BRF S.A.is a Brazilian food processing company with over 30 brands in its portfolio. They includeSadia,Perdigão,Qualy, Paty, Dánica and Bocatti. Its products are sold in over 150 countries and on five continents. More than 100 thousand employees work at the company, which owns more than 50 factories in eight countries: Argentina, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Netherlands, Malaysia, United Kingdom, Thailand, and Turkey.
Formerly | Perdigão SA (1934-2009) BRF - Brasil Foods SA (2009-2013) |
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Company type | Sociedade Anônima |
B3:BRFS3 NYSE:BRFS Ibovespa Component | |
Industry | Food processing |
Founded | August 18, 1934 |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Lorival Nogueira Luz Jr.,(CEO) Pedro Parente,(Chairman) |
Products | Meats Ultra-processed food Margarines Pasta Pizzas Frozen vegetables |
Revenue | US$ 10.8 billion (2023) |
US$ 343.0 million (2023) | |
Number of employees | over 100 thousand |
Subsidiaries | OneFoods |
Website | brf-global |
In 2016, the company sold over four million tons of food and made more than 600 thousand monthly deliveries. Over thirteen thousand integrated producers work daily in the field to supply fundamental ingredients of the food produced by the company: poultry and pork.
BRF is the result of the merger betweenSadiaandPerdigão,two major food companies in Brazil. The operation was announced in 2009, and concluded on July 13, 2013, after being approved by the Administrative Council for Economic Defense –Conselho Administrativo de Defesa Econômica(CADE). As the process was concluded, both Sadia and Perdigão stopped functioning as independent companies and became subsumed as brands under BRF's portfolio.
History
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The negotiation for the acquisition ofSadiabyPerdigãostarted in 2008, with then-presidentJosé Antonio do Prado Fay.[1]The successful merger, officially announced in May 2009, created BRF, which continued under Fay's lead.
In October 2011, BRF made two acquisitions in Argentina, acquiring the companies Avex (a poultry company) and Dánica (a leading company in the production ofmargarine) for 150 million dollars.[2][3]
One year later, in Abu Dhabi, BRF acquired 49% of the food distribution companyFederal Foods,for 36 million dollars.
In 2012, once the merger process between Perdigão and Sadia was concluded, the company (which was then called BRF Brasil Foods) became one of the biggest food companies in the world.
In the following year, to consolidate as a global brand, the company changed its name to BRF S.A. Since then, the company has presented itself to the market as BRF. While keeping up with the changes within the company, The company's logo was redesigned after two years of research among strategic audiences, accomplished with the help of consulting agencies Interbrand and A10.
In April 2013, entrepreneurAbilio Dinizwas elected as the new president of BRF's[4]Administrative Council. He boosts the plan for internal changes. After four months, Claudio Galeazzi occupies José Antonio do Prado Fay's position, becoming the company's CEO. Galeazzi repeats with Abilio Diniz a partnership that lasted years, similar to other companies where Diniz was in charge (likeGrupo Pão de Açúcar,for instance).
In May 2013, Sadia officially announces its support of theOlympic GamesandParalympicRio2016Games. From June 2013 to January 2016, the brand was also a sponsor forBrazil's National Soccer Team.The contract included the main team and all other categories. The numbers of the deal were not published.
In April 2014, another slice of Federal Foods is acquired by close to US$27.8 million;[5]in August of that same year, BRF incorporates Alyasra Food Company, a frozen food distributor from Kuwait, for 160 million dollars. With those acquisitions, the company expands its operations in the Middle East and follows through with its plan to become more international.[6]
In September 2014, BRF sold its dairy assets to the French groupLactalisfor R$1.8 billion. Among the sold assets are brands such asBatavo,Cotochés,andElegê.According to BRF, the decision of selling the dairy division was a consequence of the low return the company was getting from it.[7]In that same month, Claudio Galeazzi announced he is leaving the group's presidency and the executive Pedro Faria takes his place, effective January 2015.[8]
In 2015, BRF became the first Brazilian company to invest in offeringGreen Bonds,which are debt securities that come with a guarantee that all resources collected will be invested in environmentally responsible projects.[9]In that year, 50.2% of BRF's income came from the international market (export).
Following through with the strategic plan of turning the company global, during that same year, in Asia, SATS BRF was created in Singapore; in China, BRF launched a line of snacks with the Sadia brand; in the Middle East, Qatar National Import and Export (QNIE) was partially acquired; in Argentina, they acquired iconic brands such as Vieníssima (sausages), Goodmark (hamburgers) and Manty and Delícia (margarine) through the Avex and QuickFoodsubsidiaries.
Back in Brazil, still in 2015, Perdigão went back to acting in strategic categories (hamandsmoked sausageamongst others) after being away from the market for three years, as agreed with the CADE during the Sadia and Perdigão merger.
In 2016, theSadia Halalsubsidiary was created, which manages the assets related to producing, distributing, and selling food toMuslimmarkets. A deal was made with FFMBerhadas well, ensuring the cooperation between the two companies with FFM Further ProcessingSDN BHD( "FFP" ), a food processing company based out of Malaysia. Also in 2016, BRF sealed an investing deal withCOFCO Meat,a Chinese food producer focused on swine, with vertically integrated operations in all chains of that industry segment.
At the beginning of 2017, BRF began the operations of its subsidiary OneFoods, focused on the halal market. Headquartered inDubai,in the United Arab Emirates, the company came into the market already as the biggest halal animal protein company in the world. It arrives in Turkey, the largest consumer of halal chicken on the planet, to take over the operations ofBanvit,the biggest poultry producer and market leader in the country.
In 2021, BRF started to invest incultured meatresearch throughAleph Farms,expecting to bring it to market by 2024.[10][11][12]
Investors
editIn 2015, it was one of the ten companies from Brazil that were chosen to be a part of theEuronext-Vigeo EM 70, a European stock exchange index that includes companies from developing countries that have high performance in corporate governance.[13]
References
edit- ^"Diretor-presidente da BRF, José Antônio Fay, conta o processo de criação e crescimento da megaempresa".Archived fromthe originalon 18 May 2021.Retrieved7 July2017.
- ^"BRF compra Avex e Grupo Dánica, da Argentina".
- ^"BRF compra empresas argentinas de frango e margarina por US$150 mi".
- ^"Abilio Diniz é eleito para presidência do Conselho de Administração da BRF".9 April 2013.
- ^"BRF compra participação adicional na Federal Foods".9 April 2014.
- ^"BRF compra 75% de distribuidora de congelados no Kuwait".4 August 2014.
- ^"BRF anuncia acordo com a Lactalis para venda de sua unidade de lácteos".3 September 2014.
- ^"PEDRO FARIA É ELEITO O NOVO CEO DA BRF".21 August 2022.
- ^"BRF planeja emissão inédita de" green bonds "".20 May 2015.
- ^"Brazil's BRF makes $2.5 million bet on Israel's Aleph Farms".Reuters.7 July 2021.Retrieved19 September2022.
- ^Becker, L (22 September 2021)."Como será a carne cultivada que vai chegar aos mercados do Brasil em 2024".Revista Globo Rural(in Brazilian Portuguese).Retrieved19 September2022.
- ^Solomon, S (7 July 2021)."Aleph Farms gets $105 million investment to bring lab-grown steaks to market".Times of Israel.Retrieved19 September2022.
- ^"Euronext lança índice sustentável de emergentes com ações brasileiras".3 July 2015.