Avocado prices are plunging, sending Mission Produce stock toward its worst day ever

Mission Produce Inc. shares headed for their worst day yet on Friday, following an earnings report that showed the effects of rapidly declining avocado prices.

Mission Produce
AVO,
-15.20%

reported a fiscal fourth-quarter loss of $42 million or 59 cents a share, on net revenue of $238 million, basically flat with a year ago. After adjusting for a goodwill impairment, stock compensation and other effects, the company reported earnings of 13 cents a share.

Analysts on average were expecting adjusted earnings of 34 cents a share on sales of $250 million. Mission Produce stock fell more than 15% Friday, which would easily be its worst day since the company went public two years ago; the previous record for daily percentage decline was a 10.9% drop on March 11.

Executives noted that avocado prices have been dropping, after rising quickly at times last year, including when imports from Mexico were blocked for a time. Executives stated that prices declined 10% from the same period last year, a drastic change from the rest of the year — Mission Produce’s full-year sales showed a 28% increase in average selling prices from the year before, despite including that fourth-quarter decline.

“Our fiscal fourth-quarter financial performance was impacted by a confluence of variables, especially with regard to the rapid decline in pricing, which undermined our ability to drive the per-unit margins that we have generated historically,” founder and Chief Executive Steve Barnard said in a statement Thursday. “Persistent cost inflation, combined with a suboptimal size curve from our owned production and a delay to our seasonal transition to the Mexican production, resulted in an unfavorable mix, lower relative pricing and temporary margin compression.”

In a conference call later Thursday, Barnard was more specific about a sudden drop in pricing this fall.

“Trends reversed sharply during the fiscal fourth quarter, with the onset of the new Mexican season, and drove prices down approximately 35% as compared to the fiscal third quarter,” he said.

Executives expect that decline to last into the fiscal first quarter, projecting year-over-year price decreases of 20% to 25%, but see stability in the forecast for 2023.

“With respect to fiscal 2023, we see a more normal marketplace emerging, highlighted by better and more consistent supply conditions, which provides a constructive foundation for the industry to drive consumption and expand growth in new geographies,” Barnard said. 

Mission Produce shares had outperformed major indexes so far in 2022, declining 6.9% through Thursday’s close, while the S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.59%

has fallen 19.8% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.53%

has dropped 8.2% this year. Friday’s drop sent Mission Produce’s market capitalization lower than $1 billion.

Source: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/avocado-prices-are-plunging-and-taking-mission-produce-stock-along-for-the-ride-11671755170?siteid=yhoof2&yptr=yahoo