Hormel Foods Corporation
CorpDigest
Hormel Foods Corporation
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2026-06-09 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$11.7B
▼ 3.4% vs FY2023 ($12.1B)
Net Income: $805M
Hormel Foods Corporation reported $11.7B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a decline of 3.4% compared to the 2023 figure of $12.1B.
Hormel Foods Corporation generated exactly $11.69 billion in net sales during the fiscal year ended September 29, 2024, securing a dominant position in the global consumer packaged goods sector by executing a highly disciplined strategy of acquiring iconic heritage brands and systematically transforming them into high-margin, value-added protein and snacking powerhouses. The top-line revenue figure of $11.69 billion represents a slight contraction from the $12.1 billion reported in FY2023, a decline entirely attributable to the devastating impact of the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) outbreak on the Jennie-O turkey segment, which forced the company to depopulate millions of birds and severely restricted the volume of turkey products available for sale, rather than a fundamental weakness in consumer demand for the company's branded portfolio. The irony is, the company's progression from the 1891 founding by George A. Hormel, through the invention of SPAM in 1937 and the massive $3.45 billion acquisition of the Planters snack portfolio in 2021, to its current status as a highly focused, sustainability-driven food manufacturer, provides a masterclass in capital allocation and long-term strategic vision. This multi-faceted approach to value creation is the primary reason Hormel was able to generate $805 million in net income in FY2024, transforming from a volatile commodity meat packer into a highly predictable, cash-generating enterprise that is redefining the economics of the global food supply chain. Hormel Foods Corporation is a global manufacturer and marketer of branded food products, generating $11.69 billion in net sales for the fiscal year ended September 29, 2024, by producing and distributing a portfolio of iconic brands across the refrigerated, grocery, and international retail channels. This full-cycle control allows Hormel to capture exceptional operating margins in its Grocery Products segment, driven by the massive pricing power of iconic brands like SPAM, Skippy, Planters, and Columbus, resulting in $805 million in net income for FY2024 despite severe biological headwinds in the turkey segment. The company's strategic shift toward premium snacking and international expansion, accelerated by the $3.45 billion acquisition of the Planters snack portfolio in 2021, has fundamentally altered its earnings profile, shifting the revenue mix toward high-margin, convenience-driven items that are insulated from the extreme volatility of commodity meat processing. The crown jewel of this segment is the iconic SPAM brand, which generates over $1 billion in annual global net sales, alongside a massive portfolio of heritage brands including Skippy peanut butter, Planters nuts, Columbus craft meats, Wholly guacamole, and Justin's nut butters. The Jennie-O Turkey Store segment, which generated $2.1 billion in net sales, operates as a highly specialized, vertically integrated turkey processing engine, controlling the entire lifecycle of the turkey from the hatchery to the retail freezer case. Hormel Foods Corporation generated exactly $11.69 billion in net sales during the fiscal year ended September 29, 2024, achieving an operating profit of $1.05 billion and maintaining a disciplined cost structure, a staggering demonstration of the company's ability to execute a comprehensive portfolio premiumization strategy and restore margin expansion in a highly deflationary and biologically volatile macroeconomic environment. The company's single most important fact right now is that it has proven its pure-play branded protein and snacking model can generate massive free cash flow and industry-leading gross margins when managed with strict operational discipline, a evidence of the effectiveness of its massive vertical integration, its unparalleled heritage brand portfolio, and its highly contrarian decision to systematically expand the Grocery Products segment to fund aggressive acquisitions in the premium snacking and international protein categories. Hormel Foods generated exactly $11.69 billion in net sales for the fiscal year ended September 29, 2024, representing a 3.4 percent decrease from the $12.1 billion reported in FY2023, a reflection of the severe biological headwinds and retail price resistance that plagued the global protein and packaged foods industry during the period. Despite the top-line pressure, the company's profitability remained exceptionally solid, achieving an operating profit of $1.05 billion and maintaining a disciplined cost structure, a evidence of the company's relentless focus on operational efficiency, derivative improvement, and the strategic expansion of the high-margin Grocery Products segment. The company's operating cash flow reached $1.1 billion, allowing it to aggressively fund its capital expenditure program for biosecurity upgrades and snacking facility expansions while simultaneously executing massive share repurchase programs and maintaining a highly attractive, 60-year consecutive history of dividend increases. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) reached $1.65, demonstrating the massive cash-generating potential of the business model when operating at scale, and proving that the pure-play branded protein and snacking model is highly profitable when managed with strict operational discipline and a focus on portfolio premiumization. This financial stability has been recognized by the market, driving Hormel's market capitalization to over $17.5 billion by mid-2026, reflecting investor confidence in the company's proven ability to generate massive free cash flow and its dominant position in the global packaged foods and snacking sector.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.