After struggling for much of the past two years, Beyond Meat is taking additional steps to improve the company’s finances and spur demand for its plant-based products. Last week, it unveiled its fourth generation of the Beyond Burger and Beyond beef patty, which CEO Ethan Brown said would “deliver superior health benefits and taste.”
During the company’s earnings call Tuesday, Beyond Meat CEO Brown said the company plans to raise prices for the new burgers due to costlier ingredients, such as its decision to switch from canola to avocado oil.
A TD Cowen analyst said Beyond Meat’s latest quarter and outlook for 2024 “demonstrated good progress in the effort to transition to a sustainable model.”
Still, the research note said that despite efforts by the plant-based meat company to reduce operating costs, contract its production network, and implement price increases to support margin expansion, it has “concerns about BYND’s ability to pivot to growth and positive cash flow.”
In recent months, plant-based consumers have been pushing for cleaner ingredient decks in their products. Experts in the space have said early pioneers need to return to their roots in messaging that focuses on the product’s health benefits and positive impact on the environment. Beyond Meat is doing just that with its latest burger iteration, which the company called the “most significant renovation to date.”
Beyond Meat is continuing to see healthy demand in its European market, specifically at food service locations. “We served our strategic customers in this important market for plant-based meats, including continued traction at McDonald’s across countries such as Austria, Germany, Ireland,” among others, Brown said.
In 2024, the company will continue to exit certain markets and discontinue some product lines. Brown told analysts that Beyond Meat is planning to end production of the plant-based beef jerky it developed with PepsiCo to “allow focus and resources to be put against the latest product platform renovation.”
Last November, the company was in survival mode, with a “going concern” risk as a possibility, according to analysts. While job cuts and exiting certain markets have helped, the company’s future largely “hinges on whether it can stabilize its sales decline,” analysts said in their recent note.
Source: fooddive.com