 million (2014)[1]
Number of employees
200,000
Parent J&F Investimentos
Subsidiaries JBS USA
Pilgrim's Corp
JBS Foods
Primo Smallgoods
Moy Park
Website www.jbs.com.br
www.jbsglobal.com

JBS S.A. is a Brazilian company that is the largest (by sales) meat processing company in the world, producing factory processed beef, chicken and pork, and also selling by-products from the processing of these meats. It is headquartered in São Paulo.[2] It was founded in 1953 in Anapolis, Goias. The company has 150 industrial plants around the world. J&F Investimentos is the parent company of JBS S.A.[3]

History

JBS was initially established as a slaughtering business by rancher Jose Batista Sobrinho, a rancher in Anápolis, Brazil, in 1953. (The company's name comes from the founder's initials.) Sobrinho's business began to expand when the establishment of Brazil's capital, Brasilia, brought a new market within reach of his ranch. Over the late 1960s Sobrinho expanded into owning slaughterhouses; then, in the 1980s, the company began expanding within Brazil and purchasing other meat processing companies. JBS became a publicly held company in 2007, and in the same year received a major investment from BNDES (Brazilian Development Bank).[4]

In subsequent years, the company has grown to become the world's largest company in the beef sector with the acquisition of several stores and food companies in Brazil and the world, including the 2007 US$225m acquisition of U.S. firm Swift & Company,[5] which was the third largest U.S. beef and pork processor, renamed as JBS USA. It leads the world in slaughter capacity, at 51.4 thousand head per day, and continues to focus on production operations, processing, and export plants, nationally and internationally.

With the new acquisition, JBS entered the pork market, featuring an impressive performance in this segment, to end the year as the third largest producer and processor of this type of meat in the United States. The acquisition expanded the company's portfolio to include rights to the worldwide use of the Swift brand.

The next year, JBS acquired Smithfield Foods' beef business. It was renamed JBS Packerland.

JBS's production structure is embedded in consumer markets worldwide, with plants installed in the world's four leading beef producing nations (Brazil, Argentina, United States, and Australia), serving 110 countries through exports.

On September 16, 2009, JBS announced that it had acquired the food operation of Grupo Bertin, one of three Brazilian market leaders, consolidating its position as the largest beef producer in the world. The banks JP Morgan Chase and Santander Brasil assisted in the transaction. On the same day it was announced that the company had acquired 64% of Pilgrim's Pride for a bid of $800 million US dollars (www.sec.gov), establishing JBS's position in the chicken production industry, but currently the company owns 75.3% of Pilgrim's Pride.

In August 2010, it was reported that JBS is considering to sell some of the eight slaughterhouses it owned in Argentina because of "scarce livestock and export restrictions".[6]

As of 2011, JBS had been trying to bid to gain control of Sara Lee Corporation's meat business. JBS has shown interest in the meats business but struggled to push forward with a bid for the entire company.[7]

On May 27, 2014, Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, which is 75% owned by JBS SA, made an unsolicited $5.6 billion bid for Hillshire Brands Co. (HSH).[8]

On July 28, 2014, Tyson Foods, Inc. announced its intention to sell Tyson de México and Tyson do Brasil, its Mexican and Brazilian poultry subsidiaries, to JBS SA for $575 million in cash by the end of 2014, pending regulatory approval.[9]

Board of directors

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Retrieved from http://www.globalmeatnews.com/Industry-Markets/JBS-posts-record-revenue-for-2014/.
  2. JBS S.A. (2011). "Contact us". "Address Avenida Marginal Direita do Tietê, 500 Vila Jaguara - São Paulo/SP - Brazil CEP: 05118-100." Retrieved on 2011-02-03 from http://www.jbs.com.br/FaleConosco.aspx.
  3. Marcelino, Francisco (September 12, 2016). "JBS's Parent Faces Brazil Probe on Havaianas Loan Agreement". Bloomberg. Retrieved October 24, 2016.
  4. Keren Blankfeld (2011-05-09). "JBS: The Story Behind the World's Biggest Meat Producer". Forbes.
  5. Elzio Barreto (2007-05-29). "Brazil's JBS-Friboi to buy Swift for US$225 mln". Reuters.
  6. "JBS seen struggling to sell Argentine beef plants". Reuters. 2010-08-31.
  7. UPDATE 1-JBS shares fall amid fears of new bid for Sara Lee, Reuters
  8. , Bloomberg
  9. Tyson Foods, Inc. (2014-07-28). "Tyson Foods to Sell Mexico and Brazilian Poultry Businesses" (PDF).
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Board of Directors

External links

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