Skip to main content

Cheap chicken, sugar imports hit RCL Foods

| Economic factors

RCL Foods is appealing to the SA government to limit cheap imports of chicken and sugar after an influx from the Americas weighed on the local producer.

South Africa is an easy target, with “pretty porous” borders and generous tariffs, Chief Financial Officer Rob Field said by phone on Monday. The Durban-based company is “a highly efficient producer, so there’s no issue with supplying the local market at the volume that is required and at a price that is internationally competitive,” he said.

RCL Foods, which makes Sunbake bread, Selati sugar and Rainbow chicken, is also striving to recover from the effects of a drought and a deadly listeriosis crisis that eroded trust in its processed meat even though its own plants were not a source of the disease.

The issues with chicken and sugar compounded those challenges, sending earnings, excluding some items, down 26% in the six months through December.

“No market can sustain itself when you have dumped imports - and to the extent that they are coming in,” the CFO said. “Chicken and sugar saw 500 000 tons of each of those products coming into our market and displacing local production.”

RCL is in talks with local government to “find a way to level the playing field,” Field added.

RCL has invested in additional safety measures as the company seeks ways to regain consumer trust after the listeriosis outbreak, Field said.

The stock, which has dropped 19% in the past year, pared the decline by climbing 7.5% by 12:00, valuing RCL at R13bn. 

Pin It

Related Articles

By: Tawanda Karombo – IOL Business In a year marked by stiff economic challenges, Shoprite has announced significant increases in the remuneration of its top executives, while simultaneously warning about the growing price sensitivity among South...
By: Manyane Manyane - IOL Retailers have been criticised for keeping essential food items prices high despite production costs continuing to decline.
The Department of Mineral and Petroleum Resources is in talks with National Treasury to lower the cost of fuel, with a move to change to both petrol and diesel prices in South Africa.
By: Nick Wilson – Fin24 Releasing its latest Essential Food Price Monitoring Report (EFPM) on Friday, the Competition Commission said the "slow transmission" of reduced cooking oil prices to consumers, for instance, raised concerns about retailer...
By: Siphelele Dludla – IOL Business Report Sentiment in the retail industry in South Africa has ticked up though it remains in contractionary territory as consumers have begun feeling confident that the cost of living is slightly easing.