By Heather Haddon
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (May 6, 2019).
America's biggest milk maker is running out of options as milk
consumption continues to decline in the U.S.
Dean Foods Co.'s sinking sales also have been hurt by big
customers such as Walmart Inc. opening their own dairy plants to
help guarantee their own supply. The dairy company's sales last
year of $7.8 billion were down 38% from a decade ago.
Shares in Dean Foods have lost around 60% of their value this
year, and the Dallas-based company's $141 million market value is
about 5% of what it was worth a decade ago.
Dean's problems come at a rough time in the dairy industry
overall. Milk prices have been falling for around five years as
U.S. consumption wanes and production expands. Dairy cows have
become more efficient in the U.S., and subsidies have helped keep
some farmers producing.
Still, licensed dairy farms have shrunk to record lows, with
more than 2,700 operations closing last year, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Dean has hired bankers to review options including a sale of the
company, privatization or divestiture of some assets. Chief
Executive Ralph Scozzafava told investors in February that he
wasn't rushing those deliberations and is focused on improving
operations and building the company's brands this year.
"We remain laser-focused on our strategic plan and its key
initiatives to drive improved business performance," he said
then.
Dean Foods representatives declined to comment for this
article.
But investors say they are looking for more concrete updates
when Dean reports first-quarter earnings on Tuesday. So far, the
company hasn't accepted offers for parts of its network of 58
manufacturing facilities across 29 states, and instead is trying to
fix itself or find an outright buyer, according to people who have
recently discussed deals with Dean.
In a February debt restructuring, Dean added some of its real
property as collateral against its debt, giving its lenders the
right to some proceeds if those plants or other assets are sold,
according to a filing. That gives Dean less flexibility to sell off
its facilities as part of a potential deal, one of the people
said.
Dean has received at least a half-dozen offers to buy some of
its plants or an ice-cream business that includes the Friendly's
brand, named for the Massachusetts-based chain of family
restaurants, according to people familiar with the matter.
Executives have rejected those bids, one of those people said.
The uncertainty is unnerving Dean's customers. Some grocery
executives said they saw supply disruptions last year after Dean
closed seven milk plants and transferred millions of gallons of
production to other facilities within weeks.
One national retailer threatened to switch its supplier in the
Boston area because of the disruptions, a dairy manager with the
grocer said. Grocers have created contingency lists of other
suppliers in case Dean is sold piecemeal or has production
disruptions this year, the retailer said.
Mr. Scozzafava has said that the company has beefed up resources
to help improve the transition to new plants, though that has
contributed to higher than anticipated costs.
Dean's problems are hurting farmers, too. Dozens of dairy
farmers received letters from Dean last year saying the company
would buy less milk from them because Walmart was building a
competing plant in Indiana. Dean also lost sales last year to Dutch
retailer Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize NV after its Food Lion grocery
chain in the U.S. switched to better-priced suppliers, a
spokeswoman said.
Dean has said the Walmart plant in Indiana will cost its sales
to the nation's top food seller the equivalent of about 125 million
gallons of milk a year. Dean made about 15% of its sales to Walmart
last year, down from 18% in 2017, before the plant opened.
"Farmers who ship to Dean Foods are wary," said Julie Walker, a
dairy cow owner from eastern Tennessee, where some farmers lost
Dean contracts last year.
"There are many rural communities who could be at risk," she
said.
Some Tennessee farmers that lost Dean's business have retired or
closed their dairies, said Lee Maddox of the Tennessee Farm Bureau
Federation.
"There was one that wanted to continue milking but had no other
options to sell the milk," he said.
Milk producers beyond Dean are struggling given the consumption
declines and growing interest in plant-based beverages such as
almond and oat. Fluid milk consumption has fallen annually for more
than three decades, USDA figures show. Given the trends, last year
Dean took a majority stake in the Good Karma Foods company, which
makes dairy-free products from flax seeds.
HP Hood LLC, a Massachusetts-based dairy company, has started
selling oat-based beverages and beefed up advertising of its fluid
milk. The spending is helping to drive sales, but the company still
expects milk market-share to erode further, said Chris Ross,
marketing vice president.
"Over the next five years, we still think we will see declines,"
Mr. Ross said. "The market is really changing."
Cara Lombardo contributed to this article.
Write to Heather Haddon at heather.haddon@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 06, 2019 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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