The Arizona Republic

Beyond Meat’s third quarter disappoint­s

US retail sales down 16%, food service down 7%

- Dee-Ann Durbin

Plant-based meat maker Beyond Meat reported lower than expected sales in the third quarter due to a slump in U.S. demand.

Beyond Meat, based in El Segundo, California, said its sales increased 12.7% to $106.4 million for the July-September period. That was lower than the $109 million Wall Street forecast, according to analysts polled by FactSet.

Beyond Meat President and CEO Ethan

Brown said the results were especially disappoint­ing following the second quarter, when the company reported record revenue of $149 million.

In the third quarter, U.S. retail sales were down nearly 16% while food service sales fell 7%.

Brown said the delta variant of the coronaviru­s diminished restaurant demand, particular­ly at the independen­t restaurant­s where the majority of Beyond Meat’s products are sold.

Labor shortages at Beyond Meat manufactur­ing plants and grocery stores hurt product distributi­on. And severe weather impacted one of its manufactur­ing facilities in Pennsylvan­ia, cutting off water supplies for two weeks.

Brown said Beyond Meat also lost some market share to an increasing number of competitor­s in the plantbased meat category. But he said he doesn’t believe the results indicate declining consumer interest in Beyond Meat’s products. He noted that repeatbuyi­ng rates rose in the quarter.

“I think all of these factors are coming together to create an unusual quarter for us, but there is no indication in my view that … there is some fundamenta­l change in the consumer mindset toward our product,” Brown said in a conference call with investors.

He said the company plans to push the health and climate benefits of its products in an aggressive marketing push next year.

But in the meantime, Beyond Meat expects the turmoil to continue in the current quarter. The company said it expects net revenue in the range of $85 million to $110 million in the October-December period, far below Wall Street’s forecast of $130.5 million.

Internatio­nal revenue was a bright spot in the third quarter, jumping 142% as Beyond Meat expanded in China and Europe.

The company reported a net loss of $54.8 million, or 87 cents per share. That also fell short of analysts’ forecast of a 37-cent loss.

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