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JBS USA

American meat processor

JBS USA

Summary

American meat processor

FieldValue
nameJBS USA Holdings, Inc.
logo[[File:Logotipo da JBS (2023).png200px]]
typeSubsidiary
foundation
location_cityGreeley, Colorado
location_countryU.S.
subsid
key_peopleWesley Batista Filho (CEO)
num_employees78,000+
industryMeatpacking
revenueUS$27.8 billion (2017)
parentJBS S.A.
homepage

(as Esmark)

NYSE: ESMK (no longer trading)

JBS USA Holdings, Inc. is a meat processing company and a wholly owned subsidiary of the Brazilian multinational JBS S.A. The subsidiary was created when JBS entered the U.S. market in 2007 with its purchase of Swift & Company.

JBS USA is based in Greeley, Colorado. Its competitors include Hormel Foods, Cargill, Smithfield Foods, National Beef, and Tyson Foods.

History

Swift & Company

Swift meat packing plant in [[La Plata]], [[Argentina]], c. 1920
1916 advertisement for lard

Swift & Company operations can be traced back to 1855, when 16-year-old Gustavus Franklin Swift founded a butchering operation in Eastham, Massachusetts. Its early origins on Cape Cod led later to locations in Brighton (in Massachusetts), and Albany, and Buffalo, New York. In 1875, Swift and Company was incorporated in Chicago. Swift and Armour and Company acquired a two-thirds controlling interest in the Fort Worth Stockyards in 1902. That same year, an antitrust lawsuit was filed against Swift for conspiring with other companies to control the meatpacking industry. The companies attempted to merge to avoid the suit, leading to the 1905 Supreme Court case of Swift & Co. v. United States.

By the 1920s Swift and Company operated their largest and most modern meat processing plant in South St Paul, Minnesota. The purpose of this plant was to slaughter and process cattle, hogs, and sheep. These animals were procured by the company buyers at the adjacent St. Paul Union Stockyards. The live animals were driven across overhead ramps to the killing floors. Swift processed fresh, smoked, table-ready, canned meats, such as Prem, and baby foods, along with soap, lard, shortening, adhesives, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, fertilizers, hides and animal feeds. Operations were discontinued at the South St. Paul Plant effective November 29, 1969.

In addition to meatpacking, Swift sold various dairy and grocery items, including Swiftning shortening, Allsweet margarine, Brookfield butter, cheese under the Brookfield, Pauly, and Treasure Cave brands, and Peter Pan peanut butter. Swift began selling frozen turkeys under the Butterball brand in 1954. Gustavus Swift also championed the refrigerated railroad car.

Esmark and ConAgra

In the 1960s, Swift expanded into other fields, including insurance and petroleum, and formed the holding company Esmark in 1973. Two years later, Esmark bought International Playtex from Meshulam Riklis' Rapid-American Corporation. Esmark sold off Globe Life Insurance to the Ryan Insurance Group in 1977.

Esmark left the petroleum business in 1980, selling Vickers Petroleum to Mobil, while Swift's fresh-meat business was spun off as a separate company, Swift Independent Packing Company (SIPCO), the same year. Esmark went on to purchase Norton Simon Inc. in 1983 before being purchased by Beatrice Foods the next year. ConAgra purchased 50% of SIPCO in 1987 and the remaining portion in 1989, the same year ConAgra bought Beatrice Foods. ConAgra merged SIPCO's operations with that of Monfort, the meatpacker it had purchased in 1987, and the division was renamed Swift & Company in 1995.

In 2002, ConAgra sold a majority stake in Swift & Company to Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst, a Dallas-based private-equity firm, and Booth Creek Management. Hicks, Muse bought the remainder of ConAgra's stake in 2004.

Purchase by JBS

Logo used from 2007 to 2023.

On July 12, 2007, JBS S.A. purchased Swift & Company for US$1.5-billion in an all-cash transaction, creating the JBS Swift Group and positioning it as the largest beef processor in the world. Prior to the deal, JBS operated 23 plants in Brazil and five in Argentina. As part of the transaction, the Swift companies undertook a series of tender offers and consent solicitations to restructure existing debt.

Following the acquisition, JBS expanded its U.S. operations through a series of additional purchases. In 2008, it acquired the beef operations of Smithfield Foods for $565 million. The same year, it announced plans to acquire National Beef Packing Company for $560 million, but canceled the purchase after the U.S. Department of Justice raised antitrust concerns. In 2009, JBS USA acquired a 63% stake in poultry producer Pilgrim's Pride. It later increased its ownership share to 75.3%.

In 2009, JBS USA Holdings filed notice with the SEC of its intention to float an IPO, listing 38 subsidiaries. However, the offering was withdrawn after BDO Seidman LLP, one of the accounting firms involved, filed notice with the SEC that unaudited statements had been submitted without its endorsement.

On October 18, 2012, JBS USA announced it would assume temporary management of XL Foods' Lakeside beef processing plant in Brooks, Alberta, under a 60-day agreement that included an exclusive purchase option for XL Foods' U.S. and Canada operations. The acquisition was completed in January 2013 and included the Brooks facility, a second beef plant in Calgary, and a feedyard. In July 2015, JBS USA acquired the U.S. pork processing business of Cargill Meat Solutions for $1.45 billion.

In May 2021, JBS S.A. was the target of a ransomware cyberattack that temporarily disrupted its meat processing operations across the United States. JBS paid the hackers an $11 million ransom in Bitcoin.

References

References

  1. "Contact us". JBS USA.
  2. "About Eastham, Massachusetts". Town of Eastham, Massachusetts.
  3. "Swift and Company". Texas State Historical Association.
  4. (April 6, 1977). "Globe Life pact".
  5. (27 June 1980). "Swift's three Iowa pork plants stay open in sale, reorganization".
  6. "Swift & Company History". Funding Universe.
  7. (22 May 2002). "Hicks Muse Group to Buy Stake In ConAgra Meatpacking Unit". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  8. "ConAgra Foods Receives $194 Million for Equity Interest, Expects to Receive $300 Million for Certain Assets". ConAgra (press release).
  9. (March 5, 2008). "JBS to buy Green Bay's Smithfield Beef, other beef producers". Milwaukee Business Journal.
  10. Etter, Lauren. (February 21, 2009). "Brazil's JBS Pulls Deal to Buy National Beef". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  11. "Chicken Brands". JBS.
  12. (22 July 2009). "Form S-1 - General form for registration of securities under the Securities Act of 1933:SEC Accession No. 0001193125-09-153228". SEC.
  13. "JBS USA Will Complete XL Purchases in Canada on Monday". [[Food Safety News]].
  14. Magalhaes, Luciana. (July 1, 2015). "JBS to Buy Cargill's U.S. Pork Business for $1.45 Billion". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  15. (9 June 2021). "JBS Paid Hackers $11 Million After Hack Crippled Meat Plants". Bloomberg.
  16. (10 June 2021). "How Bitcoin Has Fueled Ransomware Attacks". NPR.
  17. "Bloomberg Politics - Bloomberg".
  18. (2018-07-31). "Undercover Video Shows Pig Abuse But Also Common Practices - CBS Detroit".
  19. (2025-04-21). "Federal Inspectors Found Antibiotics in Beef 'Raised Without Antibiotics.' They Took No Action".
  20. "Lawsuit Seeks to Protect South Platte River From Colorado Slaughterhouse Pollution".
  21. "Court Rejects Meatpacker's Efforts to Kill Lawsuit Over Slaughterhouse Pollution in South Platte River".
  22. (25 March 2021). "Brazil meat giant JBS vows net zero by 2040 amid record profits".
  23. Thomas, Patrick. "New York Attorney General Sues Meatpacker JBS Over Climate Claims". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  24. Dutkiewicz, Jan. (2024-03-08). "Why New York is suing the world's biggest meat company".
  25. Kate Barrett. (30 June 2009). "Battling A July Fourth Beef Recall". about-ecoli.com.
  26. (24 June 2009). "Colorado Firm Recalls Beef Products Due To Possible E. coli O157:H7 Contamination". USDA FSIS.
  27. (6 January 2011). "JBS USA, LLC, fka Swift & Company and Swift Pork Company Is Assessed a Civil Penalty in the Amount of $175,000". USDA GIPSA.
  28. (12 December 2006). "Immigrations and Customs Enforcement raids Swift & Co. plants in 6 states". [[CBS News]].
  29. (18 March 2009). "The 2006 Swift Raids: Assessing the Impact of Immigration Enforcement Actions at Six Facilities".
  30. (4 November 2010). "FMCSA Orders JBS Carriers to Install Electronic On-Board Recorders on its Entire Fleet of Commercial Trucks for Violating Hours-of-Service and Other Federal Safety Regulations". FMCSA.
  31. (April 10, 2020). "After second death, union calls for closure of Greeley meat-packing plant".
  32. "Hundreds of U.S. Meat Workers Have Now Tested Positive for Virus".
  33. (April 15, 2020). "Final few hundred employees help close Greeley plant, third worker dies from COVID-19". FOX31 Denver.
  34. (2020-04-27). "Fifth local JBS employee dies from coronavirus as union, company trade shots".
  35. Staff. (April 15, 2020). "Coronavirus Death Toll Among Colorado Meatpacking Workers Rises To 5". [[Colorado Public Radio.
  36. ""The workers are being sacrificed": As cases mounted, meatpacker JBS kept people on crowded factory floors".
  37. "287 workers test positive for COVID-19 at meatpacking plant as impact ripples through northern Utah".
  38. Yeung, Michael Grabell, Claire Perlman, Bernice. (June 12, 2020). "Emails Reveal Chaos as Meatpacking Companies Fought Health Agencies Over COVID-19 Outbreaks in Their Plants".
  39. Zimmerman, Sarah. (2025-10-07). "Tyson agrees to record $85M settlement in pork price-fixing lawsuit".
  40. Funk, Josh. (2022-02-03). "Beef giant JBS to pay $52.5M to settle price-fixing lawsuit".
  41. Grantham-Philips, Wyatte. (2024-10-08). "McDonald's sues top meat packers for allegedly colluding to inflate the price of beef".
  42. (February 7, 2020). "Farm Bailout Paid to Brazilian Meat Processor Angers Lawmakers". The New York Times.
  43. (May 16, 2019). "Trump administration showers Brazilian crooks with $62M bailout money meant for struggling U.S. farmers". Chris Sommerfeldt.
  44. (May 12, 2022). "Trump officials and meat industry blocked life-saving Covid controls, investigation finds". The Guardian.
  45. (May 2022). ""NOW TO GET RID OF THOSE PESKY HEALTH DEPARTMENTS!" How the Trump Administration Helped the Meatpacking Industry Block Pandemic Worker Protections".
  46. (9 May 2025). "Meet the top donors to Trump's $239 million inauguration fund". Washington Post.
  47. (23 May 2025). "JBS shareholders approve US stock listing despite pushback from environmental groups and others". Associated Press.
  48. (25 June 2025). "After Trump's Election, a Troubled Meatpacker Makes a Stunning Comeback". New York Times.
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